Skip to content

nchanged/realm-js

Repository files navigation

realm-js

RealmJs is a new dependency injection/module handling tool for Node.js and javascript projects. The library is universal (isomorphic). You can easily share modules between frontend and backend accordingly.

Introduction

Real.js comes with an absolutely superb transpiler, which resembles es6 imports. It essentially has the same syntax with few improvements

"use realm";

import myModule from myapp;
import lodash as _ from myapp.utils;

class MySuperClass {

}
export MySuperClass;

Realm transpiler goes through files and converts, say MySuperClass.js file into

realm.module("test.MySuperClass", ["myapp.myModule", "myapp.utils.lodash"], function (myModule, _) {
   class MySuperClass {

   }
  return MySuperClass;
});

Add babel7 and your are unstoppable!

Install

npm install realm-js --save

Check a simple project and see what it compiles into test-backend.js (with a little help from babel es7)

If you want to serve realm.js you can just use express middleware

app.use('/ream.js', realm.serve.express());

To get contents (for build)

realm.serve.getContents()

Under the hood

Creating modules/services

Everything revolves around es6 promises:

realm.module("MyFirstModule", function() {
   return new Promise(function(resolve, reject){
      return resolve({hello : "world"})
   });
});
realm.module("MySecondModule", function(MyFirstModule) {
   console.log(MyFirstModule);
});

Require a module

Code:

realm.require(function(MySecondModule){
   console.log(MySecondModule)
});

Will resolve all required dependencies. The ouput:

{hello: "world"}

Require a package

You can require a package if you like.

realm.requirePackage("app.components").then(function(components){

});

Annotation

Clearly, if you don't use ec6, or any other transpilers, you need to annotate modules

realm.module("myModule", ["moduleA", "moduleB"], function(moduleA, moduleB){

})

Porting your favorite libraries

Universal wrapper has a parameter called $isBackend. So, if you want to import lodash (my favorite) or any other libaries. you can register them like so:

domain.module("shared._", function() {
   return $isBackend ? require("lodash") : window._;
});
domain.module("shared.realm", function() {
   return $isBackend ? require("realm-js") : window.realm;
});

Using the realm transpiler

The current transpiler is a very simple regExp like script. (I am not sure if i can call transpiler though). I have been using this library for years, and decided to release just now. I've tried to create a babel plugin, but this thing is just ginormous and i simply don't have time for that. If you feel like, go ahead!

A simple import

If a module does not belong to any package:

import Module

If a module belongs to a package:

import Module from app

Giving it alias

import Module as mod from app

Gulp

realm.transpiler({
      preffix: "test",
      base : "test-app-backend",
      target : "./test-backend.js"
})

Wrapping into a universal function

realm.transpiler({wrap : true})

Bulding

You can use babel to transpile your code into anything you like. (RealmJs transpiler should come first)

Here is a sample build task;

gulp.task("build-backend", function() {
   return gulp.src("test-app-backend/**/*.js").pipe(realm.transpiler({
         preffix: "test",
         base : "test-app-backend",
         target : "./test-backend.js"
      }))
      .pipe(babel({
         presets: ["es2016"],
         plugins: ["transform-decorators-legacy"]
      }))
      .pipe(realm.transpiler({wrap : true}))
      .pipe(gulp.dest("./"));
});

Contribute

Please, contribute. The code isn't in its best shape but rocks!

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages