546

Is there a way in handlebars JS to incorporate logical operators into the standard handlebars.js conditional operator? Something like this:

{{#if section1 || section2}}
.. content
{{/if}}

I know I could write my own helper, but first I'd like to make sure I'm not reinventing the wheel.

1
  • 1
    For "and" logic, you can do nested if conditions, but it's clunky and doesn't help you with the else "unless", or any "or" logic per your question above. May 3, 2021 at 0:50

27 Answers 27

571

This is possible by 'cheating' with a block helper. This probably goes against the Ideology of the people who developed Handlebars.

Handlebars.registerHelper('ifCond', function(v1, v2, options) {
  if(v1 === v2) {
    return options.fn(this);
  }
  return options.inverse(this);
});

You can then call the helper in the template like this

{{#ifCond v1 v2}}
    {{v1}} is equal to {{v2}}
{{else}}
    {{v1}} is not equal to {{v2}}
{{/ifCond}}
21
  • 63
    This does go against the logicless nature of Handlebars / Moustache, but is certainly useful nonetheless, thanks!
    – Bala Clark
    Jun 29, 2012 at 11:09
  • 6
    Note that this simply doesn't work with bound properties (read, Ember bindings). It's fine with literal values, but doesn't resolve model properties (tested with Ember 1.0.0-rc.8 and Handlebars 1.0.0), and registerBoundHelper can't deal with Handlebars syntax. The workaround is to create a custom view: stackoverflow.com/questions/18005111/… Aug 29, 2013 at 14:41
  • 39
    @BalaClark is it really logicless though? I mean it still has "if" statements - just because they are intentionally crippled doesn't change the philosophy.
    – phreakhead
    Feb 25, 2014 at 7:19
  • 53
    I don't understand why AND / OR can't be a part of Handlebars. It doesn't go against the logicless nature since there's already IF, UNLESS, and EACH... so much for logicless
    – Asaf
    Sep 7, 2015 at 20:01
  • 4
    @StackOverflowed Limiting your options/handicaping yourself can help to follow a development philosophy. With a working development philosophy, the API implementing it shouldn't feel handicapping when you are trying solve a problem it is designed to solve. Instead, it should feel empowering in a strange way :) (kinda like abstinence). To get back on topic, either the Handlebars philosophy is contradictory, the problem described in this question could be solved with a solution following it, the handlebars API is implemented poorly or this is not a problem handlebars is designed to solve.
    – Matthias
    Feb 25, 2016 at 19:52
505

Taking the solution one step further. This adds the compare operator.

Handlebars.registerHelper('ifCond', function (v1, operator, v2, options) {

    switch (operator) {
        case '==':
            return (v1 == v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        case '===':
            return (v1 === v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        case '!=':
            return (v1 != v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        case '!==':
            return (v1 !== v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        case '<':
            return (v1 < v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        case '<=':
            return (v1 <= v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        case '>':
            return (v1 > v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        case '>=':
            return (v1 >= v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        case '&&':
            return (v1 && v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        case '||':
            return (v1 || v2) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
        default:
            return options.inverse(this);
    }
});

Use it in a template like this:

