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RequireJS loader plugin that supports some parts of ECMAScript Harmony Modules

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require-hm

A simulation of some APIs that are proposed for ECMAScript Harmony for JavaScript modules, but done as a loader plugin that works with RequireJS, and other AMD loaders that support the loader plugin API supported by RequireJS.

The APIs are taken from here:

Not all the APIs are supported, see further below for more details.

Goals

The goal is to allow using harmony-like modules today, that work in today's browsers and in Node. This allows playing with the APIs to make sure they get some use and understanding before baking them into a standard.

It is also a way for me to experiment with the API and suggest changes in a way that holds together in real code.

Limitations

The loader plugin cannot do the fancy compilation and linking that native support can do, but it can simulate a lot of it.

This means some things that would be early errors in a native implementation are not early errors with this approach.

Choices done outside the proposals

  1. The harmony proposals do not define a way to translate dependency strings to actual file paths, just mentions the ability to use URLs.

This plugin uses the AMD ID-to-path resolution for IDs.

  1. .hm is used for the text files that are processed by this plugin, not .js files. This is to help separate that these files are "special" and not regular .js files.

Supported

export var foo = 'foo';
export function foo() {};
module Bar = 'Bar';

import y from Bar;
import {y} from Bar;
import { modProp: localProp } from Bar;
import * from Bar;

Unsupported

  1. The following import variation is not supported, since the module form is sufficient:

    //Use module Bar = 'Bar' instead. //This is not supported: import "Bar.js" as Bar;

  2. cyclical import * not supported.

Circular references that do import * on each other will not work.

  1. import * does not work in build

Using r.js to optimize a set of hm modules to a concatenated list of AMD modules works for everything except import *, since the build does not actually run the * module as part of the build, since it may accesss environment-specific information, like window or navigator which do not exist in Node.

  1. Using identifiers for "inline modules" is not supported:

    module Bar {}

What will be supported, but is not there yet, will be using string IDs, since this matches better to module Bar = 'Bar' usage, particularly when modules are combined in a build:

module 'Bar' {}

Installing

Grab the following files in this repo:

and place them in the directory that is used as the baseUrl for your AMD-based project.

Or use volo:

volo add jrburke/require-hm

A special, modified version of esprima is used, so be sure to use the esprima.js that is in this repo. A copy of esprima.js from the esprima project will not work.

Configuration

You can pass the following configuration options to the loader plugin via the requirejs the module config:

requirejs.config({
    config: {
        hm: {
            //Will log to console the before and
            //after text.
            logTransform: true
        }
    }
});

//Now start loading harmony modules
//This load main.hm, transpiles it to AMD
//then executes.
require(['hm!main'], function (main) {
    console.log('main: ' + main);
});

Doing Builds

See tests/build for example build files (the *.build.js files).

The AMD version of the modules are placed in the built file, so the hm and esprima modules do not need to be included in the build file.

See the build files for more details.

If any .hm files will be loaded dynamically after a build, then the source versions of hm and esprima should stay in the build.

Running Tests

In Browser

Open tests/index.html in a browser. Serve the tests from a web site, since XMLHttpRequest (XHR) is used to fetch .hm, and some browsers have security restrictions when using XHR from file:// URLs.

In Node

From within the tests directory:

node ../tools/r.js all-node.js

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RequireJS loader plugin that supports some parts of ECMAScript Harmony Modules

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