317

Currently I'm doing this:

foo.js

const FOO = 5;

module.exports = {
    FOO: FOO
};

And using it in bar.js:

var foo = require('foo');
foo.FOO; // 5

Is there a better way to do this? It feels awkward to declare the constant in the exports object.

6
  • 6
    If you want to export it, you put it in the exports. What's awkward about that?
    – Alex Wayne
    Dec 21, 2011 at 20:00
  • 8
    I'm used to C# and PHP. I guess I just have to get used to defining each constant twice. Maybe in the future we will have export const FOO = 5;.
    – Tower
    Dec 21, 2011 at 20:07
  • 2
    @Tower The future is now (ES2015)! 2ality.com/2014/09/… Oct 2, 2015 at 20:39
  • 1
    Is this functionally different from the more concise module.exports={FOO:5}; ?
    – Joe Lapp
    Dec 29, 2015 at 23:40
  • 3
    It does not only feel akward, it is no constant anymore
    – Ini
    May 7, 2018 at 23:33

13 Answers 13

435
+100

In my opinion, utilizing Object.freeze allows for a DRYer and more declarative style. My preferred pattern is:

./lib/constants.js

module.exports = Object.freeze({
    MY_CONSTANT: 'some value',
    ANOTHER_CONSTANT: 'another value'
});

./lib/some-module.js

var constants = require('./constants');

console.log(constants.MY_CONSTANT); // 'some value'

constants.MY_CONSTANT = 'some other value';

console.log(constants.MY_CONSTANT); // 'some value'
7
  • What should it look like if I need to export both constants and functions? Should I put functions in the freeze block too?
    – Tom
    Jun 9, 2016 at 22:21
  • 4
    this approach is better because IDE autocomplete works with it. Nov 14, 2016 at 10:39
  • 1
    @Tom You sure can - developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/… Nov 17, 2016 at 16:43
  • 8
    This is a great answer, but it might turn people away from this approach because of the outdated warning about v8's performance at the end. Please consider removing the warning. Jan 29, 2018 at 8:57
  • 4
    Thanks @Krumia! I have updated it, but left the original warning text just for historical context (and because some of these comments wouldn't make sense without it). Jan 29, 2018 at 21:01
173

Technically, const is not part of the ECMAScript specification. Also, using the "CommonJS Module" pattern you've noted, you can change the value of that "constant" since it's now just an object property. (not sure if that'll cascade any changes to other scripts that require the same module, but it's possible)

To get a real constant that you can also share, check out Object.create, Object.defineProperty, and Object.defineProperties. If you set writable: false, then the value in your "constant" cannot be modified. :)

It's a little verbose, (but even that can be changed with a little JS) but you should only need to do it once for your module of constants. Using these methods, any attribute that you leave out defaults to false. (as opposed to defining properties via assignment, which defaults all the attributes to true)

So, hypothetically, you could just set value and enumerable, leaving out writable and configurable since they'll default to false, I've just included them for clarity.

Update - I've create a new module (node-constants) with helper functions for this very use-case.

constants.js -- Good

Object.defineProperty(exports, "PI", {
    value:        3.14,
    enumerable:   true,
    writable:     false,
    configurable: false
});

constants.js -- Better

function define(name, value) {
    Object.defineProperty(exports, name, {
        value:      value,
        enumerable: true
    });
}

define("PI", 3.14);

script.js

var constants = require("./constants");

console.log(constants.PI); // 3.14
constants.PI = 5;
console.log(constants.PI); // still 3.14
8
162

ES6 way.

export in foo.js

const FOO = 'bar';
module.exports = {
  FOO
}

import in bar.js

const {FOO} = require('foo');
3
  • 68
    Yes. Stack Overflow needs a way to depreciate outdated answers.
    – Rick Jolly
    Apr 13, 2017 at 17:31
  • 10
    Note that it is the const in bar.js that enforces immutability of the destructured variable, not the const in foo.js. That is, one can use let {FOO} = in bar.js and mutate the "constant" variable. AFAIK, to enforce immutability of exports, one still needs either ES modules or Object.freeze. Aug 11, 2017 at 21:59
  • One can also change FOO inside foo.js.
    – lima_fil
    Sep 11, 2017 at 16:37
110

You can explicitly export it to the global scope with global.FOO = 5. Then you simply need to require the file, and not even save your return value.

But really, you shouldn't do that. Keeping things properly encapsulated is a good thing. You have the right idea already, so keep doing what you're doing.

8
  • 61
    I'm sorry to do this, but -1 for knowing better but not providing an alternative (better) solution; (re: "But really, you shouldn't do that. Keeping things properly encapsulated is a good thing.")
    – Mulan
    Aug 18, 2013 at 17:05
  • 25
    If the entire software development community thought this way, we'd still be using punchards. Fortunately there are a few mavericks out there who know when it's better to break the insane rules we impose on ourselves. If encapsulation is useful, use it. If it's a nervous nanny stopping you do your job, fire the nervous nanny and get on with it. Jul 4, 2014 at 19:16
  • 27
    @naomik (super late reply time) The real reason that I didn't provide a better solution is because the OP already knows the solution. Encapsulate things in their own module and require them where necessary.
    – Alex Wayne
    Sep 17, 2014 at 21:46
  • 2
    Then this is not an actual answer and should rather be an explanation comment stating "you're doing good enough, alternatives are bad".. Sep 15, 2015 at 13:54
  • 1
    Wrong application of encapsulation. When a class uses special values as indicators and gives them a name, you WANT to share that with any code that makes use of that class. Jun 11, 2016 at 14:46
20

import and export (prob need something like babel as of 2018 to use import)

types.js

export const BLUE = 'BLUE'
export const RED = 'RED'

myApp.js

import * as types from './types.js'

const MyApp = () => {
  let colour = types.RED
}

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/import

18

From previous project experience, this is a good way:

