Package and Compress with Google Closure via MSBuild 0

The Problem

So our problem is we are building a library of JavaScript files that we use all over the place. I’ve been pushing, on the project where I’m the sole developer, to wrote 99% of the JavaScript as jQuery plugins. This works great because we can compile that 99% into a single file, or to reverse the perspective, we can split that huge file into smaller, more manageable and logical files.

For example, we have a file called jquery.mycompany.core.js which does a variety of mundane tasks. The file is huge, but unlike C# code, it’s huge for a reason. We want the browser to make as few requests as possible so there is less handshaking, less overhead, and faster page loads.

Previously we had several files and we manually combine them to one and then run it through some online compressing tool once we get close to production. This technically worked, but changes found a way of making their way into the huge file and the segmented files become out of date and obsolete.

The Hack

So here was my plan, take a list of file, concatenate them, and then compress them. Simple enough right? Well, it actually isn’t that bad

  <ItemGroup>
    <JavaScriptFiles  Include="scripts\jQueryPlugins\Custom\core\**\*.js" />
  </ItemGroup>

  <Target Name="Default" DependsOnTargets="BuildAndCompressOrdersJavaScript">

  </Target>

  <Target Name="BuildAndCompressJavaScript">
    <ReadLinesFromFile File="%(JavaScriptFiles.Identity)" >
      <Output
          TaskParameter="Lines"
          ItemName="lines"/>
    </ReadLinesFromFile>

    <WriteLinesToFile File="scripts\jquery.mycompany.core.uncompressed.js"
                      Lines="@(Lines)"
                      Overwrite="true" />

  </Target>

Not so bad right? Lastly, just add a bit of Google Closure. I just shell out and run it from the command line here.

<Exec Command='java -jar ..\compiler.jar --js scpts\jq.myco.core.un.js > scpts\jq.myco.core.js' />

I shortened some paths and filenames there so it would fit better in the blog’s column, but you get the idea.

I threw this into a post build event even though I could have added it to the csproj directly. The post build event was easier and it avoids those nasty warnings when you open the csproj.

The only issue I see with it right now is it is not as portable as I would like it to be. You pretty much company and past the build steps if you need to use it again. This is my major gripe about MSBuild. It’s difficult to create functions you repeat in the build.

This is a total cheapskate way to accomplish this task. I should be creating a nice parameterized MSBuild task, or even better, dump MSBuild for Rake. MSBuild and I acknowledge we are never going to be friends and have come to a professional arrangement. MSBuild does nothing to accommodate me and I do as little as possible with it.

ASP.Net MVC 2.0 RC 2, Input Validation and Breaking Our App 0

It’s been a while since I’ve posted and I’m trying to get back into the swing of things again. I don’t really have a lot to say about the problem, just yet. We’ve identified some breaking changes with ASP.Net MVC 2.0 RC 2.

RC 2 switches to relying on all data annotations on the model when doing validation, when previous releases only checked the values posted and properly bound to a model. To be honest, initially, I didn’t like that idea. It was confusion to me why my model was attributed with attributes requiring fields, but validation was not happening as I expected.

Over time, I came to appreciate, and apparently exploit this feature to do conditional validation. Since the form only posts the enabled controls, I was able to simply enable/disable inputs and doing so, enable/disable their required attribute for model validation.

Everything worked great, until things changed in RC2.

You can read more about the decision to make the switch.

Running specific JavaScript after partial postback 7

I know how to run JavaScript after every postback, but on occasion I want to run some JS after a specific postback (i.e. show a flash message message that says the processing completed successfully). This hasn’t been as simple as I thought it should be. I even posted to StackOverflow to see if there was something I was missing or if it really is this messy. The only answer I’ve received to date suggested the method I already had in mind when posting the question, so I thought I would work out the full example and show you how it looks.

Background: First a little background. I have a UserControl that I use to display a nice status and/or error message on all my pages. It’s in the master page and has some really convenient JavaScript to show it. For all the ajaxy stuff we do it works great. It flashes in and fades out; however, we can’t show it on the partial postback events…yet. We need to run some JS on the client side after the postback is done to either show the error message or success message.

Overview: Basically, we are going to put a hidden field on the page and register an event handler to run after partial postback to see if there is any JavaScript in it, and execute there is. Pretty simple.

I created a user control to hold all the hidden fields and JS to register the postback events. It is going to get reused in a lot of places so it makes sense to make it reusable. It could be made into a server control, but I’ll forgo that for now.

