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172 lines
6.0 KiB
Markdown
172 lines
6.0 KiB
Markdown
9 years ago
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# amdefine
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A module that can be used to implement AMD's define() in Node. This allows you
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to code to the AMD API and have the module work in node programs without
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requiring those other programs to use AMD.
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## Usage
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**1)** Update your package.json to indicate amdefine as a dependency:
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```javascript
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"dependencies": {
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"amdefine": ">=0.1.0"
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}
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```
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Then run `npm install` to get amdefine into your project.
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**2)** At the top of each module that uses define(), place this code:
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```javascript
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if (typeof define !== 'function') { var define = require('amdefine')(module) }
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```
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**Only use these snippets** when loading amdefine. If you preserve the basic structure,
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with the braces, it will be stripped out when using the [RequireJS optimizer](#optimizer).
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You can add spaces, line breaks and even require amdefine with a local path, but
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keep the rest of the structure to get the stripping behavior.
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As you may know, because `if` statements in JavaScript don't have their own scope, the var
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declaration in the above snippet is made whether the `if` expression is truthy or not. If
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RequireJS is loaded then the declaration is superfluous because `define` is already already
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declared in the same scope in RequireJS. Fortunately JavaScript handles multiple `var`
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declarations of the same variable in the same scope gracefully.
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If you want to deliver amdefine.js with your code rather than specifying it as a dependency
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with npm, then just download the latest release and refer to it using a relative path:
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[Latest Version](https://github.com/jrburke/amdefine/raw/latest/amdefine.js)
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### amdefine/intercept
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Consider this very experimental.
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Instead of pasting the piece of text for the amdefine setup of a `define`
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variable in each module you create or consume, you can use `amdefine/intercept`
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instead. It will automatically insert the above snippet in each .js file loaded
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by Node.
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**Warning**: you should only use this if you are creating an application that
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is consuming AMD style defined()'d modules that are distributed via npm and want
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to run that code in Node.
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For library code where you are not sure if it will be used by others in Node or
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in the browser, then explicitly depending on amdefine and placing the code
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snippet above is suggested path, instead of using `amdefine/intercept`. The
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intercept module affects all .js files loaded in the Node app, and it is
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inconsiderate to modify global state like that unless you are also controlling
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the top level app.
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#### Why distribute AMD-style modules via npm?
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npm has a lot of weaknesses for front-end use (installed layout is not great,
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should have better support for the `baseUrl + moduleID + '.js' style of loading,
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single file JS installs), but some people want a JS package manager and are
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willing to live with those constraints. If that is you, but still want to author
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in AMD style modules to get dynamic require([]), better direct source usage and
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powerful loader plugin support in the browser, then this tool can help.
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#### amdefine/intercept usage
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Just require it in your top level app module (for example index.js, server.js):
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```javascript
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require('amdefine/intercept');
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```
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The module does not return a value, so no need to assign the result to a local
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variable.
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Then just require() code as you normally would with Node's require(). Any .js
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loaded after the intercept require will have the amdefine check injected in
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the .js source as it is loaded. It does not modify the source on disk, just
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prepends some content to the text of the module as it is loaded by Node.
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#### How amdefine/intercept works
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It overrides the `Module._extensions['.js']` in Node to automatically prepend
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the amdefine snippet above. So, it will affect any .js file loaded by your
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app.
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## define() usage
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It is best if you use the anonymous forms of define() in your module:
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```javascript
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define(function (require) {
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var dependency = require('dependency');
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});
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```
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or
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```javascript
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define(['dependency'], function (dependency) {
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});
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```
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## RequireJS optimizer integration. <a name="optimizer"></name>
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Version 1.0.3 of the [RequireJS optimizer](http://requirejs.org/docs/optimization.html)
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will have support for stripping the `if (typeof define !== 'function')` check
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mentioned above, so you can include this snippet for code that runs in the
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browser, but avoid taking the cost of the if() statement once the code is
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optimized for deployment.
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## Node 0.4 Support
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If you want to support Node 0.4, then add `require` as the second parameter to amdefine:
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```javascript
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//Only if you want Node 0.4. If using 0.5 or later, use the above snippet.
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if (typeof define !== 'function') { var define = require('amdefine')(module, require) }
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```
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## Limitations
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### Synchronous vs Asynchronous
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amdefine creates a define() function that is callable by your code. It will
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execute and trace dependencies and call the factory function *synchronously*,
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to keep the behavior in line with Node's synchronous dependency tracing.
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The exception: calling AMD's callback-style require() from inside a factory
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function. The require callback is called on process.nextTick():
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```javascript
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define(function (require) {
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require(['a'], function(a) {
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//'a' is loaded synchronously, but
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//this callback is called on process.nextTick().
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});
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});
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```
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### Loader Plugins
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Loader plugins are supported as long as they call their load() callbacks
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synchronously. So ones that do network requests will not work. However plugins
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like [text](http://requirejs.org/docs/api.html#text) can load text files locally.
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The plugin API's `load.fromText()` is **not supported** in amdefine, so this means
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transpiler plugins like the [CoffeeScript loader plugin](https://github.com/jrburke/require-cs)
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will not work. This may be fixable, but it is a bit complex, and I do not have
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enough node-fu to figure it out yet. See the source for amdefine.js if you want
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to get an idea of the issues involved.
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## Tests
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To run the tests, cd to **tests** and run:
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```
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node all.js
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node all-intercept.js
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```
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## License
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New BSD and MIT. Check the LICENSE file for all the details.
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