Working project structure that uses grunt.js to combine JavaScript files using RequireJS?

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我寻月下人不归
我寻月下人不归 2021-01-29 18:22

I have some projects that use RequireJS to load individual JavaScript modules in the browser, but I haven\'t optimized them yet. In both development and production, the app make

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  • 2021-01-29 19:12

    I use the grunt-contrib-requirejs task to build project based on require.js. Install it inside your project directory with:

    npm install grunt-contrib-requirejs --save-dev
    

    BTW: --save-dev will add the package to your development dependencies in your package.json. If you're not using a package.json in your project, ignore it.

    Load the task in your grunt file with:

    grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-contrib-requirejs');
    

    And add the configuration to your grunt.initConfig

    requirejs: {
      production: {
        options: {
          baseUrl: "path/to/base",
          mainConfigFile: "path/to/config.js",
          out: "path/to/optimized.js"
        }
      }
    }
    

    Now you're able to build your require.js stuff into a single file that will be minimized with uglifyjs by running grunt requirejs

    You can bundle a set of different tasks into some sort of main task, by adding this to your grunt file

    grunt.registerTask('default', ['lint', 'requirejs']); 
    

    With this, you can simply type grunt and grunt will automatically run the default task with the two 'subtasks': lint and requirejs.

    If you need a special production task: define it like the above

    grunt.registerTask('production', ['lint', 'requirejs', 'less', 'copy']);
    

    and run it with

    grunt production
    

    If you need different behaviors for 'production' and 'development' inside i.e. the requirejs task, you can use so called targets. In the configuration example above it's already defined as production. You can add another target if you need (BTW, you can define a global config for all targets by adding a options object on the same level)

    requirejs: {
      // global config
      options: {
        baseUrl: "path/to/base",
        mainConfigFile: "path/to/config.js"
      },
      production: {
        // overwrites the default config above
        options: {
          out: "path/to/production.js"
        }
      },
      development: {
        // overwrites the default config above
        options: {
          out: "path/to/development.js",
          optimize: none // no minification
        }
      }
    }
    

    Now you can run them both at the same time with grunt requirejs or individually with grunt requirejs:production, or you define them in the different tasks with:

    grunt.registerTask('production', ['lint', 'requirejs:production']);
    grunt.registerTask('development', ['lint', 'requirejs:development']);
    

    Now to answer your questions:

    1. I would definitely use a subfolder in your project. In my case I use a 'src' folder for development that is build into a 'htdocs' folder for production. The project layout I prefere is:

      project/
        src/
          js/
            libs/
              jquery.js
              ...
            appname/
              a.js
              b.js
              ...
            main.js // require.js starter
          index.html
          ...
        build/
          ... //some tmp folder for the build process
        htdocs/
          ... // production build
        node_modules/
          ...
        .gitignore
        grunt.js
        package.json
      
    2. see above

    3. You can do so, but I wouldn't recommend to add requirejs to the watch task, it's a resource hungry task and it will slow down your machine noticeable.

    Last but not least: Be very cautious when playing around with r.js. Especially when you want to optimize the whole project with r.js by adding a modules directive to your config. R.js will delete the output directory without asking. If it happens that it is accidentally configured to be your system root, r.js will erase your HDD. Be warned, I erased my whole htdocs folder permanently some time ago while setting up my grunt task... Always add keepBuildDir:true to your options when playing around with the r.js config.

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