{{#ifCond var1 '==' var2}}

Coffee Script version

Handlebars.registerHelper 'ifCond', (v1, operator, v2, options) ->
    switch operator
        when '==', '===', 'is'
            return if v1 is v2 then options.fn this else options.inverse this
        when '!=', '!=='
            return if v1 != v2 then options.fn this else options.inverse this
        when '<'
            return if v1 < v2 then options.fn this else options.inverse this
        when '<='
            return if v1 <= v2 then options.fn this else options.inverse this
        when '>'
            return if v1 > v2 then options.fn this else options.inverse this
        when '>='
            return if v1 >= v2 then options.fn this else options.inverse this
        when '&&', 'and'
            return if v1 and v2 then options.fn this else options.inverse this
        when '||', 'or'
            return if v1 or v2 then options.fn this else options.inverse this
        else
            return options.inverse this
13
  • 21
    don't forget about '||' and '&&'. I added these cases and they're very useful.
    – Jason
    Jun 20, 2013 at 17:38
  • 21
    Being a noob to handlebars one thing that wasn't clear is that you have to pass the operator as a string or else the compiler will error out while tokenizing your template. {{#ifCond true '==' false}} Jul 11, 2013 at 20:11
  • 2
    I found the values to be not evaluated for object attributes. Adding the following helps v1 = Ember.Handlebars.get(this, v1, options) v2 = Ember.Handlebars.get(this, v2, options)
    – ZX12R
    Mar 3, 2015 at 6:54
  • 4
    but if v1 and v2 also one condition then how can i use? for ex: if(value == "a" || value == "b")
    – Krishna
    Sep 7, 2016 at 12:11
  • 5
    Can you do an else if with this?
    – jbyrd
    Dec 22, 2016 at 21:57
223

Handlebars supports nested operations. This provides a lot of flexibility (and cleaner code) if we write our logic a little differently.

{{#if (or section1 section2)}}
.. content
{{/if}}

In fact, we can add all sorts of logic:

{{#if (or 
        (eq section1 "foo")
        (ne section2 "bar"))}}
.. content
{{/if}}

Just register these helpers:

Handlebars.registerHelper({
    eq: (v1, v2) => v1 === v2,
    ne: (v1, v2) => v1 !== v2,
    lt: (v1, v2) => v1 < v2,
    gt: (v1, v2) => v1 > v2,
    lte: (v1, v2) => v1 <= v2,
    gte: (v1, v2) => v1 >= v2,
    and() {
        return Array.prototype.every.call(arguments, Boolean);
    },
    or() {
        return Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 0, -1).some(Boolean);
    }
});
21
  • 5
    Note that this wasn't possible until HTMLBars in Ember 1.10. Also, those helpers come as an Ember CLI addon if you'd rather: github.com/jmurphyau/ember-truth-helpers. Jul 31, 2015 at 15:06
  • 1
    This way, with no options execution is better to keeps with if method and easier to test. Thanks! Dec 25, 2015 at 6:15
  • 42
    We seem to have built Lisp into Handlebars.
    – jdunning
    Apr 15, 2016 at 16:40
  • 10
    Your and and or helpers only work with 2 parameters, which is not what you want. I managed to rework both the and and or helpers to support more than two parameters. Use this one-liner for and: return Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 0, arguments.length - 1).every(Boolean); and use this one-liner for or: return Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 0, arguments.length - 1).some(Boolean);.
    – Luke
    Aug 15, 2016 at 5:39
  • 7
    A little more advanced version that can take multiple parameters on each operator.
    – Nate
    Feb 15, 2018 at 15:40
93

taking this one up a notch, for those of you who live on the edge.

gist: https://gist.github.com/akhoury/9118682 Demo: Code snippet below

Handlebars Helper: {{#xif EXPRESSION}} {{else}} {{/xif}}

a helper to execute an IF statement with any expression

  1. EXPRESSION is a properly escaped String
  2. Yes you NEED to properly escape the string literals or just alternate single and double quotes
  3. you can access any global function or property i.e. encodeURIComponent(property)
  4. this example assumes you passed this context to your handlebars template( {name: 'Sam', age: '20' } ), notice age is a string, just for so I can demo parseInt() later in this post

Usage:

<p>
 {{#xif " name == 'Sam' && age === '12' " }}
   BOOM
 {{else}}
   BAMM
 {{/xif}}
</p>

Output

<p>
  BOOM
</p>

JavaScript: (it depends on another helper- keep reading)

 Handlebars.registerHelper("xif", function (expression, options) {
    return Handlebars.helpers["x"].apply(this, [expression, options]) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
  });

Handlebars Helper: {{x EXPRESSION}}

A helper to execute javascript expressions

  1. EXPRESSION is a properly escaped String
  2. Yes you NEED to properly escape the string literals or just alternate single and double quotes
  3. you can access any global function or property i.e. parseInt(property)
  4. this example assumes you passed this context to your handlebars template( {name: 'Sam', age: '20' } ), age is a string for demo purpose, it can be anything..

