982 lines
		
	
	
		
			39 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			982 lines
		
	
	
		
			39 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
	
	
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| <title>UglifyJS – a JavaScript parser/compressor/beautifier</title>
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| <meta name="generator" content="Org-mode"/>
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| <meta name="generated" content="2011-12-09 14:59:08 EET"/>
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| <meta name="author" content="Mihai Bazon"/>
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| <meta name="description" content="a JavaScript parser/compressor/beautifier in JavaScript"/>
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| <div id="preamble">
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| 
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| 
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| <div id="content">
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| <h1 class="title">UglifyJS – a JavaScript parser/compressor/beautifier</h1>
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| 
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| 
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| <div id="table-of-contents">
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| <h2>Table of Contents</h2>
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| <div id="text-table-of-contents">
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| <ul>
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| <li><a href="#sec-1">1 UglifyJS — a JavaScript parser/compressor/beautifier </a>
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><a href="#sec-1-1">1.1 Unsafe transformations </a>
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><a href="#sec-1-1-1">1.1.1 Calls involving the global Array constructor </a></li>
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| <li><a href="#sec-1-1-2">1.1.2 <code>obj.toString()</code> ==> <code>obj+“”</code> </a></li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><a href="#sec-1-2">1.2 Install (NPM) </a></li>
 | |
| <li><a href="#sec-1-3">1.3 Install latest code from GitHub </a></li>
 | |
| <li><a href="#sec-1-4">1.4 Usage </a>
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><a href="#sec-1-4-1">1.4.1 API </a></li>
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| <li><a href="#sec-1-4-2">1.4.2 Beautifier shortcoming – no more comments </a></li>
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| <li><a href="#sec-1-4-3">1.4.3 Use as a code pre-processor </a></li>
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| </ul>
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| </li>
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| <li><a href="#sec-1-5">1.5 Compression – how good is it? </a></li>
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| <li><a href="#sec-1-6">1.6 Bugs? </a></li>
 | |
| <li><a href="#sec-1-7">1.7 Links </a></li>
 | |
| <li><a href="#sec-1-8">1.8 License </a></li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1" class="outline-2">
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| <h2 id="sec-1"><span class="section-number-2">1</span> UglifyJS — a JavaScript parser/compressor/beautifier </h2>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-2" id="text-1">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| This package implements a general-purpose JavaScript
 | |
| parser/compressor/beautifier toolkit.  It is developed on <a href="http://nodejs.org/">NodeJS</a>, but it
 | |
| should work on any JavaScript platform supporting the CommonJS module system
 | |
| (and if your platform of choice doesn't support CommonJS, you can easily
 | |
| implement it, or discard the <code>exports.*</code> lines from UglifyJS sources).
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The tokenizer/parser generates an abstract syntax tree from JS code.  You
 | |
| can then traverse the AST to learn more about the code, or do various
 | |
| manipulations on it.  This part is implemented in <a href="../lib/parse-js.js">parse-js.js</a> and it's a
 | |
| port to JavaScript of the excellent <a href="http://marijn.haverbeke.nl/parse-js/">parse-js</a> Common Lisp library from <a href="http://marijn.haverbeke.nl/">Marijn Haverbeke</a>.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| ( See <a href="http://github.com/mishoo/cl-uglify-js">cl-uglify-js</a> if you're looking for the Common Lisp version of
 | |
| UglifyJS. )
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
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| The second part of this package, implemented in <a href="../lib/process.js">process.js</a>, inspects and
 | |
| manipulates the AST generated by the parser to provide the following:
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>ability to re-generate JavaScript code from the AST.  Optionally
 | |
|   indented—you can use this if you want to “beautify” a program that has
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|   been compressed, so that you can inspect the source.  But you can also run
 | |
|   our code generator to print out an AST without any whitespace, so you
 | |
|   achieve compression as well.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>shorten variable names (usually to single characters).  Our mangler will
 | |
|   analyze the code and generate proper variable names, depending on scope
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|   and usage, and is smart enough to deal with globals defined elsewhere, or
 | |
|   with <code>eval()</code> calls or <code>with{}</code> statements.  In short, if <code>eval()</code> or
 | |
|   <code>with{}</code> are used in some scope, then all variables in that scope and any
 | |
|   variables in the parent scopes will remain unmangled, and any references
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|   to such variables remain unmangled as well.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>various small optimizations that may lead to faster code but certainly
 | |
|   lead to smaller code.  Where possible, we do the following:
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
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| <li>foo["bar"]  ==>  foo.bar
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>remove block brackets <code>{}</code>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>join consecutive var declarations:
 | |
|     var a = 10; var b = 20; ==> var a=10,b=20;
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>resolve simple constant expressions: 1 +2 * 3 ==> 7.  We only do the
 | |
|     replacement if the result occupies less bytes; for example 1/3 would
 | |
|     translate to 0.333333333333, so in this case we don't replace it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>consecutive statements in blocks are merged into a sequence; in many
 | |
|     cases, this leaves blocks with a single statement, so then we can remove
 | |
|     the block brackets.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>various optimizations for IF statements:
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>if (foo) bar(); else baz(); ==> foo?bar():baz();
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>if (!foo) bar(); else baz(); ==> foo?baz():bar();
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>if (foo) bar(); ==> foo&&bar();
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>if (!foo) bar(); ==> foo||bar();
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>if (foo) return bar(); else return baz(); ==> return foo?bar():baz();
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>if (foo) return bar(); else something(); ==> {if(foo)return bar();something()}
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>remove some unreachable code and warn about it (code that follows a
 | |
|     <code>return</code>, <code>throw</code>, <code>break</code> or <code>continue</code> statement, except
 | |
|     function/variable declarations).
