Why does Angular build create files with 'es5' and 'es2015' but not 'es6' (or no suffix at all)?

michael picture michael · Feb 12, 2020 · Viewed 16k times · Source

I recently downloaded the Angular CLI (@angular/cli 9.0.1). I then proceeded to create a new application so that I could create a new Angular Element, package it up, and use it in another application.

After following a few blogs, the final step of every blog I came across all talk about creating a single JS file from the generated files dropped under the dist/ folder. For example: https://blog.bitsrc.io/using-angular-elements-why-and-how-part-1-35f7fd4f0457

Then using the cat command, we are concatenating the runtime.js, polyfills.js, scripts.js, and main.js files from the dist/angular-app folder into a angularapp.js file inside the preview folder.

Running ng build angular-app --prod --output-hashing=none instead seems to produce files named:

  • main-es5.js
  • main-es2015.js
  • polyfills-es5.js
  • polyfills-es2015.js
  • runtime-es5.js
  • runtime-es2015.js

I scoured every single file that had the terms es5 and es2015 and changed it to es6, but it still produced the same es5 and es2015 file names. What am I doing wrong here?

Answer

Reactgular picture Reactgular · Feb 12, 2020

Angular doesn't bundle the JavaScript files into a single file.

You can add a build step to concat the files together.

concat-build.js:

var concat = require('concat');
const es5 = ['./dist/app/runtime-es5.js','./dist/app/polyfills-es5.js','./dist/app/main-es5.js'];
const es2015= ['./dist/app/runtime-es2015.js','./dist/app/polyfills-es2015.js','./dist/app/main-es2015.js'];
concat(es5, './dist/app/elements-es5.js');
concat(es2015, './dist/app/elements-es2015.js');

package.json:

"scripts": {
   "concat": "./concat-builds.js",
   "build": "ng build --prod --output-hashing=none && npm run concat"
}

Don't get confused by the ES5 and ES2015 builds, because the Angular team split the bundles depending upon how modules are loaded (not specifically on the JavaScript version).

Web browsers that support modules will load the ES2015 versions instead of the ES5 versions, but both are recommended to be in the Html.

If you want only a single file to use, then you're forced to use the older ES5 version, and should provide it as follows:

<script src="elements-es5.js">

It is recommended to provide both files as follows and the browser will load the appropriate version:

<script src="elements-es5.js" nomodule defer>
<script src="elements-es2015.js" type="module">

Please note:

Older browsers will ignore the type="module" version, and newer browsers will skip the nomodule version.