babel-plugin-transform-with
v1.0.0
Published
Convert "with" statements to strict mode-compatible JavaScript
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1,262
Readme
babel-plugin-transform-with
Babel plugin that turns with
statements into strict-mode JS.
- [x] Alternative strict-mode-compatible syntax
- [x] Falls back to global variables if a variable is not available in the object
- [x] Supports
this
references - [x] Supports nesting
- [x] Supports
return
,break
,continue
- [x] Supports
yield
,await
- [ ] Supports
arguments
(unlikely to be supported)
Alternative syntax
Babel errors out on any with
statements during parsing by default, which can be frustrating when eventually the code will be converted anyway. This plugin implements an escape hatch using comments:
with (obj || {}) {
console.log(str);
}
// The `with` block above is equivalent to the following:
// @with
{
obj || {};
console.log(str);
}
This feature is enabled by default, but you could set alternative
option to false
to disable it.
Example output
with (obj || {}) {
console.log(str);
}
var _ref = obj || {};
(function (console, str) {
console.log(str);
})("console" in _ref ?
_ref.console :
typeof console !== "undefined" ?
console :
undefined,
"str" in _ref ?
_ref.str :
typeof str !== "undefined" ?
a :
undefined);
Exclude variables
If there are certain variables that should be regarded as globals and excluded from the closure, there are two ways to make this possible.
The plugin accepts an exclude
option that takes an array of excluded variable names. This option applies to all with
s compiled, so it is usually more suitable to be used when the variable is a global, like Array
, Object
, process
, or console
.
If you want to tweak the excluded variables on a per-instance basis, you can use @with ignore
annotation (which works for both with () {}
construct and the alternative syntax):
var i = 0, j = 0, k = 0;
var obj = { i: 1, j: 1, k: 0 };
// @with exclude: i
with (obj) {
console.log(i, j);
}
// @with exclude: i, j
with (obj) {
console.log(i, j);
}
results in
var i = 0, j = 0, k = 0;
var obj = { i: 1, j: 1, k: 0 };
(function (console, j) {
console.log(i, j);
})("console" in obj ? obj.console : typeof console !== "undefined" ? console : undefined, "j" in obj ? obj.j : typeof j !== "undefined" ? j : undefined);
(function (console) {
console.log(i, j);
})("console" in obj ? obj.console : typeof console !== "undefined" ? console : undefined);