- FAQ
- Why is the output of
for...of
so verbose and ugly? - Why are
this
andarguments
being remapped in arrow functions? - Why is
this
being remapped toundefined
? - Help?! I just want to use Babel like it was in 5.x! Everything is too complicated now!
- Upgrading from Babel 5.x to Babel 6
- Where did all the docs go?!
- How do I build babel from source?
- How do I contribute to Babel?
- Why am I getting a Syntax Error/Unexpected Token?
- Why isn’t a certain babel-x package updated?
- Why is the output of
FAQ
Why is the output of for...of
so verbose and ugly?
In order to comply with the specification, the iterator’s return method must be called on errors. An alternative is to use assumptions introduced in Babel 7.13, such as ArrayLikeIsIterable and IterableIsArray, but please note that there are many caveats to be aware of if you use assumptions and that you’re willingly choosing not to comply with the spec.
Please see babel/rfcs#5, google/traceur-compiler#1773 and babel/babel#838 for more information.
Why are this
and arguments
being remapped in arrow functions?
Arrow functions are not synonymous with normal functions. arguments
and this
inside arrow functions reference their outer function for example:
JavaScript
const user = {
firstName: "Sebastian",
lastName: "McKenzie",
getFullName: () => {
// whoops! `this` doesn't actually reference `user` here
return this.firstName + " " + this.lastName;
},
// use the method shorthand in objects
getFullName2() {
return this.firstName + " " + this.lastName;
},
};
Please see babel/babel#842, babel/babel#814, babel/babel#733 and babel/babel#730 for more information.
Why is this
being remapped to undefined
?
Babel assumes that all input code is an ES2015 module. ES2015 modules are implicitly strict mode so this means that top-level this
is not window
in the browser nor is it exports
in node.
If you don’t want this behaviour then you have the option of disabling strict
in the plugin-transform-modules-commonjs.
PLEASE NOTE: If you do this you’re willingly deviating from the spec and this may cause future interop issues.
Help?! I just want to use Babel like it was in 5.x! Everything is too complicated now!
We hear you! Babel 6 requires a tiny bit of configuration in order to get going. We think this is for the best and have added presets to ease this transition.
Upgrading from Babel 5.x to Babel 6
At the heart of Babel 6 are plugins. What plugins you need completely depends on your specific configuration but just add the following config file to get all the same transforms that were in Babel 5:
babel.config.json
{
"presets": ["env", "react", "stage-2"]
}
- npm
- Yarn
- pnpm
npm install babel-preset-env babel-preset-react babel-preset-stage-2 --save-dev
yarn add babel-preset-env babel-preset-react babel-preset-stage-2 --dev
pnpm add babel-preset-env babel-preset-react babel-preset-stage-2 --save-dev
Also check out our Setting up Babel 6 blog post.
Where did all the docs go?!
Babel 6 removes a lot of the options in favor of plugins so a lot of the docs are no longer applicable.
For every removed option there should be a plugin for it. It’s possible we may have missed something, if you think this is the case, please open an issue!
Babel is an open source project and we appreciate any and all contributions we can get. Please help out with documentation if you can by submitting a pull request to the babel.github.io repo.
How do I build babel from source?
See build instructions.
How do I contribute to Babel?
See contributing.
Why am I getting a Syntax Error/Unexpected Token?
It’s most likely the case that you didn’t include a plugin/preset that supports that feature. (It’s also possible it’s a bug in the parser, or that it actually is a syntax error).
Why isn’t a certain babel-x package updated?
We currently use Lerna’s fixed versioning system.
We have a global version for all packages. When we do a release, the only packages that get updated are the packages that actually had changes (we do a git diff
on that folder).
If we only update babel-plugin-transform-exponentiation-operator
to 6.x.x, currently we don’t publish a new version for all packages since the other dependencies are using ^
.
For example, the Babel v6.6.0 release doesn’t mean all packages are now 6.6.0.
tip
To make sure you are using the latest package versions, you may need to remove node_modules
and npm install
again.