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Managing jQuery plugin dependency in webpack

I'm using Webpack in my application, in which I create two entry points - bundle.js for all my JavaScript files/codes, and vendors.js for all libraries like jQuery and React. What do I do in order to use plugins which have jQuery as their dependencies and I want to have them also in vendors.js? What if those plugins have multiple dependencies?

Currently I'm trying to use this jQuery plugin here - https://github.com/mbklein/jquery-elastic. The Webpack documentation mentions providePlugin and imports-loader. I used providePlugin, but still the jQuery object is not available. Here is how my webpack.config.js looks like-

var webpack = require('webpack');
var bower_dir = __dirname + '/bower_components';
var node_dir = __dirname + '/node_modules';
var lib_dir = __dirname + '/public/js/libs';

var config = {
    addVendor: function (name, path) {
        this.resolve.alias[name] = path;
        this.module.noParse.push(new RegExp(path));
    },
    plugins: [
        new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
            $: "jquery",
            jquery: "jQuery",
            "window.jQuery": "jquery"
        }),
        new webpack.optimize.CommonsChunkPlugin('vendors', 'vendors.js', Infinity)
    ],
    entry: {
        app: ['./public/js/main.js'],
        vendors: ['react','jquery']
    },
    resolve: {
        alias: {
            'jquery': node_dir + '/jquery/dist/jquery.js',
            'jquery.elastic': lib_dir + '/jquery.elastic.source.js'
        }
    },
    output: {
        path: './public/js',
        filename: 'bundle.js'
    },
    module: {
        loaders: [
            { test: /\.js$/, loader: 'jsx-loader' },
            { test: /\.jquery.elastic.js$/, loader: 'imports-loader' }
        ]
    }
};
config.addVendor('react', bower_dir + '/react/react.min.js');
config.addVendor('jquery', node_dir + '/jquery/dist/jquery.js');
config.addVendor('jquery.elastic', lib_dir +'/jquery.elastic.source.js');

module.exports = config;

But in spite of this, it still throws an error in the browser console:

Uncaught ReferenceError: jQuery is not defined

Similarly, when I use the imports-loader, it throws an error,

require is not defined'

in this line:

var jQuery = require("jquery")

However, I could use the same plugin when I don't add it to my vendors.js file and instead required it in the normal AMD way as how I include my other JavaScript code files, like-

define(
[
    'jquery',
    'react',
    '../../common-functions',
    '../../libs/jquery.elastic.source'
],function($,React,commonFunctions){
    $("#myInput").elastic() //It works

});

But this is not what I want to do, as this would mean that jquery.elastic.source.js is bundled along with my JavaScript code in bundle.js, and I want all my jQuery plugins to be in the vendors.js bundle. So how do I go about achieving this?

Not sure if this is your issue but you definitely need to change windows.jQuery to "window.jQuery": "jquery" . There is a typo on webpack's website where I'm assuming you got that code from.
@AlexHawkins Oh yeah, I noticed that and fixed it. Thanks for pointing it out!

f
fracz

You've mixed different approaches how to include legacy vendor modules. This is how I'd tackle it:

1. Prefer unminified CommonJS/AMD over dist

Most modules link the dist version in the main field of their package.json. While this is useful for most developers, for webpack it is better to alias the src version because this way webpack is able to optimize dependencies better (e.g. when using the DedupePlugin).

// webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
    ...
    resolve: {
        alias: {
            jquery: "jquery/src/jquery"
        }
    }
};

However, in most cases the dist version works just fine as well.

2. Use the ProvidePlugin to inject implicit globals

Most legacy modules rely on the presence of specific globals, like jQuery plugins do on $ or jQuery. In this scenario you can configure webpack, to prepend var $ = require("jquery") everytime it encounters the global $ identifier.

var webpack = require("webpack");

    ...

    plugins: [
        new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
            $: "jquery",
            jQuery: "jquery"
        })
    ]

3. Use the imports-loader to configure this

Some legacy modules rely on this being the window object. This becomes a problem when the module is executed in a CommonJS context where this equals module.exports. In this case you can override this with the imports-loader.

Run npm i imports-loader --save-dev and then

module: {
    loaders: [
        {
            test: /[\/\\]node_modules[\/\\]some-module[\/\\]index\.js$/,
            loader: "imports-loader?this=>window"
        }
    ]
}

The imports-loader can also be used to manually inject variables of all kinds. But most of the time the ProvidePlugin is more useful when it comes to implicit globals.

