Coffee-Streamline
Helper for efficiently require()
'ing CoffeeScript and/or Streamline
files. The key word is "efficiently": compiled code is cached to prevent
recompilation on subsequent runs.
Note that Streamline does natively support caching compiled code, but it only caches the Streamline compilation; CoffeeScript is compiled every time there. This module caches both types of compilation.
This module is also robust to version changes (upgrades) to both CoffeeScript and Streamline; files will be properly recompiled in those cases.
Installation
npm install coffee-streamline
Note that CoffeeScript and Streamline should also be installed like normal, e.g. your package.json should specify the desired versions of those.
Usage
You can simply require()
this module in place of both CoffeeScript and
Streamline; all proper require()
handlers will be registered:
;
You can then require()
CoffeeScript and/or Streamline files like normal, and
they'll be compiled and cached automatically:
; // e.g. foo.coffee; // e.g. bar._js; // e.g. baz._coffee
You can also run a CoffeeScript and/or Streamline file as if it were the main file being executed:
; // e.g. app._coffee// within app._coffee, `module === require.main` will be true
Relative paths like ./app
will be resolved relative to the parent module
just like require()
.
Details
Cached files are stored in a .cache
directory under the current working
directory at runtime (process.cwd()
). This is to support deploying the
compiled files alongside the source ones, e.g. via rsync.
Currently, Streamline compilation happens under "callback" mode.
TODO
Support configuration/options, e.g. cache directory location and Streamline compilation mode (callbacks or fibers).
Can/should some of this be integrated into Streamline directly?
Changelog
0.1.3 - Minor improvement to run()
to better support node-dev.
0.1.2 - New feature: run()
files as main!
0.1.1 - Ported to JS for simplicity.
0.1.0 - Initial release.
License
MIT. © 2012 Aseem Kishore.
Credits
Jeremy Ashkenas for the awesome CoffeeScript, and Bruno Jouhier for the awesome Streamline.