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bower install load.js

load.js

load.js is a script loader written in TypeScript. It provides an easy and robust API to let you manage your script dependencies in your code instead of an external HTML file and asynchronously load them in parallel without blocking CSS, images, or other scripts.

Why load.js?

...Instead of script tags

Using script tags has three primary problems:

  1. Your dependencies are defined external to your code.
  2. Script loading will block other scripts, CSS, and images in most cases.
  3. If you use async to alleviate #2, then you can't manage complex dependencies.

So this:

<script src="/assets/scripts/analytics.js"></script>
<script src="/assets/scripts/lib/jquery.js"></script>
<script src="/assets/scripts/lib/other-lib.js"></script>
<script src="/assets/scripts/lib/another-lib.js"></script>
<script src="/assets/scripts/lib/jquery-plugin1.js"></script>
<script src="/assets/scripts/lib/jquery-plugin2.js"></script>
<script src="/assets/scripts/app/my-app-lib.js"></script>
<script src="/assets/scripts/app/my-app-main.js"></script>

Turns into this with load.js:

load.setBaseUrl("/assets/scripts/");
load("analytics.js")
    .then({ libs: ["lib/jquery.js", "lib/other-lib.js", "lib/another-lib.js"] });
load.when("jquery.js", { plugins: ["lib/jquery-plugin1.js", "lib/jquery-plugin2.js"] });
load.when(["libs", "plugins"], "app/my-app-lib.js");
load.when("my-app-lib.js", "app/my-app-main.js");

Hopefully the API is simple enough that the above is self-explanatory; if not, explanation and further examples are provided below.

Your dependencies are now explicitly defined, and your scripts will load in parallel -- saving significant load time for your users and getting them into your app/website quicker.

...Instead of other script loaders

There are a lot of other script loaders out there (LABjs, headjs, and script.js to name a few) but they either do way too much, or I didn't like the API they provided.

Browser Support

Testing Results

Usage

To save on an HTTP request and keep Javascript out of your HTML, recommended usage is to define your project's dependencies (such as in the example above) in a single config file and concatenate that file to the end of load.js as part of your build process, often renaming the file to init.js or similar in the process.

Then simply add a single script tag to <head> in your HTML.

Without a build process in place

If you believe your project simple enough to not need a build process, you can simply manually edit load.js and define your dependencies at the end of the file.

Or, (even less recommended) put them in your HTML file directly:

<script src="load.js"></script>
<script>
load( "thing.js" ).then( "otherthing.js" );
//etc...
</script>

Defining dependencies in code

It is entirely possible to define your dependencies in your code instead of a singular configuration file, though this is generally not recommended since a proper build process will be combining your various source files into different output files.

The result looks similar to an AMD definition:

/// dependency1.js
var foo = "foo";

/// dependency2.js
load.when("dependency1.js", function()
{
   function bar()
   {
      return foo + "bar";
   }
   window.bar = bar;
});

/// file1.js
load.when(["dependency1.js", "dependency2.js"], function()
{
   console.log(foo);
   console.log(bar());
});

Using with TypeScript

A declaration file load.d.ts is provided. Given the recommended usage, you don't need to import/require anything. Simple add a reference /// <reference path="load.d.ts"/> to your configuration file (or to any files that need to call load if you're not using the recommended single-configuration-file approach).

API / Examples

We'll discuss the API using our initial example:

load.setBaseUrl("/assets/scripts/");
load("analytics.js")
    .then({ libs: ["lib/jquery.js", "lib/other-lib.js", "lib/another-lib.js"] });
load.when("jquery.js", { plugins: ["lib/jquery-plugin1.js", "lib/jquery-plugin2.js"] });
load.when(["libs", "plugins"], "app/my-app-lib.js");
load.when("my-app-lib.js", "app/my-app-main.js");

Setting a root path

function setBaseUrl(path: string): void

Prepends this path to all load requests from the point it was called onward.

So...

load.setBaseUrl("/assets/scripts/");
load("analytics.js");

...Will load /assets/scripts/analytics.js.

You an also set a root path with a data-* attribute data-base-url in the script tag.

<script src="https://assets.domain.com/scripts/init.js"
        data-base-url="https://assets.domain.com/scripts/">
</script>

This is useful if you generate the path to your scripts dynamically depending on your deployment environment.