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>act a limited version of a pre-processor (c.f. the pre-processor of
 | |
|     C/C++) to allow you to safely replace selected global symbols with
 | |
|     specified values.  When combined with the optimisations above this can
 | |
|     make UglifyJS operate slightly more like a compilation process, in
 | |
|     that when certain symbols are replaced by constant values, entire code
 | |
|     blocks may be optimised away as unreachable.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-1" class="outline-3">
 | |
| <h3 id="sec-1-1"><span class="section-number-3">1.1</span> <span class="target">Unsafe transformations</span>  </h3>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-1-1">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The following transformations can in theory break code, although they're
 | |
| probably safe in most practical cases.  To enable them you need to pass the
 | |
| <code>--unsafe</code> flag.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-1-1" class="outline-4">
 | |
| <h4 id="sec-1-1-1"><span class="section-number-4">1.1.1</span> Calls involving the global Array constructor </h4>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-4" id="text-1-1-1">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The following transformations occur:
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <pre class="src src-js"><span class="org-keyword">new</span> <span class="org-type">Array</span>(1, 2, 3, 4)  => [1,2,3,4]
 | |
| Array(a, b, c)         => [a,b,c]
 | |
| <span class="org-keyword">new</span> <span class="org-type">Array</span>(5)           => Array(5)
 | |
| <span class="org-keyword">new</span> <span class="org-type">Array</span>(a)           => Array(a)
 | |
| </pre>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| These are all safe if the Array name isn't redefined.  JavaScript does allow
 | |
| one to globally redefine Array (and pretty much everything, in fact) but I
 | |
| personally don't see why would anyone do that.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| UglifyJS does handle the case where Array is redefined locally, or even
 | |
| globally but with a <code>function</code> or <code>var</code> declaration.  Therefore, in the
 | |
| following cases UglifyJS <b>doesn't touch</b> calls or instantiations of Array:
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <pre class="src src-js"><span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">case 1.  globally declared variable</span>
 | |
|   <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">Array</span>;
 | |
|   <span class="org-keyword">new</span> <span class="org-type">Array</span>(1, 2, 3);
 | |
|   Array(a, b);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">or (can be declared later)</span>
 | |
|   <span class="org-keyword">new</span> <span class="org-type">Array</span>(1, 2, 3);
 | |
|   <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">Array</span>;
 | |
| 
 | |
|   <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">or (can be a function)</span>
 | |
|   <span class="org-keyword">new</span> <span class="org-type">Array</span>(1, 2, 3);
 | |
|   <span class="org-keyword">function</span> <span class="org-function-name">Array</span>() { ... }
 | |
| 
 | |
| <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">case 2.  declared in a function</span>
 | |
|   (<span class="org-keyword">function</span>(){
 | |
|     a = <span class="org-keyword">new</span> <span class="org-type">Array</span>(1, 2, 3);
 | |
|     b = Array(5, 6);
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">Array</span>;
 | |
|   })();
 | |
| 
 | |
|   <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">or</span>
 | |
|   (<span class="org-keyword">function</span>(<span class="org-variable-name">Array</span>){
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">return</span> Array(5, 6, 7);
 | |
|   })();
 | |
| 
 | |
|   <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">or</span>
 | |
|   (<span class="org-keyword">function</span>(){
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">return</span> <span class="org-keyword">new</span> <span class="org-type">Array</span>(1, 2, 3, 4);
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">function</span> <span class="org-function-name">Array</span>() { ... }
 | |
|   })();
 | |
| 
 | |
