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Vojta Jina c075354e25 Don't ship npm package with .npmignore 11 years ago
tests 6c719d58eb Allow multiple named defines that are visible to the current module. Allows distributing single file JS files in node. 12 years ago
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LICENSE 94dde70776 Doc updates for a 0.0.1 release. 12 years ago
README.md b6e3869dad slightly clearer language 12 years ago
amdefine.js b71e842a01 rev version because npm muddles concerns 11 years ago
package.json ad60231f6f Fix github url in package.json 11 years ago

README.md

amdefine

A module that can be used to implement AMD's define() in Node. This allows you to code to the AMD API and have the module work in node programs without requiring those other programs to use AMD.

Usage

1) Update your package.json to indicate amdefine as a dependency:

    "dependencies": {
        "amdefine": ">=0.0.2"
    }

Then run npm install to get amdefine into your project.

2) At the top of each module that uses define(), place this code:

if (typeof define !== 'function') { var define = require('amdefine')(module) }

Only use these snippets when loading amdefine. If you preserve the basic structure, with the braces, it will be stripped out when using the RequireJS optimizer.

You can add spaces, line breaks and even require amdefine with a local path, but keep the rest of the structure to get the stripping behavior.

As you may know, because if statements in JavaScript don't have their own scope, the var declaration in the above snippet is made whether the if expression is truthy or not. If RequireJS is loaded then the declaration is superfluous because define is already already declared in the same scope in RequireJS. Fortunately JavaScript handles multiple var declarations of the same variable in the same scope gracefully.

If you want to deliver amdefine.js with your code rather than specifying it as a dependency with npm, then just download the latest release and refer to it using a relative path:

Version 0.0.2

define() usage

It is best if you use the anonymous forms of define() in your module:

define(function (require) {
    var dependency = require('dependency');
});

or

define(['dependency'], function (dependency) {

});

RequireJS optimizer integration.

Version 1.0.3 of the RequireJS optimizer will have support for stripping the if (typeof define !== 'function') check mentioned above, so you can include this snippet for code that runs in the browser, but avoid taking the cost of the if() statement once the code is optimized for deployment.

Node 0.4 Support

If you want to support Node 0.4, then add require as the second parameter to amdefine:

//Only if you want Node 0.4. If using 0.5 or later, use the above snippet.
if (typeof define !== 'function') { var define = require('amdefine')(module, require) }

Limitations

Synchronous vs Asynchronous

amdefine creates a define() function that is callable by your code. It will execute and trace dependencies and call the factory function synchronously, to keep the behavior in line with Node's synchronous dependency tracing.

The exception: calling AMD's callback-style require() from inside a factory function. The require callback is called on process.nextTick():

define(function (require) {
    require(['a'], function(a) {
        //'a' is loaded synchronously, but
        //this callback is called on process.nextTick().
    });
});

Loader Plugins

Loader plugins are supported as long as they call their load() callbacks synchronously. So ones that do network requests will not work. However plugins like text can load text files locally.

The plugin API's load.fromText() is not supported in amdefine, so this means transpiler plugins like the CoffeeScript loader plugin will not work. This may be fixable, but it is a bit complex, and I do not have enough node-fu to figure it out yet. See the source for amdefine.js if you want to get an idea of the issues involved.

Tests

To run the tests, cd to tests and run:

node all.js

License

New BSD and MIT. Check the LICENSE file for all the details.