-1

Whats the diff between these two approaches of exporting and in which situations we go for exporting class and exporting function as const ? Which is ES6+ compatible?

// approach1.js
class Sample1 {
  hello(visitorName) {
    return `hello ${visitorName}`;
  }
}

module.exports = Sample1;

And

// approach2.js
const hello = (visitorName) => {
  return `hello ${visitorName}`;
};
module.exports = hello;

Test Class

// test.js
const Sample1 = require('./approach1');
const sample2 = require('./approach2');

async function start() {
  const returnValueForApproach1 = (new Sample1()).hello('Name');
  console.log(returnValueForApproach1);

  const returnValueForApproach2 = sample2('Name');
  console.log(returnValueForApproach2);
}
start();

Output:
hello Name
hello Name

1
  • 1
    It appears you should do a little reading about the core language concept of when to use a function and when to use a class as that is the core issue here and really has nothing to do with exporting.
    – jfriend00
    Feb 27, 2021 at 0:05

1 Answer 1

2

You generally want to use a class when data gets stored on the instance - that is, when you need to refer to this in at least one of the methods. For example:

class Sample1 {
  constructor(name) {
    this.visitorName = name;
  }
  hello() {
    return `hello ${this.visitorName}`;
  }
}

const s = new Sample1('foobar');
// ... followed by some code, then
console.log(s.hello());

If you don't ever store data on the instance, using a class doesn't make a whole lot of sense, since it adds a bit of extra and somewhat confusing overhead without much reason. JavaScript isn't Java - don't feel like you have to tie everything to a class.

If you just have a single function, like in your example, then your second example of

const hello = (visitorName) => {
  `hello ${visitorName}`;
};
module.exports = hello;

makes the most sense by far; just declare and export the function.

If you had a collection of functions not related to instance data, you could export an object with those functions, eg:

module.exports = {
  fn1() {
    // code
  },
  fn2() {
  }
};

All of the code in the question and this answer uses ES6 syntax, so I suppose it's "ES6 compatible".

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.