It depends.
When Haml compiles a filter it checks to see if the filter text contains any interpolation (#{...}). If there isn’t any then it will be the same text to transform on each request, so the conversion is done once at compile time and the result included in the template.
If there is interpolation in the filter text, then the actual text to transform will vary on each request, so the Coffeescript will need to be compiled each time.
Here’s an example. First with no interpolation:
:coffeescript
$ ->
alert "No semicolons! Awesome"
This generates the code (use haml -d to see the generated Ruby code):
_hamlout.buffer << "<script>\n (function() {\n $(function() {\n return alert(\"No semicolons! Awesome\");\n });\n \n }).call(this);\n</script>\n";
This code simply adds a string to the buffer, so no Coffeescript is being recompiled.
Now with interpolation:
- word = "Awesome."
:coffeescript
$ ->
alert "No semicolons! #{word}"
This generates:
word = "Awesome."
_hamlout.buffer << "#{
find_and_preserve(Haml::Filters::Coffee.render_with_options(
"$ ->
alert \"No semicolons! #{word}\"\n", _hamlout.options))
}\n";
Here, since Haml needs to wait to see what the value of the interpolation is, the Coffeescript is recompiled each time.
You can avoid compiling the Coffeescript on each request by not having any interpolation inside your :coffeescript filters.
The :javascript filter behaves similarly, checking to see if there is any interpolation, but since the :javascript filter only outputs some text to the buffer when it runs there is much less of a performance hit using it. You could possibly combine :javascript and :coffeescript filters, putting interpolated data in :javascript and keeping your :coffeescript static:
- word = "Awesome"
:javascript
var message = "No semicolons! #{word}";
:coffeescript
alert message