4. Use the imports-loader to disable AMD

There are modules that support different module styles, like AMD, CommonJS and legacy. However, most of the time they first check for define and then use some quirky code to export properties. In these cases, it could help to force the CommonJS path by setting define = false.

module: {
    loaders: [
        {
            test: /[\/\\]node_modules[\/\\]some-module[\/\\]index\.js$/,
            loader: "imports-loader?define=>false"
        }
    ]
}

5. Use the script-loader to globally import scripts

If you don't care about global variables and just want legacy scripts to work, you can also use the script-loader. It executes the module in a global context, just as if you had included them via the <script> tag.

6. Use noParse to include large dists

When there is no AMD/CommonJS version of the module and you want to include the dist, you can flag this module as noParse. Then webpack will just include the module without parsing it, which can be used to improve the build time. This means that any feature requiring the AST, like the ProvidePlugin, will not work.

module: {
    noParse: [
        /[\/\\]node_modules[\/\\]angular[\/\\]angular\.js$/
    ]
}

The ProvidePlugin is applied on all occurrences of the given identifiers in all files. The imports-loader can be applied on specific files only, but you should not use both for the same variables/dependencies.
I'm confused by this. Where is the jquery actually coming from? Locally or a CDN? Everything after 3. its unclear whether that is necessary. What are the actual steps to integrate jquery into your project using webpack. Does it bypass the version that is available via CDN?
Everything from a CDN is out of scope for webpack, so this refers to a local jquery installation. Jquery can just be required, there are no special steps necessary to integrate it. This question is about how to integrate jquery plugins that depend on the global $ variable.
Did all this, still not working; Then added: "module": { "loaders": [ { test: require.resolve("jquery"), loader: "expose?$!expose?jQuery" }, and it worked fine.
Do all this, to just include a jquery package ?, what a pain. I'm going back to my gulp build
T
Timo Tijhof

For global access to jquery then several options exist. In my most recent webpack project, I wanted global access to jquery so I added the following to my plugins declarations:

 plugins: [
    new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
      $: "jquery",
      jQuery: "jquery"
    })
  ]

This then means that jquery is accessible from within the JavaScript source code via global references $ and jQuery.

Of course, you need to have also installed jquery via npm:

$ npm i jquery --save

For a working example of this approach please feel free to fork my app on github


Please can you leave a comment if you downgrade a vote explaining the reason. The above information is accurate. Please see my working app at: github.com/arcseldon/react-babel-webpack-starter-app using the above approach.
I'm not the downvoter, but maybe this is because the ProvidePlugin solution you suggest was already proposed?
@LéoLam - thanks for your comment. appreciate your point - i had deduced the answer via separate enquires, and just shared the snippet here I thought was likely most relevant to others wishing to emulate what I had done. You're right though, the official answer does cover this option.
It's working but I get 2 warnings: ./~/jQuery/dist/jquery.js There is another module with an equal name when case is ignored. and the same one with ./~/jquery/dist/jquery.js
I needed to add 'window.jQuery': 'jquery' to that list to make the ms-signalr-client npm package load. I also put in 'window.$': 'jquery' for good measure :)
s
sanfilippopablo

I don't know if I understand very well what you are trying to do, but I had to use jQuery plugins that required jQuery to be in the global context (window) and I put the following in my entry.js:

var $ = require('jquery');
window.jQuery = $;
window.$ = $;

The I just have to require wherever i want the jqueryplugin.min.js and window.$ is extended with the plugin as expected.


Basically I was making the mistake of using the ProvidePlugin along with the noParse condition. Plugins like ProvidePlugin do not work if we do NoParse, as stated by in point number 6 of the answer. You can see that mistake in the code
yeah, I've found that works more consistently across plugins than the provide plugins etc... esp if you're bringing in angular 1.x via the script-loader.
H
HarlemSquirrel

I got things working nicely while exposing $ and jQuery as global variables with Webpack 3.8.1 and the following.

Install jQuery as a project dependency. You can omit @3.2.1 to install the latest version or specify another version.

npm install --save jquery@3.2.1

Install expose-loader as a development dependency if not installed already.

npm install expose-loader --save-dev

Configure Webpack to load and expose jQuery for us.

