You are currently looking at the v11.0 docs, which are still a work in progress. If you miss anything, you may find it in the older v10.0 docs here.
Interop with JS Build Systems
If you come from JS, chances are that you already have a build system in your existing project. Here's an overview of the role rescript
would play in your build pipeline, if you want to introduce some ReScript code.
Please try not to wrap
rescript
into your own incremental build framework. ReScript's compilation is very hard to get right, and you'll inevitably run into stale or badly performing builds (therefore erasing much of our value proposition) if you create your own meta layer on top.
Popular JS Build Systems
The JS ecosystem uses a few build systems: browserify, rollup, webpack, etc. The latter's probably the most popular of the three (as of 2019 =P). These build systems do both the compilation and the linking (aka, bundling many files into one or few files).
rescript
only take care of the compilation step; it maps one .res
/.resi
file into one JS output file. As such, in theory, no build system integration is needed from our side. From e.g. the webpack watcher's perspective, the JS files ReScript generates are almost equivalent to your hand-written JS files. We also recommend that you initially check in those ReScript-generated JS files, as this workflow means:
You can introduce ReScript silently into your codebase without disturbing existing infra.
You have a visual diff of the performance & correctness of your JS file when you update the
.res
files and the JS artifacts change.You can let teammates hot-patch the JS files in emergency situations, without needing to first start learning ReScript.
You can remove ReScript completely from your codebase and things will still work (in case your company decides to stop using us for whatever reason).
For what it's worth, you can also turn rescript
into an automated step in your build pipeline, e.g. into a Webpack loader; but such approach is error-prone and therefore discouraged.
Tips & Tricks
You can make ReScript JS files look even more idiomatic through the in-source + bs suffix config in rescript.json
:
JSON{
"package-specs": {
"module": "commonjs", // or whatever module system your project uses
"in-source": true
},
"suffix": ".res.js"
}
This will:
Generate the JS files alongside your ReScript source files.
Use the file extension
.res.js
, so that you can require these files on the JS side throughrequire('./MyFile.res.js')
, without needing a loader.
Use Loaders on ReScript Side
"What if my build system uses a CSS/png/whatever loader and I'd like to use it in ReScript?"
Loaders are indeed troublesome; in the meantime, please use e.g. %raw("require('./myStyles.css')")
at the top of your file. This just uses raw
to compile the snippet into an actual JS require.
Getting Project's Dependencies
rescript
generates one MyFile.d
file per MyFile
source file; you'll find them in lib/bs
. These are human readable, machine-friendly list of the dependencies of said MyFile
. You can read into them for your purpose (though mind the IO overhead). Use these files instead of creating your own dependency graph; we did the hard work of tracking the dependencies as best as possible (including inner modules, open
s, module names overlap, etc).
Run Script Per File Built
See js-post-build. Though please use it sparingly; if you hook up a node.js script after each file built, you'll incur the node startup time per file!