@babel/preset-env
@babel/preset-env
is a smart preset that allows you to use the latest JavaScript without needing to micromanage which syntax transforms (and optionally, browser polyfills) are needed by your target environment(s). This both makes your life easier and JavaScript bundles smaller!
- Install
With npm:
npm install --save-dev @babel/preset-env
Or yarn:
yarn add @babel/preset-env --dev
How Does it Work?
@babel/preset-env
would not be possible if not for a number of awesome open-source projects, likebrowserslist
,compat-table
, andelectron-to-chromium
.We leverage these data sources to maintain mappings of which version of our supported target environments gained support of a JavaScript syntax or browser feature, as well as a mapping of those syntaxes and features to Babel transform plugins and core-js polyfills.
It is important to note that
@babel/preset-env
does not supportstage-x
plugins.@babel/preset-env
takes any Browserslist IntegrationFor browser- or Electron-based projects, we recommend using a
.browserslistrc
file to specify targets. You may already have this configuration file as it is used by many tools in the ecosystem, like autoprefixer, stylelint, eslint-plugin-compat and many others.By default
@babel/preset-env
will use browserslist config sources unless either the OptionsFor more information on setting options for a preset, refer to the preset options documentation.
targets
string | Array<string> | { [string]: string }
, defaults to{}
.Describes the environments you support/target for your project.
This can either be a browserslist-compatible query:
{ "targets": "> 0.25%, not dead" }
Or an object of minimum environment versions to support:
{ "targets": { "chrome": "58", "ie": "11" } }
Example environments:
chrome
,opera
,edge
,firefox
,safari
,ie
,ios
,android
,node
,electron
.Sidenote, if no targets are specified,
@babel/preset-env
will transform all ECMAScript 2015+ code by default.We don't recommend using
preset-env
this way because it doesn't take advantage of its ability to target specific browsers.{ "presets": ["@babel/preset-env"] }
targets.esmodules
boolean
.You may also target browsers supporting ES Modules (https://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/). When specifying this option, the browsers field will be ignored. You can use this approach in combination with
<script type="module"></script>
to conditionally serve smaller scripts to users (https://jakearchibald.com/2017/es-modules-in-browsers/).Please note: when specifying the esmodules target, browsers targets will be ignored.
{ "presets": [ [ "@babel/preset-env", { "targets": { "esmodules": true } } ] ] }
targets.node
string | "current" | true
.If you want to compile against the current node version, you can specify
"node": true
or"node": "current"
, which would be the same as"node": process.versions.node
.targets.safari
string | "tp"
.If you want to compile against the technology preview version of Safari, you can specify
"safari": "tp"
.targets.browsers
string | Array<string>
.A query to select browsers (ex: last 2 versions, > 5%, safari tp) using browserslist.
Note, browsers' results are overridden by explicit items from
targets
.Note: this will be removed in later version in favor of just setting "targets" to a query directly.
spec
boolean
, defaults tofalse
.Enable more spec compliant, but potentially slower, transformations for any plugins in this preset that support them.
loose
boolean
, defaults tofalse
.Enable "loose" transformations for any plugins in this preset that allow them.
modules
"amd" | "umd" | "systemjs" | "commonjs" | "cjs" | "auto" | false
, defaults to"auto"
.Enable transformation of ES6 module syntax to another module type.
Setting this to
false
will not transform modules.Also note that
cjs
is just an alias forcommonjs
.debug
boolean
, defaults tofalse
.Outputs the targets/plugins used and the version specified in plugin data version to
console.log
.include
Array<string|RegExp>
, defaults to[]
.An array of plugins to always include.
Valid options include any:
Babel plugins - both with (
@babel/plugin-transform-spread
) and without prefix (plugin-transform-spread
) are supported.Built-ins, such as
es6.map
,es6.set
, ores6.object.assign
.
Plugin names can be fully or partially specified (or using
RegExp
).Acceptable inputs:
- Full name (
string
):"es6.math.sign"
- Partial name (
string
):"es6.math.*"
(resolves to all plugins withes6.math
prefix) RegExp
Object:/^transform-.*$/
ornew RegExp("^transform-modules-.*")
Note that the above
.
is theRegExp
equivalent to match any character, and not the actual'.'
character. Also note that to match any character.*
is used inRegExp
as opposed to*
inglob
format.This option is useful if there is a bug in a native implementation, or a combination of a non-supported feature + a supported one doesn't work.