|   <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">etc.</span>
 | |
| </pre>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-1-2" class="outline-4">
 | |
| <h4 id="sec-1-1-2"><span class="section-number-4">1.1.2</span> <code>obj.toString()</code> ==> <code>obj+“”</code> </h4>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-4" id="text-1-1-2">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-2" class="outline-3">
 | |
| <h3 id="sec-1-2"><span class="section-number-3">1.2</span> Install (NPM) </h3>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-1-2">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| UglifyJS is now available through NPM — <code>npm install uglify-js</code> should do
 | |
| the job.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-3" class="outline-3">
 | |
| <h3 id="sec-1-3"><span class="section-number-3">1.3</span> Install latest code from GitHub </h3>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-1-3">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <pre class="src src-sh"><span class="org-comment-delimiter">## </span><span class="org-comment">clone the repository</span>
 | |
| mkdir -p /where/you/wanna/put/it
 | |
| <span class="org-builtin">cd</span> /where/you/wanna/put/it
 | |
| git clone git://github.com/mishoo/UglifyJS.git
 | |
| 
 | |
| <span class="org-comment-delimiter">## </span><span class="org-comment">make the module available to Node</span>
 | |
| mkdir -p ~/.node_libraries/
 | |
| <span class="org-builtin">cd</span> ~/.node_libraries/
 | |
| ln -s /where/you/wanna/put/it/UglifyJS/uglify-js.js
 | |
| 
 | |
| <span class="org-comment-delimiter">## </span><span class="org-comment">and if you want the CLI script too:</span>
 | |
| mkdir -p ~/bin
 | |
| <span class="org-builtin">cd</span> ~/bin
 | |
| ln -s /where/you/wanna/put/it/UglifyJS/bin/uglifyjs
 | |
|   <span class="org-comment-delimiter"># </span><span class="org-comment">(then add ~/bin to your $PATH if it's not there already)</span>
 | |
| </pre>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-4" class="outline-3">
 | |
| <h3 id="sec-1-4"><span class="section-number-3">1.4</span> Usage </h3>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-1-4">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| There is a command-line tool that exposes the functionality of this library
 | |
| for your shell-scripting needs:
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <pre class="src src-sh">uglifyjs [ options... ] [ filename ]
 | |
| </pre>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <code>filename</code> should be the last argument and should name the file from which
 | |
| to read the JavaScript code.  If you don't specify it, it will read code
 | |
| from STDIN.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| Supported options:
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><code>-b</code> or <code>--beautify</code> — output indented code; when passed, additional
 | |
|   options control the beautifier:
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><code>-i N</code> or <code>--indent N</code> — indentation level (number of spaces)
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-q</code> or <code>--quote-keys</code> — quote keys in literal objects (by default,
 | |
|     only keys that cannot be identifier names will be quotes).
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--ascii</code> — pass this argument to encode non-ASCII characters as
 | |
|   <code>\uXXXX</code> sequences.  By default UglifyJS won't bother to do it and will
 | |
|   output Unicode characters instead.  (the output is always encoded in UTF8,
 | |
|   but if you pass this option you'll only get ASCII).
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-nm</code> or <code>--no-mangle</code> — don't mangle names.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-nmf</code> or <code>--no-mangle-functions</code> – in case you want to mangle variable
 | |
|   names, but not touch function names.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-ns</code> or <code>--no-squeeze</code> — don't call <code>ast_squeeze()</code> (which does various
 | |
|   optimizations that result in smaller, less readable code).
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-mt</code> or <code>--mangle-toplevel</code> — mangle names in the toplevel scope too
 | |
|   (by default we don't do this).
