Faster implementation of Haml template language.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'faml'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install faml
You can set several options via Faml::Engine.options
.
# Render in XHTML format
Faml::Engine.options[:format] = :xhtml
# Disable autoclose
Faml::Engine.options[:autoclose] = []
# Disable auto preserve
Faml::Engine.options[:preserve] = []
Just replace your gem 'haml'
with gem 'faml'
.
faml is only tested with Rails >= 4.0.
Since middleman has its own renderers, there's no easy way to use faml with middleman currently.
faml provide a tilt interface.
If your framework uses tilt, you can use faml by replacing gem 'haml'
with gem 'faml'
.
There are several incompatibilities.
See incompatibilities for details generated by spec files.
Hash attributes are only supported to "data" attributes.
With original haml, %span{foo: {bar: 'baz'}}
is rendered as <span foo-bar='baz'></span>
.
With faml, it's rendered as <span foo='{:bar=>"baz"}'></span>
.
Only "data" attributes are converted to hyphenated attributes.
Even with non-Rails project, all string are HTML-escaped.
Only "ugly" mode in original haml is supported.
%div
%div hello
is always rendered as
<div>
<div>hello</div>
</div>
It's equivalent to haml's "ugly" mode.
I won't provide helper methods of Haml::Helpers. If you really need helper methods, please open an issue.
Only preserve
helper method is supported by engine option.
You have to set Faml::Engine.options[:extend_helpers] = true
to use preserve
.
If you find other incompatibility, please report it to me :-p.
I use temple to achieve faster template rendering. It's used by slim template language & engine which is known as fast.
- HamlParser::Parser converts source language (Haml template) to own AST (HamlParser::Ast) .
- You can see the HamlParser::Ast by running
haml_parser template.haml
.
- You can see the HamlParser::Ast by running
- Faml::Compiler compiles HamlParser::Ast into Temple AST.
- You can see the Temple AST by running
faml temple template.haml
.
- You can see the Temple AST by running
- Temple compiles its AST into Ruby code.
- You can see the Ruby code by running
faml compile template.haml
. - During this process, several optimizations are performed such as Temple::Filters::MultiFlattener and Temple::Filters::StaticMerger.
- You can see the Ruby code by running
Although Haml allows arbitrary Ruby hash in the attribute syntax, most attributes are written in hash literal form. All keys are string or symbol literals (i.e., not dynamic values) in typical case.
%div{class: some_helper_method(current_user)}
%a{href: foo_path(@item)}= @item.name
There is an optimization chance if we could know the value is String.
I introduced incompatibility to expand the chance: all attribute values are converted to String by #to_s
except for id
, class
and data
.
This will enable us to avoid runtime expensive hash merging and rendering.
The runtime hash merging is implemented by C extension in faml.
Internally, attributes are categolized into three types.
- Static attributes
- Both the key and the value are static.
- Compiled into string literals.
- Fastest.
- e.g.
%input{checked: false}
- Dynamic attributes
- The key is static but the value isn't.
- The key is compiled into string literal. The value is interpolated at run-time.
- Relatively fast.
- e.g.
%input{checked: helper_method(@record)}
- Runtime attributes
- Both the key and the value are non-static expression.
- The attributes are stringified at runtime.
- Slow.
- e.g.
%input{helper_method(@record)}
- Fork it ( https://github.com/eagletmt/faml/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request