For example, Node 4 supports native classes but not spread. If
super
is used with a spread argument, then the@babel/plugin-transform-classes
transform needs to beinclude
d, as it is not possible to transpile a spread withsuper
otherwise.NOTE: The
include
andexclude
options only work with the plugins included with this preset; so, for example, including@babel/plugin-proposal-do-expressions
or excluding@babel/plugin-proposal-function-bind
will throw errors. To use a plugin not included with this preset, add them to your "plugins" directly.exclude
Array<string|RegExp>
, defaults to[]
.An array of plugins to always exclude/remove.
The possible options are the same as the
include
option.This option is useful for "blacklisting" a transform like
@babel/plugin-transform-regenerator
if you don't use generators and don't want to includeregeneratorRuntime
(when usinguseBuiltIns
) or for using another plugin like fast-async instead of Babel's async-to-gen.useBuiltIns
"usage"
|"entry"
|false
, defaults tofalse
.This option adds direct references to the
core-js
module as bare imports. Thuscore-js
will be resolved relative to the file itself and needs to be accessible. You may need to specifycore-js@2
as a top level dependency in your application if there isn't acore-js
dependency or there are multiple versions.This option configures how
@babel/preset-env
handles polyfills.useBuiltIns: 'entry'
NOTE: Only use
require("@babel/polyfill");
once in your whole app. Multiple imports or requires of@babel/polyfill
will throw an error since it can cause global collisions and other issues that are hard to trace. We recommend creating a single entry file that only contains therequire
statement.This option enables a new plugin that replaces the statement
import "@babel/polyfill"
orrequire("@babel/polyfill")
with individual requires for@babel/polyfill
based on environment.npm install @babel/polyfill --save
In
import "@babel/polyfill";
Out (different based on environment)
import "core-js/modules/es7.string.pad-start"; import "core-js/modules/es7.string.pad-end";
This will also work for
core-js
directly (import "core-js";
orrequire('core-js');
)useBuiltIns: 'usage'
(experimental)Adds specific imports for polyfills when they are used in each file. We take advantage of the fact that a bundler will load the same polyfill only once.
In
a.js
var a = new Promise();
b.js
var b = new Map();
Out (if environment doesn't support it)
import "core-js/modules/es6.promise"; var a = new Promise();
import "core-js/modules/es6.map"; var b = new Map();
Out (if environment supports it)
var a = new Promise();
var b = new Map();
useBuiltIns: false
Don't add polyfills automatically per file, or transform
import "@babel/polyfill"
to individual polyfills.forceAllTransforms
boolean
, defaults tofalse
.Example
With Babel 7's Javascipt config file support, you can force all transforms to be run if env is set to
production
.module.exports = function(api) { return { presets: [ [ "@babel/preset-env", { targets: { chrome: 59, edge: 13, firefox: 50, }, // for uglifyjs... forceAllTransforms: api.env("production"), }, ], ], }; };
NOTE:
targets.uglify
is deprecated and will be removed in the next major in favor of this.By default, this preset will run all the transforms needed for the targeted environment(s). Enable this option if you want to force running all transforms, which is useful if the output will be run through UglifyJS or an environment that only supports ES5.
NOTE: Uglify has a work-in-progress "Harmony" branch to address the lack of ES6 support, but it is not yet stable. You can follow its progress in UglifyJS2 issue #448. If you require an alternative minifier which does support ES6 syntax, we recommend using babel-minify.
configPath
string
, defaults toprocess.cwd()
The starting point where the config search for browserslist will start, and ascend to the system root until found.
ignoreBrowserslistConfig
boolean
, defaults tofalse
Toggles whether or not browserslist config sources are used, which includes searching for any browserslist files or referencing the browserslist key inside package.json. This is useful for projects that use a browserslist config for files that won't be compiled with Babel.
shippedProposals
boolean
, defaults tofalse
Toggles enabling support for builtin/feature proposals that have shipped in browsers. If your target environments have native support for a feature proposal, its matching parser syntax plugin is enabled instead of performing any transform. Note that this does not enable the same transformations as
@babel/preset-stage-3
, since proposals can continue to change before landing in browsers.The following are currently supported:
Builtins
Features
- None