This is a toolchain for the next phase of JavaScript development. It enables developers to write JavaScript modules in ESM that work universally across many environments (Node.js import, Node.js require, Browser, Deno, etc).
You start by just writing a standard ESM module. You'll need to include
"type": "module"
in your package.json, as well as a "main"
entry
point or an export map.
npx ipjs build
This will build a package in the dist
directory that has different
versions of your files compiled for different environments and a
new package.json file that exposes all of these files to the correct
Node.js and compiler entry points.
That's it ;)
You can also compile your tests.
npx ipjs build --tests
Note: You'll need to use "named self imports", import mymodule from "mymodule"
,
in your tests so that we can compile different CJS versions of those tests for
Node.js and the browser.
You can publish to by either running npm publish
in the dist directory or using:
npx ipjs publish
There's a few Node.js and ESM features you need to stick to using and a few you need to avoid. Some are because there just isn't a very good way to provide consistent representations and some are because we need some more explicit information about your library in order to detect the dependency tree and built it successfully.
If you use default exports from files in the exports map:
- CJS/JSDoc+Typescript users of your module will find that
tsc
fails to compile as it expects a the.default
property to be present on anythingrequire
d from your module - If they switch to
.default
to satisfytsc
, node will resolve cjs at runtime via the"require":
entry from the exports map which does not have a.default
so will fail - If they switch back to no
.default
, running bundled cjs in the browser will also fail as it will be supplied the esm version where.default
is present after all
The exports map means ESM and CJS environments load the same paths from different files:
// package.json
{
"name": "my-esm-project",
"exports": {
"my-class": {
"import": "esm/src/my-class.js",
"require": "cjs/src/my-class.js",
}
}
// ...other fields
}
If a CJS file uses instanceof
on an instance of a class loaded from and instantiated in an ESM file (or vice versa), the check will fail, even though there may only be one copy of that dependency in the tree - it's because they've been loaded from different files within that dependency.
For example, consider my-esm-project
, built with ipjs and published as dual cjs/esm:
// is-my-class.cjs
const MyClass = require('my-esm-project/my-class')
module.exports = (obj) => {
return obj instanceof MyClass
}
// main.js
import isMyClass from './is-my-class.cjs'
import MyClass from 'my-esm-project/my-class'
const obj = new MyClass()
console.info(isMyClass(obj)) // false - perhaps not what we were expecting
It's possible to cross the ESM/CJS boundary like this several times during code execution, sometimes even within the same project so it's recommended not to use instanceof
.