When running webpack, and babel, the resulting bundle.js still contains arrow functions. This gives me a Syntax Error when running in Internet Explorer 10. I would like babel to replace the arrow functions with normal functions that IE can run.
My package.json has the following devDependencies:
"devDependencies": {
"babel-cli": "^6.26.0",
"babel-core": "^6.26.0",
"babel-loader": "^7.1.4",
"babel-preset-env": "^1.6.1",
"babel-preset-es2015": "^6.24.1",
"babel-preset-react": "^6.24.1",
"babel-preset-stage-1": "^6.24.1",
"css-loader": "^0.28.9",
"imports-loader": "^0.7.1",
"style-loader": "^0.19.1",
"webpack": "^3.11.0",
"webpack-dev-server": "^2.11.2"
}
My webpack.config.js looks like this:
module.exports = {
entry: [
'babel-polyfill',
'./src/index.js'
],
output: {
path: __dirname,
publicPath: '/',
filename: 'bundle.js'
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.js$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
loader: 'babel-loader'
},
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: ['style-loader', 'css-loader']
}
],
},
resolve: {
enforceExtension: false,
extensions: ['.js', '.jsx']
},
devServer: {
host: '0.0.0.0',
port: 5000,
historyApiFallback: true,
contentBase: './'
}
};
My .babelrc looks like this:
{
"presets":
[
["env", { "targets": {"browsers": ["last 2 versions"]}, "debug": true }],
"react",
"stage-3"
]
}
To transpile, I run the command:
npm run build --production
And I get the following output in the console:
Using targets:
{
"chrome": "62",
"android": "4.4.3",
"edge": "15",
"firefox": "56",
"ie": "10",
"ios": "10.3",
"safari": "10.1"
}
Modules transform: commonjs
Using plugins:
check-es2015-constants {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-arrow-functions {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-block-scoped-functions {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-block-scoping {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-classes {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-computed-properties {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-destructuring {"android":"4.4.3","edge":"15","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-duplicate-keys {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-for-of {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-function-name {"android":"4.4.3","edge":"15","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-literals {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-object-super {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-parameters {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-shorthand-properties {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-spread {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-sticky-regex {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-template-literals {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-typeof-symbol {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-es2015-unicode-regex {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-regenerator {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-exponentiation-operator {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
transform-async-to-generator {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
syntax-trailing-function-commas {"android":"4.4.3","ie":"10"}
The transform-es2015-arrow-functions is listed as included, but when I open the generated bundle.js I can, for instance, see the following:
...
function encoderForArrayFormat(options) {
switch (options.arrayFormat) {
case 'index':
return (key, value, index) => {
return value === null ? [
encode(key, options),
...
The above makes use of an arrow function, and produces a syntax error in Internet Explorer. Other ES6 stuff like '...' gets transpiled.
What am I doing wrong?
spread function
can be transpiled – Tan Duong