Question

If you've used RequireJS with a Rails 3 (esp 3.1) app, how is that working for you? Any configuration tricks or other gotchas that I need to watch out for?

Background

I'm contemplating using RequireJS over the Sprockets-based Asset Pipeline in Rails 3.1, specifically for JavaScript code. I have two motivators for this choice:

  • I want to leverage RequireJS' module management for my JS client-side code.
  • I'd like a precompilation system that can follow my JS library code into other contexts. To my surprise, the Asset Pipeline precompiler is a baked-in part of Rails, not a part of Sprockets itself.

All feedback appreciated, thanks!

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Can you tell more about why you would want RequireJS' module management over Sprockets' one? I'm thinking about doing the same thing for our Rails app — replacing Sprockets with RequireJS. – kangax Dec 4 '11 at 17:08
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@kangax, Sprockets doesn't really provide module management. It just conglomerates a bunch of JavaScript into a built file via Sprockets' directives. As it happens, I've published the requirejs-rails gem to integrate RequireJS into Rails, leveraging Sprockets for CoffeeScript conversions. Nearing 0.5.0 release with precompliation support. – John Whitley Dec 5 '11 at 22:54
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1 Answer

up vote 12 down vote accepted

For posterity, here's where I've come to on this question:

  • RequireJS provides an implementation of the Asynchronous Module Definition API. RequireJS' Why AMD? page lays out the case as to why you'd want to use this.

  • Sprockets and the Rails 3 Asset Pipeline allow for simple structuring of JavaScript/CoffeeScript code, but don't provide any true module support. For example, there's no namespace control whatsoever in Sprockets.

  • jQuery (as of 1.7), Underscore, Dojo and numerous other major libraries have implemented AMD support. Several other major JS libraries seem to have AMD support on the near-term horizion (e.g. Backbone.js).

It's certainly possible to create a Rails app that integrates RequireJS. To simplify that process, I've created the requirejs-rails gem on github, with straightforward configuration and Asset Pipeline-aware precompilation for AMD-based code via r.js. The current release is available via:

gem install requirejs-rails

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Also for posterity, Underscore no longer supports AMD. However, Lodash, a drop-in replacement for Underscore, does. lodash.com – leppert May 20 at 19:30
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