I'm having trouble understanding the benefit of require.js. Can you help me out? I imagine other developers have a similar interest.
From Require.js - Why AMD:
The AMD format comes from wanting a module format that was better than today's "write a bunch of script tags with implicit dependencies that you have to manually order"
I don't quite understand why this methodology is so bad. The difficult part is that you have to manually order dependencies. But the benefit is that you don't have an additional layer of abstraction.
Here's my current JS development work flow.
When in development-mode, all scripts have their own tag in the DOM.
<script src="depA1/dep1-for-module-A.js"></script>
<script src="dep2-for-module-A.js"></script>
<script src="moduleA/moduleA.js"></script>
<script src="dep1-for-module-B.js"></script>
<script src="module-B.js"></script>
<script src="moduleC/module-C.js"></script>
<script src="script.js"></script>
There is no abstraction layer. This allows me to better debug individual files. The browser reads separate files, so I can debug with Developer Tools. I like how it's straight-forward.
Dependencies are basically managed right here. depA1
needs to be listed before moduleA
. It's explicit.
Modules are 'transported' by attaching to the global namespace.
( function( global ) {
var dep1 = global.depA1;
var dep2 = global.depA2;
function ModuleA() {
// ...
}
// export
global.ModuleA = ModuleA;
})( this );
All scripts are concatenated and minified. One HTTP request on load.
<script src="site-scripts.js"></script>
The Concat + minify task is maintained separately. It's part of a build process. Makefile
or what-have-you. For dependency management, the ordering of scripts matches how they were listed in the HTML.
This can be done easily with some sort of configuration and templating. For example, by setting prod_env
config variable to true
or false
, the site is either in production, serving the one file, or development mode, serving every single file.
{% if prod_env %}
<script src="site-scripts.js"></script>
{% else %}
<script src="dep1/dep1-for-module-A.js"></script>
<script src="dep2-for-module-A.js"></script>
<script src="moduleA/moduleA.js"></script>
...
{% endif %}
- What benefit does require.js provide over this workflow?
- How does require.js address minimizing HTTP requests? Is this any better than concat/minifing all the scripts?
Joined a medium size team on a medium sized project using requirejs. Total nightmare. It's like all my prior experience of web programming (15 years) on the front end has been tossed aside. I have require modules not properly loading similar to the second comments in this thread: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10959095/intermittent-requirejs-load-error. Oh sure when it works it just works...but then so do script tags...and once they are ordered they stay ordered. Plus modern web frameworks like django let you compartmentalize functionality into templates.
And while I'll admit that this project likely isn't using requirejs properly I also haven't seen anything that makes me even remotely believe it's worth using. Personally I would never in a million years introduce requirejs into a project. There are so many other traditional way's to handle these issues that it just doesn't make sense.
Software engineers really should know how code works and not try to abstract away every last detail.