Gema or GEMA may refer to:
Organizations
GEMA (German organization), a performance rights organisation in Germany
Gas and Electricity Markets Authority (GEMA) in the United Kingdom
Gikuyu, Embu, and Meru Association (GEMA), a Kenyan organisation
Gemmological Association of Great Britain (Gem-A), a gemmology education and qualifications body based in the UK
Georgia Emergency Management Agency (GEMA)
Companies
Global Engine Manufacturing Alliance (GEMA), an engine-manufacturing joint venture between Chrysler, Hyundai Motors and Mitsubishi Motors
Gesellschaft für elektroakustische und mechanische...
The managers of the software team at my last company had doubts that a web designer could become a web developer. They didn't think that transition was realistic and nobody had ever tried in the company before, so when they declined my request, I quit.
Anyone else feel like Wikipedia is always asking for donations? I could understand once a year, but the frequency of their begging seems to have increased to at least once every couple of months.
I think the more important questions is "do they honestly need the donations?". If the answer is "yes" then I'd rather they nag than shut down (or sell).
I think ES6 modules prevent this for working well, although following it through the relevants specs is tricky, so I may be totally wrong.
That said, let's start with a few references:
the WhatWG module loader
the ES6 specification on modules (§15.2)
the CommonJS module specification
The fi...
as if only people that have money ask for more? :)
You can disgree with me, but your last statement just reworded the same thing. You care about frequency and assume reasons based off of that. I think reasons matter.
their operational cost is like 60 million, and they see 15-20 billion hits a month. I'm okay with them begging tbh. but I do wish you could get the notice removed once you did donate
@ssube it's a great answer at first glance. I'll dig into your reference later on, but so far it describes the problem well. However, another part of the specific problem here arrises because the 1.x style with require.ensure does no longer work. If it would, we could just continue to use that for webpack bundles
@jAndy I don't spent a lot of time on require.ensure, but I do mention that it was never real (in the sense that it is not in any spec, the behavior is not very well defined, and nobody promised it would continue existing).
but, if you can get at the Loader object that System uses, you should be able to set up a wrapper that loads and registers (but doesn't evaluate) the modules.
You can't avoid parsing them a little bit, but I think you can avoid executing anything.
this is the first time I've really dug into the module loader spec and since there's no reference implementation, it's hard to know for certain
indeed, its all on flux right now. I don't really understand why the webpack creators opened that barrel of the pandora already at this point. I also don't see the need for "webpack" to follow the ES and WhatWG specs..
yea for ES6+ modules they should follow the spec and everything, but they should and can provide "own" API's for things that never was and never will be in the official specs
webpack has gotten away without supporting es6 modules because 1) everyone is using babel anyway and 2) once it's bundled, that's not really a concern any more
all I'm saying is, webpack is a standalone tool for building, resolving dependencies, concatenating and linking web projects (more or less). They can do a shitload more things than any WhatWG or ES committee member dreams of, so why not "also" using own API's on top of everything
I guess I'm still trying to figure why a 3rd party build tool like webpack should care about all these things. I mean.. if I use a "require" within webpack (sort of) that's just to tell webpack what to do right. The outcome.. what files webpack writes out, that is the interesting part really for spec and stuff
it shouldn't even be named "require", because it leads to precisely that confusion
if you ensure some bundle that has a bunch of imports, wtf happens? are those also deferred? is the bundle loaded, parsed, and the dependencies loaded but the main one not evaluated?