I\'m using Webpack in my application, in which I create two entry points - bundle.js for all my JavaScript files/codes, and vendors.js for all libraries like jQuery and Reac
You've mixed different approaches how to include legacy vendor modules. This is how I'd tackle it:
dist
Most modules link the dist
version in the main
field of their package.json
. While this is useful for most developers, for webpack it is better to alias the src
version because this way webpack is able to optimize dependencies better (e.g. when using the DedupePlugin).
// webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
...
resolve: {
alias: {
jquery: "jquery/src/jquery"
}
}
};
However, in most cases the dist
version works just fine as well.
ProvidePlugin
to inject implicit globalsMost legacy modules rely on the presence of specific globals, like jQuery plugins do on $
or jQuery
. In this scenario you can configure webpack, to prepend var $ = require("jquery")
everytime it encounters the global $
identifier.
var webpack = require("webpack");
...
plugins: [
new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
$: "jquery",
jQuery: "jquery"
})
]
this
Some legacy modules rely on this
being the window
object. This becomes a problem when the module is executed in a CommonJS context where this
equals module.exports
. In this case you can override this
with the imports-loader.
Run npm i imports-loader --save-dev
and then
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /[\/\\]node_modules[\/\\]some-module[\/\\]index\.js$/,
loader: "imports-loader?this=>window"
}
]
}
The imports-loader can also be used to manually inject variables of all kinds. But most of the time the ProvidePlugin
is more useful when it comes to implicit globals.
There are modules that support different module styles, like AMD, CommonJS and legacy. However, most of the time they first check for define
and then use some quirky code to export properties. In these cases, it could help to force the CommonJS path by setting define = false
.
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /[\/\\]node_modules[\/\\]some-module[\/\\]index\.js$/,
loader: "imports-loader?define=>false"
}
]
}
If you don't care about global variables and just want legacy scripts to work, you can also use the script-loader. It executes the module in a global context, just as if you had included them via the tag.
noParse
to include large distsWhen there is no AMD/CommonJS version of the module and you want to include the dist
, you can flag this module as noParse
. Then webpack will just include the module without parsing it, which can be used to improve the build time. This means that any feature requiring the AST, like the ProvidePlugin
, will not work.
module: {
noParse: [
/[\/\\]node_modules[\/\\]angular[\/\\]angular\.js$/
]
}