CoffeeScript browserify transform. Mix and match .coffee
and .js
files in the same project.
Given some files written in a mix of js
and coffee
:
foo.coffee:
console.log require './bar.js'
bar.js:
module.exports = require('./baz.coffee')(5)
baz.coffee:
module.exports = (n) -> n ** n
Install coffeeify into your app:
$ npm install coffeeify
When you compile your app, just pass -t coffeeify
to browserify:
$ browserify -t coffeeify foo.coffee > bundle.js
$ node bundle.js
3125
You can omit the .coffee
extension from your requires if you add the extension to browserify's module extensions:
module.exports = require('./baz')(5)
$ browserify -t coffeeify --extension=".coffee" foo.coffee > bundle.js
$ node bundle.js
3125
You can also pass options to the CoffeeScript compiler:
$ browserify -t [ coffeeify --bare false --header true ] --extension=".coffee" foo.coffee
..
// Generated by CoffeeScript 1.10.0
(function() {
console.log(require('./bar.js'));
}).call(this);
..
Name | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
sourceMap | null |
Generate source maps, deteremined from browserify's --debug option if not set. |
bare | true |
Omit the (function(){ .. }).call(this); wrapper. |
header | false |
Include the // Generated by CoffeeScript <version> header in every file processed. |
When using browserify programatically options can be passed as an object, example:
browserify = require 'browserify'
coffeeify = require 'coffeeify'
bundle = browserify
extensions: ['.coffee']
bundle.transform coffeeify,
bare: false
header: true
bundle.add 'foo.coffee'
bundle.bundle (error, result) ->
throw error if error?
process.stdout.write result
With npm do:
npm install coffeeify
MIT