babel-codemod
babel-codemod rewrites JavaScript using babel plugins.
Install
Install from yarn:
$ yarn global add babel-codemod
NOTE: You can also install using npm install -g babel-codemod
.
This will install the runner as codemod
. This package requires node v6 or higher.
Usage
The primary interface is as a command line tool, usually run like so:
$ codemod --plugin transform-module-name \
path/to/file.js \
another/file.js
This will re-write the files path/to/file.js
and another/file.js
by transforming them with the babel plugin transform-module-name
. Multiple plugins may be specified, and multiple file or directories may be re-written at once.
For more detailed options, run codemod --help
.
Writing a Plugin
There are many, many existing plugins that you can use. However, if you need to write your own you should consult the babel handbook. If you publish a plugin intended specifically as a codemod, consider using both the babel-plugin
and babel-codemod
keywords.
Transpiling using babel plugins
babel-codemod
also supports non-standard/future language features that are not currently supported by the latest version of node. It does this by leveraging babel-preset-env
which loads the latest babel plugins. This feature is on by default.
This feature should support most use cases when writing plugins in advanced JavaScript syntax. However, if you are writing plugins with syntax that is beyond "latest", or you would like to use your own set of plugins and presets, you can pass in the --find-babel-config
switch in combination with a local .babelrc
file that lists the presets/plugins you want applied to your plugin code.
# Run a local plugin that is passed through locally installed babel plugins
$ codemod --find-babel-config --plugin ./my-plugin.js src/
This requires that all babel plugins and presets be installed locally and are listed in your .babelrc
file. babel-codemod
uses babel-register
under the hood too accomplish this and all .babelrc
lookup rules apply.
Transpiling using TypeScript
There is currently an open issue for supporting plugins written in typescript. In the interim, you can take the same approach using --require
along with ts-node/register
.
For example:
# Run a local plugin written with TypeScript.
$ codemod --require ts-node/register --plugin ./my-plugin.ts src/
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md for information on setting up the project for development and on contributing to the project.
Status
![Greenkeeper badge](https://badges.greenkeeper.io/square/babel-codemod.svg)
License
Copyright 2017 Square, Inc.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.