ES6 Module Loader Polyfill
For upgrading to ES6 Module Loader 0.16, read the release notes here.
Dynamically loads ES6 modules in browsers and NodeJS with support for loading existing and custom module formats through loader hooks.
This project implements dynamic module loading through System
exactly to the previous ES6-specified loader API at 2014-08-24 ES6 Specification Draft Rev 27, Section 15 and is being converted to track the newly redrafted specification at https://github.com/whatwg/loader (work in progress at https://github.com/ModuleLoader/es6-module-loader/pull/317).
For an overview of build workflows, see the production guide.
For an example of a universal module loader based on this polyfill for loading AMD, CommonJS and globals, see SystemJS.
Documentation
Getting Started
If using ES6 syntax (optional), include traceur.js
or babel.js
in the page first then include es6-module-loader.js
:
<script src="traceur.js"></script>
<script src="es6-module-loader.js"></script>
To use Babel, load Babel's browser.js
instead and set the transpiler to babel
with the loader configuration:
<script>
System.transpiler = 'babel';
</script>
Then we can write any ES6 module:
mymodule.js:
export class q {
constructor() {
console.log('this is an es6 class!');
}
}
and load the module dynamically in the browser
<script>
System.import('mymodule').then(function(m) {
new m.q();
});
</script>
The dynamic loader returns a Module
object, which contains getters for the named exports (in this case, q
).
Setting transpilation options
If using Traceur, these can be set with:
System.traceurOptions = {...};
Or with Babel:
System.babelOptions = {...};
Module Tag
As well as defining window.System
, this polyfill provides support for the <script type="module">
tag:
<script type="module">
import { q } from 'mymodule';
new q();
</script>
Because it is only possible to load ES6 modules with this tag, it is not suitable for production use in this way.
See the demo folder in this repo for a working example demonstrating module loading in the browser both with System.import
and with the module-type script tag.
NodeJS Use
npm install es6-module-loader babel traceur
It is important that Babel or Traceur is installed into the path in order to be found, since these are no longer project dependencies.
For use in NodeJS, the Loader
and System
globals are provided as exports:
index.js:
var System = require('es6-module-loader').System;
System.import('some-module').then(function(m) {
console.log(m.p);
});
some-module.js:
export var p = 'NodeJS test';
Running the application:
> node index.js
NodeJS test
Contributing
In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using grunt.
Also, please don't edit files in the "dist" subdirectory as they are generated via grunt. You'll find source code in the "lib" subdirectory!
Testing
npm run test:node
will use node to to run the testsnpm run test:browser
will run npm run test:browser-babel
and npm run test:browser-traceur
npm run test:browser-[transpiler]
use karma to run the tests with Traceur or Babel.npm run test:browser:perf
will use karma to run benchmarks
npm run test:browser-[transpiler]
supports options after a double dash (--
) :
-
You can use the --polyfill
option to test the code with polyfill.
-
You can use the --coverage
option to test and extract coverage info.
-
You can use the --ie8
option to test the code in the ie8 scope only.
-
You can use the --saucelabs
option to use karma and saucelabs to run the tests in various browsers.
Note: you will need to export your username and key to launch it.
export SAUCE_USERNAME={your user name} && export SAUCE_ACCESS_KEY={the access key that you see once logged in}
npm run test:browsers -- --saucelabs
Credit
Copyright (c) 2015 Luke Hoban, Addy Osmani, Guy Bedford
License
Licensed under the MIT license.