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--no-seqs</code> — when <code>ast_squeeze()</code> is called (thus, unless you pass
 | |
|   <code>--no-squeeze</code>) it will reduce consecutive statements in blocks into a
 | |
|   sequence.  For example, "a = 10; b = 20; foo();" will be written as
 | |
|   "a=10,b=20,foo();".  In various occasions, this allows us to discard the
 | |
|   block brackets (since the block becomes a single statement).  This is ON
 | |
|   by default because it seems safe and saves a few hundred bytes on some
 | |
|   libs that I tested it on, but pass <code>--no-seqs</code> to disable it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--no-dead-code</code> — by default, UglifyJS will remove code that is
 | |
|   obviously unreachable (code that follows a <code>return</code>, <code>throw</code>, <code>break</code> or
 | |
|   <code>continue</code> statement and is not a function/variable declaration).  Pass
 | |
|   this option to disable this optimization.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-nc</code> or <code>--no-copyright</code> — by default, <code>uglifyjs</code> will keep the initial
 | |
|   comment tokens in the generated code (assumed to be copyright information
 | |
|   etc.).  If you pass this it will discard it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-o filename</code> or <code>--output filename</code> — put the result in <code>filename</code>.  If
 | |
|   this isn't given, the result goes to standard output (or see next one).
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--overwrite</code> — if the code is read from a file (not from STDIN) and you
 | |
|   pass <code>--overwrite</code> then the output will be written in the same file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--ast</code> — pass this if you want to get the Abstract Syntax Tree instead
 | |
|   of JavaScript as output.  Useful for debugging or learning more about the
 | |
|   internals.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-v</code> or <code>--verbose</code> — output some notes on STDERR (for now just how long
 | |
|   each operation takes).
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-d SYMBOL[=VALUE]</code> or <code>--define SYMBOL[=VALUE]</code> — will replace
 | |
|   all instances of the specified symbol where used as an identifier
 | |
|   (except where symbol has properly declared by a var declaration or
 | |
|   use as function parameter or similar) with the specified value. This
 | |
|   argument may be specified multiple times to define multiple
 | |
|   symbols - if no value is specified the symbol will be replaced with
 | |
|   the value <code>true</code>, or you can specify a numeric value (such as
 | |
|   <code>1024</code>), a quoted string value (such as ="object"= or
 | |
|   ='https://github.com'<code>), or the name of another symbol or keyword   (such as =null</code> or <code>document</code>).
 | |
|   This allows you, for example, to assign meaningful names to key
 | |
|   constant values but discard the symbolic names in the uglified
 | |
|   version for brevity/efficiency, or when used wth care, allows
 | |
|   UglifyJS to operate as a form of <b>conditional compilation</b>
 | |
|   whereby defining appropriate values may, by dint of the constant
 | |
|   folding and dead code removal features above, remove entire
 | |
|   superfluous code blocks (e.g. completely remove instrumentation or
 | |
|   trace code for production use).
 | |
|   Where string values are being defined, the handling of quotes are
 | |
|   likely to be subject to the specifics of your command shell
 | |
|   environment, so you may need to experiment with quoting styles
 | |
|   depending on your platform, or you may find the option
 | |
|   <code>--define-from-module</code> more suitable for use.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>-define-from-module SOMEMODULE</code> — will load the named module (as
 | |
|   per the NodeJS <code>require()</code> function) and iterate all the exported
 | |
|   properties of the module defining them as symbol names to be defined
 | |
|   (as if by the <code>--define</code> option) per the name of each property
 | |
|   (i.e. without the module name prefix) and given the value of the
 | |
|   property. This is a much easier way to handle and document groups of
 | |
|   symbols to be defined rather than a large number of <code>--define</code>
 | |
|   options.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--unsafe</code> — enable other additional optimizations that are known to be
 | |
|   unsafe in some contrived situations, but could still be generally useful.
 | |
|   For now only these:
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>foo.toString()  ==>  foo+""
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>new Array(x,…)  ==> [x,…]
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>new Array(x) ==> Array(x)
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--max-line-len</code> (default 32K characters) — add a newline after around
 | |
|   32K characters.  I've seen both FF and Chrome croak when all the code was
 | |
|   on a single line of around 670K.  Pass –max-line-len 0 to disable this
 | |
|   safety feature.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--reserved-names</code> — some libraries rely on certain names to be used, as
 | |
|   pointed out in issue #92 and #81, so this option allow you to exclude such
 | |
|   names from the mangler.  For example, to keep names <code>require</code> and <code>$super</code>
 | |
|   intact you'd specify –reserved-names "require,$super".