// webpack.config.js
const webpack = require('webpack')

module.exports = {
  entry: [
    // entry bits
  ],
  output: {
    // output bits
  },
  module: {
    rules: [
      // any other rules
      {
        // Exposes jQuery for use outside Webpack build
        test: require.resolve('jquery'),
        use: [{
          loader: 'expose-loader',
          options: 'jQuery'
        },{
          loader: 'expose-loader',
          options: '$'
        }]
      }
    ]
  },
  plugins: [
    // Provides jQuery for other JS bundled with Webpack
    new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
      $: 'jquery',
      jQuery: 'jquery'
    })
  ]
}

You forgot to mention that you need to install expose-loader in order to it to work properly npm install expose-loader --save-dev
This worked for me 👍. jquery : 3.3.1, expose-loader : 0.7.5, webpack : 4.20.2
The expose-loaded did it for me. I didn't get an error at compile time, but in Chrome developer tools. That's solved now.
Thank you! This worked with "jquery": "^3.4.1", and "webpack": "^4.41.5". Is it just me or getting jQuery to work with Webpack shouldn't be this ridiculous?
For me it worked using a slightly different syntax: ` test: require.resolve("jquery"), loader: "expose-loader", options: { exposes: ["$", "jQuery"], }, }, `
a
ashwini

In your webpack.config.js file add below:

 var webpack = require("webpack");
 plugins: [
    new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
        $: "jquery",
        jQuery: "jquery"
    })
 ],

Install jQuery using npm:

$ npm i jquery --save

In app.js file add below lines:

import $ from 'jquery';
window.jQuery = $;
window.$ = $;

This worked for me. :)


How will this act if you have for ex. app.js, and jquery-module.js, that both require jquery?, for me i get jquery13981378127,and jquery12389723198 as instances on the window?
Take care of case sensitivity on "jquery". In my webpack.config externals, I had "jquery: 'jQuery'". I had "import $ from 'jQuery'" in my script. Changing to "import $ from 'jquery'" solved my problem :)
J
John Mee

Add this to your plugins array in webpack.config.js

new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
    'window.jQuery': 'jquery',
    'window.$': 'jquery',
})

then require jquery normally

require('jquery');

If pain persists getting other scripts to see it, try explicitly placing it in the global context via (in the entry js)

window.$ = jQuery;

C
Cam Tullos

I tried some of the supplied answers but none of them seemed to work. Then I tried this:

new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
    'window.jQuery'    : 'jquery',
    'window.$'         : 'jquery',
    'jQuery'           : 'jquery',
    '$'                : 'jquery'
});

Seems to work no matter which version I'm using


+1 seems to be a misunderstanding that globals added here will automatically be set against the window, doesn't seem to work like that you need to be explicit.
Correct, this does not add it to the window object. It creates a window alias inside of webpack. So if you try to use $ outside of a webpack required file, it will be undefined.
C
Community

This works in webpack 3:

in the webpack.config.babel.js file:

resolve: {
    alias: {
         jquery: "jquery/src/jquery"
    },
 ....
}

And use ProvidePlugin

new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
        '$': 'jquery',
        'jQuery': 'jquery',
    })

For others that are super new at webpack (like me!) "resolve" goes in your webpack.config.js under module.exports = {} just like entry, output, plugins, module, etc..
And new webpack.ProvidePlugin goes inside the plugins array.
f
frdnrdb

Edit: Sometimes you want to use webpack simply as a module bundler for a simple web project - to keep your own code organized. The following solution is for those who just want an external library to work as expected inside their modules - without using a lot of time diving into webpack setups. (Edited after -1)

Quick and simple (es6) solution if you’re still struggling or want to avoid externals config / additional webpack plugin config:

<script src="cdn/jquery.js"></script>
<script src="cdn/underscore.js"></script>
<script src="etc.js"></script>
<script src="bundle.js"></script>

inside a module:

const { jQuery: $, Underscore: _, etc } = window;

F
Fabricio

The best solution I've found was:

https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/5139#issuecomment-283634059

Basically, you need to include a dummy variable on typings.d.ts, remove any "import * as $ from 'jquery" from your code, and then manually add a tag to jQuery script to your SPA html. This way, webpack won't be in your way, and you should be able to access the same global jQuery variable in all your scripts.


J
JPRLCol

This works for me on the webpack.config.js

    new webpack.ProvidePlugin({
        $: 'jquery',
        jQuery: 'jquery',
        'window.jQuery': 'jquery'
    }),

in another javascript or into HTML add:

global.jQuery = require('jquery');