The answer is that there are workarounds, but you really don't want to use them, ever, ever, except for things which you want to hack into the global scope of all running modules in your application up to and including all dependencies (mongoose) and all of ITS dependencies.
override.js
global.thisIsNowAvailable = true;
flaky-file.js
if (thisIsNowAvailable) { /* ... */ }
index.js
require("./override");
require("./flaky-file");
The same will work for overriding methods on global prototypes, et cetera.
Unless your library is super-awesome and is intended to intercept, parse and interpret code at require-time
require("babel/register"); // all loaded modules can now be written in ES6
doing this for other reasons leads to horrible code-bases...
broken-index.js
require("flaky-file");
require("override");
// you might have just attempted to reference a variable that doesn't exist,
// thrown an error and crashed your entire server
// (not just a single connection, like PHP... ...the entire server went down,
// for everyone, and it has to be restarted).
Think of modules as separate function scopes.
It's really simple to do something like:
needs-mongoose.js
function doSomeInitWithMongoose (db) { /* ... */ }
function doSomeRuntimeWithMongoose (db, params) { /* ... */ }
module.exports = mongoose => {
doSomeInitWithMongoose(mongoose);
return {
run: params => {
/* ... app is run here ... */
doSomeRuntimeWithMongoose(mongoose, params);
}
};
};
configures-mongoose.js
var mongoose = require("mongoose");
function configure (db, cfg) { /* ... */ return db; }
module.exports = config => {
var configuredDB = configure(mongoose, config);
return configuredDB;
};
main.js
// to support arrow functions and other awesome ES6, including ES6 modules
require("babel/register");
var config = require("./mongoose-config");
var db = require("./configures-mongoose")(config);
var app = require("./needs-mongoose")(db);
app.run({ /* ... */ });
EDIT
Updated the last few files to be a structurally-correct pseudo-program (which does absolutely nothing, of course);
Of course, if index.js
or server.js
were to require("babel/register");
and then load main.js
(without the Babel include in it), all of the require
statements south of Babel could be written as ES6 modules, without issue.
server.js
require("babel/register");
require("./es6-main");
es6-main.js
import config from "./mongoose-config";
import configureDB from "./configures-mongoose";
import loadApp from "./needs-mongoose";
const db = configureDB(config);
const app = loadApp(db);
app.run({ /* ... */ });
Note that now I'm naming the functions I was originally returning, because in JS when you return a function, you can immediately call it...
getFunc( config )( data );
...but you can't act immediately on import
statements.
Rule of thumb is that if you're going to export an object to the outside world, it should have 0 external dependencies, or all external dependencies will be set up later, by setters of some kind:
var utils = require("./utils"); // doesn't need any information
utils.helperFunc(data);
or
var catsAndPorn = true;
var internets = [];
var SeriesOfTubes = require("series-of-tubes");
var internet = new SeriesOfTubes( catsAndPorn );
internets.push( internet );
or
var bigOlFramework = require("big-ol-framework");
bigOlFramework.setDBPool( myDBCluster );
http.createServer( bigOlFramework.connectionHandler ).listen( 8080 );
None require outside information for their actual init (though may require their own internal dependencies).
If you want to return something which does rely on external init, either export a factory/constructor, or export a function, which accepts your config/data, and then returns what you want, after an init sequence.
EDIT 2
The last piece of advice here is that as far as mongoose
usage goes, or Gulp, to a similar extent, or several routers...
...when you want to have a single file which registers its contents to a registry, or requires a core-component, to be able to return something, the pattern in Node which makes the most sense is to return a function which then does the init
var Router = require("router");
var router = new Router( );
require("./routes/login")(router);
require("./routes/usesrs")(router);
require("./routes/articles")(router);
Where "./routes/articles.js" might look like
import ArticlesController from "./../controller/articles"; // or wherever
var articles = new ArticlesController();
module.exports = router => {
router.get("/articles", ( ) => articles.getAll( ));
router.post("/articles", ( ) => articles.create( ));
};
So if you were looking to structure ORM based on schema, you might do similar:
var mongoose = require("mongoose");
var Users = require("./schema/users")(mongoose);
where "./schema/users" looks like:
module.exports = mongoose => {
return new mongoose.Schema({ /* ... */ });
};
Hope that helps.
require('mongoose')
? What's the problem with it?global.mongoose = require("mongoose");
, but that would be ugly.