Usage:

<p>Url: {{x "'hi' + name + ', ' + window.location.href + ' <---- this is your href,' + ' your Age is:' + parseInt(this.age, 10)"}}</p>

Output:

<p>Url: hi Sam, http://example.com <---- this is your href, your Age is: 20</p>

JavaScript:

This looks a little large because I expanded syntax and commented over almost each line for clarity purposes

Handlebars.registerHelper("x", function(expression, options) {
  var result;

  // you can change the context, or merge it with options.data, options.hash
  var context = this;

  // yup, i use 'with' here to expose the context's properties as block variables
  // you don't need to do {{x 'this.age + 2'}}
  // but you can also do {{x 'age + 2'}}
  // HOWEVER including an UNINITIALIZED var in a expression will return undefined as the result.
  with(context) {
    result = (function() {
      try {
        return eval(expression);
      } catch (e) {
        console.warn('•Expression: {{x \'' + expression + '\'}}\n•JS-Error: ', e, '\n•Context: ', context);
      }
    }).call(context); // to make eval's lexical this=context
  }
  return result;
});

Handlebars.registerHelper("xif", function(expression, options) {
  return Handlebars.helpers["x"].apply(this, [expression, options]) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
});

var data = [{
  firstName: 'Joan',
  age: '21',
  email: 'joan@aaa.bbb'
}, {
  firstName: 'Sam',
  age: '18',
  email: 'sam@aaa.bbb'
}, {
  firstName: 'Perter',
  lastName: 'Smith',
  age: '25',
  email: 'joseph@aaa.bbb'
}];

var source = $("#template").html();
var template = Handlebars.compile(source);
$("#main").html(template(data));
h1 {
  font-size: large;
}
.content {
  padding: 10px;
}
.person {
  padding: 5px;
  margin: 5px;
  border: 1px solid grey;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script src="http://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/handlebars.js/1.0.0/handlebars.min.js"></script>

<script id="template" type="text/x-handlebars-template">
  <div class="content">
    {{#each this}}
    <div class="person">
      <h1>{{x  "'Hi ' + firstName"}}, {{x 'lastName'}}</h1>
      <div>{{x '"you were born in " + ((new Date()).getFullYear() - parseInt(this.age, 10)) '}}</div>
      {{#xif 'parseInt(age) >= 21'}} login here:
      <a href="http://foo.bar?email={{x 'encodeURIComponent(email)'}}">
        	http://foo.bar?email={{x 'encodeURIComponent(email)'}}
        </a>
      {{else}} Please go back when you grow up. {{/xif}}
    </div>
    {{/each}}
  </div>
</script>

<div id="main"></div>

Moar

if you want access upper level scope, this one is slightly different, the expression is the JOIN of all arguments, usage: say context data looks like this:

// data
{name: 'Sam', age: '20', address: { city: 'yomomaz' } }

// in template
// notice how the expression wrap all the string with quotes, and even the variables
// as they will become strings by the time they hit the helper
// play with it, you will immediately see the errored expressions and figure it out

{{#with address}}
    {{z '"hi " + "' ../this.name '" + " you live with " + "' city '"' }}
{{/with}}

Javascript:

Handlebars.registerHelper("z", function () {
    var options = arguments[arguments.length - 1]
    delete arguments[arguments.length - 1];
    return Handlebars.helpers["x"].apply(this, [Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 0).join(''), options]);
});

