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Home/ Questions/Q 8492087
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T22:37:05+00:00 2026-06-10T22:37:05+00:00

Consider the following simplified data: var viewData = { itemSize: 20, items: [ ‘Zimbabwe’,

  • 0

Consider the following simplified data:

var viewData = {
    itemSize: 20,
    items: [
        'Zimbabwe', 'dog', 'falafel'
    ]
};

And a Handlebars template:

{{#each items}}
    <div style="font-size:{{itemSize}}px">{{this}}</div>
{{/each}}

This won’t work because within the each loop, the parent scope is not accessible — at least not in any way that I’ve tried. I’m hoping that there’s a way of doing this though!

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T22:37:06+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 10:37 pm

    There are two valid ways to achieve this.

    Dereference the parent scope with ../

    By prepending ../ to the property name, you can reference the parent scope.

    {{#each items}}
        <div style="font-size:{{../itemSize}}px">{{this}}</div>
        {{#if this.items.someKey}}
           <div style="font-size:{{../../itemSize}}px">{{this}}</div>  
        {{/if}}
    {{/each}}
    

    You can go up multiple levels via repeating the ../. For example, to go up two levels use ../../key.

    For more information, see the Handlebars documentation on paths.

    Dereference the root scope with @root

    By prepending @root to the property path, you can navigate downwards from the topmost scope (as shown in caballerog’s answer).

    For more information, see the Handlebars documentation on @data variables.

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