Every repository with this icon (
Every repository with this icon (
tree 2638dc84b4153aa0dc29370c6163443ca7d5f6af
parent 66db0f390ea0f77ba5919225a6db0f895da399d3
| name | age | message | |
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.gitignore | Sat Nov 14 05:54:06 -0800 2009 | |
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CHANGES.md | Sat Nov 14 05:56:19 -0800 2009 | |
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LICENSE | Sun Oct 04 16:46:37 -0700 2009 | |
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README.md | Thu Oct 29 11:10:51 -0700 2009 | |
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Rakefile | Sat Nov 07 06:15:57 -0800 2009 | |
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THANKS.md | Tue Oct 20 11:21:37 -0700 2009 | |
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examples/ | Sat Nov 21 08:13:50 -0800 2009 | |
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mustache-dojo/ | Sat Nov 21 08:13:02 -0800 2009 | |
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mustache-jquery/ | Sat Nov 21 08:13:02 -0800 2009 | |
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mustache.js | Sat Nov 14 06:27:52 -0800 2009 | |
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package.json | Tue Oct 20 08:17:46 -0700 2009 | |
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test/ | Sat Nov 14 05:50:29 -0800 2009 |
mustache.js
What could be more logical awesome than no logic at all?
Shamless port of http://github.com/defunkt/mustache by Jan Lehnardt jan@apache.org.
Thanks @defunkt for the awesome code.
Where to use?
You can use mustache.js rendering stuff in various scenarios. E.g. you can render templates in your browser, or rendering server-side stuff with node.js, use it for rendering stuff in CouchDB's views.
Usage
A quick example how to use mustache.js:
var view = {
title: "Joe",
calc: function() {
return 2 + 4;
}
}
var template = "{{title}} spends {{calc}}";
var html = Mustache.to_html(template, view);
template is a simple string with mustache tags and view is a JavaScript object containing the.
Template Tag Types
There are several types of tags currently implemented in mustache.js.
Simple Tags
Tags are always surrounded by mustaches like this {{foobar}}.
var view = {name: "Joe", say_hello: function(){ return "hello" }}
template = "{{say_hello}}, {{name}}"
Conditional Sections
Conditional sections begin with {{#condition}} and end with {{/condition}}. When condition evaluates to true, the section is rendered, otherwise the hole block will output nothing at all. condition may be a function returning true/false or a simple boolean.
var view = {condition: function() {
// [...your code goes here...]
return true;
}}
{{#condition}}
I will be visible if condition is true
{{/condition}}
Enumerable Sections
Enumerable Sections use the same syntax as condition sections do. {{#shopping_items}} and {{/shopping_items}}. Actually the view decides how mustache.js renders the section. If the view returns an array, it will iterator over the items. Use {{.}} to access the current item inside the enumeration section.
var view = {name: "Joe's shopping card",
items: ["bananas", "apples"]}
var template = "{{name}}: <ul> {{#items}}<li>{{.}}</li>{{/items}} </ul>"
Outputs:
Joe's shopping card: <ul><li>bananas</li><li>apples</li></ul>
View Partials
mustache.js supports a quite powerful but yet simple view partial mechanism. Use the following syntax for partials: {{<partial_name}}
var view = {
name: "Joe",
winnings: {
value: 1000,
taxed_value: function() {
return this.value - (this.value * 0.4);
}
}
};
var template = "Welcome, {{jow}}! {{<winnings}}"
var partials = {winnings: "You just won ${{value}} (which is ${{taxed_value}} after tax)"};
var output = Mustache.to_html(template, view, partials)
output will be:
Welcome, Joe! You just won $1000 (which is $600 after tax)
You invoke a partial with {{<name}}. Invoking the partial name will tell
mustache.js to look for a object in the context's property name. It will then
use that object as the context for the template found in partials for name.
Escaping
mustache.js does escape all values when using the standard double mustache syntax. Characters which will be escaped: & \ " < >. To disable escaping, simply use tripple mustaches like {{{unescaped_variable}}}.
Example: Using {{variable}} inside a template for 5 > 2 will result in 5 > 2, where as the usage of {{{variable}}} will result in 5 > 2.
More Examples and Documentation
See examples/ for more goodies and read the original mustache docs







