# Hamlit Basically Hamlit is the same as Haml. See [Haml's tutorial](http://haml.info/tutorial.html) if you are not familiar with Haml's syntax. [REFERENCE - Haml Documentation](http://haml.info/docs/yardoc/file.REFERENCE.html) ## Supported features See [Haml's reference](http://haml.info/docs/yardoc/file.REFERENCE.html) for full features in original implementation. - [x] Using Haml - [x] Rails XSS Protection - [x] Ruby Module - [x] Options - [ ] Encodings - [x] Plain Text - [x] Escaping: \ - [x] HTML Elements - [x] Element Name: % - [x] Attributes: ` - [x] :class and :id Attributes - [x] HTML-style Attributes: () - [x] Ruby 1.9-style Hashes - [ ] Attribute Methods - [x] Boolean Attributes - [x] HTML5 Custom Data Attributes - [x] Class and ID: . and # - Implicit Div Elements - [x] Empty (void) Tags: / - [x] Whitespace Removal: > and < - [x] Object Reference: [] - [x] Doctype: !!! - [x] Comments - [x] HTML Comments: / - [x] Conditional Comments: /[] - [x] Haml Comments: -# - [x] Ruby Evaluation - [x] Inserting Ruby: = - [x] Running Ruby: - - [x] Ruby Blocks - [x] Whitespace Preservation: ~ - [x] Ruby Interpolation: #{} - [x] Escaping HTML: &= - [x] Unescaping HTML: != - [x] Filters - [ ] :cdata - [x] :coffee - [x] :css - [x] :erb - [x] :escaped - [x] :javascript - [x] :less - [x] :markdown - [ ] :maruku - [x] :plain - [x] :preserve - [x] :ruby - [x] :sass - [x] :scss - [ ] :textile - [ ] Custom Filters - [ ] Helper Methods - [x] surround - [x] precede - [x] succeed - [x] Multiline: | - [x] Whitespace Preservation - [ ] Helpers ## Limitations ### No pretty mode Haml has :pretty mode and :ugly mode. :pretty mode is used on development and indented beautifully. On production environemnt, :ugly mode is used and Hamlit currently supports only this mode. So you'll see difference rendering result on development environment, but it'll be the same on production. ### No Haml buffer Hamlit uses Array as buffer for performance. So you can't touch Haml::Buffer from template when using Hamlit. ### Haml helpers are still in development At the same time, because some methods in Haml::Buffer requires Haml::Buffer, they are not supported now. But some helpers are supported on Rails. Some of not-implemented methods are planned to be supported. ### Limited attributes hyphenation In Haml, `%a{ foo: { bar: 'baz' } }` is rendered as ``, whatever foo is. In Hamlit, this feature is supported only for data attribute. Hamlit renders `%a{ data: { foo: 'bar' } }` as `` because it's data attribute. This design allows us to reduce work on runtime and is originally in [Faml](https://github.com/eagletmt/faml). ### Limited boolean attributes In Haml, `%a{ foo: false }` is rendered as ``, whatever `foo` is. In Hamlit, this feature is supported for only boolean attributes, which are defined by http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/guidelines.html or https://html.spec.whatwg.org/. The list is the same as `ActionView::Helpers::TagHelper::BOOLEAN_ATTRIBUTES`. In addition, `data-*` is also regarded as boolean. Since foo is not boolean attribute, `%a{ foo: false }` is rendered as `` (`foo` is not removed). This is the same behavior as Rails helpers. Also for `%a{ foo: nil }`, Hamlit does not remove non-boolean attributes and render ``. This design allows us to reduce String concatenation. This is the largest difference between Hamlit and Faml. ## 5 Types of Attributes Haml has 3 types of attributes: id, class and others. In addition, Hamlit treats data and boolean attributes specially. So there are 5 types of attributes in Hamlit. ### id attribute Almost the same behavior as Haml, except no hyphenation and boolean support. Multiple id specification results in `_`-concatenation. ```rb # Input %div{ id: %w[foo bar] } #foo{ id: 'bar' } # Output