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I am considering using Dojo in some new projects (or at least including it),, Partially because of it's compatibility with Google Closure Compiler's Advanced mode which will (hopefully) entirely delete all unused code.

What would I lose? (besides familiarity with syntax)

(also, generally any tips on what is different would probably be helpful)

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    The jQuery's community is bigger than the Dojo one. I guess. (e.g. on StackOverflow there are 69k+ jQuery questions where Dojo has only 1200+) Mar 14, 2011 at 19:43
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    I'm not sure I understand the purpose here. If you are converting so that you can use features in Dojo then great. However if you are converting solely because you want added compiler options I don't see the point... unless you are already squeezing every last byte out of your current apps... and saving a few extra bytes will save you $1,000's on your multi-millions of requests...
    – scunliffe
    Mar 14, 2011 at 19:51
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    If someone really wants to know those things, they WILL be able to figure it out as long as you use client-side code. Compressing your javascript code just makes it a little harder, but by no means impossible. Mar 14, 2011 at 20:13
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    @George but why? It will be pretty straight forward for someone to copy the way your site works even without ripping the code directly. If your JavaScript source is critical to turning a profit, you've got bigger problems than protecting it!
    – Hamish
    Mar 14, 2011 at 20:22
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    @GeorgeBailey Security through obscurity is NOT security. What's your website? I'll set up a clone of it by the end of the weekend.
    – Raynos
    Mar 14, 2011 at 20:44

3 Answers 3

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I use jQuery myself, but to sum it up jQuery appears to be better documented and easier to do cool stuff "out of the box". Dojo appears to be easier to extend if you know what you are doing. I got this info from the community wiki here:

jQuery

  • Fast
  • Well documented
  • Easy to use
  • Chaining
  • Unlike Prototype it doesn't extend an object if you didn't specifically ask for it (try looping an array in Prototype)
  • easy-to-use Ajax (I love the $.ajaxSetup() function)
  • Nice event handlers
  • CSS selectors
  • filtering your selection
  • did I mention chaining?
  • Small (only 30 KB)
  • Nice little build-in effects.
  • Plugins

Dojo

"Being a Dojo developer I would recommend Dojo. While my choice is not surprising, I became a Dojo developer because I found following things, which are done better than in other JavaScript frameworks:"

  • OOP (and other paradigms) done right.
  • Widget infrastructure done right.
  • Modules done right with all necessary goodies:
    • Lazy loading of modules dynamically.
    • Possibility to extract only necessary modules and build a custom one-file profile.
    • Asynchronous loading of modules if desired.
    • Simple integration with CDNs for heavy-duty web applications.
  • Sheer breadth of available modules in DojoX including graphics, charting, grids, and so on.
  • Ability to use it in non-browser environments.
  • Attention to details in widgets:
    • support for i18n (including LTR and RTL languages),
    • support for l10n (including standard date, currency, number formatting),
    • provisions for people with special needs (automatic high-contrast mode, keyboard-only support, and so on) — useful for regular users too, and mandatory for most government contracts.
  • Smart people in the community (last but not least) — as much as I love hand-holding for novices at some point every developer becomes "seasoned" and needs much more than that.

"Smart people in the community (last but not least) — as much as I love hand-holding for novices at some point every developer becomes "seasoned" and needs much more than that. If all you want is to write one-liners and add simple progressive enhancements to existing web applications, you can do it with pretty much any framework, or even with a pure JavaScript. But as soon as your web application becomes bigger or more complex good packaging, good support for your favorite methodologies, good building blocks, and the ability to make your own building blocks become more and more important. That's why I settled on Dojo, and never looked back."

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For what it's worth, the full source version of dojo comes with ShrinkSafe. I'm not familiar with any performance comparisons between that and the closure complier, but I find dojo's module management and packaging tools (including ShrinkSafe) to be very useful.

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  • Dojo's community has generally shifted to Closure from its own Shrinksafe, which was one of the original obfuscators based on Rhino and perhaps the inspiration for YUI and Closure. Closure does have much more advanced features. At this time, I don't think running closure in advanced mode (pruning out dead code using hints, etc.) works OOTB, but someone is working on it. There's a thread about this on the dojo-contributors list (oops... I see you already referenced Stephen's work)
    – peller
    Mar 15, 2011 at 1:45
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Well if I need to say some thing now I would say there is not a difference for me between jquery and dojo because I don't use both. I use pure javascript that i have gone deeper on it that I don't need any of the libraries I create my own framework my own things more fast, pure, cured,

And I would say I have hated all libraries cause it make me more unkowing of things like the wonder of javascript and its beauty.

I dont advise using any library and if you need so do it after you know javascript for real.

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    I pushed the limits of animation before I used jQuery. I appreciate anybody who learns to do it manually and then later uses a framework. I would stress for someone to have a general idea of how the framework does the job but I would not say they should learn to do without the framework. Mar 15, 2011 at 15:27
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    Vanilla Javascript would be beautiful if browsers implemented it uniformly. I'm a much happier person when a library is handling browser idiosyncrasies for me.
    – Chris
    Mar 15, 2011 at 19:08

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