Universal Module Definition for use in automated build systems
return style module supportIn 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 returns 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