Builtin Helpers

The if block helper

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.
<div class="entry">
  {{#if author}}
    <h1>{{firstName}} {{lastName}}</h1>
  {{/if}}
</div>
when used with an empty ({}) context, author will be undefined, resulting in:
<div class="entry">
</div>
When using a block expression, you can specify a template section to run if the expression returns a falsy value. The section, marked by {{else}} is called an "else section".
<div class="entry">
  {{#if author}}
    <h1>{{firstName}} {{lastName}}</h1>
  {{else}}
    <h1>Unknown Author</h1>
  {{/if}}
</div>

The unless block helper

You can use the unless helper as the inverse of the if helper. Its block will be rendered if the expression returns a falsy value.
<div class="entry">
  {{#unless license}}
  <h3 class="warning">WARNING: This entry does not have a license!</h3>
  {{/unless}}
</div>
If looking up license under the current context returns a falsy value, Handlebars will render the warning. Otherwise, it will render nothing.

The each block helper

You can iterate over a list using the built-in each helper. Inside the block, you can use this to reference the element being iterated over.
<ul class="people_list">
  {{#each people}}
    <li>{{this}}</li>
  {{/each}}
</ul>
when used with this context:
{
  people: [
    "Yehuda Katz",
    "Alan Johnson",
    "Charles Jolley"
  ]
}
will result in:
<ul class="people_list">
  <li>Yehuda Katz</li>
  <li>Alan Johnson</li>
  <li>Charles Jolley</li>
</ul>
You can use the this expression in any context to reference the current context.
You can optionally provide an {{else}} section which will display only when the list is empty.
{{#each paragraphs}}
  <p>{{this}}</p>
{{else}}
  <p class="empty">No content</p>
{{/each}}
When looping through items in each, you can optionally reference the current loop index via {{@index}}
{{#each array}}
  {{@index}}: {{this}}
{{/each}}
Additionally for object iteration, {{@key}} references the current key name:
{{#each object}}
  {{@key}}: {{this}}
{{/each}}
The first and last steps of iteration are noted via the @first and @last variables when iterating over an array. When iterating over an object only the @first is available.
Nested each blocks may access the iteration variables via depth based paths. To access the parent index, for example, {{@../index}} can be used.
The each helper also supports block parameters, allowing for named references anywhere in the block.
{{#each array as |value key|}}
  {{#each child as |childValue childKey|}}
    {{key}} - {{childKey}}. {{childValue}}
  {{/each}}
{{/each}}
Will create a key and value variable that children may access without the need for depthed variable references. In the example above, {{key}} is identical to {{@../key}} but in many cases is more readable.

The with Block Helper

Normally, Handlebars templates are evaluated against the context passed into the compiled method.
var source   = "<p>{{lastName}}, {{firstName}}</p>";
var template = Handlebars.compile(source);
template({firstName: "Alan", lastName: "Johnson"});
results in
<p>Johnson, Alan</p>
You can shift the context for a section of a template by using the built-in with block helper.
<div class="entry">
  <h1>{{title}}</h1>

  {{#with author}}
  <h2>By {{firstName}} {{lastName}}</h2>
  {{/with}}
</div>
when used with this context:
{
  title: "My first post!",
  author: {
    firstName: "Charles",
    lastName: "Jolley"
  }
}
will result in:
<div class="entry">
  <h1>My first post!</h1>

  <h2>By Charles Jolley</h2>
</div>
with can also be used with block parameters to define known references in the current block. The example above can be converted to
<div class="entry">
  <h1>{{title}}</h1>

  {{#with author as |myAuthor|}}
  <h2>By {{myAuthor.firstName}} {{myAuthor.lastName}}</h2>
  {{/with}}
</div>
Which allows for complex templates to potentially provide clearer code than ../ depthed references allow for.
You can optionally provide an {{else}} section which will display only when the passed value is empty.
{{#with author}}
  <p>{{name}}</p>
{{else}}
  <p class="empty">No content</p>
{{/with}}

The lookup helper

The lookup helper allows for dynamic parameter resolution using Handlebars variables. This is useful for resolving values for array indexes.
{{#each bar}}
  {{lookup ../foo @index}}
{{/each}}

The log block helper

The log helper allows for logging of context state while executing a template.
{{log "Look at me!"}}
Delegates to Handlebars.logger.log which may be overriden to perform custom logging.
Any number of arguments may be passed to this method and all will be forwarded to the logger.
{{log "This is logged" foo "And so is this"}}
The log level may be set using the level hash parameter. Supported values are debug, info, warn, and error. When omitted, info is the default value,
{{log "Log!" level="error"}}
Logging is conditional based on the level and to value set in Handlebars.logger.level, which defaults to info. All log statements at or above the current level will be output.

The blockHelperMissing helper

Implicitly called when a helper can not be directly resolved in the environment's helpers hash.
{{#foo}}{{/foo}}
will call this helper with the resolved value of foo on the current context and the options.name field set to "foo". For instances where there is no registered helper named foo.
This may be overriden by users that wish to change the behavior of block evaluation. For example
Handlebars.registerHelper('blockHelperMissing', function(context, options) {
  throw new Handlebars.Exception('Only if or each is allowed');
});
could be used to prevent the use of mustache-style block evaluation in favor of the more efficent if and each helpers.

The helperMissing helper

Internal helper that is called when a potential helper expression was not found in either the environment helpers or the current context. For cases where both are run, this is run prior to the blockHelperMissing helper.
{{foo}}
{{foo bar}}
{{#foo}}{{/foo}}
Will each call this helper, passing any arguments that would have been otherwise passed to a helper of the same name. This helper is not called when using knownHelpersOnly mode.
This may be overriden by applications. To force the existence of the field, the following may be used:
Handlebars.registerHelper('helperMissing', function(/* [args, ] options */) {
  var options = arguments[arguments.length - 1];
  throw new Handlebars.Exception('Unknown field: ' + options.name);
});

© 2011–2017 by Yehuda Katz
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://handlebarsjs.com/builtin_helpers.html