iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.
iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.



Link to original content: http://github.com/andreyvital/babel-plugin-global-require
GitHub - andreyvital/babel-plugin-global-require: A simple plugin that allows you to require globally
Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Nov 21, 2017. It is now read-only.

A simple plugin that allows you to require globally

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

andreyvital/babel-plugin-global-require

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

84 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

babel-plugin-global-require npm version

Installation

npm install --save-dev babel-plugin-global-require

Tell the plugin where's your root (.babelrc):

{
  "plugins": [
    ["global-require", {
      "root": "src"
    }]
  ]
}

What are the benefits?

  • You'll use the same require statement from anywhere in your project;
  • You'll avoid path hell ../../../../..;
  • You'll write a more concise code.

This plugin is convention based: the alias is always the name of the file. For example:

src (root)
  util
    queue
      InMemoryAcknowledgingQueue.js
      PriorityQueue.js
      CallbackQueue.js
      ...
  io
    NuclearEventEmitter.js
  user
    UserActions.js
    UserStore.js
  security
    authorization
      rbac
        Role.js
  ...

Then:

import NuclearEventEmitter from 'NuclearEventEmitter'

// (...)
import UserStore from 'UserStore'

// require
var Role = require('Role')

It will translate 'NuclearEventEmitter' to src/io/NuclearEventEmitter.js for you. And the same happens to UserStore and Role.

Requiring index.js by parent folder name is supported!

It is common to require an index.js file by the name of its parent directory, for example:

src
  security
    authorisation
      index.js

Instead of:

require('./security/authorisation')

You'll write:

require('authorisation')

But what about conflicts?

Given the following structure:

src
  security
    authorization
      rbac
        hasAccessTo.js
      acl
        hasAccessTo.js

You can't require hasAccessTo.js only by its name because it would result in a require of undesired file. So for this specific case, the conflict is resolved simply by going up one directory (and it keeps going until there's no conflict):

import { hasAccessTo as ... } from 'rbac/hasAccessTo'
import { hasAccessTo as ... } from 'acl/hasAccessTo'

About

A simple plugin that allows you to require globally

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published