280

I had a pull request feedback below, just wondering which way is the correct way to import lodash?

You'd better do import has from 'lodash/has'.. For the earlier version of lodash (v3) which by itself is pretty heavy, we should only import a specidic module/function rather than importing the whole lodash library. Not sure about the newer version (v4).

import has from 'lodash/has';

vs

import { has } from 'lodash';

Thanks

2

10 Answers 10

333

import has from 'lodash/has'; is better because lodash holds all it's functions in a single file, so rather than import the whole 'lodash' library at 100k, it's better to just import lodash's has function which is maybe 2k.

16
  • 2
    @GeorgeKatsanos you just import the function you want to use, you don't need '_'
    – Bill
    Oct 29, 2016 at 11:57
  • 10
    @GeorgeKatsanos 'lodash/has' isn't a separate package. There's a file called has.js in the root of the regular 'lodash' package, and import has from 'lodash/has' (or const has = require ('lodash/has) will load that file. There are separate method packages on npm, but they use the "dot syntax": 'lodash.has'. This would also be a valid way to go about it if you don't mind installing a separate package for every method you use (and potentially making your package.json massive as a result).
    – daemone
    Nov 30, 2016 at 15:26
  • 99
    I have to add here that, if you use webpack 2 or rollup (a bundler that supports tree shaking), then import { has } from 'lodash' would work the same way, since the rest will be stripped out
    – Alex JM
    Dec 5, 2016 at 10:08
  • 3
    @PDN webpack 2 tree shaking should do it for you automatically
    – Bill
    Jul 24, 2017 at 0:22
  • 30
    unlike some others, my tree shaking wouldn't work with the more obvious syntax, it was only after I switched to lodash-es and used the import has from 'lodash-es/has' syntax did I get full tree shaking. went from 526KB to 184KB, see stackoverflow.com/questions/41991178/… Aug 3, 2017 at 18:59
156

If you are using webpack 4, the following code is tree shakable.

import { has } from 'lodash-es';

The points to note;

  1. CommonJS modules are not tree shakable so you should definitely use lodash-es, which is the Lodash library exported as ES Modules, rather than lodash (CommonJS).

  2. lodash-es's package.json contains "sideEffects": false, which notifies webpack 4 that all the files inside the package are side effect free (see https://webpack.js.org/guides/tree-shaking/#mark-the-file-as-side-effect-free).

  3. This information is crucial for tree shaking since module bundlers do not tree shake files which possibly contain side effects even if their exported members are not used in anywhere.

Edit

As of version 1.9.0, Parcel also supports "sideEffects": false, threrefore import { has } from 'lodash-es'; is also tree shakable with Parcel. It also supports tree shaking CommonJS modules, though it is likely tree shaking of ES Modules is more efficient than CommonJS according to my experiment.

9
  • I converted all of my lodash imports to import { ... } from 'lodash-es'; My bundle still includes the whole library.
    – Isaac Pak
    Jan 28, 2019 at 0:55
  • 3
    @IsaacPak Make sure that you are not transpiing ES modules to CommonJS. If you are using TypeScript, you have to set --module compiler option as es6, es2015 or esnext.
    – kimamula
    Jan 28, 2019 at 2:09
  • I'm not using TypeScript and my .babelrc env preset is set to modules: false so they aren't transpiled to CommonJS. I am using Bruce's solution now which seems to work. Thanks for your contribution, I'm sure it works but I just don't have the setup for it.
    – Isaac Pak
    Jan 28, 2019 at 11:47
  • unfortunately, can't use lodash-es with jest at this point: github.com/facebook/jest/issues/4842#issuecomment-491434065
    – apollo
    Oct 13, 2019 at 23:10
  • 3
    import has from 'lodash-es/has' and import {has} from 'lodash-es' both variants do treeshaking when using webpack-4
    – Legends
    Jan 13, 2020 at 23:36
29

Import specific methods inside of curly brackets

import { map, tail, times, uniq } from 'lodash';

Pros:

  • Only one import line(for a decent amount of functions)
  • More readable usage: map() instead of _.map() later in the javascript code.

Cons:

  • Every time we want to use a new function or stop using another - it needs to be maintained and managed

Copied from:The Correct Way to Import Lodash Libraries - A Benchmark article written by Alexander Chertkov.

