That's not a matter of server or client side, that a matter of used module loading system.
As you may already know people out there use CommonJS (which node uses), AMD (which used on client side to write modular javascript) and or script tag (on client side) to load javascript modules. So you should somehow prepare your library to be able to be used with whichever of these module loading systems. As a result there is a UMD (Universal Module Definition) pattern which make your module compatible with all of these module systems (See UMD templates which people use to implement this pattern).
Build and bundling tools (like webpack, browserify, ...) have facilities to bundle your module as a umd, so it's compatible with all module loading systems:
webpack:
Set the libraryTarget
and library
output configurations:
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
entry: './myModule.js',
output: {
filename: './dist/myModule.js',
// export to AMD, CommonJS, or window
libraryTarget: 'umd',
// set window global to this name
library: 'myModule'
}
};
Browserify:
Use --standalone
( -s
) option:
browserify main.js -s myModule -o myModule.js