There isn’t much to the user control.

<%@ Control Language="C#"
    AutoEventWireup ="true"
    CodeFile        ="DoAfterPostback.ascx.cs"
    Inherits        ="DoAfterPostback" %>        

<asp:HiddenField ID="DoAfterPostbackJavaScriptHiddenField" runat="server"
    EnableViewState="false" />

It’ll need some code to create a property to access the JavaScript we want to run and register the event handlers.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.UI;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls;

public partial class DoAfterPostback : System.Web.UI.UserControl
{
    public string DoAfterPostbackJavaScript { get; set; }

    protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        Page.ClientScript.RegisterStartupScript(
            this.GetType(),
            "DoAfterPostbackJavaScriptEngine",
            @"
                var prm = Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager.getInstance();
                prm.add_endRequest(function(s, e) {
                    $('[id$=_DoAfterPostbackJavaScriptHiddenField]').each(doPostbackJS);
                }); 

                function doPostbackJS(i){
                    eval(this.value);
                }

            ",true);
    }

    protected override void OnPreRender(EventArgs e)
    {
        base.OnPreRender(e);
        DoAfterPostbackJavaScriptHiddenField.Value = DoAfterPostbackJavaScript;
    }
}

We probably don’t need jQuery in there, but we’re already using it so I continued to use it here.

Now let’s get to using it. We’ll need a page for that.

<%@ Page Language="C#" AutoEventWireup="true"  CodeFile="Default.aspx.cs" Inherits="_Default" %>
<%@ Register src="DoAfterPostback.ascx" tagname="DoAfterPostback" tagprefix="uc1" %>
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head runat="server">
    <title></title>
    <script type="text/javascript" src="jquery.js"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript">
        function showMsg(s) {
            alert(s);
        }
    </script>
</head>
<body>
    <form id="form1" runat="server">
        <asp:ScriptManager ID="ScriptManager1" runat="server">
        </asp:ScriptManager>
        <div>
            <asp:UpdatePanel ID="UpdatePanel1" runat="server">
                <ContentTemplate>
                    <uc1:DoAfterPostback ID="DoAfterPostback1" runat="server" />
                    <asp:TextBox ID="TextBox1" runat="server" />
                    <asp:Button ID="Button1" runat="server"
                        Text    ="Button"
                        OnClick ="ButtonClicked" /><br />
                    <asp:Label ID="Label1" runat="server"
                        Text    ="Label" />
                </ContentTemplate>
            </asp:UpdatePanel>
        </div>
    </form>
</body>
</html>

We have a textbox, button and a label inside an UpdatePanel. We also have our user control in there. This will let the hidden field value change on partial postback and the new value to show up in our event handler. In addition, there is a trivial JavaScript function on the page for us to call after the postback:showMsg . Technically we could just throw the alert right in our control, but this more closely mimics how we’re going to do for real.

Finally we need some code on the server side to put some JS in our hidden field.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.UI;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls;

public partial class _Default : System.Web.UI.Page
{
    protected void ButtonClicked(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        var s = TextBox1.Text;
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s)) return;

        Label1.Text = string.Format("The user says {0}.", s);
        DoAfterPostback1.DoAfterPostbackJavaScript = "showMsg('" + s + "');";
    }
}

That should be it. Now we can enter text, hit the button and see both our server side processing take place and the client side JavaScript execute after the postback as completed.

jQuery Validation and ASP.Net Web Forms 0

I’ve been dark for a while, but there has been a lot in the works. Hopefully there will be a flood of posts coming, most with a happier outcome than this one; however, to get back in the swing of things, I’ll take make it short and sweet.

I get really frustrated with ASP.Net Web Forms

We all know and love jQuery. It is an amazing JavaScript framework. It’s made it possible, for even the staunchest back-end developers, to get excited about writing UI. ASP.Net is the bane of jQuery enjoyment. I’ve covered this in jQuery Selectors and ASP.Net Controls. I have a new frustration: the giant HTML Form ASP.Net puts in the Web Form page.

There is an amazing jQuery validation plugin. It can do just about any validation you’ll need with minimal effort. If you want to validate a single form, it’s great; however, if you need to validate only a portion of the form, it’s a pain.

Since ASP.Net sticks its own <form> tag on the page by default, you’re pretty much screwed. The only option I’ve found so far is to go through each element, running a validation on the individual elements.

