Now following LinkedIn managed version as original repository is not being updated anymore.
This gem adds the Dust template and a corresponding assets engine to the asset pipeline in Rails => 3.1 applications.
For detailed information about Dust, visit http://akdubya.github.com/dustjs/
Add the following line to your Gemfile:
gem 'dust-rails'
Update your bundle:
bundle install
Place individual Dust template file in their own file with template_name.js.dust
extension.
/* app/assets/javascripts/templates/demo.js.dust */
Hello {name}! You have {count} new messages.
Which will be compiled and rendered as:
(function(){dust.register("demo",body_0);function body_0(chk,ctx){return chk.write("Hello ").reference(ctx.get("name"),ctx,"h").write("! You have ").reference(ctx.get("count"),ctx,"h").write(" new messages.");}return body_0;})();
Dust-rails resolves the name of the template out of relative path of each template file.
Relative path starts from app/assets/javascripts/templates/
by default.
app/assets/javascripts/templates/demo1.js.dust -> demo1
app/assets/javascripts/templates/demos/demo2.js.dust -> demos/demo2
If you want to change the default root path of template files, add following configuration into application.rb:
# config/application.rb
module YourApp
class Application < Rails::Application
config.dust.template_root = 'app/assets/your_path_to_templates/'
end
end
In your javascript files, require dust-core
and your own template files.
Using require_tree
is recommended if you want to require all the template files at once.
/* app/assets/javascripts/application.js */
//= require dust-core
//= require_tree ./templates
...
dust.render("demo", {name: "Fred", count: 10}, function(err, out) {
console.log(out);
});
To include dust-helpers, add require dust-helpers
after dust-core
in application.js
All done. Your template files will be compiled and registered.