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I am currently working on a prototype ASP.NET MVC 3 solution that will be used as a base for several project rewrites (from web forms).

One of the goals that I have is to implement some script management across application as opposed to none that we currently have.

MVC 3 has a flaw IMHO: if you need specific script specified on a partial view or template view - you might end up either losing control over where script block is located in rendered HTML or having to specify every single dependent javascript file on the parent View.

I have been seriously considering using http://getcassette.net/ as a framework to resolve described issue. However, last release of MVC4 beta made me doubt myself again: MVC's Bundles look really similar to Cassette's Bundles and I am confused again:

  1. Should I implement cassette now and than migrate to MVC4 bundles?

  2. Should I implement some simplified script manager myself (sth. like Scripts helper class in MVC4 preview) and then migrate to MVC4

  3. Or should I integrate cassette into project and hope that it will be more future-proof than MVC's imlementation (I really don't like this option right now just because of sheer number of dependencies cassette comes with).

I have no experience with Cassette itself and find it really hard to make the comparison myself and would appreciate any answers or hints.

EDIT: I just figured that there is another option: installing beta nuget package for MVC bundling: https://nuget.org/packages/Microsoft.Web.Optimization

CONCLUSION: The more I look into MVC4 bundle implementation the bigger difference I notice: MVC4 bundles do not address MVC3 issue described above - they just do bundling & minification. Moreover, cassette is not just capable of rendering script tags in a specific place it is also capable of ordering them in correct order which is not trivial. So at the moment I am not satisfied with either of solutions and I will try to come up with my own minimalistic implementation hoping that situation will improve in the future.

But if you are not afraid of adding 5+ dependencies and bunch of web.config changes into your project - go for cassette. I hope it will be updated at some point to utilize MVC bundling inside to reduce functionality duplication, and hopefully, will become more modular.


UPDATE: As of version 2.0 of Cassette it is no longer necessary to include coffee script and other features of Cassette if you just need bundles and js dependency resolution. So at this point Cassette is a clear winner to me.

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  • Thank you for all the updates, the question alone helped a lot! :)
    – keisar
    Nov 26, 2012 at 20:19
  • 1
    Yes, thanks for the updates, that was more helpful than the answers, since it includes actual experience with it. Feb 27, 2014 at 14:35

4 Answers 4

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Information about ASP.NET MVC bundling is here: http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2011/11/27/new-bundling-and-minification-support-asp-net-4-5-series.aspx.

ASP.NET is adding a feature that makes it easy to “bundle” or “combine” multiple CSS and JavaScript files into fewer HTTP requests. This causes the browser to request a lot fewer files and in turn reduces the time it takes to fetch them.

The next release of ASP.NET is also adding a new feature that makes it easy to reduce or “minify” the download size of the content as well.

Looks like it's essentially the same thing as Cassette. All other things being equal, use the solution that is native to ASP.NET MVC.

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    Thanks, I read this blog earlier, and to me as a new user to either of libraries it looks the same, I am wondering maybe there are some less visible/obvious features/usage patterns in cassette that are not present in current MVC bundle implementation.
    – bushed
    Feb 22, 2012 at 23:21
  • Cassette seems to be slightly more aggressive about the caching and minifying, but if you don't need bleeding edge... Feb 22, 2012 at 23:22
  • Well at this point it all comes to evaluating the risk of switching from cassette to default MVC4 implementation (I am quite confident that we'll migrate our projects to it as soon as it will be available).
    – bushed
    Feb 22, 2012 at 23:38
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    Knowing little of Cassette, it seems the only real feature it has over MVC4's native bundling/compressing is the ability to resolve resolutions between noted scripts/sheets. It has many more features outside of bundling now though like squishing HTML templates into JS code. Seems like a nice framework but much heavier than MVC4 + dotLess Dec 27, 2012 at 0:03
  • I like bundletransformer.codeplex.com as it builds on top of MVC4's bundling support. Apr 1, 2013 at 11:56
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I ended up using Cassette on my last project and it's working pretty well. There's really not a whole lot of configuration to it if you use NuGet, so my thinking is that it wouldn't be too hard to use Cassette now and then switch later if you wanted to.

One other thing to consider is that Cassette does Less compiling. I'm not sure if the MVC4 bundling does that or not since I haven't had time to read up on it.

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    AFAIK it does not, however dotless is pretty isolated nuget package. In this sense cassette is still much heavier than dotless in MVC4 environment.
    – bushed
    Feb 22, 2012 at 23:35
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Cassette is still an interesting alternative as it has native support for less and coffescript. It has also support for HTML Templates, if you are interested in client side mvc frameworks (backbone, knockout etc)

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  • What I don't like about cassette right now (unless I'm missing something) is lack of feature configurability: We don't need coffee script support. dotLESS implementation is fine - it is still optional though. As for templates - I don't see much benefit in what cassette does - doesnt look much different from PartialViews..
    – bushed
    Feb 23, 2012 at 15:05
  • I think LESS, SASS, and CoffeeSscript are all separate plugins now via Nuget: getcassette.net
    – John B
    Dec 8, 2012 at 15:19
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Just as an update to this, LESS and CoffeeScript support was added in the Update 2 package for Visual Studio 2012, so it's starting to look more and more like it would be better to add what transformations you need to the native implementation of the Bundling/Minification backed into MVC4 than go with Cassette in the long term.

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    Am I right in saying that there's still no "built in" support for registering script requirements in partials? (e.g. having multiple partials declare they need to reference fancybox.js and have the framework deal with including it once and only when needed). Jun 12, 2013 at 15:09
  • @JamesMorcom Do you know more about this now? Still wondering about this myself. Would be great if ASP.NET could just resolve the script dependencies once globally for the page.
    – oligofren
    Sep 6, 2016 at 13:01

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