I am trying to get Haml to work with my Ruby on Rails project. I am new to Ruby on Rails and I really like it. However, when I attempt to add an aplication.html.haml or index.html.haml for a view, I just receive errors.

I am using NetBeans as my IDE. Any help would be appreciated.

link|improve this question
feedback

10 Answers

Haml with Rails 3

For Rails 3 all you need to do is add gem "haml", '3.0.25' to your Gemfile. No need to install plugin or run haml --rails ..

Just:

$ cd awesome-rails-3-app.git
$ echo 'gem "haml"' >> Gemfile

And you're done.

link|improve this answer
feedback

First, install haml as a gem in bundler by adding this to your Gemfile:

gem "haml"

Run bundle install, then make sure your views are named with a *.html.haml extension. For example:

`-- app
    `-- views
        |-- layouts
        |   `-- application.html.haml
        `-- users
            |-- edit.html.haml
            |-- index.html.haml
            |-- new.html.haml
            `-- show.html.haml
link|improve this answer
2  
If you have erb templates already go ahead and rename them .html.haml. At the top of the file tell haml to use the erb filter by putting :erb at the top of the file. Then you can slowly convert your templates. More on filters by visiting. haml.hamptoncatlin.com/docs/rdoc/classes/Haml.html – gregf Apr 21 '09 at 22:56
2  
Why is it important to end with .html.haml and not just .haml? – Darren Green Apr 26 '10 at 23:39
9  
mathee, It's Rails convention. name.mime.format (e.g. show.html.erb, show.xml.builder, show.html.haml) – Ryan McGeary Apr 29 '10 at 12:34
feedback

The answers above are spot-on. You just need to put gem 'haml' in your Gemfile.

One other tip that was not mentioned: to have rails generators use haml instead of erb, add the following to config/application.rb:

config.generators do |g|
  g.template_engine :haml

  # you can also specify a different test framework or ORM here
  # g.test_framework  :rspec
  # g.orm             :mongoid
end    
link|improve this answer
7  
Alternatively to editing application.rb, you can add gem 'haml-rails' to the development group in Gemfile. That will also take care of the generators. – Felix Rabe Jan 4 at 13:00
feedback

First, make sure you have the HAML gem.

gem list --local | grep haml

If haml doesn't show up in the list, then do this:

sudo gem install haml

Then do this from your project directory:

# cd ../
# haml --rails <yourproject>

That should install everything you need, and the HAML views should stop complaining and parse correctly.

link|improve this answer
1  
Be mindful that for Rails 3, haml --rails is no longer needed. See my answer for Rails 3 howto. – kch May 23 '10 at 15:53
feedback

Before trying to use haml in your rails application, you can verify that the command line executable is installed correctly:

$ haml
%p 
  %span Hello World!

Then press CTRL-D and you should see:

<p>
  <span>Hello World!</span>
</p>
link|improve this answer
feedback

What are the errors?

Do you have the HAML plugin installed?

link|improve this answer
feedback

if for some reason you installed haml, but you haml doesn't start. try

sudo ln haml /usr/bin/

in the bin directory of your haml gem

for some reason this didn't happen automatically on my ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty.

link|improve this answer
feedback

This may be an old question but I think the answer is using haml-rails at https://github.com/indirect/haml-rails

link|improve this answer
feedback

Add haml to your Gemfile

gem "haml"

If you want to use the scaffold-functions too, add html-rails within your development-group

gem 'haml-rails', :group => :development

Dont forget to run

/> bundle install
link|improve this answer
feedback

If you are using Pow you will need to restart it also. Ideally you are using powder (gem install powder), because then you can just run this at the terminal

$ powder restart
link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown