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Import from/Export to JS

You've seen how ReScript's idiomatic Import & Export works. This section describes how we work with importing stuff from JavaScript and exporting stuff for JavaScript consumption.

Note: due to JS ecosystem's module compatibility issues, our advice of keeping your ReScript file's compiled JS output open in a tab applies here more than ever, as you don't want to subtly output the wrong JS module import/export code, on top of having to deal with Babel/Webpack/Jest/Node's CommonJS<->ES6 compatibility shims.

In short: make sure your bindings below output what you'd have manually written in JS.

Output Format

We support 2 JavaScript import/export formats:

  • CommonJS: require('myFile') and module.exports = ....

  • ES6 modules: import * from 'MyReScriptFile' and export let ....

The format is configurable in via bsconfig.json.

Import From JavaScript

Import a JavaScript Module's Named Export

Use the module external:

ReScriptJS Output (CommonJS)JS Output (ES6)
// Import nodejs' path.dirname
@module("path") external dirname: string => string = "dirname"
let root = dirname("/User/github") // returns "User"

Here's what the external does:

  • @module("path"): pass the name of the JS module; in this case, "path". The string can be anything: "./src/myJsFile", "@myNpmNamespace/myLib", etc.

  • external: the general keyword for declaring a value that exists on the JS side.

  • dirname: the binding name you'll use on the ReScript side.

  • string => string: the type signature of dirname. Mandatory for externals.

  • = "dirname": the name of the variable inside the path JS module. There's repetition in writing the first and second dirname, because sometime the binding name you want to use on the ReScript side is different than the variable name the JS module exported.

Import a JavaScript Module As a Single Value

By omitting the string argument to module, you bind to the whole JS module:

ReScriptJS Output (CommonJS)JS Output (ES6)
@module external leftPad: string => int => string = "./leftPad"
let paddedResult = leftPad("hi", 5)

Depending on whether you're compiling ReScript to CommonJS or ES6 module, this feature will generate subtly different code. Please check both output tabs to see the difference. The ES6 output here would be wrong!

Import an ES6 Default Export

Use the value "default" on the right hand side:

ReScriptJS Output (ES6)
@module("./student") external studentName: string = "default"
Js.log(studentName)

Export To JavaScript

Export a Named Value

As mentioned in ReScript's idiomatic Import & Export, every let binding and module is exported by default to other ReScript modules (unless you use a .resi interface file). If you open up the compiled JS file, you'll see that these values can also directly be used by a JavaScript file too.

Export an ES6 Default Value

If your JS project uses ES6 modules, you're likely exporting & importing some default values:

JS
// student.js export default name = "Al";
JS
// teacher.js import studentName from 'student.js';

A JavaScript default export is really just syntax sugar for a named export implicitly called default (now you know!). So to export a default value from ReScript, you can just do:

ReScriptJS Output (CommonJS)JS Output (ES6)
// ReScriptStudent.res
let default = "Bob"

You can then import this default export as usual on the JS side:

JS
// teacher2.js import studentName from 'ReScriptStudent.js';

If your JavaScript's ES6 default import is transpiled by Babel/Webpack/Jest into CommonJS requires, we've taken care of that too! See the CommonJS output tab for __esModule.