babel-cli
Babel comes with a built-in CLI which can be used to compile files from the command line. In addition, various entry point scripts live in the top-level package at babel-cli/bin
.
There are some shell-executable utility scripts, babel-external-helpers.js
and babel-node.js
, and the main Babel cli script, babel.js
.
Install
While you can install Babel CLI globally on your machine, it's much better to install it locally project by project.
There are two primary reasons for this.
- Different projects on the same machine can depend on different versions of Babel allowing you to update one at a time.
- It means you do not have an implicit dependency on the environment you are working in. Making your project far more portable and easier to setup.
We can install Babel CLI locally by running:
npm install --save-dev babel-cli
Note: If you do not have a
package.json
, create one before installing. This will ensure proper interaction with thenpx
command.
After that finishes installing, your package.json
file should include:
{
"devDependencies": {
+ "babel-cli": "^6.0.0"
}
}
Basic Usage
babel script.js
babel
Note: These instructions use the excellent npx command to run the locally installed executables. You can drop it inside of an npm run script or you may instead execute with the relative path instead.
./node_modules/.bin/babel
Compile Files
Compile the file script.js
and output to stdout.
npx babel script.js
# output...
If you would like to output to a file you may use --out-file
or -o
.
npx babel script.js --out-file script-compiled.js
To compile a file every time that you change it, use the --watch
or -w
option:
npx babel script.js --watch --out-file script-compiled.js
Compile with Source Maps
If you would then like to add a source map file you can use
--source-maps
or -s
. Learn more about source maps.
npx babel script.js --out-file script-compiled.js --source-maps
If you would rather have inline source maps, you may use --source-maps inline
.
npx babel script.js --out-file script-compiled.js --source-maps inline
Compile Directories
Compile the entire src
directory and output it to the lib
directory. You may use --out-dir
or -d
. This doesn't overwrite any other files or directories in lib
.
npx babel src --out-dir lib
Compile the entire src
directory and output it to the one concatenated file.
npx babel src --out-file script-compiled.js
Ignore files
Ignore spec and test files
npx babel src --out-dir lib --ignore spec.js,test.js
Copy files
Copy files that will not be compiled
npx babel src --out-dir lib --copy-files
Piping Files
Pipe a file in via stdin and output it to script-compiled.js
npx babel --out-file script-compiled.js < script.js
Using Plugins
Use the --plugins
option to specify plugins to use in compilation
npx babel script.js --out-file script-compiled.js --plugins=transform-runtime,transform-es2015-modules-amd
Using Presets
Use the --presets
option to specify plugins to use in compilation
npx babel script.js --out-file script-compiled.js --presets=es2015,react
Ignoring .babelrc
Ignore the configuration from the projects .babelrc file and use the cli options e.g. for a custom build
npx babel --no-babelrc script.js --out-file script-compiled.js --presets=es2015,react
Advanced Usage
There are many more options available in the babel CLI, see options, babel --help
and other sections for more information.
babel-node
Not meant for production use
You should not be using
babel-node
in production. It is unnecessarily heavy, with high memory usage due to the cache being stored in memory. You will also always experience a startup performance penalty as the entire app needs to be compiled on the fly.Check out the example Node.js server with Babel for an idea of how to use Babel in a production deployment.
ES6-style module-loading may not function as expected
Due to technical limitations ES6-style module-loading is not fully supported in a
babel-node REPL
.
babel comes with a second CLI which works exactly the same as Node.js's CLI, only it will compile ES6 code before running it.
Launch a REPL (Read-Eval-Print-Loop).
npx babel-node
Evaluate code.
npx babel-node -e "class Test { }"
Compile and run test.js
.
npx babel-node test
Tip: Use
rlwrap
to get a REPL with input historynpx rlwrap babel-node
On some platforms (like OSX), extra arguments may be required for
rlwrap
to function properly, eg:NODE_NO_READLINE=1 npx rlwrap --always-readline babel-node
Usage
babel-node [options] [ -e script | script.js ] [arguments]
When arguments for user script have names conflicting with node options, double dash placed before script name can be used to resolve ambiguities
npx babel-node --debug --presets es2015 -- script.js --debug
Options
Option | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
-e, --eval [script] | Evaluate script | |
-p, --print | Evaluate script and print result | |
-i, --ignore [regex] | node_modules | Ignore all files that match this regex when using the require hook |
-x, --extensions | ".js",".jsx",".es6",".es" | List of extensions to hook into |
--presets | [] | Comma-separated list of presets (a set of plugins) to load and use. |
--plugins | [] | Comma-separated list of plugins to load and use. |