I've got Webpack working with Babel and including the @babel/polyfill, yet IE11 is still throwing a SCRIPT438 error when trying to use .forEach
on a NodeList
.
Here's my package.json
{
...
"scripts": {
"build:js": "webpack --config ./_build/webpack.config.js"
},
...
"browserslist": [
"IE 11",
"last 3 versions",
"not IE < 11"
],
"babel": {
"presets": [
[
"@babel/preset-env",
{
"useBuiltIns": "usage"
}
]
]
},
"devDependencies": {
"@babel/core": "^7.1.6",
"@babel/preset-env": "^7.1.6",
"babel-loader": "^8.0.4",
"webpack": "^4.25.1",
"webpack-cli": "^3.1.2"
},
"dependencies": {
"@babel/polyfill": "^7.0.0"
}
}
My webpack.config.js
:
const path = require('path');
const webpack = require('webpack');
module.exports = (env, argv) => {
const javascript = {
test: /\.js$/,
use: {
loader: 'babel-loader'
}
};
// config object
const config = {
entry: {
main: './_src/js/main.js',
},
devtool: 'source-map',
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, '../js'),
filename: '[name].js',
},
module: {
rules: [javascript]
}
}
return config;
}
And finally /_src/main.js
that I'm running through webpack and babel:
const testList = document.querySelectorAll('.test-list li');
testList.forEach(item => {
console.log(item.innerHTML);
})
The docs at https://babeljs.io/docs/en/babel-polyfill say that you don't need to import
or require
polyfill
when loading it via Webpack with useBuiltIns: "usage"
. But even if I remove that option and manually import the whole polyfill at the top of main.js
(making my bundle huge), it still errors out in IE11.
So...what am I doing wrong?
Update: As of Babel 7.4.0, Babel has switched to using core-js
directly rather than wrapping it with @babel/polyfill
. core-js
already polyfills forEach
on NodeList
, so no additional polyfill required anymore.
babel-polyfill doesn't polyfill missing web API/prototype methods like NodeList.prototype.forEach
.
Also please note that your question title is misleading as NodeList.prototype.forEach
is not an ES6 feature. forEach
on iterable collections is currently only a candidate recommendation (as of August 2018).
Simply include your own polyfill at the top level of your Javascript:
if (window.NodeList && !NodeList.prototype.forEach) {
NodeList.prototype.forEach = Array.prototype.forEach;
}
This might change as soon as core-js 3 is stable: https://github.com/zloirock/core-js/issues/329
You can also go without any polyfill if you start to adopt the common pattern being used in ES6 times:
const testList = [...document.querySelectorAll('.test-list li')];
or
const testList = Array.from(document.querySelectorAll('.test-list li'));
The other option you have is to use for...of
instead:
const lis = document.querySelectorAll('.test-list li');
for (const li of lis) {
// li.addEventListener(...) or whatever
}
Finally, you can also adopt the common ES5 pattern:
var testList = document.querySelectorAll('.test-list li');
Array.prototype.forEach.call(testList, function(li) { /*whatever*/ });