browserize
Converts simple node.js modules into ES6 modules.
What it is
What it does
browserize
turns this:
module.exports = function main() {}
const extra = 'EXTRA',
module.exports = {
extra,
}
into this:
export default function main() {}
const extra = 'EXTRA',
export {
extra,
}
Recognizes references to main
browserize
turns this:
module.exports = function main() { return true }
const main = require('./main')
module.exports = {
extra: main,
}
into this:
export default function main() { return true }
export {
extra: main,
}
This relies on identical names for the default export in both files.
Merges constants and Variables
browserize
turns this:
const common = 'CONSTANT'
module.exports = function main() { return common }
const common = 'CONSTANT'
module.exports = {
extra: common,
}
into this:
const common = 'CONSTANT'
export default function main() { return common }
export {
extra: common,
}
and this:
let common = 'VARIABLE'
module.exports = function main() { return common }
let common = 'VARIABLE'
module.exports = {
extra: common,
}
into this:
let common = 'VARIABLE'
export default function main() { return common }
common = 'VARIABLE'
export {
extra: common,
}
NOTE:
Since browserize
cannot know if common
gets changed in main.js
, it leaves the assignment in place.
If the variable is not assigned in the second file, the declaration is removed.
What it does not
browserize
does not:
- check if the result will run in a browser
- transform
require
s into import
s - bundle dependencies àla Webpack/Rollup
- transpile anything other than JavaScript, like CoffeeScript (it might work by coincidence, but there's no support for that)
When to use
browserize
is made for small packages without runtime dependencies that should run both in node.js and in the browser.
When not to use
If your package has any dependency, it's probably complex enough to warrant babel, webpack, or some such. Use that instead.
If you need to transpile anything, like CoffeScript or TypeScript, your tooling for that should cover you.
How to use it
NOTE:
If you want to interpolate imports, you need to use the node API.
This feature is currently not available for the CLI.
node API
You can import either browserize
or browserize/fs
, depending on how you will use it.
browserize
takes an options object with three optional entries:
main
: a string containing the main/default exportnamed
: a string containing the named exportsimports
: a key/value store that maps import paths to replacement values
browserize/fs
takes an options object with three optional entries:
main
: the file where the main/default export is found, defaults to index.js
, set to null
for no default exportnamed
: where to find the named exports, defaults to null
imports
: a key/value store that maps import paths to replacement file pathsoutput
: where to write the ESM file, defaults to the main
or named
filename with the extension .mjs
And that is it.
Examples
The simplest form
const browserizeFS = require('browserize/fs')
browserizeFS()
This reads index.js
and writes the equivalent index.mjs
, and that's it.
Handling in-memory files
const fs = require('fs-extra')
const browserize = require('browserize')
const main = fs.readFileSync('main.js').toString()
browserize({ main })
Turns the content of main.js
into its ESM version.
This is mainly useful if you want to integrate with a build setup using in-memory files, like gulp
.
The most complex case browserize/fs
covers
const browserizeFS = require('browserize/fs')
browserizeFS({
main: 'components/class-name.jsx',
named: 'extras/helpers/component-helpers.js',
output: 'dist/browser-magic.js',
imports: {
'../utils': 'utils.js',
'../../utils': 'utils.js',
},
})
This includes named exports, sets custom paths for everything, and interpolates an import into both import files.
Replacing imports
build.js |
const fs = require('fs-extra')
const browserize = require('browserize')
const main = fs.readFileSync('src/main.js').toString()
browserize({
main,
imports: {
'./constant': require('./src/constant'),
}
})
|
---|
src/main.js |
const common = require('./constant')
module.exports = function main() { return common }
|
---|
src/constant.js |
module.exports = 'CONSTANT'
|
---|
result |
const common = 'CONSTANT'
export default function main() { return common }
|
---|
Using this feature, you can extract constants for common use in node files and still have an ESM file without dependencies.
IMPORTANT: The keys are matched verbatim, so imports:{'./x':'X'}
will do nothing for require('./x.js')
.
NOTE: This only works for simple values, like strings and arrays, not functions or classes.
CLI
npx browserize [--no-default|-x] [[--default|-d] index.js] [[--named|-n] helpers.js] [[--output|-o] index.mjs]
The CLI passes the given arguments through to the underlying node API, and works through browserize/fs
.
Examples
The simplest form
npx browserize
This reads index.js
and writes the equivalent index.mjs
, and that's it.
Adding named exports
npm browserize -n helper-functions
This reads index.js
and helper-functions.js
, then transforms and concatenates them, and finally writes the result to index.mjs
.
The most complex case browserize
covers
npx browserize class-name.jsx helper-functions.js dist/browser-magic.js
This includes named exports and sets custom paths for everything.
Requirements
browserize
is a simple tool and has a few simple requirements:
Each source file must contain exactly one assignment to module.exports
Good
module.exports = class DefaultExport {}
module.exports = {
key1: helper1,
key2: helper2,
}
Bad
exports.key1 = helper1
exports.key2 = helper2
While valid, browserize
does not know how to transform this.
module.exports = export1
module.exports = export2
This is not useful anyway.
window.myStuff = class DefaultExport {}
This is not a module.
The default export must be declared without a newline between the assignment operator and the exported item
Good
module.exports = class DefaultExport {}
module.exports = class DefaultExport {
}
Bad
module.exports =
class DefaultExport {}
While this is valid in node.js, it will lead to an invalid ESM file.
The named exports must be declared as an object literal
Good
module.exports = { helper1, helper2 }
module.exports = {
helper1,
helper2,
}
Bad
module.exports.helper1 = helper1
module.exports.helper2 = helper2
While this is valid in node.js, browserize
does not understand it.
This is too complex, and has no real benefit over the object literal.
The named exports must use shorthand syntax
Good
module.exports = {
helper1,
helper2,
}
Bad
module.exports = {
helper1: helper1,
helper2: helper2,
}
module.exports = {
key1: helper1,
key2: helper2,
}
While this is valid in node.js, it will lead to an invalid ESM file.