In order for the UMD wrapper to work the source code for your module should return
the export, e.g.
function method() { //code } method.helper = function () { //code } return method;
For examples, see the examples directory. The CommonJS module format is also supported by passing true as the second argument to methods.
options:
commonJS
(default: false
) - If commonJS is true
then it will accept CommonJS source instead of source code which return
s the module.The name
should the the name of the module. Use a string like name, all lower case with hyphens instead of spaces.
If source
should be a string, that is wrapped in umd and returned as a string.
return the text which will be inserted before a module.
return the text which will be inserted after a module.
Usage: umd <name> <source> <destination> [options] Pipe Usage: umd <name> [options] < source > destination Options: -h --help Display usage information -c --commonJS Use CommonJS module format
You can easilly pipe unix commands together like:
cat my-module.js | umd my-module | uglify-js > my-module.umd.min.js
The name
passed to umd
will be converted to camel case (my-library
becomes myLibrary
) and may only contain:
The name may not begin with a number. Invalid characters will be stripped.
MIT