Use esm (ES modules, import, export for Node v6) with less boilerplate.
Let's assume you have an ES module like usage.mjs
:
import dfOnly from './default-export-only';
import * as named from './named-exports-only';
export default dfOnly;
export const { foo, answer } = named;
… and you want to use it from old node's CommonJS realm.
The esm
module can do it:
module.exports = require('esm')(module)('./usage.mjs')
But that's still a bit too much boilerplate for my taste.
Don't waste your time micro-managing the filename
and whether you should add .default
to the above formula!
There's a much easier way:
Make a bridge module with almost the same name,
except it ends with .node.js
instead of .mjs
(thus here, usage.node.js
):
require('esmod-pmb')(module);
It should work out of the box:
$ nodejs -p "require('./usage.node.js')"
{ foo: [Getter], answer: [Getter], default: [Getter] }
To see values instead of getters, copy them to another object:
$ nodejs -p "Object.assign({}, require('./usage.node.js'))"
{ foo: 23,
answer: 42,
default: { isDefaultExport: true, bar: 5 } }
For modules that have a default export and no named exports,
like default-export-only.mjs
:
export default { isDefaultExport: true, bar: 5 };
… your bridge module will export that as the top level:
$ nodejs -p "require('./default-export-only.node.js')"
{ isDefaultExport: true, bar: 5 }
$ nodejs -p "require('esm')(module)('./default-export-only.mjs')"
{ default: [Getter] }
// standard:
require('esmod-pmb')(module);
// custom options:
require('esmod-pmb')(module, { preferDefaultExport: false });
// detailed:
var bridgeBuilder = require('esmod-pmb');
var opt = { reexport: false };
var esmRequire = bridgeBuilder(module, opt);
var yourEsModule = esmRequire('./yourmodule.mjs');
This module exports one function:
Returns an ESM-capable require
-like function obtained from esm
.
The optional options object opt
can be used to modify the default
options.
If you need custom options for something you consider "normal"/"usual", please file an issue so we can try to provide better defaults. After all, the purpose of this module is to reduce boilerplate.
That said, bridgeBuilder
uses the same options object as esm
,
so you can use all of its options, and some additional ones:
reexport
: (bool, default: true) WhetherbridgeBuilder
shall do its main magic:- guess the name of your ES module,
- import it,
- (skippable) resolve the imported bindings
- and "re-export" them, i.e. assign the imported values to
baseModule.exports
.
- Set to
false
to opt-out of the main magic, but still get anesmRqr
with the combined options based on this module's defaults.
Options used only when reexport
is enabled:
-
stripSuffixes
: (regexp) andaddSuffix
(string, default:".mjs"
) To guess the ES module filename, thebridgeBuilder
removes the part matched bystripSuffixes
and appendsaddSuffix
. -
resolveImportedValues
: (bool, default:true
) Whether to resolve (copy) the imported values. Set tofalse
if you prefer getter functions. Sane modules usually shouldn't mutate their exports, so usually resolving them makes life easier by reducing the amount of magic involved. -
preferDefaultExport
: Determines which of the ESM exports shall be re-export into CommonJS land.false
= all of them. The re-export will be a dictionary (object). If the ES module only has a default export, the dictionary will contain only one key,default
.true
= only the default export. If the ES module doesn't have a default export, the re-export will beundefined
.1
(as a number; also the default) = automatic. The re-export will be a dictionary with all exports, except in case there is only one single export and its name isdefault
; in that case, that default export will be re-exported directly.
- Needs more/better tests and docs.
ISC