@babel/plugin-transform-block-scoping
Examples
In
{
let a = 3
}
let a = 3
Out
{
var _a = 3;
}
var a = 3;
Constant checks
This plugin also validates all const
variables.Reassignment of constants is a runtime error and it will insert the necessary error code for those.
Installation
npm install --save-dev @babel/plugin-transform-block-scoping
Usage
With a configuration file (Recommended)
Without options:
{
"plugins": ["@babel/plugin-transform-block-scoping"]
}
With options:
{
"plugins": [
["@babel/plugin-transform-block-scoping", {
"throwIfClosureRequired": true
}]
]
}
Via CLI
babel --plugins @babel/plugin-transform-block-scoping script.js
Via Node API
require("@babel/core").transform("code", {
plugins: ["@babel/plugin-transform-block-scoping"]
});
Options
throwIfClosureRequired
boolean
, defaults to false
.
In cases such as the following it's impossible to rewrite let/const without adding an additional function and closure while transforming:
for (let i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
setTimeout(() => console.log(i), 1);
}
In extremely performance-sensitive code, this can be undesirable. If "throwIfClosureRequired": true
is set, Babel throws when transforming these patterns instead of automatically adding an additional function.
tdz
boolean
, defaults to false
.
By default this plugin will ignore the temporal dead zone (TDZ) for block-scoped variables. The following code will not throw an error when transpiled with Babel, which is not spec compliant:
i
let i;
If you need these errors you can tell Babel to try and find them by setting "tdz": true
for this plugin. However, the current implementation might not get all edge cases right and its best to just avoid code like this in the first place.
You can read more about configuring plugin options here