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@esbuild/win32-arm64
Advanced tools
The Windows ARM 64-bit binary for esbuild, a JavaScript bundler.
The @esbuild/win32-arm64 npm package is a binary package for the esbuild bundler optimized for Windows on ARM64 architectures. Esbuild is a fast JavaScript bundler and minifier. It compiles TypeScript and JavaScript into efficient code that can be executed in the browser or on Node.js. This package specifically targets the Windows ARM64 platform, providing native performance improvements.
JavaScript and TypeScript bundling
This feature allows you to bundle multiple JavaScript or TypeScript files into a single file. The code sample demonstrates how to bundle an entry file named 'app.js' into an output file named 'out.js'.
require('esbuild').build({
entryPoints: ['app.js'],
bundle: true,
outfile: 'out.js'
}).catch(() => process.exit(1))
Minification
This feature enables the minification of JavaScript files to reduce their size for production. The code sample shows how to minify an entry file 'app.js' into a smaller output file 'out.js'.
require('esbuild').build({
entryPoints: ['app.js'],
minify: true,
outfile: 'out.js'
}).catch(() => process.exit(1))
Transpiling
This feature allows for the transpilation of TypeScript files into JavaScript, making it possible to use TypeScript in environments that only support JavaScript. The code sample demonstrates transpiling a TypeScript file 'app.ts' into a JavaScript file 'out.js'.
require('esbuild').build({
entryPoints: ['app.ts'],
loader: { '.ts': 'ts' },
outfile: 'out.js'
}).catch(() => process.exit(1))
Webpack is a popular JavaScript module bundler with a rich ecosystem of plugins and loaders. It offers similar functionality to esbuild, such as bundling, minification, and transpilation. However, esbuild is known for its speed, often being significantly faster than Webpack, especially for larger projects.
Rollup is another module bundler for JavaScript which focuses on producing smaller bundles by eliminating unused code. It is similar to esbuild in terms of its bundling capabilities and support for plugins. While Rollup is generally faster than Webpack, esbuild typically outperforms Rollup in terms of build speed.
Parcel is a web application bundler that offers out-of-the-box support for many web development languages and frameworks, with zero configuration required. It provides similar functionalities to esbuild, including fast bundling and built-in support for various file types. Parcel is known for its ease of use, but esbuild usually has a performance advantage.
This is the Windows ARM 64-bit binary for esbuild, a JavaScript bundler and minifier. See https://github.com/evanw/esbuild for details.
0.23.1
Allow using the node:
import prefix with es*
targets (#3821)
The node:
prefix on imports is an alternate way to import built-in node modules. For example, import fs from "fs"
can also be written import fs from "node:fs"
. This only works with certain newer versions of node, so esbuild removes it when you target older versions of node such as with --target=node14
so that your code still works. With the way esbuild's platform-specific feature compatibility table works, this was added by saying that only newer versions of node support this feature. However, that means that a target such as --target=node18,es2022
removes the node:
prefix because none of the es*
targets are known to support this feature. This release adds the support for the node:
flag to esbuild's internal compatibility table for es*
to allow you to use compound targets like this:
// Original code
import fs from 'node:fs'
fs.open
// Old output (with --bundle --format=esm --platform=node --target=node18,es2022)
import fs from "fs";
fs.open;
// New output (with --bundle --format=esm --platform=node --target=node18,es2022)
import fs from "node:fs";
fs.open;
Fix a panic when using the CLI with invalid build flags if --analyze
is present (#3834)
Previously esbuild's CLI could crash if it was invoked with flags that aren't valid for a "build" API call and the --analyze
flag is present. This was caused by esbuild's internals attempting to add a Go plugin (which is how --analyze
is implemented) to a null build object. The panic has been fixed in this release.
Fix incorrect location of certain error messages (#3845)
This release fixes a regression that caused certain errors relating to variable declarations to be reported at an incorrect location. The regression was introduced in version 0.18.7 of esbuild.
Print comments before case clauses in switch statements (#3838)
With this release, esbuild will attempt to print comments that come before case clauses in switch statements. This is similar to what esbuild already does for comments inside of certain types of expressions. Note that these types of comments are not printed if minification is enabled (specifically whitespace minification).
Fix a memory leak with pluginData
(#3825)
With this release, the build context's internal pluginData
cache will now be cleared when starting a new build. This should fix a leak of memory from plugins that return pluginData
objects from onResolve
and/or onLoad
callbacks.
FAQs
The Windows ARM 64-bit binary for esbuild, a JavaScript bundler.
The npm package @esbuild/win32-arm64 receives a total of 5,155,889 weekly downloads. As such, @esbuild/win32-arm64 popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @esbuild/win32-arm64 demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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