Handlebars.js is a template framework for Javascript environments. It allows the construction of HTML elements using HTML and expressions wrapped in {{ }}
One of the conditional block helpers Handlebars offers is the {{#if}}
.
For example:
<div class="entry">
{{#if author}}
<h1>{{firstName}} {{lastName}}</h1>
{{else}}
<h1>Unknown Author</h1>
{{/if}}
</div>
Unfortunately, that's about all you can do with the if
out of the box. Luckily, Handlebars provides means of working with such expressions as well as adding your own. Using the registerHelper
method, we will change the if
block to support testing for property equality.
To do so, we will pass registerHelper
a modified version of the if
function where we utilize Handlebars' ability to parse key-value attributes in expressions:
Handlebars.registerHelper("if", function(conditional, options) {
if (options.hash.desired === options.hash.type) {
options.fn(this);
} else {
options.inverse(this);
}
});
Now, our modified if
expressions look something like this:
{{#if type desired="image" type=type}}
<div class="msg img">
<strong>{{user}}</strong> <i>shared an image</i>
<br />
<a href="{{file}}"><img src="{{file}}" /></a>
</div>
{{/if}}
where type
is a property of this
in our current scope, and "image"
is a possible value for type
.
Of course, you may want to define your own block expression instead of overriding the default {{#if}}
, but the idea holds.
@thomasvanlankv I tried your method but it is giving me an error ::: result = operators[operator](lvalue, rvalue); is not a function.