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babel-preset

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Babel preset to be used at MOXY.

Installation

$ npm install @moxy/babel-preset @babel/core --save-dev

If you are using Jest for testing, you also need to install babel-jest:

$ npm install babel-jest --save-dev

Motivation

Projects developed at MOXY often use new JavaScript language features that may not be supported in the targets they will run. This preset provides a shareable Babel config that:

Do I need to transpile?

There has been discussion in the community about libraries not being compiled, leaving all compilation efforts to top-level projects consuming them. This makes sense, since developers know what platforms their top-level project target and are able to compile their dependencies accordingly. Furthermore, library maintainers are constantly having to update their compilation options as new features are accepted into different stages of the specification, which creates significant and unnecessary overhead.

Problems arise, however, in libraries which target both Node.js and browser, or if non-standard JavaScript is being used, such as proposals or JSX. In those situations, library authors are required to transpile their libraries code to offer CommonJS and ES module variants or to transform non-standard JavaScript to standard JavaScript.

In conclusion:

  1. For libraries, you need to transpile if you want to publish both in CommonJS and ES or if there are non-standard JavaScript language features being used
  2. For top-level projects, you need to transpile both your code and your dependencies if the JavaScript language features being used are not supported by your targets

Usage

1. Choose a preset-type

There're two preset types available for you to use:

2. Setup babel within your project

The way Babel is configured depends on the the tooling you are using. Below, there are instructions for common scenarios:

Standard project

If you don't use a bundler within your project, this is the setup guide you should follow

Webpack based project

Tweak your Webpack config JavaScript rule to include babel-loader and MOXY's preset. Here's an example for a website project using React:

{
    test: /\.js$/,
    use: [
        {
            loader: require.resolve('babel-loader'),
            options: {
                cacheDirectory: true,  // Improve performance
                presets: [
                    [require.resolve('@moxy/babel-preset/end-project'), {
                        targets: ['browsers'],
                        react: true,
                        modules: false,
                    }],
                ],
            },
        },
    ],
}

It's important that you do not exclude the node_modules folder so that everything goes through the @babel/preset-env, ensuring that all the produced code was transpiled according to the targets.

3. Tweak the options

Below, you may find a list containing all options you may tweak:

NameDescriptionTypeDefaultin libin end-project
reactAdds support for Reactbooleanfalse
lodashTransform to cherry-pick Lodash modulesboolean/Objecttrue
modulesTransform ES6 module syntax to another module typestring/booleanBased on process.env.BABEL_ENV, commonjs if unspecified
dynamicImportAdds support for import() statementsbooleantrue
looseEnable "loose" transformations for any plugins that allow thembooleantrue
targetsThe output targets, see bellow for a more detailed explanationArray/Object['browsers', 'node']
envThe environment (development, production or test)stringBased on process.env.NODE_ENV
namedDefaultExportUse add-module-exports plugin to get around babel/babel#2212booleantrue if modules is commonjs

lodash option

Specify which modules will have the cherry-pick transformation applied.

Note that lodash-es, lodash-compat and lodash/fp are always added for you, regardless of having this option defined or not.

For instance, to have smaller bundles when using recompose:

{
    "presets": [
        ["@moxy/babel-preset/<preset-type>", {
            "lodash": { "id": ["recompose"] }
        }],
    ],
}

targets option

The targets option has a very important role. By default, its value is ['browsers', 'node'] which means that the compiled code will work in both the Browser and in Node.js.

When browsers is specified, the compiled code will work on browsers that are supported by Google's browser support policy (modern). When node is specified, the compiled code will work on the last LTS or higher (currently v8.9).

If your project has different requirements in terms of browser or node support, you may specify the targets yourself as an object.

dynamicImport option

Dynamic imports support are enabled by default but are dependent on the modules option. More specifically, the syntax-dynamic-import and dynamic-import-node when the modules option is set to false and commonjs respectively.

For other modules types, such as amd, you must find and include a plugin yourself. Also, you may disable the dynamicImport option by setting it to false in case you want to disable the feature completely or if you want to choose another plugin.

env option

The env's default value respects process.env.NODE_ENV and falls back to production if none are set. When env is production, some plugins that perform code optimization will be enabled.

The modules default value is commonjs unless process.env.BABEL_ENV is set to es.

4. Be aware of the caveats

No, seriously. Read the Caveats section as it contains crucial information and might require you to do a few more steps.

Caveats

Polyfills

In libraries

Shipping polyfills in libraries is, in general, a bad practice because it increases the overall file size of your top-level project due to duplication.

The transform-runtime plugin attempts to solve the polyfills and duplication by transforming Object.assign, Promise and other features to their core-js counter-parts. Though, this doesn't play well with preset-env because it inlines everything, including features that are already supported by our targets. Additionally, if different versions of the runtime are installed, duplication still happens.

For this reason, you, as an author, should state in the README of your library that you expect the environment to be polyfilled with core-js, babel-polyfill, polyfill.io or similar.

In top-level projects

Simply include import 'babel-polyfill'; at the top of your entry file. That statement will be replaced with the necessary polyfills based on the targets you want to support.

// in:
import 'babel-polyfill';

// out:
import 'core-js/modules/es6.object.assign';
import 'core-js/modules/es6.promise';
// ...

Dynamic imports

The support for dynamic imports is enabled by default, please read more on the dynamicImport option.

The caveat is that preset-env is unaware that using import() with Webpack relies on Promise internally. Environments which do not have builtin support for Promise, like Internet Explorer, will require both the promise and iterator polyfills be added manually. Having said that, tweak your top-level project's Webpack config like so:

{
    entry: [
        'core-js/modules/es6.promise',
        'core-js/modules/es6.array.iterator',
        // Path to your entry file
    ],
};

Minifying

You must use a minifier that understands ES6+ syntax because the transpiled code might contain ES6+ code. As an example, UglifyJS v2 only understands ES5 syntax but UglifyJS v3 does support ES6+.

Tests

$ npm test
$ npm test -- --watch # during development

License

MIT License