Here is an example of what I’m doing:

$().ready(function(){

	$("form").validate();	

	$("#firstname").rules("add", {
	 	minlength: 2,
		required:  true
	});

	$("#submit").click(function(){
		var valid = true;
		valid = valid && $("form").validate().element("#firstname");
		alert(valid);
   	});
});

I hope to find a better solution soon, but this will do for now.

Animating Partial Postbacks and UpdatePanels with jQuery 4

Update panels make it really easy to do pseudo ajaxish stuff with little or no extra effort. Wrap your controls in a an UpdatePanel, pay for the entire page to post back and go through its life-cycle and you’re pretty much there. I’ve already written a bit on the extra steps you’ll need if you’re doing some jQuery magic inside that UpdatePanel. It’s not difficult and easy enough to either delegate up the chain to something outside the UpdatePanel (e.g. event delegation) or rinse and repeat the jQuery after the partial post back is complete (e.g. add_endRequest).

What would be really slick-o-matic is if we could do some animation to transition the partial postback so it wouldn’t just explode with new content in our face. Now granted, that may be an overstatement. The content changes usually aren’t drastic or very distracting to but let’s add a bit of polish.

Keep in mind this is a first draft, done in about 30 minutes after an idea landed in my head at 3am. It still needs some polishing, but the major hurdles are taken care of.

For our example, we’ll have a simple Div that will be worked upon in a partial postback. Our goal will be to gently transition the display of that work to the user. Something like this.

Original Video – More videos at TinyPic

We’ll start off with some basic styles to help illustrate the change. We’ll change the content of the Div and also the class.

	#mydiv{ width:200px; border:solid 1px black; font-size:xx-large; }
	.myclass0 { height:200px; background-color:Blue; }
	.myclass1 { height:100px; background-color:Red; }
	.myclass2 { height:150px; background-color:Lime; }
	.myclass3 { height:50px; background-color:Purple; color:White; }

Nothing too exciting, but our partial postback will give us some new dimensions and style. It’ll get the point across.

Next we need some HTML.

<form id="form1" runat="server">
	<asp:ScriptManager ID="ScriptManager1" runat="server">
	</asp:ScriptManager>
	<div>
		Original time: <%= DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString() %> 
		<asp:UpdatePanel ID="UpdatePanel1" runat="server">
			<ContentTemplate>
				<asp:Button runat="server" Text="Button" ID="MyButton"
						OnClick="MyButtonClick"
					OnClientClick="return ClientClick(this,'#mydiv'); " />
				<div id="mydiv" runat="server">
					<asp:Label runat="server" Text="Label"
                                           ID="MyLabel"></asp:Label>
				</div>
			</ContentTemplate>
		</asp:UpdatePanel>
	</div>
</form>

The magic is going to live in the ClientClick event handler, but forget about that for now. The server side OnClick event will do some trivial work.

 protected void MyButtonClick(object sender, EventArgs e)
 {
	 MyLabel.Text = DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString();
	 var c = "myclass" + DateTime.Now.Millisecond % 4;
	 mydiv.Attributes.Add("class",c);
 }

This could just as easily toggled a view from edit mode to read-only, expanded a detailed area, etc. Here, we are just picking one of four css classese to use on the div and also giving a label the current time. Like I said this isn’t the cool part.

The final steps are to do the following:

  • Get the jQuery animation to happen on the click of the button.
  • Get the partial postback to wait until the animation is done.
  • Get the DOM to appear in the pre-animation state when it comes back from the partial postback.
  • Get the animation to happen once we have the new page ready to go.

The function needs to know what needs to be animated upon. I’ve been using slide transitions, but the animation is something I think can very easily be abstracted out. We make some quick tests to see if we are in the process of animating or if the animation has been completed. I struggled with how to delay the button click’s post back from happening until the animation is complete and finally decided to just let it happen a second time, but to flag the second click to allow it to continue posting back. I’m using the jQuery data feature to keep some state about the button.

If we are currently sliding, then there is nothing left to do, and if we are done sliding then we can skip the other steps and continue the postback.

if (d.data("isSliding")) return false;
if (d.data("doneSliding")) return true;

If we don’t meet those conditions, we need to slide. We set our flag, wire up the end request handler and the callback to the slide method and kick off the slide.

