Got questions? Tag Stack Overflow questions with ractivejs or contact @RactiveJS on Twitter
BETANAUTS! Help improve the next version of Ractive by trying out the pre-release 0.3.9 builds and reporting any issues!
It's a JavaScript library for building reactive user interfaces in a way that doesn't force you into a particular framework's way of thinking. Its features include...
- data-binding, with a beautiful declarative syntax
- event handling that doesn't make you tear your hair out
- flexible and performant animations and transitions
...among many others. It takes a radically different approach to DOM manipulation - one that saves both you and the browser unnecessary work.
To get a feel for how it will make your life as a web developer easier, visit ractivejs.org, follow the interactive tutorials, or try the 60 second setup.
If you don't find what you're looking for in the docs, ask a question on Stack Overflow with the ractive
tag, or send a tweet to @RactiveJS or @Rich_Harris.
To build the project locally, you'll need to have Grunt installed. Clone the repo, navigate to the folder, then do
$ npm install
to install all the development dependencies (which aren't included in the repo itself). Then do
$ grunt
to build the project from source, lint it, run the tests and minify the library. If all of those steps succeed, files will be created in the build
folder.
Other grunt commands available:
# Watch all source files, and rebuild when they change. This will
# only concatenate the files (it won't lint/test/minify) to the
# tmp folder
$ grunt watch
# Concatenate the files to the tmp folder
$ grunt concat
# Lint the concatenated code
$ grunt jshint
# Run tests on the concatenated code
$ grunt qunit
# Release a new version of the library to the release folder
# (reads version number from package.json)
$ grunt release
If you have feature suggestions or bug reports, please raise an issue on GitHub after checking it's not a duplicate.
Pull requests are always welcome! In lieu of a formal styleguide, please try to follow the existing conventions.
Tested successfully in IE8+ and all modern browsers. If your experience differs please let me know! (For legacy browser support, use the builds with legacy
in the filename - these include polyfills for Array.prototype.forEach
and other ES5 features used by Ractive.)
Copyright (c) 2012-13 Rich Harris. Released under an MIT license.