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Play Framework essentials

You're reading from   Play Framework essentials An intuitive guide to creating easy-to-build scalable web applications using the Play framework

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783982400
Length 200 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Julien Richard-Foy Julien Richard-Foy
Author Profile Icon Julien Richard-Foy
Julien Richard-Foy
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Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Web Service FREE CHAPTER 2. Persisting Data and Testing 3. Turning a Web Service into a Web Application 4. Integrating with Client-side Technologies 5. Reactively Handling Long-running Requests 6. Leveraging the Play Stack – Security, Internationalization, Cache, and the HTTP Client 7. Scaling Your Codebase and Deploying Your Application Index

Serving static assets


The web layer we wrote in the previous chapter was not really complete; we could add some beautiful CSS styles and some cool JavaScript behavior. CSS files, JavaScript files, as well as images do not change once your application is started, so they are usually referred to as static assets. The most convenient way to serve them is to map a URL path to a directory of your filesystem. Play comes with an Assets controller that does just this. Consider the following route definition:

GET   /assets/*file   controllers.Assets.at(path = "/public",   file)

This route maps the public directory of your application to the assets path of your HTTP layer. This means that, for example, a public/stylesheets/shop.css file is served under the /assets/stylesheets/shop.css URL.

This works because Play automatically adds the public/ directory of your application to the classpath. To use an additional directory as an assets folder, you have to explicitly add it to the application classpath...

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