String/Data transformations for use in templating libraries, static site generators and web frameworks. This gathers the most useful transformations you can apply to text or data into one library with a consistent API. Transformations can be pretty much anything but most are either compilers or templating engines.
To use each of these transforms you will also need to install the associated npm module for that transformer.
<![CDATA[${INPUT_STRING]]>
with the standard escape for ]]>
(]]]]><![CDATA[>
).cdata
, but with surrounding comments suitable for inclusion into a HTML/JavaScript <script>
block: //<![CDATA[\n${INPUT_STRING\n//]]>
.cdata
, but with surrounding comments suitable for inclusion into a HTML/CSS <style>
block: /*<![CDATA[*/\n${INPUT_STRING\n/*]]>*/
.${INPUT_STRING}
npm install coffee-script
marked
, supermarked
, markdown-js
or markdown
npm install component-builder
options: {development: false}
npm install component-builder
options: {development: false}
npm install html2jade
- Converts HTML back into jadePull requests to add more transforms will always be accepted providing they are open-source, come with unit tests, and don't cause any of the tests to fail.
The exported object transformers
is a collection of named transformers. To access an individual transformer just do:
var transformer = require('transformers')['transformer-name']
The following options are given special meaning by transformers
:
filename
is set by transformers automatically if using the renderFile
APIs. It is used if cache
is enabled.cache
if true, the template function will be cached where possible (templates are still updated if you provide new options, so this can be used in most live applications).sudoSync
used internally to put some asyncronous transformers into "sudo syncronous" mode. Don't touch this.minify
if set to true on a transformer that isn't a minifier, it will cause the output to be minified. e.g. coffeeScript.renderSync(str, {minify: true})
will result in minified JavaScript.Returns an array of engines that can be used to power this transformer. The first of these that's installed will be used for the transformation.
To enable a transformation just take [engine] = Transformer.engines[0]
and then do npm install [engine]
. If [engine]
is .
there is no need to install an engine from npm to use the transformer.
Tranform the string str
using the Transformer
with the provided options and call the callback cb(err, res)
.
If no cb
is provided, this method returns a promises/A+ promise.
Synchronous version of Transformer.render
Reads the file at filename into str
and sets options.filename = filename
then calls Transform.render(str, options, cb)
.
If no cb
is provided, this method returns a promises/A+ promise.
Synchronous version of Tranformer.renderFile
A string, one of:
'xml'
'css'
'js'
'json'
'text'
Adding to this list will not result in a major version change, so you should handle unexpected types gracefully (I'd suggest default to assuming 'text'
).
true
if the transformer can be used syncronously, false
otherwise.
The following transformations will always throw an exception if you attempt to run them synchronously:
The following transformations sometimes throw an exception if run syncronously, typically they only throw an exception if you are doing something like including another file. If you are not doing the things that cause them to fail then they are consistently safe to use syncronously.
then-jade
instead of jade
)@import
is used with a url instead of a filename)The following libraries look like they might sometimes throw exceptions when used syncronously (if you read the source) but they never actually do so: