You can take your Methadone code and run it in any JS environment
without preprocessing or async script loading.  That's the whole
point.


On Jan 21, 5:30 pm, Oleg Slobodskoi <[email protected]> wrote:
> What I mean is if you can't take your methadone code and run in any js env.
> without preprocessing. Using any commonjs loader like requirejs + wrapping
> your code in AMD enables you that.
>
> All stuff needed f.e. by requirejs can be added by preprocessor
> automatically. Thats what I am working on.
>
> Modules itself a written in normal js, no one line extra to get it running
> in any commonjs system.
>
> I think you should post it in nodejs group, jsmentors is more about
> javascript itself, then about dependencies management and nodejs.
>
> 2011/1/21 Andrew Stein <[email protected]>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Thanks, Garrett - I'll fix those.
>
> > On Jan 21, 3:51 pm, Oleg Slobodskoi <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > Nice to see people have the same problems like me :)
>
> > > I am working on a similar module, it is not ready yet, but I would like
> > to
> > > give you my opinion about methadone.
>
> > > 1. The most bad part is you class like declarations. At this point you
> > are
> > > completely changing the way to write javascript, don't do it!
> > > 2. Loader - there already some really good commonjs loader out of there,
> > > f.e. requirejs, you should use one of them!
> > > 3. Unneeded preprocessor - if you want to have a small footprint of js
> > and
> > > css, you SHOULD preprocess your files with minifier, because they
> > optimize a
> > > lot!  So due to the fact we HAVE to do preprocessing, wrapping modules
> > with
> > > AMD is not a problem at all. There are also a lot of other stuff we can
> > > nicely preprocess:
> >https://github.com/kof/node-ams/tree/master/lib/processors
>
> > > About my project node-ams:
>
> > > 1. it is is build tool
> > > 2. it is dependecies detector with purpose to combine files
> > > 3. it is easy extendable preprocessing tool
> > > 4. it is static file server
>
> > > 2011/1/21 Andrew Stein <[email protected]>
>
> > > > My employer, Benchmark Solutions, has released this open source
> > > > framework y'all may enjoy:
>
> > > >https://github.com/benchmark-solutions/methadone
>
> > > > It introduces declarative Modules & Classes into Javascript through
> > > > some overloaded labels & runtime code reflection (though the code
> > > > reflection can also be run in advance on the server ...), essentially
> > > > amounting to a small DSL for static dependency analysis &
> > > > namespacing.
>
> > > > Though there are many frameworks available for this, we felt there was
> > > > nothing which satisfied everything we wanted:
>
> > > > 1) Does not load scripts via XHR or document.write("<script ... "), as
> > > > we feel that these types of loading tricks obscure the debugging
> > > > process & make writing reusable libraries tied to a specific
> > > > implementation.
> > > > 2) Does not require a separate preprocessor, code transformation or
> > > > compilation step to run in the browser - though powerful, we wanted
> > > > the code you see in the browser to be the exact same code you wrote in
> > > > your IDE.
> > > > 3) Has a clean API that doesn't "get in the way" of how you already
> > > > write javascript - a framework that provides a class construct
> > > > shouldn't reinvent the wheel with regards to Javascript's existing
> > > > prototype system.
>
> > > > There are some existing bugs and questionable design decisions, but we
> > > > would love constructive feedback from the community!
>
> > > > --
> > > > To view archived discussions from the original JSMentors Mailman list:
> > > > http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
>
> > > > To search via a non-Google archive, visit here:
> > > >http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
>
> > > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> > > > [email protected]<jsmentors%2Bunsubscribe@googlegroups
> > > >  .com>
> > <jsmentors%2Bunsubscribe@googlegroups .com>
>
> > > --
> > > regards,
> > > Oleg @oleg008
> > > github.com/kof
>
> > Sorry, I'm a little confused as to your first point.  Methadone's
> > Class definitions are annotated, but otherwise the verbatim pattern
> > for Javascript constructor declaration - what makes this different
> > from the same declaration with no annotations?
>
> > When I say that Methadone aspires to "not get in the way" of your
> > javascript coding, I specifically meant to call out frameworks like
> > RequireJS which necessitate parameter based module definitions &
> > introduce their special notion of script loading as a dependency to
> > your library.  Methadone does neither of these things, letting you
> > write essentially straight Javascript w/ some annotations, without
> > making any assertions about how you should preprocess, minify or load
> > your application.  Enabling this sort of functionality with the same
> > ease of which you would include JQuery or Underscore is the ongoing
> > justification for its development.
>
> > Minifying, preprocessing directives, parallel async script loading -
> > these are all great features - and yet totally irrelevant to providing
> > declarative modules & namespacing to Javascript.  If you want these
> > things in your application, you can use them alongside Methadone
> > without issue.
>
> > --
> > To view archived discussions from the original JSMentors Mailman list:
> > http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
>
> > To search via a non-Google archive, visit here:
> >http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
>
> > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> > [email protected]<jsmentors%2Bunsubscribe@googlegroups 
> > .com>
>
> --
> regards,
> Oleg @oleg008
> github.com/kof

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