# grunt-ruby-haml Compile your HTML templates using the Ruby HAML command-line compiler ## WHAT!? WHY!?!?!? Because I like underscore, and underscore templates. They come free with Backbone. And Ruby's HAML treats them without abusing them. It's not a great solution, but it's better than trying to write yet another HAML parser. And before you get me started on Jade, or Mustache, or whatever: forget it. Jade is a big learning curve for little reward, and the rest are templating languages in their own right. ## Getting Started Make sure you have Ruby and Haml available in you $PATH. Install this grunt plugin next to your project's [grunt.js gruntfile][getting_started] with: `npm install grunt-ruby-haml` Then add this line to your project's `grunt.js` gruntfile: ```javascript grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-ruby-haml'); ``` ## Documentation You'll need to install `grunt-ruby-haml`: npm install grunt-ruby-haml Then modify your `Gruntfile.js` file by adding the following line: grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-ruby-haml'); Then add some configuration for the plugin like so: grunt.initConfig({ ... rubyHaml: { app: { files: { "public/index.html": "src/index.haml" } options: { templatize: False } } }, ... }); Then just run `grunt rubyHaml` and enjoy! Ruby-HAML will, by default, generate HTML. With the 'templatize' option set to True, it will instead spit out an underscore template ready to be rendered, wrapped in an AMD-compliant define() call. This may be useful to some of you who want to use the output of the HAML engine as a pre-parsed underscore template. ## Contributing In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using [grunt][grunt]. ## Release History 0.0.1 - Just what I've always run. Don't expect miracles ## License Copyright (c) 2013 Elf M. Sternberg Licensed under the MIT license.