This module contains closure tools compiled jar
s and various helper function to make dependency management easier.
This module exports 4 functions:
const closureTools = require('closure-tools-helper');
closureTools.compiler(...);
closureTools.templates(...);
closureTools.stylesheets(...);
closuretools.extractTemplateMsg(...);
The closure compiler api abstracts the module system of closure compiler to something based on entry points, much similar to rollup.
(await closureTools.compiler(baseCompilerFlags, sourceGlob, entryPoints)).src()
.pipe(...)
Note the requirements of await
, due to building compiler flag being an async operation.
The plugin controls --module
and -js
compiler flags. All the other flags must be provided with baseCompilerFlags
argument.
sourceGlob
is a glob pattern that provides js sources to the compiler. All files referenced by entryPoints must be provided by the glob.
entryPoints
is an array where each element follows the below interface.
interface ICompilerEntryPoint {
/**
* This is what is used in `goog.require()`.
* `null` means there is no entry module, but it can have some extraSources.
*/
id:string|null,
/**
* module name, used in specifying dependencies, and also used in output file name.
*/
name:string,
/**
* Array of module names that this bundle depends on.
*/
deps:string[],
/**
* Any files that are not reachable via `goog.require`s but still need to be provided
* to the compiler.
*/
extraSources?:string[]
}
const compiler = require('closure-tools-helper');
gulp.task('build-soy', () => {
return compiler.templates([.../* Command line args passed to SoyToJsSrcCompiler.jar */])
.src()
.pipe(gulp.dest('build'));
});
gulp.task('extract-soy-messages', () => {
return compiler.extractTemplateMsg([.../* Command line args passed to SoyMsgExtractor.jar */])
.src();
});
Compiler apis returns a readable stream of the stdout. Users of the package should explicitly call .src()
in order to turn the stream into flowing mode (same as google-closure-compiler
gulp plugin).
Closure templates by default supports compile-time i18n. Provide a second argument TemplatesI18nOptions
to post-process js files generated by soy compiler to enable i18n. Its interface is what follows:
interface ITemplatesI18nOptions {
/**
* This is a string to replace `goog.getMsg` with.
*/
googGetMsg:string
/**
* This is a string that will be appended right after the `goog.module(..)` expression.
*/
header?:string
/**
* This must match files generated by the compiler jar.
*/
inputGlob:string|string[]
outputPath?:string // If provided, files will be written to `outputPath/fileName`.
}
If runtime i18n is enabled, it will additionally transform legacy-style goog.provide
modules into goog.module
, so that a consumer can import the compiled templates by using const templates = goog.require('namespace.to.the.template')
, or import templates from 'goog:namespace.to.the.template'
if the consumer is using tsickle.
Import or reference ./third-party/soyutils.js
or ./third-party/soyutils_usegoog.js
.
const compiler = require('closure-tools-helper');
gulp.task('build-gss', () => {
return compiler.stylesheets([.../* Command line args passed to closure-stylesheets.jar */])
.src()
})
Compiler apis returns a readable stream of the stdout. User of the package should explicitly call .src()
to turn the stream into a flowing mode.
yarn add https://github.com/seanl-adg/closure-tools-helper.git
yarn add https://github.com/seanl-adg/closure-tools-helper.git#<specific-tag>
tsc