Reputation: 2025
In my MEAN app, I use jade as my template engine. My problem is, when I call an angular directive, jade code is not working but html code is working. My code is given below:
index.jade
div(ng-repeat="num in addDir")
admin-collection
directive.js
var formDir = angular.module("formDirective", []);
formDir.directive('adminCollection', function() {
return {
restrict: 'E',
transclude: true,
// call jade template url
templateUrl: '../_template/_formTemplate/_adminCollection.jade'
};
});
_adminCollection.jade
h1 from _adminCollection templateUrl
If I use jade format code in _adminCollection.jade, it just show a plain text, not text inside h1 tag
But following code is working:
directive.js
var formDir = angular.module("formDirective", []);
formDir.directive('adminCollection', function() {
return {
restrict: 'E',
transclude: true,
// call jade template url
templateUrl: '../_template/_formTemplate/_adminCollection.html'
};
});
_adminCollection.html code::
<h1> from _adminCollection templateUrl </h1>
How can I solve this problem?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 4235
Reputation: 31257
Another option is to keep the HTML templates in your DOM, but hidden:
div(ng-non-bindable, style="display: none")
#adminCollectionTemplate
div(ng-repeat="num in addDir")
admin-collection
#anotherTemplate
//- Alternatively, pull in the template from another file
include ./_formTemplate/_adminCollection.jade
and then use jQuery to fetch the HTML out of the DOM, and give it to angular:
formDir.directive('adminCollection', function() {
return {
restrict: 'E',
transclude: true,
// fetch template from DOM
template: $('#adminCollectionTemplate').html()
};
});
This will just work, without any Ajax or any task runners. But it will clutter up the DOM with templates that could otherwise be hidden away in the JS. And it is an extra step to place every new template into that div.
ng-non-bindable
is needed to tell Angular to leave the template elements alone (don't manipulate them or bind to them), until their clones are actually used by the directive.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 4606
.... Or you can to use webpack to do the work.
then you can load the template like this:
angular.module('app').component('myComponent', {
bindings: {},
template: require('./mytemplate.jade')()
});
You can to note that I'm invoking the returned function.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1748
Jade is a template engine. Browser has only built-in html parser, so it does not understand what jade code means and treats it as plaintext.
To make it work you need to convert it to html. You can use some task manager to do it. Two most popular task managers for node.js are gulp and grunt. Each of them has a working jade plugin which you can use right away.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 315
Jade is something like less - it must be convert to another format, because browser can't understand that. When you use less, you have to transform it to css. And if you use jade - to html. If you use grunt, you should look on it: https://github.com/gruntjs/grunt-contrib-jade Otherwise you can check if your IDE can transform jade to html. For example PhpStorm can do this in automatic way.
Then in your directives you should specify path to html template, no jade.
You can use following directory structure:
app/
src/
js/
less/
jade/
dist/
templates/ <-- here you can put your htmls
styles/ <-- and here put css
js/ <-- if you want, you can put this minimalized app.js
that will contain all of your project,
see grunt-contrib-uglify for more info
EDIT: here is really great article about grunt: http://anthonydel.com/my-personal-gruntfile-for-front-end-experiments/ There is much more then you need, but maybe it will help you
Upvotes: 2