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I'm writing a small javascript text expansion library. The library use a web worker and is packaged up with bower. When installed via bower the parser script is not found (I get a 404) because the browser is looking relative to the root of the consuming site and not relative to the bower script from which it is being consumed (both scripts are contained in the same folder). This appears to be the correct behavior.

My question: how should workers be used in combination with bower such that required scripts can be loaded without hard-coding the bower_components/ path?

function Expander(args) {
    ...
    this.parser = 'parser.js';
    this.worker = new Worker(this.parser);
    ...
}
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    I am not familiar with bower, but as I understand: you can open .bowerrc json file get value of directory property and attach to this.parser. If Directory not specified you need to hardcode bower_components because bower hardcoded it too.
    – bot_insane
    Jul 7, 2015 at 9:34
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    Are you using anything to build and package your scripts (browserify, etc)? You could have it (or grunt or gulp) move the parser files to the right place in your distribution directory. How are you including scripts on the page, under what path? Jul 7, 2015 at 21:49

1 Answer 1

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+25

I would use Grunt. Gulp might be a bit easier starting out since it can be debugged but it is missing a key component for your needs. There are a set of libraries wiredep, build-file and watch that will enable you to do what you are wanting to do. Wiredep watches the bower directory and will automatically add the js files for the dependencies in bower.json into the html and watch can be configured to watch any type of file in any directory for a change. Build-file enables you to configure a template and pass it variables that it will use to dynamically build a js file. You can then use the abilities of grunt to get the correct application path and point it to your file.

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    Doesn't this impact the end user and not the distributable library? I would assume that the consuming application would need to use grunt, but not necessarily this library. Any clarification would be appreciated
    – JP.
    Jul 8, 2015 at 16:14
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    The consuming client would need to be running grunt for this to work. That said it could be automated to pull the configurations from a file in your distributable and inject them into the consumer's grunt file.
    – tuckerjt07
    Jul 8, 2015 at 18:25

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