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--inline-script</code> – when you want to include the output literally in an
 | |
|   HTML <code><script></code> tag you can use this option to prevent <code></script</code> from
 | |
|   showing up in the output.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>--lift-vars</code> – when you pass this, UglifyJS will apply the following
 | |
|   transformations (see the notes in API, <code>ast_lift_variables</code>):
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>put all <code>var</code> declarations at the start of the scope
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>make sure a variable is declared only once
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>discard unused function arguments
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>discard unused inner (named) functions
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>finally, try to merge assignments into that one <code>var</code> declaration, if
 | |
|     possible.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-4-1" class="outline-4">
 | |
| <h4 id="sec-1-4-1"><span class="section-number-4">1.4.1</span> API </h4>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-4" id="text-1-4-1">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| To use the library from JavaScript, you'd do the following (example for
 | |
| NodeJS):
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <pre class="src src-js"><span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">jsp</span> = require(<span class="org-string">"uglify-js"</span>).parser;
 | |
| <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">pro</span> = require(<span class="org-string">"uglify-js"</span>).uglify;
 | |
| 
 | |
| <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">orig_code</span> = <span class="org-string">"... JS code here"</span>;
 | |
| <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">ast</span> = jsp.parse(orig_code); <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">parse code and get the initial AST</span>
 | |
| ast = pro.ast_mangle(ast); <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">get a new AST with mangled names</span>
 | |
| ast = pro.ast_squeeze(ast); <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">get an AST with compression optimizations</span>
 | |
| <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">final_code</span> = pro.gen_code(ast); <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">compressed code here</span>
 | |
| </pre>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The above performs the full compression that is possible right now.  As you
 | |
| can see, there are a sequence of steps which you can apply.  For example if
 | |
| you want compressed output but for some reason you don't want to mangle
 | |
| variable names, you would simply skip the line that calls
 | |
| <code>pro.ast_mangle(ast)</code>.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| Some of these functions take optional arguments.  Here's a description:
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><code>jsp.parse(code, strict_semicolons)</code> – parses JS code and returns an AST.
 | |
|   <code>strict_semicolons</code> is optional and defaults to <code>false</code>.  If you pass
 | |
|   <code>true</code> then the parser will throw an error when it expects a semicolon and
 | |
|   it doesn't find it.  For most JS code you don't want that, but it's useful
 | |
|   if you want to strictly sanitize your code.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>pro.ast_lift_variables(ast)</code> – merge and move <code>var</code> declarations to the
 | |
|   scop of the scope; discard unused function arguments or variables; discard
 | |
|   unused (named) inner functions.  It also tries to merge assignments
 | |
|   following the <code>var</code> declaration into it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
|   If your code is very hand-optimized concerning <code>var</code> declarations, this
 | |
|   lifting variable declarations might actually increase size.  For me it
 | |
|   helps out.  On jQuery it adds 865 bytes (243 after gzip).  YMMV.  Also
 | |
|   note that (since it's not enabled by default) this operation isn't yet
 | |
|   heavily tested (please report if you find issues!).
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
|   Note that although it might increase the image size (on jQuery it gains
 | |
|   865 bytes, 243 after gzip) it's technically more correct: in certain
 | |
|   situations, dead code removal might drop variable declarations, which
 | |
|   would not happen if the variables are lifted in advance.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
|   Here's an example of what it does:
 | |
| </p></li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <pre class="src src-js"><span class="org-keyword">function</span> <span class="org-function-name">f</span>(<span class="org-variable-name">a</span>, <span class="org-variable-name">b</span>, <span class="org-variable-name">c</span>, <span class="org-variable-name">d</span>, <span class="org-variable-name">e</span>) {
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">q</span>;
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">w</span>;
 | |
|     w = 10;
 | |
|     q = 20;
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">for</span> (<span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">i</span> = 1; i < 10; ++i) {
 | |
|         <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">boo</span> = foo(a);
 | |
|     }
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">for</span> (<span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">i</span> = 0; i < 1; ++i) {
 | |
|         <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">boo</span> = bar(c);
 | |
|     }
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">function</span> <span class="org-function-name">foo</span>(){ ... }
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">function</span> <span class="org-function-name">bar</span>(){ ... }
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">function</span> <span class="org-function-name">baz</span>(){ ... }
 | |
| }
 | |
| 
 | |
| <span class="org-comment-delimiter">// </span><span class="org-comment">transforms into ==></span>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <span class="org-keyword">function</span> <span class="org-function-name">f</span>(<span class="org-variable-name">a</span>, <span class="org-variable-name">b</span>, <span class="org-variable-name">c</span>) {
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">i</span>, <span class="org-variable-name">boo</span>, <span class="org-variable-name">w</span> = 10, <span class="org-variable-name">q</span> = 20;
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">for</span> (i = 1; i < 10; ++i) {
 | |
|         boo = foo(a);
 | |
|     }
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">for</span> (i = 0; i < 1; ++i) {
 | |
|         boo = bar(c);
 | |
|     }
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">function</span> <span class="org-function-name">foo</span>() { ... }
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">function</span> <span class="org-function-name">bar</span>() { ... }
 | |
| }
 | |
| </pre>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><code>pro.ast_mangle(ast, options)</code> – generates a new AST containing mangled
 | |
|   (compressed) variable and function names.  It supports the following
 | |
|   options:
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><code>toplevel</code> – mangle toplevel names (by default we don't touch them).
