The Closure Compiler application is a Java command-line utility that compresses, optimizes, and looks for mistakes in your JavaScript. To try out the Closure Compiler application with a simple JavaScript program, follow the steps below.
To work through this exercise you need the Java Runtime Environment version 6.
Download the Closure Compiler package
Create a working directory called closure-compiler.
Download the Closure Compiler compiler.jar file and save it
in closure-compiler.
Create a JavaScript file
Create a file named hello.js containing the following
JavaScript:
// A simple function.
function hello(longName) {
alert('Hello, ' + longName);
}
hello('New User');
Save this file in the closure-compiler directory.
Compile the JavaScript file
Run the following command from
the closure-compiler directory:
java -jar compiler.jar --js hello.js --js_output_file hello-compiled.js
This command creates a new file
called hello-compiled.js, which contains the following
JavaScript:
function hello(a){alert("Hello, "+a)}hello("New User");
Note that the compiler has stripped comments, whitespace and an
unnecessary semi-colon. The compiler has also replaced the parameter
name longName with the shorter name a. The
result is a much smaller JavaScript file.
To confirm that the compiled JavaScript code still works correctly,
include hello-compiled.js in an HTML file like this
one:
<html> <head><title>Hello World</title></head> <body> <script src="hello-compiled.js"></script> </body> </html>
Load the HTML file in a browser, and you should see a friendly greeting!
This example illustrates only the most simple optimizations performed by the Closure Compiler. To learn more about the compiler's capabilities, read Advanced Compilation and Externs.
To learn more about other flags and options for the Closure
Compiler, execute the jar with the --help flag:
java -jar compiler.jar --help