Handlebars.registerHelper("zif", function () {
    var options = arguments[arguments.length - 1]
    delete arguments[arguments.length - 1];
    return Handlebars.helpers["x"].apply(this, [Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 0).join(''), options]) ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
});
21
  • 16
    This is great. Handlebars can't tell you what to do :)
    – lemiant
    Mar 11, 2014 at 14:47
  • 1
    :) thanks, I updated the gist a little to add few more goodies (not directly related to this SO question - but in the spirit of doing what you want inside a handlebars template) However, you should watch out for the limitations, I haven't found a way to access "upper scope levels" from within the expression, say you're in a each scope, {{#each}} ... {{xif ' ../name === this.name' }} {{/each}} ... but I am still investigating..
    – bentael
    Mar 12, 2014 at 16:05
  • 1
    found a solution for "upper scope access" but using a new helper, see updated answer, {{z ...}} helper
    – bentael
    Mar 13, 2014 at 5:44
  • 1
    @rickysullivan try replace your eval(expression); with this: eval('(function(){try{return ' + expression + ';}catch(e){}})();'); - i know this is getting ugly, but can't think of a safe way to do this - please be aware that this is not very "fast" to execute, I wouldn't do this in huge iteration.
    – bentael
    Oct 13, 2016 at 18:48
  • 1
    For NodeJS usage you might want to use a safer eval solution such as: npmjs.com/package/safe-eval instead of the eval() function
    – BigMan73
    Oct 30, 2020 at 14:43
39

There is a simple way of doing this without writing a helper function... It can be done within the template completely.

{{#if cond1}}   
  {{#if con2}}   
    <div> and condition completed</div>  
  {{/if}}
{{else}}   
  <div> both conditions weren't true</div>  
{{/if}}

Edit: Conversely you can do or's by doing this:

{{#if cond1}}  
  <div> or condition completed</div>    
{{else}}   
  {{#if cond2}}  
    <div> or condition completed</div>  
  {{else}}      
    <div> neither of the conditions were true</div>    
  {{/if}}  
{{/if}}

Edit/Note: From the handlebar's website: handlebarsjs.com here are the falsy values:

You can use the if helper to conditionally render a block. If its argument returns false, undefined, null, "" or [] (a "falsy" value), Then any 'cond' (like cond1 or cond2) will not be counted as true.

10
  • 13
    Not really, you don't compare two value, you just ensure both of them exists, it's different.
    – Cyril N.
    Sep 2, 2013 at 13:43
  • 3
    Actually it evaluates it the same way javascript does, from the website: "You can use the if helper to conditionally render a block. If its argument returns false, undefined, null, "" or [ ] (a "falsy" value), Handlebars will not render the block."
    – Jono
    Sep 4, 2013 at 15:40
  • 1
    You are right, I firstly thought the test was to compare two values, not testing of both existed. My bad, sorry.
    – Cyril N.
    Sep 4, 2013 at 20:00
  • 4
    This doesn't work correctly. If cond1 is true and con2 is false, nothing will be printed.
    – Tessa Lau
    Apr 1, 2014 at 22:47
  • 1
    Hey @TessaLau, I think I see where you're coming from. However if you draw out a control flow you'll see that in the very first line moves the control flow to that condition.
    – Jono
    Apr 3, 2014 at 14:40
19

One problem with all of the answers posted here is that they don't work with bound properties, i.e. the if condition is not re-evaluated when the properties involved change. Here's a slightly more advanced version of the helper supporting bindings. It uses the bind function from the Ember source, which is also used to implement the normal Ember #if helper.

This one is limited to a single bound property on the left-hand side, comparing to a constant on the right-hand side, which I think is good enough for most practical purposes. If you need something more advanced than a simple comparison, then perhaps it would be good to start declaring some computed properties and using the normal #if helper instead.

