neuronjs v10.0.3
Neuron
First of all, neuron is not designed for human developers to use directly. Most usually, it works together with cortex.
Neuron is a full feature CommonJS module loader which makes your node-style modules run in browsers.
- Implements commonjs Module/1.0 standard.
- Fully supports SemVer and SemVer ranges:
'^a.b.c','~a.b.c','>=a.b.c', etc. - Implements File Modules of node.js (Maybe the only module loader which could do that.)
- Supports cyclic dependencies.
- Implements
require.resolve()for browsers which is similar to node.js. - Completely isolated sandboxes.
Neurons are the core components of the nervous system. They processes and transmits chemical signals to others as well as javascript modules work with others by passing runtime objects.
With Cortex and Neuron, we write web modules exactly the same as we work with node.js, with no Module/Wrappings, no *MD, etc.
You could remove all those annoying and noisy things out of your mind, and, just focus on the origin and code your web modules like node.js.
Neuron is designed to run in the background without your concern, UNLIKE RequireJS and many other loaders.
We're trying to return to the origin of commonjs. There should be only ONE standard, that is, Module/1.0.
Build dist
$ node node/buildWith ecma5 compatibility
$ node node/build ecma5NPM module: neuronjs
A package to get the JavaScript file of neuron.
var neuron = require('neuronjs');
neuron.version(); // 6.0.0
neuron.content(function(err, content){
content; // The file content of neuron.js
});neuron.version();
Returns String the version of neuron for browsers, not the version of npm module neuronjs
neuron.write(dest, callback)
- dest
path - callback
function(err)
Writes the content of neuron.js to the dest
neuron.content(callback)
- callback
function(err, content) - content
Bufferthe buffer of the content of neuron.js
Gets the content of neuron.js
Neuron Loader for Browsers
Getting Started
Installation
npm install
gruntUsage
Frequent configurations, for more, just see Configuration Hierarchies section.
<script src="/dist/neuron.js"></script>
<script>
neuron.config({
path: 'http://localhost/mod'
});
</script>For the example above:
module 'abc@0.1.1' will be located at 'http://localhost/mod/abc/0.1.1/abc.js'
Methods
require(id)
- id
Stringmodule identifier.
To require modules. See CommonJS Module/1.0
require.async(id, callback)
- id
Stringmodule identifier. - callback
function(exports)callback must be passed, orrequire.asyncwill do nothing.
Asynchronously loads a module by id, and then passes the module exports to callback.
You should always pass the callback parameter because neuron can not make sure the exact time when a module is loaded asynchronously.
It is NOT a good practice if the logic of your code relies on the result of the require.async()d module without a callback.
require.resolve(path)
- path
Stringthe relative path to be resolved according to the current module.
Returns the resolved absolute path of the resource.
Returns undefined if path is not a relative path.
Returns undefined if path is even outside the current package.
facade()
facade(identifier);
facade(identifier, data);Method facade loads a module. If the module.exports has a method named init, facade method will run the init method.
We call this kind of modules as facade modules
identifier String
module name with version, seperated with '@'. For example: 'async@0.1.0'
data Object
If data is defined, data will be passed as the parameter of the init method.
Developer Guide
Neuron CORE supplies no high-level APIs, which means that neuron core only cares about module dependencies and module wrapping while will do nothing about things such as fetching modules from remote server and injecting them into the current document, and never cares about where a specific module should come from.
You could do all these things in your will (by write your own lib/load.js and adjust Gruntfile.js). Nevertheless, neuron have a basic configuration file which located at lib/load.js.
Configuration
neuron.config(settings);settings.path String
CommonJS module path, like NODE_PATH, default to 'the root directory of neuronjs'.
Pay attension that path will not be resolved to absolute url. So if you don't want a relative path, don't forget 'http://'.
settings.loaded String|Array.<id>
To tell neuron loader that those modules are already loaded, and prevent duplicate loading.
If String, we can separate different ids with '|' (comma).
neuron.config({
loaded: ['jquery@1.9.2', 'async@0.2.9']
});settings.graph Object
The directed graph of all dependencies, which could be parsed by neuron-graph.
The arithmetics to generate the graph is complicated and hard to describe, see https://github.com/kaelzhang/neuron/blob/master/doc/graph.md for details (Too Long; Don't Read)
define()
With cortex, you might NEVER use this method.
ALWAYS use builders to generate this method.
define(identifier, dependencies, factory, options);id (full module id)
Format: <package-name>@<version>/<path-with-extension>
Type: string
The real pathname relative to the root directory of the package.
dependencies
Array.<id>
factory
function(require, exports, module, __filename, __dirname){}
options
options.main
Type Boolean
whether the module is the main entry, i.e. the package.main field in package.json
options.map
Type Object
<id>:<full-module-id>.
require('./a')
require('./lib')
// ->
// map: {
// './a': 'my@1.0.0/a.js'
// // require a directory
// './lib': 'my@1.0.0/lib/index.js'
// }Events
| Event | Emitted |
|---|---|
| beforeready | when the module is needed by others |
| beforeload | before being downloaded |
| load | when the module is downloaded |
| ready | when the module is ready to be require()d |
neuron.on('ready', function(id){
console.log('module "' + id + '" is ready to be `require()`d');
});Related Projects
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