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Home/ Questions/Q 8963419
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T16:21:03+00:00 2026-06-15T16:21:03+00:00

I’m building an in-browser MVC application which will eventually run on a mobile device

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I’m building an in-browser MVC application which will eventually run on a mobile device via PhoneGap. The app will communicate with the API server but will otherwise be completely independent. When I develop standard server-side MVC applications in Rails, the models, views, and controllers are separated into distinct files and directories. What’s the standard practice with in-browser MVC apps? Are the MVC components usually defined within a single JS file, or are they usually separated out?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T16:21:04+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 4:21 pm

    During the development phase, yes javascript files should be separated and well documented..
    You can use requirejs to load your modules/views/collections separately.

    Here is a great tutorial about Asynchronous Module Definitions (AMD). It’s mainly about how you would organize your application using modules. I suggest you read it.
    Below is the sample project structure the tutorial’s author uses:

    ├── js
    │   ├── libs
    │   │   ├── jquery
    │   │   │   ├── jquery.min.js
    │   │   ├── backbone
    │   │   │   ├── backbone.min.js
    │   │   └── underscore
    │   │   │   ├── underscore.min.js
    │   ├── models
    │   │   ├── users.js
    │   │   └── projects.js
    │   ├── collections
    │   │   ├── users.js
    │   │   └── projects.js
    │   ├── views
    │   │   ├── projects
    │   │   │   ├── list.js
    │   │   │   └── edit.js
    │   │   └── users
    │   │       ├── list.js
    │   │       └── edit.js
    │   ├── router.js
    │   ├── app.js
    │   ├── main.js
    │   ├── order.js
    │   └── text.js
    └── index.html
    

    For the validation/deployment phase, use a grunt-like tool to launch automated tasks. Such as concatenating and minifying javascript files into a single one. (It takes around 30 seconds depending on how you’ve configured it)
    Here is an example of a grunt file.

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