5
  • 2
    Thanks for the useful answer. However, I like the _.map() syntax to be clear that an external library is being used. Is import _ from 'lodash' equally efficient as your suggestion or is there another way of being able to use this syntax? Jan 21, 2020 at 14:10
  • 2
    @ToivoSäwén I completely agree and prefer the explicit _.map() syntax as well. Were you able to figure out a way to maintain that while doing es6 imports and tree-shaking?
    – Raj
    Apr 23, 2020 at 5:45
  • This answer seems like a simple copy and paste from blazemeter.com/blog/…. If so, it would be better to provide credit.
    – Lacek
    Aug 14, 2020 at 9:02
  • 1
    import { map as _map, tail } from 'lodash'
    – McKay
    Dec 3, 2020 at 22:29
  • 1
    the article linked actually states the smallest bundle size, without some special plugins, is "one-by-one or ‘modules’ import". e.g. import map from "lodash/map" Mar 16, 2022 at 8:12
11

You can import them as

import {concat, filter, orderBy} from 'lodash';

or as

import concat from 'lodash/concat';
import orderBy from 'lodash/orderBy';
import filter from 'lodash/filter';

the second one is much optimized than the first because it only loads the needed modules

then use like this

pendingArray: concat(
                    orderBy(
                        filter(payload, obj => obj.flag),
                        ['flag'],
                        ['desc'],
                    ),
                    filter(payload, obj => !obj.flag),
4

If you are using babel, you should check out babel-plugin-lodash, it will cherry-pick the parts of lodash you are using for you, less hassle and a smaller bundle.

It has a few limitations:

  • You must use ES2015 imports to load Lodash
  • Babel < 6 & Node.js < 4 aren’t supported
  • Chain sequences aren’t supported. See this blog post for alternatives.
  • Modularized method packages aren’t supported
2

I just put them in their own file and export it for node and webpack:

// lodash-cherries.js
module.exports = {
  defaults: require('lodash/defaults'),
  isNil: require('lodash/isNil'),
  isObject: require('lodash/isObject'),
  isArray: require('lodash/isArray'),
  isFunction: require('lodash/isFunction'),
  isInteger: require('lodash/isInteger'),
  isBoolean: require('lodash/isBoolean'),
  keys: require('lodash/keys'),
  set: require('lodash/set'),
  get: require('lodash/get'),
}
2

I think this answer can be used in any project easily and brings the best result with less effort.

For Typescript users, use as following :

// lodash.utils.ts
export { default as get } from 'lodash/get';
export { default as isEmpty } from 'lodash/isEmpty';
export { default as isNil } from 'lodash/isNil';
...

And can be used the same way as importing lodash :

//some-code.ts
import { get } from './path/to/lodash.utils'

export static function getSomething(thing: any): any {
    return get(thing, 'someSubField', 'someDefaultValue')
}

Or if you prefer to keep the _ to avoid conflicts (ex. map from rxjs vs lodash)

//some-other-code.ts
import * as _ from './path/to/lodash.utils'

export static function getSomething(thing: any): any {
    return _.get(thing, 'someSubField', 'someDefaultValue')
}

UPDATE : Seems like the right way to export is :

export * as get from 'lodash/get';
export * as isEmpty from 'lodash/isEmpty';
export * as isNil from 'lodash/isNil';
...

But there is a weird collision with @types/lodash, I've removed this type package because I would get this error :

Module '"/../project/node_modules/@types/lodash/cloneDeep"' uses 'export =' and cannot be used with 'export *'.ts(2498)

UPDATE :

After some digging, I've turned tsconfig.json feature esModuleInterop to true, and it allows me to do the following :

import get from 'lodash/get';
import isEmpty from 'lodash/isEmpty';
import isNil from 'lodash/isNil';
...

export { get, isEmpty, isNil, ... };

Note that this affects all your imports in your projects that has been defined as import * as lib from 'lib'. Follow the documentation to be sure it's suitable for you.

0

import { cloneDeep, groupBy } from 'lodash';

I think this is simpler when you don't need to convert array to lodash object by using _.

const groupData = groupBy(expandedData, (x) => x.room.name);

-2

For those who want to keep using _ , then just import them like this:

import groupBy from 'lodash/groupBy';
import filter from 'lodash/filter';
import get from 'lodash/get';

window._ = {groupBy, filter, get};
-7

I think the more cleaner way of importing lodash is just like this:-

import _ from 'lodash'

then you can use what ever you want just by using this underscore just like this:-

_.has()
1
  • if you do that, lodash will load the whole package. This is heavy for the app bundle. Cf. the documentation Jun 15, 2023 at 15:33

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