googlemaps / js-region-lookup

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chore(deps-dev): bump esbuild from 0.14.28 to 0.17.15 #61

Closed dependabot[bot] closed 1 year ago

dependabot[bot] commented 1 year ago

Bumps esbuild from 0.14.28 to 0.17.15.

Release notes

Sourced from esbuild's releases.

v0.17.15

  • Allow keywords as type parameter names in mapped types (#3033)

    TypeScript allows type keywords to be used as parameter names in mapped types. Previously esbuild incorrectly treated this as an error. Code that does this is now supported:

    type Foo = 'a' | 'b' | 'c'
    type A = { [keyof in Foo]: number }
    type B = { [infer in Foo]: number }
    type C = { [readonly in Foo]: number }
    
  • Add annotations for re-exported modules in node (#2486, #3029)

    Node lets you import named imports from a CommonJS module using ESM import syntax. However, the allowed names aren't derived from the properties of the CommonJS module. Instead they are derived from an arbitrary syntax-only analysis of the CommonJS module's JavaScript AST.

    To accommodate node doing this, esbuild's ESM-to-CommonJS conversion adds a special non-executable "annotation" for node that describes the exports that node should expose in this scenario. It takes the form 0 && (module.exports = { ... }) and comes at the end of the file (0 && expr means expr is never evaluated).

    Previously esbuild didn't do this for modules re-exported using the export * from syntax. Annotations for these re-exports will now be added starting with this release:

    // Original input
    export { foo } from './foo'
    export * from './bar'
    

    // Old output (with --format=cjs --platform=node) ... 0 && (module.exports = { foo });

    // New output (with --format=cjs --platform=node) ... 0 && (module.exports = { foo, ...require("./bar") });

    Note that you need to specify both --format=cjs and --platform=node to get these node-specific annotations.

  • Avoid printing an unnecessary space in between a number and a . (#3026)

    JavaScript typically requires a space in between a number token and a . token to avoid the . being interpreted as a decimal point instead of a member expression. However, this space is not required if the number token itself contains a decimal point, an exponent, or uses a base other than 10. This release of esbuild now avoids printing the unnecessary space in these cases:

    // Original input
    foo(1000 .x, 0 .x, 0.1 .x, 0.0001 .x, 0xFFFF_0000_FFFF_0000 .x)
    

    // Old output (with --minify)

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from esbuild's changelog.

Changelog: 2022

This changelog documents all esbuild versions published in the year 2022 (versions 0.14.11 through 0.16.12).

0.16.12

  • Loader defaults to js for extensionless files (#2776)

    Certain packages contain files without an extension. For example, the yargs package contains the file yargs/yargs which has no extension. Node, Webpack, and Parcel can all understand code that imports yargs/yargs because they assume that the file is JavaScript. However, esbuild was previously unable to understand this code because it relies on the file extension to tell it how to interpret the file. With this release, esbuild will now assume files without an extension are JavaScript files. This can be customized by setting the loader for "" (the empty string, representing files without an extension) to another loader. For example, if you want files without an extension to be treated as CSS instead, you can do that like this:

    • CLI:

      esbuild --bundle --loader:=css
      
    • JS:

      esbuild.build({
        bundle: true,
        loader: { '': 'css' },
      })
      
    • Go:

      api.Build(api.BuildOptions{
        Bundle: true,
        Loader: map[string]api.Loader{"": api.LoaderCSS},
      })
      

    In addition, the "type" field in package.json files now only applies to files with an explicit .js, .jsx, .ts, or .tsx extension. Previously it was incorrectly applied by esbuild to all files that had an extension other than .mjs, .mts, .cjs, or .cts including extensionless files. So for example an extensionless file in a "type": "module" package is now treated as CommonJS instead of ESM.

0.16.11

  • Avoid a syntax error in the presence of direct eval (#2761)

    The behavior of nested function declarations in JavaScript depends on whether the code is run in strict mode or not. It would be problematic if esbuild preserved nested function declarations in its output because then the behavior would depend on whether the output was run in strict mode or not instead of respecting the strict mode behavior of the original source code. To avoid this, esbuild transforms nested function declarations to preserve the intended behavior of the original source code regardless of whether the output is run in strict mode or not:

    // Original code
    if (true) {
      function foo() {}
      console.log(!!foo)
      foo = null
      console.log(!!foo)
    }
    

... (truncated)

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dependabot[bot] commented 1 year ago

Superseded by #62.