sixportify
v0.3.1
Published
A browserify transform for ES-harmony-style module exports.
Downloads
11
Readme
Synopsis
sixportify is a browserify transform that enables you to write CommonJS module exports as if you were using ES6 (also known as harmony).
Install
Node.js
With NPM
npm install sixportify
From source
git clone https://github.com/pluma/sixportify.git
cd sixportify
npm install
make test
Basic usage example
somelib.js
export var config = {x: 4};
export function addX(y) {
return config.x + y;
}
index.js
var somelib = require('./somelib.js');
console.log(somelib.addX(1)); // 5
somelib.config.x = 2;
console.log(somelib.addX(1)); // 3
Usage
var browserify = require('browserify'),
sixportify = require('sixportify'),
b = browserify();
b.transform(sixportify);
b.add('./index.js');
b.bundle().pipe(require('fs').createWriteStream('bundle.js'));
Caveats
The implementation is incredibly naïve.
While sixportify
works just fine with variable declarations,
keep in mind that re-assignment may have unintended consequences. E.g.
export var foo = 'bar';
foo = 'qux';
In this case the value that will actually be exported as exports.foo
will be "qux"
, not "bar"
.
You should therefore treat exported var
declarations as constants.
Likewise, the following will not work as intended:
// in somelib.js
export var foo = 'bar';
export function greet() {
console.log('Hello, ' + foo + '!'); // still refers to the local var
}
// in index.js
var somelib = require('./somelib.js');
somelib.foo = 'world'; // re-assigns the exported var
somelib.greet(); // "Hello bar!"
ES6/harmony and Classes
If you want to use sixportify
with ES6-style classes, you can do that:
// in somelib.es6
export class Foo {
greet() {
console.log('sup');
}
}
// in index.es6
var Foo = require('./somelib.es6').Foo;
var foo = new Foo();
foo.greet(); // "sup"
This means you can use sixportify to preprocess your ES6-style exports for es6ify.
Keep in mind that sixportify
does not understand decomposition, so the following will not work:
// BROKEN!
var obj = {'foo': 'bar'};
export var {foo} = obj;
// ALSO BROKEN!
var arr = ['hello'];
export var [qux] = arr;
License
The MIT/Expat license.