xsheetjs/demos/webpack/README.md

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# Webpack
This library is built with some dynamic logic to determine if it is invoked in a
script tag or in nodejs. Webpack does not understand those feature tests, so by
default it will do some strange things.
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## Basic Usage
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`webpack.app.js` demonstrates bundling an entire app script in a bundle. For
basic projects requiring the module from the npm package, it is sufficient to
suppress the node shims:
```js
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/* webpack config for app.out.js */
{
/* entry point app.js */
entry: './app.js',
/* write to app.out.js */
output: { path:__dirname, filename: './app.out.js' },
/* suppress node shims */
node: {
fs: false,
process: false,
Buffer: false
}
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}
```
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## Suppressing the Node shims
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The library properly guards against accidental leakage of node features in the
browser but webpack disregards those. The config should explicitly suppress:
```js
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node: {
fs: false,
process: false,
Buffer: false
}
```
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## Omitting optional dependencies
The `codepage` is needed in certain special cases, including files generated by
non-US-English versions of Excel, but may not be needed. To reduce build size,
the module can be omitted by aliasing the dependency:
```js
resolve: {
alias: { "./dist/cpexcel.js": "" }
},
```
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Alternatively, bundling the `xlsx.core.min.js` script always omits dependencies.
## Bower and minified versions
Webpack may show a message like "This seems to be a pre-built javascript file"
when processing minified files (like the default Bower script). The message is
harmless. To suppress the message, set `module.noParse` in the webpack config:
```js
module: {
noParse: [
/xlsx.core.min.js/,
/xlsx.full.min.js/
]
}
```
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## Other Demos
This demo also attempts to demonstrate bundling of the library as well as the
core and full distribution versions. `app.js` is the common app code (it will
not be bundled). The individual bundles merely wrap and reflect `XLSX`. The
app code uses the bundles with script tag inclusion in the main HTML files. The
worker scripts use the bundles with `importScripts` references.
| required script | HTML page | entry | worker script |
|----------------:|------------:|----------:|----------------:|
| main `xlsx` lib | `main.html` | `main.js` | `mainworker.js` |
| `xlsx.core.min` | `core.html` | `core.js` | `coreworker.js` |
| `xlsx.full.min` | `full.html` | `full.js` | `fullworker.js` |
The entry points in the demo merely require and re-export the library:
```js
/* main.js */
var XLSX = require('../../');
console.log("it works!");
module.exports = XLSX;
```
The main advantage of reflecting the library is deduplication: the library code
is only downloaded once. The basic example builds a separate worker script and
eventually ships the library twice.
### Reflecting the XLSX variable
This library will not assign to `module.exports` if it is run in the browser. To
convince webpack, the demo webpack config sets `output`:
```js
output: {
libraryTarget: 'var',
library: 'XLSX'
}
```
[![Analytics](https://ga-beacon.appspot.com/UA-36810333-1/SheetJS/js-xlsx?pixel)](https://github.com/SheetJS/js-xlsx)