The most common packages like React will continue to be maintained in Cljsjs. But there are better alternatives for using JS libraries.
Maintainers might still accept PRs but if you are just adding a library for use in your application, consider alternatives before creating a PR.
- To allow easy use of JS libraries from Cljs -> No longer needed
- To ensure there is only single copy of the JS library in classpath -> Still relevant, in some cases
- Centralized repository needs maintainers to review and merge PRs
- Outdated tooling, open issues with tooling
Use shadow-cljs or ClojureScript with Webpack to directly consume npm packages. You always get access to up-to-date versions.
Depending on your library, you could just require that the consumers of your library use shadow-cljs or webpack to provide requires JS libraries. If you need to ensure users can use the library with foreign-libraries, you could package the JS library yourself as a JAR, same as what cljsjs does, but you can do this yourself using Leiningen or clj.
Compared to Cljsjs, you need to create a bit of tooling yourself, but you are free to update the JS library yourself.
CLJSJS is an effort to package Javascript libraries to be able to use them from within ClojureScript.
All packages provided by cljsjs provide deps.cljs
files that will be automatically picked up by the ClojureScript
compiler as of 0.0-2727. Versions of the Jar reflect the
version of the packaged JS lib.
You can find the specific coordinates for those packages in their
respective README
files.
The wiki of this repo is used for community maintained documentation:
If you'd like to contribute there's a small section on that as well.
Clojurians slack (join) has a channel #cljsjs for talk about Cljsjs.