@title Celerity Technical Documentation @group celerity Technical overview of the Celerity system. = Overview = Celerity is a static resource (CSS and JS) management system, which handles: - Keeping track of which resources a page needs. - Generating URIs for the browser to access resources. - Managing dependencies between resources. - Packaging resources into fewer HTTP requests for performance. - Preprocessing resources (e.g., stripping comments and whitespace). - Delivering resources and managing resource cache lifetimes. - Interfacing with the client to manage resources. Celerity is an outgrowth of the //Haste// system at Facebook. You can find more information about Celerity here: - @{article:Things You Should Do Soon: Static Resources} describes the history and context of the system and the problems it solves. - @{article:Adding New CSS and JS} provides a developer guide to using Celerity. = Class Relationships = Celerity's primary API is @{function:require_celerity_resource}, which marks a resource for inclusion when a response is rendered (e.g., when the HTML page is generated, or when the response to an Ajax request is built). For instance, if you use a CSS class like "widget-view", you must ensure the appropriate CSS is included by calling ##require_celerity_resource('widget-view-css')## (or similar), at your use site. This function uses @{class:CelerityAPI} to access the active @{class:CelerityStaticResourceResponse} and tells it that it needs to include the resource later, when the response actually gets built. (This layer of indirection provides future-proofing against certain complex situations Facebook eventually encountered). When the time comes to render the response, the page renderer uses @{class:CelerityAPI} to access the active @{class:CelerityStaticResourceResponse} and requests that it render out appropriate references to CSS and JS resources. It uses @{class:CelerityResourceMap} to determine the dependencies for the requested resources (so you only have to explicitly include what you're actually using, and not all of its dependencies) and any packaging rules (so it may be able to generate fewer resource requests, improving performance). It then generates ##