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Render is an advanced command-line interface that renders text or HTML from Jade templates, Handlebars templates, Swig templates and pretty much any other kind of templates you can think of.

Use it to generate your static site, to fill out code skeletons, to populate config files – anything you can think of.

Install with NPM (bundled with node.js):

npm install render-cli -g

Render comes with an ISC license.

Features

Context variables

Pass context variables to your templates with --context <file>... for dynamic rendering. Context can be YAML or JSON.

# no context
render page.jade
# context from a single file
render page.jade \
    --input page.json
# context from multiple files which will be 
# merged (if objects) or appended (if arrays)
render page.jade \
    --context globals.json,page.json
# specify globals separately (for clarity)
render page.jade \
    --context page.json \
    --globals globals.json

One-to-one and one-to-many

Render a single page:

# output to `stdout`
render page.jade
# or redirect to wherever you like
render page.jade > hello-world.html

Render a single page with context:

# one template, one rendered html file
render page.jade \
    --context page.json

Pick your own output filename, optionally using information from the context:

render page.jade \
    --context page.json
    --output 'pages/{title}'

Render multiple pages, one for each item in an array:

render tableofcontents.jade \
    --context pages.json
    --output 'pages/{permalink}'
    --many

If you'd like to iterate over the keys and values of an object instead, e.g. a url-to-title mapping, use:

render tableofcontents.jade \
    --context links.json
    --many-pairs

Each key will be available as key, each value as value.

The --many and --many-pairs options both accept an optional key to traverse to before iterating:

render tableofcontents.jade \
    --context pages.json
    --output 'pages/{permalink}'
    --many results.pages

Useful if you don't have control over the input JSON and the array or object to iterate over is not at the root. Note that you can traverse multiple levels using dot notation, e.g. results.data.pages.

Namespacing context data

You can pass more than one file to render. Objects will be merged, arrays will be appended to.

When merging different inputs would result in name clashes, you have the option of namespacing the data from each input file.

Namespaces come in three flavors:

TypeDescriptionFlag
explicityou pick the namespace--input (namespace):(filename)
automaticthe basename of the file--namespaced
automaticthe full path to the file--fully-namespaced

Explicit namespaces

Explicit namespaces: put globals.json in a globals key rather than at the root of the context object.

render page.jade \
    --context globals:globals.json,page.json
{
    "globals": {
        ...
    }, 
    "title": "data from page.json, not namespaced", 
    ...
}

Automatic namespaces

Automatic namespaces: inside of the context object, globals.json data will be available under globals and page.json data under page.

render page.jade \
    --input globals.json,page.json
    --namespaced
{
    "globals": {
        ...
    }, 
    "page": {
        ...
    }
}

Automatic namespaces using the full path: helpers/globals.json will be accessible at helpers.globals and page.json will be under page.

render page.jade \
    --context helpers/globals.json,page.json
    --fully-namespaced
{
    "helpers": {
        "globals": {
            ...
        }
    }, 
    "page": {
        ...
    }
}

Explicit namespaces take preference over automatic ones, so these globals will be available under globals rather than helpers.globals:

render page.jade \
    --context globals:helpers/globals.json,page.json
    --fully-namespaced
{
    "globals": {
        ...
    }, 
    "page": {
        ...
    }
}

Dynamic output paths

Output paths can contain placeholders that will be interpolated to determine the final path to which to write the HTML for each rendered set of context. Think of your output path as a little template of its own.

If you're a web developer, this is similar to the kind of URL routing you see in web frameworks.

In a path like build/{date}/{permalink}, the date and permalink keys in your data determine where the final HTML ends up. This is especially useful when you ask render to iterate over your context data with --many, which will render and save each set of data separately.

Paths are interpolated using the exact same context data that was used to render your template.

Not just the output path, even the path to your template can be dynamic and based on the data. For example, templates/{layout}.swig will figure out which layout to use by looking for a layout key in your context variables. This means a single render command isn't limited to rendering just a single template.

Output paths that end in a slash will get /index.html tacked on the end.

PatternContextOutput
posts/{permalink}.htmlpermalink: hello-worldposts/hello-world.html
posts/{permalink}/permalink: hello-worldposts/hello-world/index.html
posts/{permalink}/index.htmlpermalink: hello-worldposts/hello-world/index.html

Supported template languages

By default, Render uses the templating language matching your extension (.swig for Swig, .jade for Jade). You can explicitly specify which renderer to use with the --engine option.

Supported engines include:

Render uses the consolidate.js template engine consolidation library for all rendering. For more information on how to contribute a new template engine wrapper, please take a look at their documentation.

Conditional rendering

If your context data includes a date in ISO format, you're in luck. Using the --newer-than <key> flag, you can tell render to only re-render if the context data is newer than the HTML that's already there.

The key flag indicates where in your data render can find the modified date.

This is particularly useful when iterating over multiple context sets: two or three sets of data might have changed but nothing else, and you shouldn't have to rerender all of it.

Speed

The speed of render will depend on the complexity of your templates, the template engine and the speed of your CPU and hard drive. You can reasonably expect to be able to render about 10 to 20 pages per second.

IO is usually the bottleneck, even on machines with solid state drives, so render processes content serially to avoid filesystem contention.