A handlebars template loader for webpack.
Handlebars 4 now supported
{
...
module: {
loaders: [
...
{ test: /\.handlebars$/, loader: "handlebars-loader" }
]
}
}
var template = require("./file.handlebars");
// => returns file.handlebars content as a template function
The loader resolves partials and helpers automatically. They are looked up relative to the current directory (this can be modified with the rootRelative
option) or as a module if you prefix with $
.
The following query options are supported:
- helperDirs: Defines additional directories to be searched for helpers. Allows helpers to be defined in a directory and used globally without relative paths. You must surround helpers in subdirectories with brackets (Handlerbar helper identifiers can't have forward slashes without this). See example
- runtime: Specify the path to the handlebars runtime library. Defaults to look under the local handlebars npm module, i.e.
handlebars/runtime
. - extensions: Searches for templates with alternate extensions. Defaults are .handlebars, .hbs, and '' (no extension).
- inlineRequires: Defines a regex that identifies strings within helper/partial parameters that should be replaced by inline require statements.
- rootRelative: When automatically resolving partials and helpers, use an implied root path if none is present. Default =
./
. Setting this to be empty effectively turns off automatically resolving relative handlebars resources for items like{{helper}}
.{{./helper}}
will still resolve as expected. - partialsRootRelative: Just like
rootRelative
except specific to partials. If not defined, defaults torootRelative
- helpersRootRelative: Just like
rootRelative
except specific to helpers. If not defined, defaults torootRelative
- knownHelpers: Array of helpers that are registered at runtime and should not explicitly be required by webpack. This helps with interoperability for libraries like Thorax helpers.
- exclude: Defines a regex that will exclude paths from resolving. This can be used to prevent helpers from being resolved to modules in the
node_modules
directory. - debug: Shows trace information to help debug issues (e.g. resolution of helpers).
See webpack
documentation for more information regarding loaders.
See the examples folder in this repo. The examples are fully runnable and demonstrate a number of concepts (using partials and helpers) -- just run webpack
in that directory to produce dist/bundle.js
in the same folder, open index.html.
See the CHANGELOG.md file.