39

Has anyone compiled jQuery against Google's newly-released Closure compiler?

There has been reported huge savings in code size. I'm curious what the benefit is if jQuery was compiled with it.

2
  • Think I'll wait for Resig and the team to release a new -min or special closured version. I wouldn't want to compress the library find out specific features didn't work or didn't work as expected.
    – Tom
    Nov 9, 2009 at 8:28
  • My first (and only) down vote. Question does not deserve an up vote if the OP does not accept an answer (or at least state what's unacceptable about the answers offered). Part of what makes a good question is knowing the accepted solution.
    – Karl
    Nov 21, 2014 at 16:38

10 Answers 10

27

John Resig reported a bug on recursive functions when he attempted to compile a nightly of jQuery 1.4, so there are a few kinks to be worked out. I wouldn't use a jQuery compiled with Closure Compiler without making sure it passes the jQuery testbed.

http://code.google.com/p/closure-compiler/issues/detail?id=1&can=1#c2

2
  • 28
    Pointing out that, now that jQuery 1.4 is released, the bugs are worked out and the Closure Compiler is now the primary minifier for jQuery :)
    – Matchu
    Jan 19, 2010 at 5:13
  • 1
    Just a quick note: turns out that calling the Closure Compiler is rather simplistic. Among other things, it's an optimizing compiler, removes dead code and provides useful compile-time warnings through static analysis. Aug 15, 2011 at 18:04
12

I tried with jQuery jQuery 1.3.2

jQuery-1.3.2.min.js     57254 Bytes
jQuery closure compiler 49730 Bytes
-----------------------------------
Reduced by               7524 Bytes
Saved 13.31% off the original size
Saved 10.87% off the gzipped size

Gain of ~7KB

But it also reports 15 Warnings and I didn't test if it still works

7

The closure compiler eliminates any code that you don't actually use. The typical web page will only use a small fraction of jQuery functions, so the most benefit will come from compiling your code together with the full version of jQuery.

4
  • 6
    But, of course, you lose any benefit from the jQuery code being cached on the user's computer (if it is).
    – Nosredna
    Jan 13, 2010 at 15:15
  • 1
    Actually, last time I checked Closure didn't actually remove unused functions from jQuery, I think because they're not actually defined as separate functions. Apr 9, 2010 at 12:51
  • If so, wouldn't Closure Compiler remove almost all code when you compile only the jQuery library? Feb 11, 2011 at 11:59
  • That's the intention yes, but the advanced closure compiler is far from perfect right now. Mar 30, 2012 at 11:18
6

With ADVANCED_OPTIMIZATIONS turned off:

  • jquery-1.3.2.min.js: 57254 bytes
  • jquery-1.3.2.closure.js 55346 bytes (-3.4%)
  • jquery-1.3.2.min.js.gz: 19680 bytes
  • jquery-1.3.2.closure.js.gz: 18666 bytes (-5.2%)

With ADVANCED_OPTIMIZATIONS turned on: it doesn't work unmodified. With ADVANCED_OPTIMIZATIONS turned on and everything I can find to export exported... it still doesn't quite work, and the code is already up to 53466 bytes again (and 18785 gzipped, which is more than the gzipped closured code without ADVANCED_OPTIMIZATIONS) so it doesn't look like a winning proposition.

4
  • 7
    The ADVANCED_OPTIMIZATIONS flag does not optimize for file size but for execution speed(it tries to change your code to make it run faster, not download quicker).
    – Kekoa
    May 28, 2010 at 17:30
  • 1
    @Kekoa, from what I've read online and in print, it seems like file size (and download speed) is the main goal of ADVANCED_OPTIMIZATIONS and the compiler in general.
    – hyperslug
    Sep 5, 2011 at 2:18
  • Smaller file size results often (but not always) in faster code. Dead code removal and inlining serves both purposes.
    – Blaise
    Jan 13, 2013 at 9:31
  • Inlining does not always reduce file size if there is much invocation.
    – SOFe
    Jan 19, 2019 at 16:47
5

As of jQuery 1.4, Google's Closure Compiler is used as the default minification technique for jQuery releases. However, jQuery only uses the SIMPLE_OPTIMIZATIONS settings. The jQuery team has no plans to support ADVANCED_OPTIMIZATIONS.