In the constants.js:

// constants.js

'use strict';

let constants = {
    key1: "value1",
    key2: "value2",
    key3: {
        subkey1: "subvalue1",
        subkey2: "subvalue2"
    }
};

module.exports =
        Object.freeze(constants); // freeze prevents changes by users

In main.js (or app.js, etc.), use it as below:

// main.js

let constants = require('./constants');

console.log(constants.key1);

console.dir(constants.key3);
16

I found the solution Dominic suggested to be the best one, but it still misses one feature of the "const" declaration. When you declare a constant in JS with the "const" keyword, the existence of the constant is checked at parse time, not at runtime. So if you misspelled the name of the constant somewhere later in your code, you'll get an error when you try to start your node.js program. Which is a far more better misspelling check.

If you define the constant with the define() function like Dominic suggested, you won't get an error if you misspelled the constant, and the value of the misspelled constant will be undefined (which can lead to debugging headaches).

But I guess this is the best we can get.

Additionally, here's a kind of improvement of Dominic's function, in constans.js:

global.define = function ( name, value, exportsObject )
{
    if ( !exportsObject )
    {
        if ( exports.exportsObject )
            exportsObject = exports.exportsObject;
        else 
            exportsObject = exports;        
    }

    Object.defineProperty( exportsObject, name, {
        'value': value,
        'enumerable': true,
        'writable': false,
    });
}

exports.exportObject = null;

In this way you can use the define() function in other modules, and it allows you to define constants both inside the constants.js module and constants inside your module from which you called the function. Declaring module constants can then be done in two ways (in script.js).

First:

require( './constants.js' );

define( 'SOME_LOCAL_CONSTANT', "const value 1", this ); // constant in script.js
define( 'SOME_OTHER_LOCAL_CONSTANT', "const value 2", this ); // constant in script.js

define( 'CONSTANT_IN_CONSTANTS_MODULE', "const value x" ); // this is a constant in constants.js module

Second:

constants = require( './constants.js' );

// More convenient for setting a lot of constants inside the module
constants.exportsObject = this;
define( 'SOME_CONSTANT', "const value 1" ); // constant in script.js
define( 'SOME_OTHER_CONSTANT', "const value 2" ); // constant in script.js

Also, if you want the define() function to be called only from the constants module (not to bloat the global object), you define it like this in constants.js:

exports.define = function ( name, value, exportsObject )

and use it like this in script.js:

constants.define( 'SOME_CONSTANT', "const value 1" );
0
8

I think that const solves the problem for most people looking for this anwwer. If you really need an immutable constant, look into the other answers. To keep everything organized I save all constants on a folder and then require the whole folder.

src/main.js file

const constants = require("./consts_folder");

src/consts_folder/index.js

const deal = require("./deal.js")
const note = require("./note.js")


module.exports = {
  deal,
  note
}

Ps. here the deal and note will be first level on the main.js

src/consts_folder/note.js

exports.obj = {
  type: "object",
  description: "I'm a note object"
}

Ps. obj will be second level on the main.js

src/consts_folder/deal.js

exports.str = "I'm a deal string"

Ps. str will be second level on the main.js

Final result on main.js file:

console.log(constants.deal); Ouput:

{ deal: { str: 'I\'m a deal string' },

console.log(constants.note); Ouput:

note: { obj: { type: 'object', description: 'I\'m a note object' } }

5

As an alternative, you can group your "constant" values in a local object, and export a function that returns a shallow clone of this object.

var constants = { FOO: "foo" }

module.exports = function() {
  return Object.assign({}, constants)
}

Then it doesn't matter if someone re-assigns FOO because it will only affect their local copy.

1
  • or just module.exports = ()=>({ FOO: "foo", BAR: "bar" }); Sep 19, 2017 at 15:08
3

Since Node.js is using the CommonJS patterns, you can only share variables between modules with module.exports or by setting a global var like you would in the browser, but instead of using window you use global.your_var = value;.

3

I ended up doing this by exporting a frozen object with anonymous getter functions, rather than the constants themselves. This reduces the risk of nasty bugs introduced due to a simple typo of the const name, as a runtime error will be thrown in case of a typo. Here's a full example that also uses ES6 Symbols for the constants, ensuring uniqueness, and ES6 arrow functions. Would appreciate feedback if anything in this approach seems problematic.

'use strict';
const DIRECTORY = Symbol('the directory of all sheets');
const SHEET = Symbol('an individual sheet');
const COMPOSER = Symbol('the sheet composer');

module.exports = Object.freeze({
  getDirectory: () => DIRECTORY,
  getSheet: () => SHEET,
  getComposer: () => COMPOSER
});
0

I recommend doing it with webpack (assumes you're using webpack).

Defining constants is as simple as setting the webpack config file:

var webpack = require('webpack');
module.exports = {
    plugins: [
        new webpack.DefinePlugin({
            'APP_ENV': '"dev"',
            'process.env': {
                'NODE_ENV': '"development"'
            }
        })
    ],    
};

This way you define them outside your source, and they will be available in all your files.

0

I don't think is a good practice to invade the GLOBAL space from modules, but in scenarios where could be strictly necessary to implement it:

Object.defineProperty(global,'MYCONSTANT',{value:'foo',writable:false,configurable:false});

It has to be considered the impact of this resource. Without proper naming of those constants, the risk of OVERWRITTING already defined global variables, is something real.

0

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