The slide method is the simplest.

d.slideUp(500,
	function() {
		d.data("isSliding", false);
		d.data("doneSliding", true);
		$(sender).click();
	});

Slide our control up, and when we’re done, set some flags and kick off the click a second time. With the flags set, we’ll fire off the postback. Nothing really fancy here either. Notice we can still reference d here. We don’t need to find it again.

The endRequest handler looks a bit more involved.

var prm = Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager.getInstance();

var f = function(s, e) {
	d = $(whatToSlideDown);
	d.css("display", "none");
	d.slideUp(0);
	d.slideDown(500);
	prm.remove_endRequest(f);
}

prm.add_endRequest(f);

Here, inside the function we do need to ask jQuery to find what we want again. The DOM has been changed and the old d we created from $(whatToSlideUp) probably isn’t there anymore. In addition, we need to set the element in the state we left the old element. In this case, we want the display to be set to “none”. This allows the slideDown to work just like we would expect following a slideUp.

This is part of the setup that I don’t like. I’ve tried quickly running a slideUp(0) on the the new elements, but I was seeing a flash of the default state before getting the slide up. This is something that I would like to factor out. The animation, including this default state should be a parameter to the function.

Here is a look at the function as a whole. It’s a stupid function name I know, but that is easily changed.

function ClientClick(sender,whatToSlideUp,whatToSlideDown) {

	if (!whatToSlideDown)
		whatToSlideDown = whatToSlideUp;

	var d = $(whatToSlideUp);

	if (d.data("isSliding")) return false;
	if (d.data("doneSliding")) return true;

	d.data("isSliding", true);

	var prm = Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager.getInstance();

	var f = function(s, e) {
		d = $(whatToSlideDown);
		d.css("display", "none");
		d.slideUp(0);
		d.slideDown(500);
		prm.remove_endRequest(f);
	}

	prm.add_endRequest(f);

	d.slideUp(500,
		function() {
			d.data("isSliding", false);
			d.data("doneSliding", true);
			$(sender).click();
		});
	return false;
}

That’s it. There is definitely room to polish this up and make it more flexible. I’ll post back when I get it up and running in a real application so it looks more useful.

Scoping JavaScript with Module Pattern 0

I’ve entered the world of actually writing JavaScript. In the past, usability was really a secondary concern. I need to do a postback to make a button visible, no problem. The screen will flash, but who cares. It’s not like the user is going to stop using my application to do the stack of work on their desk. They have to use it. It’s their only option.

Now that isn’t entirely true. We attempted to make it as usable as possible, but anything that even close to using jQuery was probably just, according to the powers that be, the developers just playing around with cool toys. I’m not sure the value of the user experience fell nicely into a quantifiable metric. I’m beginning to rant, so back to the point.

In my new adventures with jQuery, I’ve been writing a lot of JavaScript. The biggest complaint I’ve had with my JavaScript is that everything is global and can potentially be overwritten by subsequent JavaScript, or I might be overwriting someone else’s functions or variables. My JavaScript files looked like the following.

var foo = "berry";
function doWork(s){
	alert(s+foo);
}

$(function(){doWork("foo")});

I just cross my fingers that no one else has a doWork function or foo variable. There has to be a way to scope this stuff.

Luckily, I found and article that explains exactly that. It explains the Module Pattern and how to use it to limit the scope of JavaScript.

I’ll let you read the article for a more complete description that I could put together, but ultimately, my JavaScript ends up looking like this.

myScript = function(){
  return {
	init:function(){doWork("foo");}
  }
  var foo = "berry";
  function doWork(s){
	alert(s+foo);
  }
}();
$(myScript.init);

In this case, init is the only method that gets exposed. You can’t invoke doWork. Also, by adding the scope of myScript, you can have greater confidence your methods and variables aren’t getting overwritten.

My practice thus far is to have one JavaScript file for each page and user control. The scope of each page’s file is the name of the page, or control. So you could see Login.aspx.js with a scope of MyApp_Login.

So far so good. We’ll see how it goes.

Finding parent elements with jQuery 1.3 0


magnifying monkey man.

I was recently writing a little javascript function that would traverse up the object graph and apply jQuery selectors to pick the correct parent that I needed. It was a pretty basic function, but I had that gut feeling that this is something that I shouldn’t be writing. It has to be already written by someome. 

Luckily, with jQuery 1.3, it’s part of the core library. New in this version is the closest method which will find the closest parent that matches the selector you pass.