Note

Note that setting this is literally just doing a string concatenation, no path manipulation is performed; so make sure your slashes are in the right spot:

  • load.setBaseUrl("/scripts/");load("/foo.js") will load /scripts//foo.js
  • load.setBaseUrl("/scripts/");load("./foo.js") will load /scripts/./foo.js
  • load.setBaseUrl("/scripts");load("foo.js") will load /scriptsfoo.js

Loading files in parallel

function load(file: string): Promise;
function load(fileWithLabel: any): Promise;
function load(...files: any[]): Promise;

Provide as many file names (strings) as you'd like and they will all be loaded in parallel:

load("analytics.js"/*, "foo.js", "bar.js", "baz.js", etc... */);

You can also pass an array, which is useful if you're calling load dynamically from other code and prevents the need to call .apply()

var dependencies = ["foo.js", "bar.js", "baz.js"];
load(dependencies);

Labelling files

You can provide a label to single files or to arrays of files to make it easier to reference for dependency management.

load("analytics.js")
    .then({ libs: ["lib/jquery.js", "lib/other-lib.js", "lib/another-lib.js"] });

This allows you reference libs to ensure that all three of lib/jquery.js, lib/other-lib.js, and lib/another-lib.js have completed loading without having to type all three file paths out.

This works for single files as well:

load({ awesome: "really-awesome-library-v2.14.1932-beta3.min.js" });

Loading files, or executing code, sequentially

This is the type returned from load():

interface Promise
{
   then(callback: () => void): Promise;
   then(file: string): Promise;
   then(fileWithLabel: any): Promise;
   then(...files: any[]): Promise;
}

The arguments to then() are the same as those to load() with the addition of accepting functions.

You can use it to ensure dependencies are loaded by only loading files after completion of the ones preceding it.

load("analytics.js")
    .then({ libs: ["lib/jquery.js", "lib/other-lib.js", "lib/another-lib.js"] });

The above will load lib/jquery.js, lib/other-lib.js, and lib/another-lib.js in parallel after analytics.js has completed.

You can chain then() calls as much as you'd like:

load("a.js").then("b.js").then("c.js").then("d.js").then("e.js").then(function()
{
   console.log("a, b, c, d, and e have all been loaded");
});

This can be especially useful to load some ability-checking library and load further files depending on the results:

load("check-for-things.js").then(function()
{
   if(!CheckForThings.websockets)
   {
      load("websockets-polyfill.js");
   }
   // etc...
});

Loading files, or executing code, on completion of certain items

// when complete trigger a callback
function when(dependency: string, callback: () => void, waiting?: (missing: string[]) => void): void;
function when(dependencies: string[], callback: () => void, waiting?: (missing: string[]) => void): void;
// when complete, load the provided file
function when(dependency: string, file: string, waiting?: (missing: string[]) => void): void;
function when(dependencies: string[], file: string, waiting?: (missing: string[]) => void): void;
// when complete, load all of the provided files
function when(dependency: string, files: string[], waiting?: (missing: string[]) => void): void;
function when(dependencies: string[], files: string[], waiting?: (missing: string[]) => void): void;
// when complete, load the provided file(s) with a label
function when(dependency: string, fileWithLabel: any, waiting?: (missing: string[]) => void): void;
function when(dependencies: string[], fileWithLabel: any, waiting?: (missing: string[]) => void): void;

Use load.when() to wait for specific dependencies and, when they have completed, to then load further files or execute code. This is very similar to then() but it can be called from another point in your code or provide more specific dependencies.

Dependencies are either file names or labels, and multiple dependencies can be provided.

load("analytics.js")
    .then({ libs: ["lib/jquery.js", "lib/other-lib.js", "lib/another-lib.js"] });
load.when("jquery.js", { plugins: ["lib/jquery-plugin1.js", "lib/jquery-plugin2.js"] });
load.when(["libs", "plugins"], "app/my-app-lib.js");

Note that the path lib/jquery.js is loaded, but only jquery.js is used in the first call to when(); and the second call to when() lists two dependencies, libs, and plugins, both of which are labels.

You can also call when() at any point in your code, even prior to the file being loaded. For example, the following is completely fine and will load everything in the right order:

load.when(["libs", "plugins"], "app/my-app-lib.js");
load.when("jquery.js", { plugins: ["lib/jquery-plugin1.js", "lib/jquery-plugin2.js"] });
load("analytics.js")
    .then({ libs: ["lib/jquery.js", "lib/other-lib.js", "lib/another-lib.js"] });

Set query string arguments

function setQuerystring(args: string): void

You can call load.setQuerystring to set query string arguments that will be appended to every loaded file.

This can be useful for rudimentary cache-busting, eg, load.setQuerystring("rnd=" + Math.random()).

Note that no calls to encodeURI() or encodeURIComponent() are made with the provided string, so be sure the argument you provide to setQuerystring() has been properly encoded to be a valid querystring.

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A small, comprehensive script loader for Javascript and TypeScript

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