The common wisdom is that one should not reinvent the wheel, because that would waste effort and resources. It is certainly true in many cases. A javascript framework is a considerable investment, so it is quite logical to ask the question: why did Odoo decide to make OWL instead of using a standard/well known framework, such as React or Vue?
As you might expect, the answer to that question is not simple. But most of the reasons discussed in this page are a consequence from a single fact: Odoo is extremely modular.
This means, for example, that the core parts of Odoo are not aware, before runtime, of what files will be loaded/executed, or what will be the state of the UI. Because of that, Odoo cannot rely on a standard build toolchain. Also, this implies that the core parts of Odoo need to be extremely generic. In other words, Odoo is not really an application with a user interface. It is an application which generates a dynamic user interface. And most frameworks are not up to the task.
Betting on Owl was not an easy choice to make, because there certainly are a lot of conflicting needs that we want to carefully balance. Choosing anything other than a well known framework is bound to be controversial. This page will explain some of the reason why we still believe that building Owl is a worthwile endeavour.
It is true that we want to keep control of our technology, in the sense that we do not want to depend on Facebook or Google, or any other large (or small) company. If they decide to change their license, or to go in a direction that will not work for us, this may be a problem. This is even more true because Odoo is not a conventional javascript application, and our needs are probably quite different as most other applications.
It is clear that the biggest frameworks are moving away from class components. There is an implicit assumption that class components are terrible, and that functional programming is the way to go. React even goes as far as to say that classes are confusing for developers.
While there is some truth to that, and to the fact that composition is certainly a good mechanism for code reuse, we believe that classes and inheritance are important tools.
Sharing code between generic components with inheritance is the way Odoo built its web client. And it is clear that inheritance is not the root of all evils. It is often a perfectly simple and appropriate solution. What matter most is the architectural decisions.
Also, Odoo has another specific use out of class components: each method of a class provides an extension point for addons. This may not be a clean architecture pattern, but it is a pragmatic decision that served Odoo well: classes are sometimes monkey-patched to add behaviour from the outside. A little bit like mixins, but from the outside.
Using React or Vue would make it significantly harder to monkey patch components, because a lot of the state is hidden in their internals.
React or Vue have a huge community, and a lot of effort have been made into their tooling. This is wonderful, but at the same time, a pretty big issue for Odoo: since the assets are totally dynamic (and could change whenever the user install or remove an addon), we need to have all that kind of tooling on the production servers. This is certainly not ideal.
Also, this makes it very complicated to setup Vue or React tools: Odoo code is not a simple file that import other files. It changes all the time, assets are bundled differently in different contexts. This is the reason why Odoo has its own module system, which are resolve at runtime, by the browser. The dynamic nature of Odoo means that we often need to delay work as late as possible (in other word, we want a JIT user interface!)
Our ideal framework has minimal (mandatory) tooling, which makes it easier to deploy. Using React without JSX, or Vue without vue file is not very appealing.
At the same time, Owl is designed to solve this issue: it compiles templates
by the browser, it doesn't need much code for that, since we use the XML parser
built into each browser. Owl works with or without any additional tooling. It
can use template strings to write single file component, and is easy to integrate
in any html page, with a simple <script>
tag.
Odoo stores template as XML document in a database. This is very powerful, since this allow the use of xpaths to customize other templates. This is a very important feature of odoo, and one of the key to Odoo modularity.
Because of that, we still expect to write our templates in an XML document. Weirdly enough, no major framework uses XML to store templates, even though it is extremely convenient.
So, using React or Vue means that we need to make a template compiler. For React, that would be a compiler that would take a QWeb template, and convert it to a React render function. For Vue, it would convert it to a Vue template. Then we need to bundle the vue template compiler as well.
Not only this would be complex (compiling a templating language into another is not an easy task), but it would negatively impact the developer experience as well. Writing Vue or React components in a QWeb template would certainly be awkward, and very confusing.
This brings us to the following point: developer experience. We see this choice as an investment for the future, and we want to make onboarding developer as easy as possible.
While many javascript professionals clearly think that react/vue is not difficult (which is true to some extent), it is alsy true that many non js specialists are overwhelmed with the frontend world: functional component, hooks, and many other fancy words. Also, what is available in the compilation context may be difficult, there is a lot of black magic going on in pretty much every framework. Vue somehow join various namespaces into one, under the hood, and add various internal keys. Svelte transform the code. React require that state transformations are deep, and not shallow.
Owl is trying very hard to have a simple and familiar API. It uses classes. Its reactivity system is explicit, not implicit. The scoping rules are obvious. In case of doubt, we err on the side of not implementing a feature.
It is certainly different from React or Vue, but at the same time, kind of familiar for experienced developers.
There is also a clear trend in the frontend world to compile code as much as possible ahead of time. Most frameworks will compile templates ahead of time. And now Svelte is trying to compile the JS code away, so it can remove itself from the bundle.
This is certainly reasonable for many usecases. However, this is not what Odoo needs: Odoo will fetch templates from the database and need to compile them only at the last possible moment, so we can apply all necessary xpaths.
Even more: Odoo needs to be able to generate (and compile) templates at runtime. Currently, Odoo form views interpret a xml description. But the form view code then needs to do a lot of complicated operations. With Owl, we will be able to transform a view description into a QWeb template, then compile that and use it immediately.
There are other design choices that we feel are not optimal in other frameworks. For example, the reactivity system. We like the way Vue did it, but it has a flaw: it is not really optional. There is actually a way to opt out of the reactivity system by freezing the state, but then, it is freezed.
And there certainly are situations where we need a state, which is not readonly, and not observed. For example, imagine a spreadsheet component. It may have a very large internal state, and it knows exactly when it needs to be rendered (basically, whenever the user perform some action). Then, observing its state is a net performance loss, both for the CPU and the memory.
Many applications are happy to simply display a spinner whenever a new asynchronous action is performed, but Odoo want a different user experience: most asynchronous state changes are not displayed until ready. This is sometimes called a concurrent mode: the UI is rendered in memory, and displayed only when it is ready (and only if it has not been cancelled by subsequent user actions).
React has now an experimental concurrent mode, but it was not ready when Owl started. Vue has not really an equivalent API (suspense is not what we need).
Also, React concurrent mode is complex to use. Concurrency was one of the rare strong point of the former Odoo js framework (widgets), and we feel that Owl has now a very strong concurrent mode, which is simple and powerful at the same time.
This lengthy discussion showed that there are many small and not so small reasons that current standard frameworks are not tailored to our needs. It is perfectly fine, because they each chose a different set of tradeoffs.
However, we feel that there is still room in the framework world for something that is different. For a framework that make choices compatible with Odoo.
And that is why we built Owl 🦉.