You will find the documentation of Mikado here.
It is recommended to install the compiler as a non-global dependency to your stack:
npm install mikado-compileCompile a source file, takes same directory as destination:
npx mikado-compile tpl/app.htmlCompile a source file to a given destination folder:
npx mikado-compile src/tpl/app.html dest/tpl/Compile a source file in a specific format:
npx mikado-compile src/tpl/app.html jsonCompile all files which matches a given expression:
npx mikado-compile src/tpl/*.htmlnpx mikado-compile src/**/*.htmlCompile files explicitly by using option flags:
npx mikado-compile --src src/tpl/*.html --dest dest/tpl/ --type jsonCompile files explicitly by using option flag shortcuts:
npx mikado-compile -s src/tpl/*.html -d dest/tpl/ -t jsonForce overwrite existing files (silent):
npx mikado-compile src/tpl/*.html --forceCompile as pretty print (non-minified):
npx mikado-compile src/tpl/*.html --prettyYou can call the compile function directly:
const compile = require("mikado-compile");
const src = "./src/*.html";
const dest = "./dist/";
compile(src, dest, {
type: ["es5", "es6", "json"],
force: true,
pretty: false
});Start the file watcher to compile templates automatically when file contents change:
npx mikado-compile src/tpl/*.html --watchPress CTRL + C to stop the watcher.
Note: Existing files will be overridden by default when running the watcher.