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>except</code> – an array of names to exclude from compression.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>defines</code> – an object with properties named after symbols to
 | |
|     replace (see the <code>--define</code> option for the script) and the values
 | |
|     representing the AST replacement value.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>pro.ast_squeeze(ast, options)</code> – employs further optimizations designed
 | |
|   to reduce the size of the code that <code>gen_code</code> would generate from the
 | |
|   AST.  Returns a new AST.  <code>options</code> can be a hash; the supported options
 | |
|   are:
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><code>make_seqs</code> (default true) which will cause consecutive statements in a
 | |
|     block to be merged using the "sequence" (comma) operator
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>dead_code</code> (default true) which will remove unreachable code.
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>pro.gen_code(ast, options)</code> – generates JS code from the AST.  By
 | |
|   default it's minified, but using the <code>options</code> argument you can get nicely
 | |
|   formatted output.  <code>options</code> is, well, optional :-) and if you pass it it
 | |
|   must be an object and supports the following properties (below you can see
 | |
|   the default values):
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><code>beautify: false</code> – pass <code>true</code> if you want indented output
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>indent_start: 0</code> (only applies when <code>beautify</code> is <code>true</code>) – initial
 | |
|     indentation in spaces
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>indent_level: 4</code> (only applies when <code>beautify</code> is <code>true</code>) --
 | |
|     indentation level, in spaces (pass an even number)
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>quote_keys: false</code> – if you pass <code>true</code> it will quote all keys in
 | |
|     literal objects
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>space_colon: false</code> (only applies when <code>beautify</code> is <code>true</code>) – wether
 | |
|     to put a space before the colon in object literals
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>ascii_only: false</code> – pass <code>true</code> if you want to encode non-ASCII
 | |
|     characters as <code>\uXXXX</code>.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li><code>inline_script: false</code> – pass <code>true</code> to escape occurrences of
 | |
|     <code></script</code> in strings
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-4-2" class="outline-4">
 | |
| <h4 id="sec-1-4-2"><span class="section-number-4">1.4.2</span> Beautifier shortcoming – no more comments </h4>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-4" id="text-1-4-2">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The beautifier can be used as a general purpose indentation tool.  It's
 | |
| useful when you want to make a minified file readable.  One limitation,
 | |
| though, is that it discards all comments, so you don't really want to use it
 | |
| to reformat your code, unless you don't have, or don't care about, comments.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| In fact it's not the beautifier who discards comments — they are dumped at
 | |
| the parsing stage, when we build the initial AST.  Comments don't really
 | |
| make sense in the AST, and while we could add nodes for them, it would be
 | |
| inconvenient because we'd have to add special rules to ignore them at all
 | |
| the processing stages.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-4-3" class="outline-4">
 | |
| <h4 id="sec-1-4-3"><span class="section-number-4">1.4.3</span> Use as a code pre-processor </h4>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-4" id="text-1-4-3">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The <code>--define</code> option can be used, particularly when combined with the
 | |
| constant folding logic, as a form of pre-processor to enable or remove
 | |
| particular constructions, such as might be used for instrumenting
 | |
| development code, or to produce variations aimed at a specific
 | |
| platform.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The code below illustrates the way this can be done, and how the
 | |
| symbol replacement is performed.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <pre class="src src-js">CLAUSE1: <span class="org-keyword">if</span> (<span class="org-keyword">typeof</span> DEVMODE === <span class="org-string">'undefined'</span>) {
 | |
|     DEVMODE = <span class="org-constant">true</span>;
 | |
| }
 | |
| 
 | |
| <span class="org-function-name">CLAUSE2</span>: <span class="org-keyword">function</span> init() {
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">if</span> (DEVMODE) {
 | |
|         console.log(<span class="org-string">"init() called"</span>);
 | |
|     }
 | |
|     ....
