If your external dependency is packaged through npm and has a `jsnext:main` field in its package.json file, rollup won't treat it as an external dependency and can be clever about extracting only the required variable bindings.
For the complete set of options, run `rollup --help`.
Rollup can be used via a [JavaScript API](https://github.com/rollup/rollup/wiki/JavaScript-API) or a [Command Line Interface](https://github.com/rollup/rollup/wiki/Command-Line-Interface). Install with `npm install -g rollup` and run `rollup --help` to get started.
## A next-generation ES6 module bundler
Right now, you have a few different options if you want to create a bundle out of your ES6 modules:
* The best option, in terms of performance, size of the resulting bundle, and accurate representation of ES6 module semantics, is to use [esperanto](http://esperantojs.org)<sup>1</sup>. It's used by [ractive.js](http://ractivejs.org), [moment.js](http://momentjs.com/), Facebook's [immutable.js](https://github.com/facebook/immutable-js), the jQuery Foundation's [pointer events polyfill](https://github.com/jquery/PEP), [Ember CLI](http://www.ember-cli.com/) and a bunch of other libraries and apps
* You could use [jspm](http://jspm.io/), which combines a module bundler with a loader and a package manager
* Or you could use [browserify](http://browserify.org/) or [webpack](http://webpack.github.io/), transpiling your modules into CommonJS along the way
<small>1. Esperanto has recently been deprecated in favor of rollup. :)</small>
But there's a flaw in how these systems work. Pretend it's the future, and lodash is available as an ES6 module, and you want to use a single helper function from it:
```js
// app.js
import { pluck } from 'lodash';
```
With that single import statement, you've just caused the whole of [lodash](https://lodash.com/) to be included in your bundle, even though you only need to use a tiny fraction of the code therein.
If you're using esperanto, that's not totally disastrous, because a sufficiently good minifier will be able to determine through [static analysis](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_program_analysis) that most of the code will never run, and so remove it. But there are lots of situations where static analysis fails, and unused code will continue to clutter up your bundle.
If you're using any of the other tools, static analysis won't be able to even begin to determine which of lodash's exports aren't used by your app (AFAIK! please correct me if I'm wrong).
### The current solution is not future-proof
I picked lodash because it does offer one solution to this problem: modular builds. Today, in your CommonJS modules, you can do this:
```js
var pluck = require( 'lodash/collection/pluck' );
```
**This is not the answer.** Using a folder structure to define an interface is a bad idea - it makes it harder to guarantee backwards compatibility, it imposes awkward constraints on library authors, and it allows developers to do this sort of thing:
```js
var cheekyHack = require( 'undocumented/private/module' );
```
Sure enough, you [won't be able to do this with ES6 modules](https://github.com/esperantojs/esperanto/issues/68#issuecomment-73302346).
### A better approach?
This project is an attempt to prove a different idea: ES6 modules should define their interface through a single file (which, by convention, is currently exposed as the `jsnext:main` field in your package.json file), like so...
```js
// snippet from future-lodash.js
export { partition } from './src/collection/partition';
export { pluck } from './src/collection/pluck';
export { reduce } from './src/collection/reduce';
/* ...and so on... */
```
...and ES6 *bundlers* should handle importing in a much more granular fashion. Rather than importing an entire module, an intelligent bundler should be able to reason like so:
* I need to import `pluck` from `future-lodash.js`
* According to `future-lodash.js`, the definition of `pluck` can be found in `lodash/src/collection/pluck.js`
* It seems that `pluck` depends on `map` and `property`, which are in... *these* files
* ...
* Right, I've found all the function definitions I need. I can just include those in my bundle and disregard the rest
In other words, the 'tree-shaking' approach of throwing everything in then removing the bits you don't need is all wrong - instead, we should be selective about what we include in the first place.
This is not a trivial task. There are almost certainly a great many complex edge cases. Perhaps it's not possible. But I intend to find out.
* Respect for original formatting and code comments
### API
The example below is aspirational. It isn't yet implemented - it exists in the name of [README driven development](http://tom.preston-werner.com/2010/08/23/readme-driven-development.html).
```js
rollup.rollup({
// The bundle's starting point
entry: 'app.js',
// Any external modules you don't want to include
// in the bundle (includes node built-ins)
external: [ 'path', 'fs', 'some-other-lib' ]
}).then( function ( bundle ) {
// generate code and a sourcemap
const { code, map } = bundle.generate({
// output format - 'amd', 'cjs', 'es6', 'iife', 'umd'
format: 'amd',
// exports - 'auto', 'none', 'default', 'named'
exports: 'auto',
// amd/umd options
moduleId: 'my-library',
When you're developing software, it's much easier to break your library or application apart into separate pieces that you can work on separately. It's also very likely that you'll have dependencies on third party libraries. The result is lots of small files – but that's bad news for browsers, which get slowed down by having to make many requests.
// umd options
moduleName: 'MyLibrary', // necessary if the bundle has exports
globals: {
backbone: 'Backbone'
}
});
The solution is to bundle your code into a single file that includes everything you need.