1.0.0 • Published 2 years ago

@marcotss/parcel-transformer-handlebars-json v1.0.0

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
2 years ago

Handlebars plugin for Parcel 2 using JSON

This plugin allows Parcel 2 to load and compile Handlebars templates. It was heavily inspired by partiellkorrekt/parcel-transformer-handlebars, which only works using frontmatter data, this will works only using JSON files

Installation

Install with npm:

npm install --save @marcotss/parcel-transformer-handlebars-json

Then activete the plugin for .hbs and .handlebars files by adding transformers to your .parcelrc:

{
  "extends": "@parcel/config-default",
  "transformers": {
    "*.{hbs,handlebars}": ["@marcotss/parcel-transformer-handlebars-json"]
  }
}

(For reference see: https://parceljs.org/features/plugins/#transformers)

Configuration

The plugin has the following config defaults. These are required for handlebars to map all dependencies for compiling handlebars templates.

{
  "data": "src/markup/data",
  "decorators": "src/markup/decorators",
  "helpers": "src/markup/helpers",
  "layouts": "src/markup/layouts",
  "partials": "src/markup/partials"
}

Custom Configuration

If you would like to enforce your own folder structure simply create handlebars.config.json or hbs.config.json in your project root. Each property of the configuration file is optional and can also take an array of paths instead of just one path. If a property is not set, it will be taken from the defaulf configuration.

{
  "data": "views/json",
  "decorators": "views/decorators",
  "helpers": "views/tools",
  "layouts": "views/templates",
  "partials": "views/partials"
}

If you want, you can also use js instead of json.

module.exports = {
  data: 'views/json',
  decorators: 'views/decorators',
  helpers: 'views/tools',
  layouts: 'views/templates',
  partials: 'views/partials'
}

Features

Features

Reads from JSON

The original plugin has built in support for frontmatter yaml. I edited it to pull content from JSON files:

Source - content.json

{
    "title": "This is a heading",
    "desc": "this is a paragraph",
    "names": [
        "bob",
        "jane",
        "mark"
    ]
}

Source - example.hbs

{{!< mainlayout}}

<h1>{{title}}</h1>
<p>{{desc}}</p>
<ul>
    {{#each names}}
    <li>{{this}}</li>
    {{/each}}
</ul>

Output - example.html

<html>
<body>
<h1>This is a heading</h1>
<p>this is a paragraph</p>
<ul>
    <li>bob</li>
    <li>jane</li>
    <li>mark</li>
</ul>
</body>
</html>

Handlebars Layouts

The plugin has built in support for handlebars-layouts.

Handlebars Helpers

The plugin is also including all helpers found in the npm package handlebars-helpers. Please refer to their documentation for example usages.

Environment Variables

During compililation the plugin will also pass the following variable(s) to the template:

  • NODE_ENV

This can be useful when you want specific code to show up on production builds.

{{#eq NODE_ENV "production"}}
<!-- Google Tag Manager -->
<script>(function(w,d,s,l,i){w[l]=w[l]||[];w[l].push({'gtm.start':
new Date().getTime(),event:'gtm.js'});var f=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],
j=d.createElement(s),dl=l!='dataLayer'?'&l='+l:'';j.async=true;j.src=
'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtm.js?id='+i+dl;f.parentNode.insertBefore(j,f);
})(window,document,'script','dataLayer','GTM-XXXX');</script>
<!-- End Google Tag Manager -->
{{/eq}}

Or perhaps the opposite

{{#isnt NODE_ENV "production"}}
<span class="dev-banner sticky full">
  You're in DEVELOPMENT mode
</span>
{{/isnt}}