> Looks like GWT project must be run to make accessible all Java 
> functionality from JS. Is it true? 
>

Yes, the getting started of gwt-exporter also point that out (at the bottom 
of the "Quick Start Guide" section). You need a JS callback so you know 
when the JS produced by GWT has been executed by the browser. Only then the 
exported Java code is available in JavaScript.

 

> And back to my original problem: Is it possible to create standalone JS 
> lib with embedded bitcoinj Java lib? Or it's just not possible technically 
> due to JS limitations?
>

Depends on what you want to use from that library. GWT does not support the 
full JRE API because some APIs simply won't work in browsers, others won't 
work efficiently in browsers and again others are not really demanded by 
web app developers.

To see what GWT supports out of the box take a look at: 

http://www.gwtproject.org/doc/latest/RefJreEmulation.html
https://gwt.googlesource.com/gwt/+/master/user/super/com/google/gwt/emul 
(thats the latest right from git master branch)

You will quickly notice that there is no crypto api, no reflection, no 
multi threading which might all be used by your bitcoin library. So when 
your Bitcoin library uses JRE APIs that GWT does not support you would need 
to emulate them yourself using GWT's "super-source" mechanism or mark them 
as @GwtIncompatible so that the GWT compiler will simply ignores them.


-- J.

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