I've inherited responsibility for a moderately complex Rails app, which has meant learning Ruby and Rails besides trying to understand a lot of code that I did not write myself. The project also contains a non-trivial Backbone.js app written in Coffeescript. Since I will be the sole developer on this project for a long time, and since I don't know Coffeescript, I plan to move the entire source code to straight Javascript.
I would like to know what the best approach to doing this would be. Compiling to javascript is easy enough, but there is a lot of refactoring to do to make the code look "normal".
Cleaning up cruft by replacing stuff like
var a;
a = 1;
with
var a = 1;
is simple enough, or perhaps not even worth bothering with. I am more worried about the overall structure of the project. Coffeescript produces files that begin like this Backbone view code:
(function() {
var extend = function(child, parent) {
for (var key in parent) {
if (hasProp.call(parent, key)) child[key] = parent[key];
} function ctor() {
this.constructor = child;
}
ctor.prototype = parent.prototype;
child.prototype = new ctor();
child.__super__ = parent.prototype; return child;
},
hasProp = {}.hasOwnProperty;
App.Views.MyClass = (function(superClass) {
extend(MyClass, superClass);
function MyClass() {
return MyClass.__super__.constructor.apply(this, arguments);
}
# rest of the code here...
});
}).call(this);
I would just like to know what a sane approach to dealing with this would be, and I haven't found any kind of "best practices" for doing what I would like to do.
What would be best: just check everything into git and keep going? Use the Backbone/Underscore version of extend
instead of redefining the same function at the top of every file? Use a different method entirely for stringing together all of the separate files?
Just looking for a general direction. I'll figure out the details.