 | |
|     DEVMODE &amp;&amp; console.log(<span class="org-string">"init() complete"</span>);
 | |
| }
 | |
| 
 | |
| <span class="org-function-name">CLAUSE3</span>: <span class="org-keyword">function</span> reportDeviceStatus(<span class="org-variable-name">device</span>) {
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">var</span> <span class="org-variable-name">DEVMODE</span> = device.mode, <span class="org-variable-name">DEVNAME</span> = device.name;
 | |
|     <span class="org-keyword">if</span> (DEVMODE === <span class="org-string">'open'</span>) {
 | |
|         ....
 | |
|     }
 | |
| }
 | |
| </pre>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| When the above code is normally executed, the undeclared global
 | |
| variable <code>DEVMODE</code> will be assigned the value <b>true</b> (see <code>CLAUSE1</code>)
 | |
| and so the <code>init()</code> function (<code>CLAUSE2</code>) will write messages to the
 | |
| console log when executed, but in <code>CLAUSE3</code> a locally declared
 | |
| variable will mask access to the <code>DEVMODE</code> global symbol.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| If the above code is processed by UglifyJS with an argument of
 | |
| <code>--define DEVMODE=false</code> then UglifyJS will replace <code>DEVMODE</code> with the
 | |
| boolean constant value <b>false</b> within <code>CLAUSE1</code> and <code>CLAUSE2</code>, but it
 | |
| will leave <code>CLAUSE3</code> as it stands because there <code>DEVMODE</code> resolves to
 | |
| a validly declared variable.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| And more so, the constant-folding features of UglifyJS will recognise
 | |
| that the <code>if</code> condition of <code>CLAUSE1</code> is thus always false, and so will
 | |
| remove the test and body of <code>CLAUSE1</code> altogether (including the
 | |
| otherwise slightly problematical statement <code>false = true;</code> which it
 | |
| will have formed by replacing <code>DEVMODE</code> in the body).  Similarly,
 | |
| within <code>CLAUSE2</code> both calls to <code>console.log()</code> will be removed
 | |
| altogether.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| In this way you can mimic, to a limited degree, the functionality of
 | |
| the C/C++ pre-processor to enable or completely remove blocks
 | |
| depending on how certain symbols are defined - perhaps using UglifyJS
 | |
| to generate different versions of source aimed at different
 | |
| environments
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| It is recommmended (but not made mandatory) that symbols designed for
 | |
| this purpose are given names consisting of <code>UPPER_CASE_LETTERS</code> to
 | |
| distinguish them from other (normal) symbols and avoid the sort of
 | |
| clash that <code>CLAUSE3</code> above illustrates.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-5" class="outline-3">
 | |
| <h3 id="sec-1-5"><span class="section-number-3">1.5</span> Compression – how good is it? </h3>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-1-5">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| Here are updated statistics.  (I also updated my Google Closure and YUI
 | |
| installations).
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| We're still a lot better than YUI in terms of compression, though slightly
 | |
| slower.  We're still a lot faster than Closure, and compression after gzip
 | |
| is comparable.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <table border="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" rules="groups" frame="hsides">
 | |
| <caption></caption>
 | |
| <colgroup><col class="left" /><col class="left" /><col class="right" /><col class="left" /><col class="right" /><col class="left" /><col class="right" />
 | |
| </colgroup>
 | |
| <thead>
 | |
| <tr><th scope="col" class="left">File</th><th scope="col" class="left">UglifyJS</th><th scope="col" class="right">UglifyJS+gzip</th><th scope="col" class="left">Closure</th><th scope="col" class="right">Closure+gzip</th><th scope="col" class="left">YUI</th><th scope="col" class="right">YUI+gzip</th></tr>
 | |
| </thead>
 | |
| <tbody>
 | |
| <tr><td class="left">jquery-1.6.2.js</td><td class="left">91001 (0:01.59)</td><td class="right">31896</td><td class="left">90678 (0:07.40)</td><td class="right">31979</td><td class="left">101527 (0:01.82)</td><td class="right">34646</td></tr>
 | |
| <tr><td class="left">paper.js</td><td class="left">142023 (0:01.65)</td><td class="right">43334</td><td class="left">134301 (0:07.42)</td><td class="right">42495</td><td class="left">173383 (0:01.58)</td><td class="right">48785</td></tr>
 | |
| <tr><td class="left">prototype.js</td><td class="left">88544 (0:01.09)</td><td class="right">26680</td><td class="left">86955 (0:06.97)</td><td class="right">26326</td><td class="left">92130 (0:00.79)</td><td class="right">28624</td></tr>
 | |
| <tr><td class="left">thelib-full.js (DynarchLIB)</td><td class="left">251939 (0:02.55)</td><td class="right">72535</td><td class="left">249911 (0:09.05)</td><td class="right">72696</td><td class="left">258869 (0:01.94)</td><td class="right">76584</td></tr>
 | |
| </tbody>
 | |
| </table>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-6" class="outline-3">
 | |
| <h3 id="sec-1-6"><span class="section-number-3">1.6</span> Bugs? </h3>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-1-6">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| Unfortunately, for the time being there is no automated test suite.  But I
 | |
| ran the compressor manually on non-trivial code, and then I tested that the
 | |
| generated code works as expected.  A few hundred times.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| DynarchLIB was started in times when there was no good JS minifier.
