112

I understand Dart compiles to JavaScript, and I read the Dart Language Spec on Libraries, although I didn't see an answer there. Also a search on their discussion form for the word 'existing' turns up 3 results that are not related.

Does anyone know if Dart will support the use of existing JavaScript libraries such as jQuery or Raphael?

1
  • 1
    although I am posting the question now.
    – TMB
    Oct 10, 2011 at 16:59

4 Answers 4

96

The answer is now Yes! Dart now ships a JS-interop library to use existing JavaScript code with your Dart app. Learn more here: https://www.dartlang.org/articles/js-dart-interop/

3
  • @Seth I had a follow up question. Does it really make much sense to you use Javascript libraries from Dart, when Dart is there to finally kinda replace Javascript ? And does Dart have something inbuilt for visualization ?
    – Amit Tomar
    Jan 31, 2014 at 10:54
  • 2
    @AmitTomar the community can't port over all JS libraries immediately, so it makes sense to use the vast amount of JS libraries out there. As for charting (visualization), I'm only aware of interop with JS based libraries.
    – Seth Ladd
    Jan 31, 2014 at 23:03
  • Thanks Seth, I also demonstrate how to use it in this article. Feb 19, 2019 at 18:13
15

You will not be able to call javascript directly from dart code. The native directive is reserved for the core libraries of dartc (dart:core, dart:dom, dart:html, dart:json, etc), which itself compiles to javascript.

7
  • do you have a reference for this?
    – TMB
    Oct 12, 2011 at 1:30
  • 6
    I work on the dartc team and internally there's talks of restricting the native directive & keyword to dart: libraries only. You can certainly look at any core functions (e.g. isolate.dart & isolate.js) and see that appending the "native" keyword to a function signature (note: no body in the Dart version) will let you call a mangled javascript function; but we make no promise that we wont break you in the future.
    – jtmcdole
    Oct 12, 2011 at 19:48
  • 7
    I understand and respect the ideal of giving the Web a clean and thought out language, but I beg you to consider an interop layer. Microsoft provided one from Com to .Net to help ensure that projects could be migrated incrementally. This hasn't hindered the success of .Net at all; I believe it helped its adoption, although they did improve it with time. If breaking is something that is of serious concern, consider an invitational program for major libraries such a jQuery, MooTools, and script.aculo.us. Thank you.
    – TMB
    Oct 12, 2011 at 23:02
  • 2
    I invite you to make a feature request through our issue tracker @ link. I do not believe this decision has been cast in stone yet.
    – jtmcdole
    Oct 13, 2011 at 18:50
  • 1
    Just pointing out that this has been brought up as an issue again: code.google.com/p/dart/issues/detail?id=1108
    – jtmcdole
    Jan 10, 2012 at 16:42
9

There is now a new simpler way https://pub.dartlang.org/packages/js (currently version 0.6.0-beta.6)

Make JS classes and functions available to Dart like:

@JS("JSON.stringify")
external String stringify(obj);
@JS('google.maps')
library maps;

// Invokes the JavaScript getter `google.maps.map`.
external Map get map;

// `new Map` invokes JavaScript `new google.maps.Map(location)`
@JS()
class Map {
  external Map(Location location);
  external Location getLocation();
}

// `new Location(...)` invokes JavaScript `new google.maps.LatLng(...)`
//
// We recommend against using custom JavaScript names whenever
// possible. It is easier for users if the JavaScript names and Dart names
// are consistent.
@JS("LatLng")
class Location {
  external Location(num lat, num lng);
}

for more see the readme of the package

4

There is also a dart:js library. And here is an article explaining how to use this library for interoperating with JavaScript.

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