gulp + browserify + incremental build, done right.
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Even through gulp has recipes to make things work, configuring browserify needs too much boilerplate and understanding about how things work. gulp-bro looks like any other gulp plugin, it does the exact same thing you can do manually, but hides the ugly stuff for you.
It also support incremental build out of the box, so you don't have to mess with watchify again.
npm install --save-dev gulp-bro
gulp.task('build', () =>
gulp.src('app.js')
.pipe(bro())
.pipe(gulp.dest('dist'))
)
gulp.watch('*.js', ['build'])
Subsequent calls to build
will be fast thanks to incremental build.
gulp.task('build', () =>
gulp.src('app.js')
.pipe(bro({
transform: [
babelify.configure({ presets: ['es2015'] }),
[ 'uglifyify', { global: true } ]
]
}))
.pipe(gulp.dest('dist')
)
gulp.task('build', () =>
gulp.src('*.js')
.pipe(bro())
.pipe(gulp.dest('dist'))
)
bro([options], [callback])
Except error
, options are directly passed to browserify. So you can use bro as if you were using browerify. Here is a list of all available options.
Another pitfall of using browerify manually was that error reporting had to be done manually too or you ended up with a huge callstack and a crashed process. By default, bro reports nicely formatted errors:
You can customize things in 2 ways:
- Set
emit
which will cause bro to emit the error, so you can catch it withon('error')
. - Set a callback that will handle the error.
If you use vanilla browserify with gulp, you end up with long compile times if you watch for changes. The reason is that each time a new browserify instance is created and has to parse and compile the whole bundle. Even if only one file has changed, the whole bundle is processed.
Usually you use watchify to improve this, and only recompile files that have changed. The only problem with watchify is that it monitors file changes on its own and needs a lot of boilerplate to integrate with gulp, precisely because of this.
gulp already provide a file watch mechanism that we can use out of the box. bro caches already compiled files and only recompile changes. So you can call repeatedly bro
with optimal compile times.
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MIT © Nicolas Gryman