 | |
| Therefore I was quite religious about trying to write short code manually,
 | |
| and as such DL contains a lot of syntactic hacks<sup><a class="footref" name="fnr.1" href="#fn.1">1</a></sup> such as “foo == bar ?  a
 | |
| = 10 : b = 20”, though the more readable version would clearly be to use
 | |
| “if/else”.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| Since the parser/compressor runs fine on DL and jQuery, I'm quite confident
 | |
| that it's solid enough for production use.  If you can identify any bugs,
 | |
| I'd love to hear about them (<a href="http://groups.google.com/group/uglifyjs">use the Google Group</a> or email me directly).
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-7" class="outline-3">
 | |
| <h3 id="sec-1-7"><span class="section-number-3">1.7</span> Links </h3>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-1-7">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>Twitter: <a href="http://twitter.com/UglifyJS">@UglifyJS</a>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>Project at GitHub: <a href="http://github.com/mishoo/UglifyJS">http://github.com/mishoo/UglifyJS</a>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>Google Group: <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/uglifyjs">http://groups.google.com/group/uglifyjs</a>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>Common Lisp JS parser: <a href="http://marijn.haverbeke.nl/parse-js/">http://marijn.haverbeke.nl/parse-js/</a>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>JS-to-Lisp compiler: <a href="http://github.com/marijnh/js">http://github.com/marijnh/js</a>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>Common Lisp JS uglifier: <a href="http://github.com/mishoo/cl-uglify-js">http://github.com/mishoo/cl-uglify-js</a>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="outline-container-1-8" class="outline-3">
 | |
| <h3 id="sec-1-8"><span class="section-number-3">1.8</span> License </h3>
 | |
| <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-1-8">
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| UglifyJS is released under the BSD license:
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <pre class="example">Copyright 2010 (c) Mihai Bazon <mihai.bazon@gmail.com>
 | |
| Based on parse-js (http://marijn.haverbeke.nl/parse-js/).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
 | |
| modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
 | |
| are met:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     * Redistributions of source code must retain the above
 | |
|       copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
 | |
|       disclaimer.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
 | |
|       copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
 | |
|       disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials
 | |
|       provided with the distribution.
 | |
| 
 | |
| THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER “AS IS” AND ANY
 | |
| EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
 | |
| IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
 | |
| PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER BE
 | |
| LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY,
 | |
| OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
 | |
| PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
 | |
| PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
 | |
| THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR
 | |
| TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF
 | |
| THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
 | |
| SUCH DAMAGE.
 | |
| </pre>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="footnotes">
 | |
| <h2 class="footnotes">Footnotes: </h2>
 | |
| <div id="text-footnotes">
 | |
| <p class="footnote"><sup><a class="footnum" name="fn.1" href="#fnr.1">1</a></sup> I even reported a few bugs and suggested some fixes in the original
 | |
|     <a href="http://marijn.haverbeke.nl/parse-js/">parse-js</a> library, and Marijn pushed fixes literally in minutes.
 | |
| </p></div>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div id="postamble">
 | |
| <p class="date">Date: 2011-12-09 14:59:08 EET</p>
 | |
| <p class="author">Author: Mihai Bazon</p>
 | |
| <p class="creator">Org version 7.7 with Emacs version 23</p>
 | |
| <a href="http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=referer">Validate XHTML 1.0</a>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| </body>
 | |
| </html>
 |