I'm trying to write a cross-browser extension for Firefox and Chrome. Firefox uses the commonJS specification and Chrome just lumps everything into the global namespace like a webpage.
In order to be able to write reusable code, I'm trying to use requireJS to lood code in the Chrome extension, that way I can write commonJS modules and have them work in both environments.
I'm running into a problem when I need to conditionally require modules. For example, Firefox provides access to a simple-storage module which you should use to access the local storage. In chrome, I need to use the localStorage API that they provide. So, I've been trying to do this:
// storage.js
define(function(require, exports, module){
var store;
try {
// This module will only be available in the FF extension.
store = require('simple-storage').storage
} catch(error) {
// If it's not available, we must be in Chrome and we
// should use the localStorage object.
store = localStorage
}
// Use the store object down here.
});
However this doesn't seem to work. When I try to load the Chrome extension I get the following error:

Is there a better way to require modules with a fallback?
catch. Either way, the result is the same. – David Tuite Aug 24 '12 at 13:35