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JavaScript at Scale

You're reading from   JavaScript at Scale Build web applications that last, with scaling insights from the front-line of JavaScript development

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785282157
Length 266 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Adam Boduch Adam Boduch
Author Profile Icon Adam Boduch
Adam Boduch
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Scale from a JavaScript Perspective 2. Influencers of Scale FREE CHAPTER 3. Component Composition 4. Component Communication and Responsibilities 5. Addressability and Navigation 6. User Preferences and Defaults 7. Load Time and Responsiveness 8. Portability and Testing 9. Scaling Down 10. Coping with Failure Index

Router configuration


The mapping of our routes to their events is often lager than the router implementation itself. That's because as our application grows and acquires more route patterns, the list of possibilities gets bigger. A lot of the time, this is an unavoidable consequence of an application that's meeting its scaling demands. The trick is to not let a large number of route declarations collapse under their own weight, and this can happen in a number of ways.

There's more than one approach to configuring the routes that a given router instance responds to. Depending on the framework we're using, the router component may have more flexibility in how they're configured than others. Generally speaking, there's the static route approach, or the event registration approach. We'll also want to consider the router's ability to disable a given route at any given time.

Static route declarations

Simple applications usually configure their routers with a static declaration. This usually means...

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