Although it may be true that you can't configure Handlebars' expression delimiters, that's not the only way to resolve the conflict between Handlebars and Blade. Blade provides syntax that allows you to avoid the conflict by designating what should be passed on to Handlebars. (This is fitting, since Blade created the conflict to begin with, and it's necessary, since Blade is processing the template before Handlebars ever sees it.) Just prepend @
before the curly braces that you want Blade to ignore and pass as-is to Handlebars. Here's a very short snippet of a much larger example:
...
<link
rel="stylesheet"
type="text/css"
href="{{ asset("css/bootstrap.theme.3.0.0.css") }}"
/>
<title>Laravel 4 Chat</title>
</head>
<body>
<script type="text/x-handlebars">
@{{outlet}}
</script>
...
{{outlet}}
will be passed to Handlebars, but {{ asset("css/bootstrap.theme.3.0.0.css") }}
will be handled by Blade.
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