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README.md
babel-plugin-transform-es2015-modules-umd
This plugin transforms ES2015 modules to Universal Module Definition (UMD).
Example
In
export default 42;
Out
(function (global, factory) {
if (typeof define === "function" && define.amd) {
define(["exports"], factory);
} else if (typeof exports !== "undefined") {
factory(exports);
} else {
var mod = {
exports: {}
};
factory(mod.exports);
global.actual = mod.exports;
}
})(this, function (exports) {
"use strict";
Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", {
value: true
});
exports.default = 42;
});
Installation
npm install --save-dev babel-plugin-transform-es2015-modules-umd
Usage
Via .babelrc
(Recommended)
.babelrc
{
"plugins": ["transform-es2015-modules-umd"]
}
You can also override the names of particular libraries when this module is
running in the browser. For example the es6-promise
library exposes itself
as global.Promise
rather than global.es6Promise
. This can be accommodated by:
{
"plugins": [
["transform-es2015-modules-umd", {
"globals": {
"es6-promise": "Promise"
}
}]
]
}
Default semantics
There are a few things to note about the default semantics.
First, this transform uses the basename of each import to generate the global names in the UMD output. This means that if you're importing multiple modules with the same basename, like:
import fooBar1 from "foo-bar";
import fooBar2 from "./mylib/foo-bar";
it will transpile into two references to the same browser global:
factory(global.fooBar, global.fooBar);
If you set the plugin options to:
{
"globals": {
"foo-bar": "fooBAR",
"./mylib/foo-bar": "mylib.fooBar"
}
}
it will still transpile both to one browser global:
factory(global.fooBAR, global.fooBAR);
because again the transform is only using the basename of the import.
Second, the specified override will still be passed to the toIdentifier
function in babel-types/src/converters.
This means that if you specify an override as a member expression like:
{
"globals": {
"fizzbuzz": "fizz.buzz"
}
}
this will not transpile to factory(global.fizz.buzz)
. Instead, it will
transpile to factory(global.fizzBuzz)
based on the logic in toIdentifier
.
Third, you cannot override the exported global name.
More flexible semantics with exactGlobals: true
All of these behaviors can limit the flexibility of the globals
map. To
remove these limitations, you can set the exactGlobals
option to true
.
Doing this instructs the plugin to:
- always use the full import string instead of the basename when generating the global names
- skip passing
globals
overrides to thetoIdentifier
function. Instead, they are used exactly as written, so you will get errors if you do not use valid identifiers or valid uncomputed (dot) member expressions. - allow the exported global name to be overridden via the
globals
map. Any override must again be a valid identifier or valid member expression.
Thus, if you set exactGlobals
to true
and do not pass any overrides, the
first example of:
import fooBar1 from "foo-bar";
import fooBar2 from "./mylib/foo-bar";
will transpile to:
factory(global.fooBar, global.mylibFooBar);
And if you set the plugin options to:
{
"globals": {
"foo-bar": "fooBAR",
"./mylib/foo-bar": "mylib.fooBar"
},
"exactGlobals": true
}
then it'll transpile to:
factory(global.fooBAR, global.mylib.fooBar)
Finally, with the plugin options set to:
{
"plugins": [
"external-helpers",
["transform-es2015-modules-umd", {
"globals": {
"my/custom/module/name": "My.Custom.Module.Name"
},
"exactGlobals": true
}]
],
"moduleId": "my/custom/module/name"
}
it will transpile to:
factory(mod.exports);
global.My = global.My || {};
global.My.Custom = global.My.Custom || {};
global.My.Custom.Module = global.My.Custom.Module || {};
global.My.Custom.Module.Name = mod.exports;
Via CLI
babel --plugins transform-es2015-modules-umd script.js
Via Node API
require("babel-core").transform("code", {
plugins: ["transform-es2015-modules-umd"]
});