1
  • 2
    Outdated: "However, we believe we can do even better than that, and would like to offer automated ways for any user to create an optimally minimized file that includes both application code and just the needed parts of jQuery. In particular, we are working with the Google Closure Compiler team to see if we could use its ADVANCED_OPTIMIZATIONS option. We’ll have more information on our progress as it develops." blog.jquery.com/2011/11/22/call-for-jquery-1-8-ideas Mar 30, 2012 at 11:21
2

Out of curiosity, I put together a SlickSpeed test of the latest Prototype and jQuery libs, shrunk with YUI and Closure. You can run the tests here.

As others have noted, compiling with ADVANCED_OPT does not work but if someone wants to do the work, I'll be happy to add the results to the SlickSpeed test.

0
1

Doesn't Closure just minimize and renames vars? jQuery already has a .min version. Minifying with closure again will probably be minimally helpful and potentially dangerous.

Edit: I just did it.

Compilation was a success!

Original Size:  55.91KB (19.28KB gzipped)
Compiled Size:  54.05KB (18.28KB gzipped)
Saved 3.34% off the original size (5.18% off the gzipped size)

This is on top of the already mined version. There's a demo here: http://closure-compiler.appspot.com/home

9
  • Yes, JQuery already uses a minifier. I just read an article about how Prototype was recompiled using Closure, instead of YUI Compressor. The Closure version of Prototype was 60% smaller than what YUI Compressor produced. That's crazy small and create for speeding up web applications.
    – Ted
    Nov 7, 2009 at 3:28
  • 6
    Theoretically, you could mix your JavaScript with jQuery and have Closure rename all of the .click,.each etc for additional savings.
    – Tinister
    Nov 7, 2009 at 3:33
  • @Tinister, how would you do that. Wouldn't Closure then need to parse your HTML page to see what is called and what's not called
    – Ted
    Nov 7, 2009 at 4:05
  • 12
    You don't put any JS in your HTML page.
    – hobbs
    Nov 7, 2009 at 7:01
  • 1
    Closure Compiler doesn't just minimize and rename. If you compile a large JS program you'll see it is a recompile. It will put code inline where it makes sense to. It will reorganize complicated conditionals, etc.
    – Nosredna
    Nov 7, 2009 at 22:47
1

I tried with their online compiler, it works well.

1

I used Closure (with ADVANCED_OPTIMIZATIONS) to compress the javascript code for a single-page site that I host and saw a significant size savings over the YUI Compressor. So I started looking into shrinking jQuery for that site as well, since it certainly doesn't use the entier jQuery library.

I get warnings every time I run jQuery through the compiler, mostly pointing out portions of the code that are not used. Even still, the compiled code doesn't work. The primary issue I see is that things aren't being exported properly by the compiler. I was able to easily export functions from my own code by attaching them to the window object, but I have not yet been able to do this yet with jQuery.

The good news is that John Resig is already experimenting with Closure. I suspect that we'll see new releases of both that are compatible in the near future.

-1

jQuery is not compatible (yet) with the Closure Compiler in advanced mode. I agree it would be a very good thing to make it compatible, because its method-chaining syntax lends very readily to prototype virtualization for much improved execution speed.

In fact, among the popular JavaScript libraries (other than Closure Library, that is), only the Dojo Toolkit is compatible with Closure Advanced mode.

http://dojo-toolkit.33424.n3.nabble.com/file/n2636749/Using_the_Dojo_Toolkit_with_the_Closure_Compiler.pdf?by-user=t

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