Ember.Handlebars.registerHelper('ifeq', function(a, b, options) {
  return Ember.Handlebars.bind.call(options.contexts[0], a, options, true, function(result) {
    return result === b;
  });
});

You can use it like this:

{{#ifeq obj.some.property "something"}}
  They are equal!
{{/ifeq}}
3
  • This is the appropriate answer if you are using Ember. The other solutions as you mentioned will just pass the key instead of the value. BTW thanks for this, spent a few hours wracking my head.
    – J Lee
    Jan 12, 2015 at 13:59
  • 2
    Has anyone gotten this working with HTMLBars/Ember 1.10? Ember.Handlebars.bind no longer seems to exist.
    – Linda
    Jan 18, 2015 at 6:25
  • I originally used registerBoundHelper originally but then when it changed condition it wouldn't change to the else value and back.. This method works with ember for changing :) It should have a lot more votes up May 18, 2015 at 9:47
12

Improved solution that basically work with any binary operator (at least numbers, strings doesn't work well with eval, TAKE CARE OF POSSIBLE SCRIPT INJECTION IF USING A NON DEFINED OPERATOR WITH USER INPUTS):

Handlebars.registerHelper("ifCond",function(v1,operator,v2,options) {
    switch (operator)
    {
        case "==":
            return (v1==v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        case "!=":
            return (v1!=v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        case "===":
            return (v1===v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        case "!==":
            return (v1!==v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        case "&&":
            return (v1&&v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        case "||":
            return (v1||v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        case "<":
            return (v1<v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        case "<=":
            return (v1<=v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        case ">":
            return (v1>v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        case ">=":
         return (v1>=v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);

        default:
            return eval(""+v1+operator+v2)?options.fn(this):options.inverse(this);
    }
});
3
  • how would you use this in a template? especially the options.fn part?
    – qodeninja
    Feb 10, 2014 at 22:37
  • {{ifCond val1 '||' val2}}true{{else}}false{{/if}} it returns options.fn (true, the ifCond clause) if its correct, otherwise it returns options.inverse (false, the else clause) if incorrect.
    – Nick Kitto
    Mar 31, 2014 at 20:37
  • 1
    Due to the caveat mentioned about script injection, I would strongly recommend against using this helper. In a large codebase this could easily be responsible for a nasty security problem down the line Apr 23, 2014 at 21:28
11

Here's a solution if you want to check multiple conditions:

/* Handler to check multiple conditions
   */
  Handlebars.registerHelper('checkIf', function (v1,o1,v2,mainOperator,v3,o2,v4,options) {
      var operators = {
           '==': function(a, b){ return a==b},
           '===': function(a, b){ return a===b},
           '!=': function(a, b){ return a!=b},
           '!==': function(a, b){ return a!==b},
           '<': function(a, b){ return a<b},
           '<=': function(a, b){ return a<=b},
           '>': function(a, b){ return a>b},
           '>=': function(a, b){ return a>=b},
           '&&': function(a, b){ return a&&b},
           '||': function(a, b){ return a||b},
        }
      var a1 = operators[o1](v1,v2);
      var a2 = operators[o2](v3,v4);
      var isTrue = operators[mainOperator](a1, a2);
      return isTrue ? options.fn(this) : options.inverse(this);
  });

Usage:

/* if(list.length>0 && public){}*/

{{#checkIf list.length '>' 0 '&&' public '==' true}} <p>condition satisfied</p>{{/checkIf}}
1
  • Love the simplicity of this. Thank you! Feb 2 at 22:25
7

Here's a link to the block helper I use: comparison block helper. It supports all the standard operators and lets you write code as shown below. It's really quite handy.

{{#compare Database.Tables.Count ">" 5}}
There are more than 5 tables
{{/compare}}
3
  • 1
    This should be the winning vote. Native and intended. I find almost every time that if you're writing a new helper you're overthinking it.
    – augurone
    Feb 17, 2015 at 22:28
  • 2
    @augurone this isn't a native helper. If you follow the link you'll see that it is a custom defined helper.
    – gfullam
    Mar 25, 2015 at 13:38
  • @gfullam you're right, I was using handlebars in assemble, which includes this helper natively. My bad.
    – augurone
    Mar 25, 2015 at 23:06
5

Install Ember Truth Helpers addon by running the below command

ember install ember-truth-helpers

you can start use most of the logical operators(eq,not-eq,not,and,or,gt,gte,lt,lte,xor).

