1

I just started using RequireJS. I tried a simple code but one way works but the other doesn't.

folder "script" has "main.js", "module.js", "require.js"

<script data-main="script/main.js" src="script/require.js"></script>

in main.js

requirejs( ['module'], function( mod ) {
    mod.sayHello();
} );

in module.js:

define( {
    name : "value",
    sayHello : function() {
        alert( "Hello" );
    },
    sayBye : function() {
        alert( "Bye" );
    }
} );

I expect baseUrl to be "script" as mentioned in here:

http://requirejs.org/docs/api.html#jsfiles

The baseUrl is normally set to the same directory as the script used in a data-main attribute for the top level script to load for a page.

So, I thought there would be no problem, but doesn't mod.sayHello() nor sayBye() and console.log( mod.name ) = undefined.

I tried console.log( mod ) and it prints something like this:

Object {id: "_@r6", uri: "script/[email protected]", exports: Object}

When I use ["script/module.js"] instead of ["module"], console.log( mod ) prints like the following:

Object {name: "value"}
name: "value"
sayBye: ()
sayHello: ()
__proto__: Object

and mod.sayHello(), mod.sayBye(), mod.name all works.

including the following in the beginning of main.js is the same:

requirejs.config( {
    baseUrl: "script"
} );

What am I doing wrong... Please help.

2 Answers 2

1

Use a different name than module for your module. For one thing, it is a terribly uninformative name, but the module named module is a special module for RequireJS. It is a module that gives information about the module you are currently in. For instance if foo.js contains this code:

define(['module'], function (module) {
    console.log(module.id);
});

and this file is loaded when you request the module named foo, then console.log will show "foo" on the console.

The documentation does not highlight the existence of module but it talks about it when explaining what the configuration option config does. Because you get to access the config of your module through module.config().

The reason requiring "script/module.js" works is because when you do this you require a module named script/module.js rather than module.

1
  • oh...I just discovered that a file named "test.js" works ( on different computer ). So that could be the reason for my code working but not working at the same time. So, there already exists 'module', so it doesn't give me "Script error ... whatever file name is not found". I should've tried it with the "module.js" in other folder. This is something I never expected. I read the documentation only up to 1.3 then tried myself. Thanks for such a great info. Jan 22, 2016 at 0:10
0

I continued reading the documentation:

http://requirejs.org/docs/api.html

and it led to a github that has information about this:

https://github.com/jrburke/requirejs/wiki/Differences-between-the-simplified-CommonJS-wrapper-and-standard-AMD-define#magic

It turns out that "module" is a kind of "magic modules" along as "require", "export".

And "module" ... :

gives you information about the module ID and location of the current module

https://github.com/jrburke/requirejs/wiki/Differences-between-the-simplified-CommonJS-wrapper-and-standard-AMD-define#module

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.