To get the most out of YUI's loader pattern, you do have to play by a few of its rules. Your example looks almost exactly right, as far as directory patterning goes.
Unless you explicitly include your javascript source files in your document, you will need to notify the YUI loader that the modules exist and what dependencies they have. At the moment, there's a bug in the way dependencies are loaded for a module, so you have to declare the dependencies in two places, in your loader configuration, and as a postfix to your YUI.add statements.
You can configure the loader in two ways: you can pass the config as an argument to YUI() before calling use on it, or you can assign the configuration to the YUI_config global variable:
var cfg = {
/* other configs */
modules: {
'mod3-base': { requires: [ 'mod3-class1', 'mod3-class2' ] },
'mod3-class1': { /* */ },
'mod3-class2': { /* */ }
}
}
// You could pass the config in as an argument:
YUI(cfg).use('mod3-class2', function(Y) {
// your code
});
// Or set it as a magic global:
YUI_config = cfg; // will implicitly configure all YUI().use statements
You'll need to configure the loader so it knows where to find your module files.
Generally, the loader expects each module to have its own directory, which contains one or more submodule files and a concatenated "supermodule" file. For example, looking at the "Base" module we see the following pattern:
- base-base.js
- base-build.js
- base-pluginhost.js
- base.js: a concatenated copy of base-base, base-build, and base-pluginhost
Each of those four types has three variants, a "raw" source file, a "-min", and a "-debug". Depending on how you configure your loader, it might go looking for the minified variants.