Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Clarifying Tagneto's mission

I think the description of Tagneto in the Why and What documents may be a little vague or too generic. I'm trying to clarify the mission and the message of the mission. Here goes:

Provide tools to build fast, rich web applications that don't require application server infrastructure.

Creating rich user interfaces in HTML should not require a server infrastructure. A web server is needed to serve the files and to distribute updates, but server infrastructure like an application server (whether it is in Java, Python, Ruby, Perl, PHP, .NET, whatever) should not be needed. Server infrastructure is needed for data APIs, but for the user interface, it should not be required.

For some larger applications, it is desirable to have the ability to create the user interface from component HTML pieces, and assemble them together in the page. Normally, an application server technology like JSP, ASP, PHP would be used to accomplish this task. However, since the desire is to avoid application server infrastructure, a View Assembly tool is needed that would provide that capability. Tagneto's View Assembly tool does just that, and it uses tools the UI developer already needs to know, JavaScript, XML, HTML and Entities.

The View Assembly tool also implements advanced features such as
  • "Aspected Oriented HTML" via overlays, allowing the matching and processing of tags across pages, and allowing processing before, after, as the first child or as the last child of the matching tag.
  • Chained tag handlers, for combining many small, focused tags together to accomplish something big.
  • The architecture is also designed to allow other scripting languages (Python, Ruby, Perl) to be used instead of JavaScript for the tag scripting (but right now only JavaScript is implemented).
  • The source does not have to completely valid XML.
  • Internationalization/Localization support.
To help with the "fast" part of "fast, rich web applications", the View Assembly tool uses a developer, compile step to generate the final UI instead of trying to do everything dynamically at runtime in JavaScript. This allows the most efficient use of processing power: use the developer's box to build things that don't depend on dynamic user input, and save only the request/user-dependent UI generation for the runtime JavaScript.
Avoiding application server infrastructure opens up the possibility to deliver the user interface from anywhere, a specialized web farm like a Content Delivery Network (CDN), or even the local disk.

However, to successfully access the data APIs, cross-domain access to the APIs via JavaScript is required. Something that is not possible with XMLHTTPRequest. Ideally, future advances of the XMLHTTPRequest object will provide that functionality, but for the browsers of today, The Dynamic Script Request API is an attempt to solve that issue.

All that said, application server infrastructure is a critical component of delivering a complete application. Hopefully it is just used for the data APIs, but the View Assembly tools should play nice with those technologies if they also need to be used to generate UI. Tagneto's View Assembly tool does play nice with the technologies, since it can be run before deploying the pages to the application server, and it is very flexible in choosing which tags to match and process.

The main goal of Tagneto is not necessarily to provide a "JavaScript library framework". Some JavaScript libraries are available with Tagneto, but in the service of the mission above. In fact, recently I have been considering providing View Assembly tool integration with some of the more well-known JavaScript frameworks, like Dojo or Prototype, with Dojo integration probably first.

Perhaps for Dojo, "View Assembly tool integration" means:
  • Using Dojo's string building utilties to build the JS-escaped strings for the ctrl tags. Right now the Array.append/join is used.
  • Supporting Dojo's connect() methods for event binding via the ctrl:listen tag.
  • Possibly do some compile-time "preprocessing" on Dojo widget tags to convert them to the HTML/JavaScript that will actually be used at runtime. This would avoid having to scan the HTML at runtime to find and bind the widgets.
  • Integrating the DSR with dojo.io.bind.
Those are just some brainstorming ideas. I'll have to investigate the Dojo code to determine feasibility. But I think one of the results of clarifying Tagneto's mission is the focus on not trying to build a JavaScript framework library. Some JS libraries will be developed as reference implementation for pieces that fulfill the mission, but ultimately, I may try to integrate those implementations into existing JS frameworks.

I'll see how it goes, but right now I like this clarification. I'll gradually work on updating the site docs to reflect it. Feedback or suggestions are welcome.

1 comment:

  1. sweeeet
    Keep it up James!
    I'd like to start using tagneto~~~

    ReplyDelete

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