ASP.Net Ajax payload size compared to jQuery 0

Let me start off by saying this isn’t scientific, or possibly even accurate, but was pretty shocking at first glance. I wanted to take a look at what the true size of our pages were, so I brought up Chrome’s nice resource inspector and refreshed and average page from our intranet application. It was a bit shocking at first.

image

All that orange is javascript! Now, I know the browser is probably caching that, when it goes through IIS – Cassini won’t cache it—, butit still seems like a pretty big chunk, but it’s probably all the jQuery and jQuery plugins we’re using right?

image

Without the rest of the files, it’s hard to put that into perspective, but trust me ,that is pretty small. What about the plugins?

image

Those are pretty small too. All that javascript has to be somewhere right? What about ASP.Net Ajax?

image

I had to scale the image so it would fit, but there is a lot there. You may have noticed that we are using the min version of the jQuery file. Is the ASP.Net Ajax minified?

NOPE!

I haven’t really looked to see if it is possible to shrink that JS somehow, we’ll see about doing that soon.

Firebug is great, but… 4

Firebug is the single most important piece of software I use when developing the layout of a web UI. For the longest time at my previous employer, installing Firebug and Firefox would also, after the evening big brother scan, install a nice e-mail in your inbox from the compliance nazis about your recent contraband software installation, and strongly suggest you rethink your decision. Recently however, they have seen the light and no longer send out that nasty little e-mail. But on to my only gripe about Firebug.

Let’s take this simple page and bring up Firebug.

Firebug.Original

Now, we can click into the style we want to change and use the up and down arrow keys to modify the numeric value. This is an awesome feature to position elements with paddings and margins. Imagine doing this with several elements via their class’s associated style and seeing the effect on the entire page. Pretty awesome!

Firebug.Modified

We can switch over to the CSS view and see our change.

Firebug.CssView

Great! Now let’s find a ways to pull out all those changes so we can paste them back into our real CSS file.
Firebug.CssWithoutChanges

Where are my changes? I realize it might not be able to recreate that CSS file from my changes because of elements Firebug couldn’t handle, but how can I get all my changes out at once? Even if I am viewing a local file, like I am in this case, there appears to be no way to export my modifications form Firebug in one bulk export.

Welcome to jQuery 2

My first task at my new organization was to verify text being added to a freeform text field is not already associated to a different record of the same type. This would be similar to checking if a username is taken before completing a registration process. As you have probably encountered with the registration process, the typical way to complete this test is to wait for the user to click save button and then test the database for the existing record. It would be a lot nicer if the test would happen automatically as you type, so this is what I set out to do.

Doing this with ASP.Net AJAX would probably be possible, but given we are starting to invest in jQuery, I took this as a great opportunity to learn something new, while still delivering a great user experience. While working through some quick and dirty jQuery examples, I quickly see its potential. It feels nice to be in a dynamic language for a change.

My first task was to fire off a function after a certain amount of time elapses without the user typing into the field. I know Javascript provides a timer mechanism, but I’m hoping jQuery provides a nice abstract to it…and it does. I’m able to find my text box and attach my timers. It was when I first tried to move this out of my static html proof of concept into an ASP.Net application hat I first realized the bane of ASP.Net when using jQuery, control id’s.

All of the examples in jQuery have really nice, hand crafted control id’s.

	$("#myTextbox").keypress(function(){
		$("#myTextbox").oneTime(1000,"mytimer",function(){alert("times up");});
	});

That’s great, but my text box is inside a user control, inside another user control, inside a page. I don’t get id = "myTextbox". I get id = "ctl0__ctl1_ctl1_etc_myTexbox", which makes the selector a little more difficult to write. Luckily, we can use some nasty escaped ASPX code to handle that. I’m not sure this is the best way to handle it, but it is working for now.

	<script type="javascript">
		var controlName = "<%= myTextbox.ClientID %>";
		$("#" + controlName).keypress(function(){"pressed it");});
	</script>

On occasion, the client id is not as easy to come across. For example, in my particular case, I am trying to select a text box inside the InsertItemTemplate of a ListView.

<asp:ListView ID="ListView1" runat="server">
    <!-- ... -->
    <InsertItemTemplate>
        <asp:TextBox ID="myTextbox" runat="server" />
        <script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
            var controlName = '<%= ListView1.InsertItem.FindControl("myTextbox"); %>';
        </script>
    </InsertItemTemplate>
</asp:ListView>

…OK. I’ve learned not to be too ambitious with my blogs post. I’ll be contributing in smaller chunks form now on.