import-maps
importmap-rails
import-maps | importmap-rails | |
---|---|---|
45 | 30 | |
2,723 | 1,106 | |
0.6% | 1.2% | |
3.1 | 7.1 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 months ago | |
JavaScript | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
import-maps
-
It is hard to avoid JavaScript
Long time huge fan of JS. I appreciate your calling out the multi-paradigm aspect; having these first class functions & prototype based inheritance has been so flexible.
TC39 has done a great job shaping the language over the years. New capabilities are usually well thought out & integrate well. Async await has been amazing.
The one major miss that makes me so sad and frustrated is modules; js has gotten better everywhere except it's near requirement for build tooling. Being able to throw some scripts on a page and go is still an unparalleled experience in the world, is so direct & tactile an experience. EcmaScript Modules was supposed to improve things, help get us back, but imports using url specifiers made the whole thing non-modular, was a miss. We're still tangled & torn. Import-maps has finally fixed but it's no where near as straightforward, and it still doesn't work in workers, which leaves us infuriatingly shirt of where the past was. https://github.com/WICG/import-maps/issues/2
-
'Mother of all breaches' data leak reveals 26B account stolen records
makes sure your app is getting the download it expects. Adoption is probably pretty minimal though. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Security/Subres...
I think the big thing making this unlikely though is that very few folks use cdns these days. We designed ESM as a module system for the language, but then took a good fraction of a decade to build import-maps, to let us actually use modules in a modular way. Good news, we can finally use modules modularly! https://caniuse.com/import-maps
Bad news? Oh import-maps only works for the simplest case. Doesn't work in webworkers/service workers. https://github.com/WICG/import-maps/issues/2
The point is that single page apps almost always are bundled together, as using CDNs hasn't even been technically possible.
Also, CDNs are kind of somewhat pointless, now that http caches are partitioned by origin (for security reasons). They might have better anycast infrastructure to get the content out faster, but without the caching there's no inherent advantage. The user will download the same jquery file again in each site they go to, no already having it cached anymore. Bah humbug!
- Rails Frontend Bundling - Which one should I choose?
- ESM dynamic imports
-
JavaScript import maps are now supported cross-browser
https://github.com/WICG/import-maps/issues/2
-
We Added Package.json Support to Deno
Bare specifiers has been the tragedy of ESM. Nice module syntax... that is utterly u deoyable & which has had to have awful de-modularizing specifiers hard-coded into each file to make it work. Abominable sin to introduce "modules" to JS/es2015 then spend a decade dragging everyone along with no story for how to have modular modules.
Import-maps are like "here" to fix this on the web... finally... except they only are shipping to the happiest sunniest easiest case, with Web Workers being totally shit out of luck in spite of some very simple straightforward suggested paths forward. https://github.com/WICG/import-maps/issues/2
I think Deno is making pretty good tradeoffs along the way here. This looks like package.json at surface level, but there is a nightmare of complexity under the surface. Typescript, ESM, cjs all have various pressures they create & in Node it's just incredibly tight & tense dealing with packaging, where-as Deno's happy path of Typescript first does not slowly tatters one over time. It really has been super pleasant being free of the previous world, and having something much more web-platform centric, more intented, with less assembly & less building, and more doing the actual coding.
I really hope import-maps eventually get broader support. Maybe this long-dwelling webworker issue should be brought up with WinterCG.
-
Import maps 101
Import maps proposal
-
You Might Not Need Module Federation: Orchestrate your Microfrontends at Runtime with Import Maps
The concept of Import Maps was born in 2018 and made its long way until it was declared a new web standard implemented by Chrome in 2021 and some other browsers.
-
Getting an "import file" syntax right for ArkScript
For package managers, you can use something like import maps to let the user specify which path points to what package, and resolve it properly.
-
Deno 1.28: Featuring 1.3M New Modules
Huh. I was about to complain that this breaks with web standards, but apparently it's being proposed as a standard feature: https://github.com/WICG/import-maps
Interesting!
importmap-rails
-
Importmap or jsbundling? I use both
This is because the @lit/reactive-element package has many optional modules that were not downloaded. But if you download all optional modules, the importmap configuration will become very bloated. There is a PR in progress (#235), but it's hard to say if it will solve the problem because the issue lies in the library authors not considering the need for unbundled imports.
-
Buh-Bye Webpack and Node.js, Hello Rails and Import Maps
At a high level, the importmaps-rails Gem allows developers to import maps into their applications. The use of /bin/importmap allows engineers to update, pin, or unpin dependencies as needed. This is similar to how Maven and Gradle work in Java-based projects.
-
Polyfill supply chain attack hits 100K+ sites
Before ESM I wasn't nearly as sold on skipping the build step, but now it feels like there's a much nicer browser native way of handling dependencies, if only I can get the files in the right shape!
The Rails community are leaning into this heavily now: https://github.com/rails/importmap-rails
-
Do you know how the delivery of assets works in your Rails 7 app?
// Configure your import map in config/importmap.rb. Read more: https://github.com/rails/importmap-rails import "@hotwired/turbo-rails" import "controllers" import "bootstrap" import "@popperjs/core"
-
The Rails asset pipeline, old and new
It is implemented as a thor task in lib/importmap/cmmands.rb
-
RubyJS-Vite
With importmaps (https://github.com/rails/importmap-rails) and Hotwire (https://hotwired.dev/), you write plain js and serve it.
Also packages are served via CDN. There is no tree shaking. Rails got rid of the whole bundling step.
-
First commits in a Ruby on Rails app
Importmap audit - “checks the NPM registry for known security issues”
-
Asset compilation taking ~ 12 mins
It worked, but JS changes were not coming through. Digging into the Importmap docs (see 'sweeping the cache', it monitors changes according to the setting config.importmap.cache_sweepers. So, by adding the locations where I have my JS files, I also got JS changes passed through.
-
Is the default importmap method unrealistic in the most popular real world use cases?
You can't use TypeScript, or anything that requires pre-compile, with importmap. answered issue
-
Ruby on Rails with React on Typescript using importmaps
Let's begin by installing the necessary dependencies. The first gem generates the importmap object, manages caching, and helps with library installations, among other things. I recommend reading the entire readme to become familiar with its capabilities. The second gem will be discussed later, it is used to compile JSX files. Gemfile
What are some alternatives?
es-module-shims - Shims for new ES modules features on top of the basic modules support in browsers
sprockets-rails - Sprockets Rails integration
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
esbuild-rails - Esbuild Rails plugin
esm.sh - A nobuild content delivery network(CDN) for modern web development.
jsbundling-rails - Bundle and transpile JavaScript in Rails with esbuild, rollup.js, bun, or Webpack.