The expose-loader
loader allows to expose a module (either in whole or in part) to global object (self
, window
and global
).
For compatibility tips and examples, check out Shimming guide in the official documentation.
To begin, you'll need to install expose-loader
:
npm install expose-loader --save-dev
or
yarn add -D expose-loader
or
pnpm add -D expose-loader
(If you're using webpack 4, install expose-loader@1
and follow the corresponding instructions instead.)
Then you can use the expose-loader
using two approaches.
The |
or %20
(space) allow to separate the globalName
, moduleLocalName
and override
of expose.
The documentation and syntax examples can be read here.
Warning
%20
represents a space
in a query string because spaces are not allowed in URLs.
import $ from "expose-loader?exposes=$,jQuery!jquery";
//
// Adds the `jquery` to the global object under the names `$` and `jQuery`
import { concat } from "expose-loader?exposes=_.concat!lodash/concat";
//
// Adds the `lodash/concat` to the global object under the name `_.concat`
import {
map,
reduce,
} from "expose-loader?exposes=_.map|map,_.reduce|reduce!underscore";
//
// Adds the `map` and `reduce` method from `underscore` to the global object under the name `_.map` and `_.reduce`
src/index.js
import $ from "jquery";
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: require.resolve("jquery"),
loader: "expose-loader",
options: {
exposes: ["$", "jQuery"],
},
},
{
test: require.resolve("underscore"),
loader: "expose-loader",
options: {
exposes: [
"_.map|map",
{
globalName: "_.reduce",
moduleLocalName: "reduce",
},
{
globalName: ["_", "filter"],
moduleLocalName: "filter",
},
],
},
},
],
},
};
The require.resolve
call is a Node.js function (unrelated to require.resolve
in webpack processing).
require.resolve
that returns the absolute path of the module ("/.../app/node_modules/jquery/dist/jquery.js"
).
So the expose only applies to the jquery
module and it's only exposed when used in the bundle.
Finally, run webpack
using the method you normally use (e.g., via CLI or an npm script).
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
exposes |
{String|Object|Array<String|Object>} |
undefined |
List of exposes |
globalObject |
String |
undefined |
Object used for global context |
Type:
type exposes =
| string
| {
globalName: string | Array<string>;
moduleLocalName?: string;
override?: boolean;
}
| Array<
| string
| {
globalName: string | Array<string>;
moduleLocalName?: string;
override?: boolean;
}
>;
Default: undefined
List of exposes.
Allows to use a string
to describe an expose.
The |
or %20
(space) allow to separate the globalName
, moduleLocalName
and override
of expose.
String syntax - [[globalName] [moduleLocalName] [override]]
or [[globalName]|[moduleLocalName]|[override]]
, where:
globalName
- The name on the global object, for examplewindow.$
for a browser environment (required)moduleLocalName
- The name of method/variable etc of the module (the module must export it) (may be omitted)override
- Allows to override existing value in the global object (may be omitted)
If moduleLocalName
is not specified, it exposes the entire module to the global object, otherwise it exposes only the value of moduleLocalName
.
src/index.js
import $ from "jquery";
import _ from "underscore";
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: require.resolve("jquery"),
loader: "expose-loader",
options: {
// For `underscore` library, it can be `_.map map` or `_.map|map`
exposes: "$",
// To access please use `window.$` or `globalThis.$`
},
},
{
// test: require.resolve("jquery"),
test: /node_modules[/\\]underscore[/\\]modules[/\\]index-all\.js$/,
loader: "expose-loader",
type: "javascript/auto",
options: {
// For `underscore` library, it can be `_.map map` or `_.map|map`
exposes: "_",
// To access please use `window._` or `globalThis._`
},
},
],
},
};
Allows to use an object to describe an expose.
Type:
type globalName = string | Array<string>;
Default: undefined
The name in the global object. (required).
src/index.js
import _ from "underscore";
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /node_modules[/\\]underscore[/\\]modules[/\\]index-all\.js$/,
loader: "expose-loader",
type: "javascript/auto",
options: {
exposes: {
// Can be `['_', 'filter']`
globalName: "_.filter",
moduleLocalName: "filter",
},
},
},
],
},
};
Type:
type moduleLocalName = string;
Default: undefined
The name of method/variable etc of the module (the module must export it).
If moduleLocalName
is specified, it exposes only the value of moduleLocalName
.
src/index.js
import _ from "underscore";
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /node_modules[/\\]underscore[/\\]modules[/\\]index-all\.js$/,
loader: "expose-loader",
type: "javascript/auto",
options: {
exposes: {
globalName: "_.filter",
moduleLocalName: "filter",
},
},
},
],
},
};
Type:
type override = boolean;
Default: false
By default, loader does not override the existing value in the global object, because it is unsafe.
In development
mode, we throw an error if the value already present in the global object.
But you can configure loader to override the existing value in the global object using this option.
To force override the value that is already present in the global object you can set the override
option to the true
value.
src/index.js
import $ from "jquery";
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: require.resolve("jquery"),
loader: "expose-loader",
options: {
exposes: {
globalName: "$",
override: true,
},
},
},
],
},
};
src/index.js
import _ from "underscore";
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /node_modules[/\\]underscore[/\\]modules[/\\]index-all\.js$/,
loader: "expose-loader",
type: "javascript/auto",
options: {
exposes: [
"_.map map",
{
globalName: "_.filter",
moduleLocalName: "filter",
},
{
globalName: ["_", "find"],
moduleLocalName: "myNameForFind",
},
],
},
},
],
},
};
It will expose only map
, filter
and find
(under myNameForFind
name) methods to the global object.
In browsers, these methods will be available under windows._.map(..args)
, windows._.filter(...args)
and windows._.myNameForFind(...args)
methods.
type globalObject = string;
Default: undefined
Object used for global context
import _ from "underscore";
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /node_modules[/\\]underscore[/\\]modules[/\\]index-all\.js$/,
loader: "expose-loader",
type: "javascript/auto",
options: {
exposes: [
{
globalName: "_",
},
],
globalObject: "this",
},
},
],
},
};
index.js
import { method1 } from "./my-module.js";
my-module.js
function method1() {
console.log("method1");
}
function method2() {
console.log("method1");
}
export { method1, method2 };
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /my-module\.js$/,
loader: "expose-loader",
options: {
exposes: "mod",
// // To access please use `window.mod` or `globalThis.mod`
},
},
],
},
};
We welcome all contributions!
If you're new here, please take a moment to review our contributing guidelines before submitting issues or pull requests.