Confluence Docs 3.0 : Including Javascript and CSS resources
This page last changed on Oct 28, 2009 by agnes@atlassian.com.
Good style for web applications requires that JavaScript and CSS for web pages are kept separate to the HTML they enhance. Confluence itself is moving towards this model, and the tools that Confluence uses to do this are also available to plugin developers.
On this page: Including a Custom JavaScript or CSS File from a PluginIn your atlassian-plugin.xml, you should add a Web Resource module. See Web Resource Plugins. For each resource, the location of the resource should match the path to the resource in your plugin JAR file. Resource paths are namespaced to your plugin, so they can't conflict with resources in other plugins with the same location (unlike say i18n or Velocity resources). However, you may find it convenient to use a path name which is specific to your plugin to be consistent with these other types. To include your custom web resource in a page where your plugin is used, you use the #requireResource Velocity macro like this: #requireResource("com.acme.example.plugin:web-resource-key") Where "com.acme.example.plugin:web-resource-key" should be your plugin key, a colon, and the key of the web resource module in your plugin. Only one instance of each script or stylesheet will be included, and they will appear in the order they are requested in the Velocity rendering process.
Web Resource ConfigurationWithin your Web Resource plugin module, you will define one or more resource definitions. See Adding Plugin and Module Resources. Note that you can declare the media type (for CSS resources) and whether the resource should be wrapped in an Internet Explorer conditional comment. This feature is also described in Adding Plugin and Module Resources. Here is a short example: <web-resource key="my-macro-resources"> <resource type="download" name="macro.js" location="path/inside/jar/to/js/macro.js"/> <resource type="download" name="more-macro-stuff.js" location="path/inside/jar/to/js/more-macro-stuff.js"/> <resource type="download" name="macro.css" location="path/inside/jar/to/css/macro.css"/> <resource type="download" name="macro-ie.css" location="path/inside/jar/to/css/macro-ie.css"> <param name="ieonly" value="true"/> <param name="title" value="IE styles for My Awesome Macro"/> </resource> <resource type="download" name="macro-print.css" location="path/inside/jar/to/css/macro-print.css"> <param name="media" value="print"/> </resource> <dependency>confluence.web.resources:ajs</dependency> <!-- depends on jQuery/AJS --> </web-resource> See below for the libraries provided by Confluence which you can include as a dependency. Including a JavaScript Library provided by ConfluenceConfluence currently includes several JavaScript libraries which plugins can use. The versions of these libraries are subject to change, but only across major versions of Confluence. In the Confluence source code, these libraries are included in a plugin XML file called web-resources.xml.
To include one of these libraries in all pages in which your Velocity template appear, simply use the #requireResource macro as above. For example, if your macro requires jQuery, add the following to its Velocity template: #requireResource("confluence.web.resources:jquery") Deprecated librariesUse of Scriptaculous, Prototype and DWR is deprecated. Use of these libraries in Confluence core will be gradually replaced with jQuery over the next few releases. Plugin developers should start doing the same with their front-end code, because these libraries will at some point, be removed in a future release of Confluence.
Running Scripts when the Page LoadsThe recommended way to load scripts when the page is ready, known as 'on-DOM-ready', is to use the Atlassian JavaScript (AJS) abstraction. This avoids depending on a particular JavaScript library which may not remain in Confluence. AJS.toInit(function () { // ... your initialisation code here }); This has the additional benefit of ensuring any functions or variables you declare here are not in the global scope, which is important for best interoperability with other plugins in Confluence. Achieving Progressive EnhancementWe recommend you separate your markup, styles and JavaScript when developing a Confluence plugin, according to the design principles of progressive enhancement. To assist with this, there are a few hooks in AJS and in Confluence in general to make this easier. Dynamic Content in JavaScriptIf you need to pass information from Velocity to JavaScript, such as for localised text, you can use AJS.params. This automatically looks up values inside fieldsets marked with a class of "parameters" inside your markup. For example, given the following markup: <fieldset class="parameters hidden"> <input type="hidden" id="deleteCommentConfirmMessage" value="$action.getText('remove.comment.confirmation.message')"> </fieldset> You can have your JavaScript access the localised text without embedding it by using AJS.params: if (confirm(AJS.params.deleteCommentConfirmMessage)) { // ... } Getting the Context PathUsually, you can use relative paths in stylesheets and JavaScript to avoid the need to know the context path. However, Confluence makes this available through a meta tag in the header which looks like this: <meta id="confluence-context-path" name="confluence-context-path" content="/confluence"> With jQuery, or even normal JavaScript, it is quite easy to retrieve this for use in scripts: // normal JS var relativeUrl = (document.getElementById("confluence-context-path").content || "") + "/path/to/content"; // jQuery var relativeUrl = ($("#confluence-context-path").attr("content") || "") + "/path/to/content"; More InformationCouldn't you do this already? What's changed in Confluence 2.8?Since Confluence 2.6, you've been able to use #includeJavascript, which puts the script tag inline, exactly where that Velocity macro appears. You've also always been able to include inline scripts or styles in your macros. However, there are a couple of problems with this that we've solved in 2.8:
Many plugin authors found that including JavaScript in their plugins meant the plugin broke in some places, such as in the preview window, if two copies of the macro were on the same page. By using the new #requireResource, you're guaranteed to get only one instance of the script appearing on a page, and it will be cached by browsers until your plugin is upgraded. Do I have to use Velocity to request these resources? What about in Java?You can achieve the same result in Java via the WebResourceManager. Use the same method as described above for Velocity: webResourceManager.requireResource(String) In most cases, using Velocity makes more sense, because the declaration of the JS and CSS should be close to the code which uses it. RELATED TOPICSWeb Resource Plugins |
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Document generated by Confluence on Nov 05, 2009 23:34 |