{{#if (or section1 section2)}}  
...content  
{{/if}}

You can even include subexpression to go further,

{{#if (or (eq section1 "section1") (eq section2 "section2") ) }}  
...content  
{{/if}}
3
  • Thanks for sharing, this simple solution worked like charm. Sep 20, 2021 at 17:02
  • 1
    Looks like this works without ember-truth-helpers. Or something like this embedded into handlebars. Checked in 2022
    – Sergius
    Feb 17, 2022 at 14:03
  • Yeah. Thanks for the heads-up. It seems In this RFC discussed and implemented gradually. Feb 22, 2022 at 12:16
5

Yet another crooked solution for a ternary helper:

'?:' ( condition, first, second ) {
  return condition ? first : second;
}

<span>{{?: fooExists 'found it' 'nope, sorry'}}</span>

Or a simple coalesce helper:

'??' ( first, second ) {
  return first ? first : second;
}

<span>{{?? foo bar}}</span>

Since these characters don't have a special meaning in handlebars markup, you're free to use them for helper names.

4

Similar to Jim's answer but a using a bit of creativity we could also do something like this:

Handlebars.registerHelper( "compare", function( v1, op, v2, options ) {
        
  var c = {
    "eq": function( v1, v2 ) {
      return v1 == v2;
    },
    "neq": function( v1, v2 ) {
      return v1 != v2;
    },
    ...
  }
        
  if( Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call( c, op ) ) {
    return c[ op ].call( this, v1, v2 ) ? options.fn( this ) : options.inverse( this );
  }
  return options.inverse( this );
} );

Then to use it we get something like:

{{#compare numberone "eq" numbertwo}}
  do something
{{else}}
  do something else
{{/compare}}

I would suggest moving the object out of the function for better performance but otherwise you can add any compare function you want, including "and" and "or".

3

One other alternative is to use function name in #if. The #if will detect if the parameter is function and if it is then it will call it and use its return for truthyness check. Below myFunction gets current context as this.

{{#if myFunction}}
  I'm Happy!
{{/if}}
3
  • So you would need to add a function into the context? Executing code from a context is a security hole, as the source of the code could be unknown. This can be exploited for an XSS attack.
    – T Nguyen
    Dec 4, 2013 at 15:58
  • Yes, you need to add function into the context. In a badly designed website, yes, this could be security hole. But in that case, there would be many others. Dec 5, 2013 at 2:39
  • This is the preferred way.. TY.
    – elad.chen
    Dec 29, 2014 at 12:30
3

Unfortunately none of these solutions solve the problem of "OR" operator "cond1 || cond2".

  1. Check if first value is true
  2. Use "^" (or) and check if otherwise cond2 is true

    {{#if cond1}} DO THE ACTION {{^}} {{#if cond2}} DO THE ACTION {{/if}} {{/if}}

It breaks DRY rule. So why not use partial to make it less messy

{{#if cond1}}
    {{> subTemplate}}
{{^}}
    {{#if cond2}}
        {{> subTemplate}}
    {{/if}}
{{/if}}
3

I can understand why you would want to create a helper for situations where you have a large number of varied comparisons to perform within your template, but for a relatively small number of comparisons (or even one, which was what brought me to this page in the first place), it would probably just be easier to define a new handlebars variable in your view-rendering function call, like:

Pass to handlebars on render:

var context= {
    'section1' : section1,
    'section2' : section2,
    'section1or2' : (section1)||(section2)
};

and then within your handlebars template:

{{#if section1or2}}
    .. content
{{/if}}

I mention this for simplicity's sake, and also because it's an answer that may be quick and helpful while still complying with the logicless nature of Handlebars.

2

I have found a npm package made with CoffeeScript that has a lot of incredible useful helpers for Handlebars. Take a look of the documentation in the following URL:

https://npmjs.org/package/handlebars-helpers

You can do a wget http://registry.npmjs.org/handlebars-helpers/-/handlebars-helpers-0.2.6.tgz to download them and see the contents of the package.

