This simple add-on will add an options object to your App instance to be used for passed in configuration from meta tags on the page where your app is instantiated.
By parsing meta tags with your app's modulePrefix as a prefix, you can make passed in settings available to app for your use.
This is can be handy if you want to use one app as the basis for a widget where all that varies is text and perhaps exportable values.
You can find background here:
http://discuss.emberjs.com/t/how-to-have-multiple-instances-of-an-app-in-same-window/6733
Example code to come, in the mean time you can email me if you have questions (wm -a t- waltermcginnis dot com).
ember install ember-cli-meta-options
You'll then need to config the addon by adding this to your config/environment.js (only add from BEGIN to END, everything is context about where to put it, mind the comma just before BEGIN):
var ENV = {
modulePrefix: 'poc2',
...
APP: {
...
},
// BEGIN configuration for options initializer
optionsConfig: {
// leave blank to use all defaults
// metaNamePrefix: modulePrefix
// valueAttr: 'content'
// parentPathIgnoreUpTo: 2
// parentPathToIgnoreUpTo is index of number of parent parts in path to ignore
// conventional parent path in meta tag name is 'modulePrefix/initializers/options/'
}
// END configuration for options initializer
}
Simply add meta tags with the name value pairs that you want to your index.html file or wherever your app is deployed following this convention:
<meta name="[your_app's modulePrefix]/initializers/options/your_setting_name" content="your_value">
E.g.
<meta name="example/initializers/options/appTitle" content="Example Ember App">
This would make an options object with the propery named appTitle with a value of "Example Ember App" available to use.
You can also group options by nested objects.
E.g.
<meta name="example/initializers/options/article/title" content="Example article">
<meta name="example/initializers/options/article/summary" content="Blah, blah, blah">
Would result in the options object having a nested object called article with two properties called title and summary.
{ article: { title: "Example article", summary: "Blah, blah, blah" } }
There are now acceptance tests that confirm the core features work.
I'm happy to accept pull requests for unit tests of the initializer code though.
Originally developed by Walter Mcginnis. Upgraded to Ember 3.5 by Jiří Prokop.
This ember-cli add-on was built as a part of widget work for http://askthem.io.
It's based on code from Ember Zone.
Thanks to the Ember.js, ember-cli, and Broccoli teams for excellent work.