Skip to content

Browserify transform for JSX (superset of JavaScript used in React library by Facebook)

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

countravioli/reactify

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

reactify

Browserify transform for JSX (superset of JavaScript used in React library):

var React = require('react')

class Hello extends React.Component {

  render() {
    return <div>Hello, {this.props.name}!</div>
  }
}

Save the snippet above as main.js and then produce a bundle with the following command:

% browserify -t reactify main.js

reactify transform activates for files with either .js or .jsx extensions.

If you want to reactify modules with other extensions, pass an -x / --extension option:

% browserify -t coffeeify -t [ reactify --extension coffee ] main.coffee

If you don't want to specify extension, just pass --everything option:

% browserify -t coffeeify -t [ reactify --everything ] main.coffee

ES6 transformation

reactify transform also can compile a limited set of es6 syntax constructs into es5. Supported features are arrow functions, rest params, templates, object short notation and classes. You can activate this via --es6 or --harmony boolean option:

% browserify -t [ reactify --es6 ] main.js

es6 class getter and setter methods can be activated via --target es5 option:

% browserify -t [ reactify --es6 --target es5 ] main.js

You can also configure it in package.json

{
    "name": "my-package",
    "browserify": {
        "transform": [
            ["reactify", {"es6": true}]
        ]
    }
}

Troubleshooting

Code in 3rd-party packages isn't being transformed by reactify

By default Browserify applies transforms only for modules in the current package. That means that if there are modules with JSX in packages in node_modules/ directory then browserify will throw SyntaxError left and right even if you are using reactify.

The best way to fix that is ask package author to publish to npm with code compiled down to plain ES5 which is runnable in browsers and Node.js as-is.

Another approach is to ask to add

"browserify": {
  "transform": ["reactify"]
}

to the package's package.json. That will make Browserify apply reactify transform for that package too.

Another way is to activate reactify with -g option which will instruct Browserify to apply reactify to every module it encounters:

% browserify -g reactify main.js

Note that this will lead to slower builds as every module will be parsed and transformed by reactify even if it doesn't have JSX code in it.

About

Browserify transform for JSX (superset of JavaScript used in React library by Facebook)

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 95.6%
  • Makefile 4.4%