How much library code do you really need — 50K? 100K? 150K? More? How much of that do you really use?
Sure, we all love our favorite monolithic frameworks, and sometimes we even use them fully. But how often do we reach for the ride-on John Deere tractor with air conditioning and six-speaker sound system, when a judiciously applied pocketknife would do the trick better, faster, slicker?
Micro-frameworks are definitely the pocketknives of the JavaScript library world: short, sweet, to the point. And at 5k and under, micro-frameworks are very very portable. A micro-framework does one thing and one thing only — and does it well. No cruft, no featuritis, no feature creep, no excess anywhere.
MicroJS.com helps you discover the most compact-but-powerful microframeworks, and makes it easy for you to pick one that’ll work for you.
Want to add your own? Fork this site on GitHub, add your framework to "data.js" and submit a pull request.
- Must not have dependencies (It's ok to target a specific platform, like Node.js or WebKit)
- Must do something useful, and must not be just a demo
- Must be MIT/BSD-license or similar permissive license
- Templating engines and loaders will only be added if they're outstanding and exceptional
- Must be < 5k when minified and gzipped (see below)
- Source file must be available for download and not change across releases (e.g. awesomesauce-1.1.0.js)
- Prefer hand-coded/hand-optimized JavaScript over generated/cross-compiled code
To check the minified and compressed size of your library from the command line, either use ./build.js -v
(see below) or run:
$ uglifyjs yourlib.js | gzip -9f | wc -c
or
$ wget -q -O- https://domain.tld/path/to/file.src | uglifyjs | gzip -9f | wc -c
- Add your library to "data.js", pick a random point in the file (this helps with merging many contributions) and enter the required attributes:
'name'
,'tags'
,'url'
,'source'
- The a
'url'
should point to wherever you host your README or docs and where code is downloaded code-download - If the
'url'
is not a GitHub address but your project is hosted there, add a'github'
field with your username & lib name, e.g.'timrwood/moment'
so the builder can collect GitHub stats - The
'source'
attribute must point to a single-file, or an array of files that can be concatenated to form your complete library in a ready-to-use form. The'source'
must not be minified (see below) - Running
make
should work and not return an error. To run make, you'll need node installed
If your source very small, you can simply include the whole thing in the source attribute as a string. If your source is split across multiple files, you can use an array of URLs (it's preferrable to just have a single source). If your source is released in a ZIP file you can point to the ZIP's URL and append a !/zip/entry.js
to the end so the compiler knows where to look (it's still preferable to just have a single source URL!)
The builder reads data.js and checks the source of each entry. It will calculate the raw, minified and gzipped sizes of the entries.
You will see warnings where entries need to be checked and errors where entries will be excluded.
If you wish to see details of all entries, you can run the ./build.js -v
command.
- Fork repository
- Clone repository to your local machine
- Add to
data.js
file the representative attributes listed above - NOTE add the new files somewhere other than the bottom to make PR merging less conflict-prone
- Run
npm install
if you haven't already andnpm test
- If your added package comes up with a
SUCCESS
message you are good to go, submit the PR - To filter on only your package results run
./build.js -v | grep YOUR_PACKAGE_NAME
Please note that MicroJS.com is a curated site and that we reserve the right to refuse any listing for any reason.
The microjs.com code/website is released under a MIT License.