You will be abled to do things like {{#is number 5}} or {{formatDate date "%m/%d/%Y"}}

1
  • 1
    Thanks @Cristian! That's a nice solution!
    – Willian
    Jun 13, 2020 at 22:27
2

Correct Solution for AND/OR

Handlebars.registerHelper('and', function () {
    // Get function args and remove last one (function name)
    return Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 0, arguments.length - 1).every(Boolean);
});
Handlebars.registerHelper('or', function () {
    // Get function args and remove last one (function name)
    return Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 0, arguments.length - 1).some(Boolean);
}); 

Then call as follows

{{#if (or (eq questionType 'STARTTIME') (eq questionType 'ENDTIME') (..) ) }}

BTW: Note that the solution given here is incorrect, he's not subtracting the last argument which is the function name. https://stackoverflow.com/a/31632215/1005607

His original AND/OR was based on the full list of arguments

   and: function () {
        return Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments).every(Boolean);
    },
    or: function () {
        return Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments).some(Boolean);
    }

Can someone change that answer? I just wasted an hour trying to fix something in an answer recommended by 86 people. The fix is to filter out the last argument which is the function name. Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 0, arguments.length - 1)

1

if you just want to check if one or the other element are present you can use this custom helper

Handlebars.registerHelper('if_or', function(elem1, elem2, options) {
  if (Handlebars.Utils.isEmpty(elem1) && Handlebars.Utils.isEmpty(elem2)) {
    return options.inverse(this);
  } else {
    return options.fn(this);
  }
});

like this

{{#if_or elem1 elem2}}
  {{elem1}} or {{elem2}} are present
{{else}}
  not present
{{/if_or}}

if you also need to be able to have an "or" to compare function return values I would rather add another property that returns the desired result.

The templates should be logicless after all!

1

For those having problems comparing object properties, inside the helper add this solution

Ember.js helper not properly recognizing a parameter

1

Just came to this post from a google search on how to check if a string equals another string.

I use HandlebarsJS in NodeJS server-side, but I also use the same template files on the front-end using the browser version of HandlebarsJS to parse it. This meant that if I wanted a custom helper, I'd have to define it in 2 separate places, or assign a function to the object in question - too much effort!!

What people forget is that certain objects have inherit functions that can be used in the moustache template. In the case of a string:

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/match

An Array containing the entire match result and any parentheses-captured matched results; null if there were no matches.

We can use this method to return either an array of matches, or null if no matches were found. This is perfect, because looking at the HandlebarsJS documentation http://handlebarsjs.com/builtin_helpers.html

You can use the if helper to conditionally render a block. If its argument returns false, undefined, null, "", 0, or [], Handlebars will not render the block.

So...

{{#if your_string.match "what_youre_looking_for"}} 
String found :)
{{else}}
No match found :(
{{/if}}

UPDATE:

After testing on all browsers, this doesn't work on Firefox. HandlebarsJS passes other arguments to a function call, meaning that when String.prototype.match is called, the second argument (i.e. the Regexp flags for the match function call as per above documentation) appears to be being passed. Firefox sees this as a deprecated use of String.prototype.match, and so breaks.

A workaround is to declare a new functional prototype for the String JS object, and use that instead:

if(typeof String.includes !== 'function') {
    String.prototype.includes = function(str) {
        if(!(str instanceof RegExp))
            str = new RegExp((str+'').escapeRegExp(),'g');
        return str.test(this);
    }
}

Ensure this JS code is included before you run your Handlebars.compile() function, then in your template...

