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Babel plugin to add the opportunity to use import and require with root based paths.<br> Build Status Dependency Status https://github.com/entwicklerstube/babel-plugin-root-import Codacy Badge

Example

// Without this plugin...
import SomeExample from '../../../some/example.js';
const OtherExample = require('../../../other/example.js');
import('../../../other/dynamic').then((mod) => {
  // ...
});

// With babel-plugin-root-import you can write...
import SomeExample from '~/some/example.js';
const OtherExample = require('~/other/example.js');
import('~/other/dynamic').then((mod) => {
  // ...
});

Install

Install with your package manager of choice.

npm install babel-plugin-root-import --save-dev

or

yarn add babel-plugin-root-import --dev

Use

Add it to your plugins array in your babel config, e.g. a .babelrc file.

{
  "plugins": [
    ["babel-plugin-root-import"]
  ]
}

For recent react-native versions, add it as a plugin in babel.config.js:

module.exports = (api) => {
  api.cache(true);

  return {
    plugins: ['babel-plugin-root-import'],
  };
};

For the rest of this readme, it's implied that you'll configure the plugin as above when using react-native.

Config

You can configure this plugin by changing the string plugin name to a two-item array. Note that this array is nested inside the plugins array. Here's an example with the default config.

  "plugins": [
    [
      "babel-plugin-root-import",
      {
        "rootPathSuffix": "./",
        "rootPathPrefix": "~/"
      }
    ]
  ],

Multiple rules may be specified by creating an object with { "paths": [firstItem, secondItem] }, e.g.

  "plugins": [
    [
      "babel-plugin-root-import",
      {
        "paths": [
          {
            "rootPathSuffix": "./src/components",
            "rootPathPrefix": "~/"
          },
          {
            "rootPathSuffix": "./src/utils",
            "rootPathPrefix": "!/"
          },
        ]
      }
    ]
  ],

Custom rootPathSuffix

By default, the import will be relative to the working directory of the process running babel. Typically this means you'll have import paths like ~/src/foo.js. You can change the prefix of "./" to e.g. "src" or "src/js" with this config option.

{
  "plugins": [
    ["babel-plugin-root-import", {
      "rootPathSuffix": "src/js"
    }]
  ]
}

The paths "src/js" and "./src/js" behave the same.

Custom rootPathPrefix

If you don't like the ~ syntax you can use your own symbol (for example an # symbol or \ or anything you want). Using @ is not recommended as NPM allows @ in package names. ~ is the default since it's very unlikely to conflict with anything (and wouldn't be expanded to HOME anyway).

{
  "plugins": [
    ["babel-plugin-root-import", {
      "rootPathPrefix": "#/"
    }]
  ]
}

// Now you can use the plugin like this
import foo from '#/my-file';

If you set it to e.g. "#/" then it'll require the slash in the import path.

Custom root

By default everything is resolved relative to the current working directory. You can change this with the root config option. To use it effectively, you'll need to configure babel with one of the JavaScript config file variants, rather than JSON.

For example, the following .babelrc.js file causes imports to resolve relative to the directory .babelrc.js is in.

const rootImportOpts = {
  root: __dirname,
  rootPathPrefix: '~/',
  rootPathSuffix: 'src/js',
};

module.exports = {
  plugins: [['babel-plugin-root-import', rootImportOpts]],
};
<details> <summary>

babel.config.js

</summary>
const rootImportOpts = {
  root: __dirname,
  rootPathPrefix: '~/',
  rootPathSuffix: 'src/js',
};

module.exports = (api) => {
  api.cache(true);

  const plugins = [['babel-plugin-root-import', rootImportOpts]];

  return { plugins };
};
</details> <details> <summary>

Function root variant

</summary>

This .babelrc.js aliases @/foo to ./internals/foo.js since it's always relative to the file doing the import (contrived example).

const rootImportOpts = {
  root: (sourcePath) => path.dirname(sourcePath),
  rootPathPrefix: '@/',
  rootPathSuffix: 'internals',
};

module.exports = {
  plugins: [['babel-plugin-root-import', rootImportOpts]],
};
</details>

Transform paths for custom functions

If you have the need to transform paths also for other function calls you can configure them. But please be aware that this is kind of error prone because custom function names in Javascript are not static and can differ.

{
  "plugins": [
    ["babel-plugin-root-import", {
      "functions": ["jest.mock"]
    }]
  ]
}

// Now you can use the plugin also for jest.mock calls:
jest.mock('~/myfile')

Don't let ESLint be confused

If you use eslint-plugin-import to validate imports it may be necessary to instruct ESLint to parse root imports. You can use eslint-import-resolver-babel-plugin-root-import

  "settings": {
    "import/resolver": {
      "babel-plugin-root-import": {}
    }
  }

You may also specify a prefix/suffix if it doesn't correctly find your babel config.

  "settings": {
    "import/resolver": {
      "babel-plugin-root-import": {
        "rootPathPrefix": "~",
        "rootPathSuffix": "src"
      }
    }
  }

Don't let Flow be confused

If you use Facebook's Flow for type-checking it is necessary to instruct it on how to map your chosen prefix to the root directory. Add the following to your .flowconfig file, replacing {rootPathPrefix} with your chosen prefix (minus a trailing slash if any) and {rootPathSuffix} with your chosen suffix.

[options]
module.name_mapper='^{rootPathPrefix}/\(.*\)$' -> '<PROJECT_ROOT>/{rootPathSuffix}/\1'

Don't let VSCode be confused

For features like go-to-definition, VSCode needs to be able to resolve require/import paths to files on disk. This only works with one rootPathSuffix, but you may define multiple rootPathPrefix entries.

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "baseUrl": ".",
    "paths": {
      "{rootPathPrefix}/*": ["src/*"]
    }
  }
}

For example, with ~/x/y.js -> ./src/x/y.js:

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "baseUrl": ".",
    "paths": {
      "~/*": ["src/*"]
    }
  }
}

FYI

Webpack delivers a similar feature, if you just want to prevent end-less import strings you can also define aliases in the resolve module, at the moment it doesn't support custom/different symbols and multiple/custom suffixes. READ MORE

Want to revert back to relative paths?

Sometimes tooling might not be up to scratch, meaning you lose features such as navigation in your IDE. In such cases you might want to revert back to using relative paths again. If you have a significant amount of files, it might be worth looking into tooling to help you with the conversion.

Change Log

6.6.0 - 2020-10-23

6.4.1 - 2019-07-18

6.4.0 - 2019-07-18

6.3.0 - 2019-07-17

Adds 'root' config option.

6.2.0 - 2019-05-09

6.1.0 - 2018-06-23

5.0.0 - 2017-02-10

4.1.5 - 2016-11-17

4.1.4 - 2016-11-15

4.1.3 - 2016-09-14

4.1.0 - 2016-08-20

4.0.0 - 2016-06-29

3.2.2 - 2016-02-20

3.2.0 - 2016-02-19

3.1.0 - 2015-12-01

3.0.1 - 2015-11-30

2.0.1 - 2015-11-15

Breaking Change to Babel 5

1.0.1 - 2015-08-07