Mini mustache template engine.
$ npm install minstache
$ component install visionmedia/minstache
The minstache(1)
executable can compile a file to a valid
stand-alone commonjs module for you, there's no need to have minstache
as a dependency:
hello.mustache:
Hello {{name}}! {{^authenticated}}<a href="/login">login</a>{{/authenticated}}
convert it:
$ minstache < hello.mustache > hello.js
hello.js:
module.exports = function anonymous(obj) {
function escape(html) {
return String(html)
.replace(/&/g, '&')
.replace(/"/g, '"')
.replace(/</g, '<')
.replace(/>/g, '>');
};
function section(obj, prop, negate, str) {
var val = obj[prop];
if ('function' == typeof val) return val.call(obj, str);
if (negate) val = !val;
if (val) return str;
return '';
};
return "Hello " + escape(obj.name) + "! " + section(obj, "authenticated", true, "<a href=\"/login\">login</a>") + "\n"
}
Compile and render the given mustache string
with optional context obj
.
Compile the mustache string
to a stand-alone Function
accepting a context obj
.
Partials are not supported, this lib is meant to be a small template engine solution for stand-alone component templates. If your template takes "partials" then pass other rendered strings to it. If you need a full-blown mustache solution Hogan.js is still great.
Minstache uses {{!name}}
for unescaped properties.
MIT