{{#your_string}}
    {{#if (includes "what_youre_looking_for")}} 
        String found :)
    {{else}}
        No match found :(
    {{/if}}
{{/your_string}}
1
  • Updated for Firefox, this is what I'm currently using
    – Jon
    Jul 3, 2017 at 22:13
1

You can do it simply by using the logical operator like this shown below:

{{#if (or(eq firstValue 'String_to_compare_value') (eq secondValue 'String_to_compare_value'))}}business logic goes here{{/if}}

{{#if (and(eq firstValue 'String_to_compare_value') (eq secondValue 'String_to_compare_value'))}}business logic goes here{{/if}}

Before closing if you can write your business logic

1

Here we have vanilla handlebars for multiple logical && and || (and or):

Handlebars.registerHelper("and",function() {
    var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
    var options = args[args.length-1];

    for(var i=0; i<args.length-1; i++){
        if( !args[i] ){
            return options.inverse(this);
        }
    }

    return options.fn(this);
});


Handlebars.registerHelper("or",function() {
    var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
    var options = args[args.length-1];

    for(var i=0; i<args.length-1; i++){
        if( args[i] ){
            return options.fn(this);
        }
    }

    return options.inverse(this);
}

// Results
// {{#and foo bar sally bob}} yup {{else}} nope {{/and}} // yup
// {{#or foo bar "" sally bob}} yup {{else}} nope {{/or}} // yup

// {{#and foo bar "" sally bob}} yup {{else}} nope {{/and}} // nope
// {{#or "" "" "" "" ""}} yup {{else}} nope {{/or}} // nope

Not so sure if it's "safe" to use "and" and "or"... maybe change to something like "op_and" and "op_or"?

0

Following these 2 guides a-way-to-let-users-define-custom-made-bound-if-statements and custom bound helpers I was able to adjust my shared views in this post on stackoverflow to use this instead of the standard #if statement. This should be more secure than just tossing an #if in there.

The custom bound helpers in that gist are outstanding.

<li>
    <a href="{{unbound view.varProductSocialBlog}}">
        {{#if-equal view.showDiv "true"}}<div>{{/if-equal}}<i class="fa fa-rss-square"></i>{{#if-equal view.showDiv "true"}}</div>{{/if-equal}}
        {{#if-equal view.showTitle "true"}}Blog{{/if-equal}}
    </a>
</li>

I am using the ember cli project to build my ember application.

Current setup at the time of this post:

DEBUG: -------------------------------
DEBUG: Ember      : 1.5.1
DEBUG: Ember Data : 1.0.0-beta.7+canary.b45e23ba
DEBUG: Handlebars : 1.3.0
DEBUG: jQuery     : 2.1.1
DEBUG: -------------------------------
0

In Ember.js you can use inline if helper in if block helper. It can replace || logical operator, for example:

{{#if (if firstCondition firstCondition secondCondition)}}
  (firstCondition || (or) secondCondition) === true
{{/if}}
0

You can use the following code:

{{#if selection1}}
    doSomething1
{{else}}
   {{#if selection2}}
       doSomething2
   {{/if}}
{{/if}}
1
  • Please explain more about your thoughts and process, it can be very hard for people to understand your solution if they don't know the context or are new to the language.
    – mrhn
    Mar 31, 2020 at 17:26
0

you cannot write your expressions inside handlebars template but all of your logic (expressions) in express.js

app.js

res.render("view.hbs", {expression: section1 || section2})

view.hbs

{{#if expression}}
  <h1> My Expression Returned True </h1>
{{ else }}
  <h2>My Expression Returned False</h2>
{{/if}} <!-- End IF -->
-1

Here's an approach I'm using for ember 1.10 and ember-cli 2.0.

// app/helpers/js-x.js
export default Ember.HTMLBars.makeBoundHelper(function (params) {
  var paramNames = params.slice(1).map(function(val, idx) { return "p" + idx; });
  var func = Function.apply(this, paramNames.concat("return " + params[0] + ";"))
  return func.apply(params[1] === undefined ? this : params[1], params.slice(1));
});

Then you can use it in your templates like this:

// used as sub-expression
{{#each item in model}}
  {{#if (js-x "this.section1 || this.section2" item)}}
  {{/if}}
{{/each}}

// used normally
{{js-x "p0 || p1" model.name model.offer.name}}

Where the arguments to the expression are passed in as p0,p1,p2 etc and p0 can also be referenced as this.

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