Last week, the team behind the Dojo Toolkit announced the release of Dojo 5.0. This release comes with extended support for TypeScript versions from 2.6.x to 3.2.x, condition polyfills, better Build Time Rendering, and more. Dojo is a JavaScript toolkit that equips developers with everything they need to build a web app like language utilities, UI components, and more.
This release provides a better user experience by introducing an out-of-the-box solution for building and loading polyfills in Dojo applications. A polyfill is a piece of code, which implements a feature that web browsers do not support natively.
The Dojo build will produce two platform bundles that will be loaded only if two key conditions are fulfilled. First, the shim module is imported somewhere in an application. Second, a user browser does not natively support the browser feature. This update means serving less JavaScript and hence improving the application performance without compromising on features.
This version comes with various stability and feature enhancements in BTR such as Dojo Blocks, support for StateHistory API, multiple page HTML generation, better error messaging, and more.
BTR was supported in Dojo via the Dojo cli-build-app command since its initial 2.0.0 release. It provides rendering an application to HTML during the build and in-lines the critical CSS enabling the application to effectively render static HTML pages. It also comes with some advantages of server-side rendering (SSR) such as performance and SEO and eliminates the complexities of running a server to support full SSR.
Dojo Blocks is a new mechanism that allows you to execute code in Node.js as part of the build. A Dojo Block module can do things like reading a group of markdown files, transforming them into VNodes, and making them available to render in the application, all at build time. The results of this Dojo module can be written to the cache that can be used at runtime in the browser.
Dojo 5.0 comes with Assertion Templates, that makes testing widgets easier. Earlier, developers had to manually curate each ‘expectedRender’ result per test. Assertion Templates solves this problem by allowing developers to easily modify and layer outputs for the expected render.
To read the entire list of updates in Dojo 5.0, check out the official announcement.
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