Javascript is a fantastic example of how something, despite having visible warts and very poor design, can dominate the tech landscape. Nobody uses Javascript because it’s a beautiful language; they use it because it’s ubiquitous. Its warts are now well understood and most have workarounds.

An amazing omission in Javascript’s design is the lack of a built-in module system. As more projects used Javascript and shared more code, the need for a robust module system became necessary. Two contenders sprung up, Asynchronous Module Definition (AMD) and CommonJS (CJS). The former is much more popular with browser applications and the latter is much more popular with server applications written in node.js.

Having two major standards for defining modules led to a technological holy war in the Javascript community akin to the vim/emacs arguments of the editor world. It wasn’t pretty.

Fortunately, there is light at the end of the tunnel. TC39 has been hard at work on the next version of Javascript, called ES6 (short for EcmaScript 6). One of the major features of ES6 is a standard syntax for handling modules in Javascript.

A simple example of ES6 modules

By default anything you declare in a file in a ES6 project is not available outside that file. You have to use the export keyword to explicitly make it available. Here’s an example of how to export a user class:

// user.js var localVariable = 123 ; // not visible outside this file export default function User ( age ) { this . age = age ; }; // can be imported by other files

And now if we wanted to use the User class in another file:

// user-details.js import User from 'user' ; var evilTrout = new User ( 35 );

Pretty simple, isn’t it? There are many more examples of the syntax here if you are curious about other ways it can be used.

When will it be available in browsers?

In the past, it was very risky to use new Javascript features before they were standardized and widely available in browsers. You’d never know if someone was using an old or incompatible browser and it would cause your code to crash and burn.

These days, thanks to the Extensible Web movement, people are working hard at making it so that developers can try out advanced features before they’re compatible in all browsers.

The great news is you can use ES6 modules today! You just have to run your code through a transpiler. The transpiler will convert your ES6 modules into Javascript that browsers can understand today. In the future, when the browsers understand ES6 modules natively, you’ll be able to stop transpiling and it will just work.

The transpiler I’ve been using lately is es6-module-transpiler from Square. If you check out their build tools section you’ll see they’ve got integration stories for all the major Javascript build tools.

If you are using Rails on the server side, Dockyard has created an easy to use Gem version of it that you should be able to drop into your project.

ES6 Modules and Ember.js

The Ember community has bet big on ES6 modules. For example, if you are using Ember App Kit to structure your project, it includes ES6 module support via transpiling out of the box.

Recently, Robert Jackson converted the Ember source code to ES6 modules. This means that, if you have things set up properly in your development environment, you can import just the parts of Ember.js that you want to use and end up with a potentially smaller runtime.

ES6 modules integrate quite beautifully in an Ember project. If you’re not using ES6 modules, the standard way of making parts of your application available for discovery was by hanging them off your application’s global namespace. For example:

// app/controllers/user.js App . UserController = Ember . ObjectController . extend ({ // ... controller code });

Then if you transitioned to the user route, Ember would search for a UserController on your App object. This actually works quite well, but making everything available globally makes it too easy for developers to reach into components they have no business reaching into. If you make it easy for a developer to do the wrong thing, they will do it.

To contrast, if you are using Ember with an ES6 application you can define your user controller this way:

// app/controllers/user.js export default Ember . ObjectController . extend ({ // ... controller code });

Ember’s new resolver will then look for the module exported from the app/controllers/user path and will wire it up for you automatically.

Going Forward

I’ve found that since I started using ES6 modules in my projects that their code bases are a lot cleaner and more organized. It also just feels awesome to be using a standard before it’s widely available.

I’ve got a branch of Discourse that I am converting to ES6 modules one at a time. The bad news is that Discourse has hundreds of files to convert, so it will be some time before we are 100% on ES6. The good news is, with a little duct tape in our custom resolver, the application can run with some modules in the global Discourse namespace and some in ES6 format. I’m hoping to merge it into master shortly so our contributors can help with the converting efforts.

My advice is to not wait for browsers to implement these modules; start hacking today and put your project ahead of the curve. There are other ES6 features that can be transpiled too, and I’m excited to try some of those out too!