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A template engine enables you to use static template files in your application. At runtime, the template engine replaces variables in a template file with actual values, and transforms the template into an HTML file sent to the client. This approach makes it easier to design an HTML page.
Some popular template engines that work with Express are Pug, Mustache, and EJS. The Express application generator uses Jade as its default, but it also supports several others.
See Template Engines (Express wiki) for a list of template engines you can use with Express. See also Comparing JavaScript Templating Engines: Jade, Mustache, Dust and More.
Note: Jade has been renamed to Pug. You can continue to use Jade in your app, and it will work just fine. However if you want the latest updates to the template engine, you must replace Jade with Pug in your app.
To render template files, set the following application setting properties, set in app.js
in the default app created by the generator:
views
, the directory where the template files are located. Eg: app.set('views', './views')
.
This defaults to the views
directory in the application root directory.view engine
, the template engine to use. For example, to use the Pug template engine: app.set('view engine', 'pug')
.Then install the corresponding template engine npm package; for example to install Pug:
$ npm install pug --save
Express-compliant template engines such as Jade and Pug export a function named __express(filePath, options, callback)
,
which is called by the res.render()
function to render the template code.
Some template engines do not follow this convention. The Consolidate.js library follows this convention by mapping all of the popular Node.js template engines, and therefore works seamlessly within Express.
After the view engine is set, you don’t have to specify the engine or load the template engine module in your app; Express loads the module internally, as shown below (for the above example).
app.set('view engine', 'pug')
Create a Pug template file named index.pug
in the views
directory, with the following content:
html
head
title= title
body
h1= message
Then create a route to render the index.pug
file. If the view engine
property is not set,
you must specify the extension of the view
file. Otherwise, you can omit it.
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
res.render('index', { title: 'Hey', message: 'Hello there!' })
})
When you make a request to the home page, the index.pug
file will be rendered as HTML.
Note
The view engine cache does not cache the contents of the template’s output, only the underlying template itself. The view is still re-rendered with every request even when the cache is on.
To learn more about how template engines work in Express, see: “Developing template engines for Express”.