Preprocessor for converting HAML files to AngularJS templates.
The easiest way is to keep karma-ng-haml2js-preprocessor
as a devDependency in your package.json
.
{
"devDependencies": {
"karma": "~0.10",
"karma-ng-haml2js-preprocessor": "~0.1"
}
}
You can simple do it by:
npm install karma-ng-haml2js-preprocessor --save-dev
// karma.conf.js
module.exports = function(config) {
config.set({
preprocessors: {
'**/*.haml': ['ng-haml2js']
},
files: [
'*.js',
'*.html',
// if you wanna load template files in nested directories, you must use this
'**/*.haml'
],
ngHaml2JsPreprocessor: {
// strip this from the file path
stripPrefix: 'public/',
// prepend this to the
prependPrefix: 'served/',
// or define a custom transform function
cacheIdFromPath: function(filepath) {
return cacheId;
},
// Setting this option to true will run the haml command in a login shell.
// This will enable you to use the Ruby set by RVM instead of the system Ruby
loginShell: true,
// setting this option will create only a single module that contains templates
// from all the files, so you can load them all with module('foo')
moduleName: 'foo'
}
});
};
This preprocessor converts HAML files into JS strings and generates Angular modules. These modules, when loaded, puts these HAML files into the $templateCache
and therefore Angular won't try to fetch them from the server.
For instance this template.haml
...
%div
something
... will be served as template.html.js
:
angular.module('template.html', []).config(function($templateCache) {
$templateCache.put('template.html', '<div>something</div>');
});
For more information on Karma see the homepage.