Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@joepie91
Last active April 26, 2024 13:33
Show Gist options
  • Star 192 You must be signed in to star a gist
  • Fork 4 You must be signed in to fork a gist
  • Save joepie91/bca2fda868c1e8b2c2caf76af7dfcad3 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save joepie91/bca2fda868c1e8b2c2caf76af7dfcad3 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
ES Modules are terrible, actually

ES Modules are terrible, actually

This post was adapted from an earlier Twitter thread.

It's incredible how many collective developer hours have been wasted on pushing through the turd that is ES Modules (often mistakenly called "ES6 Modules"). Causing a big ecosystem divide and massive tooling support issues, for... well, no reason, really. There are no actual advantages to it. At all.

It looks shiny and new and some libraries use it in their documentation without any explanation, so people assume that it's the new thing that must be used. And then I end up having to explain to them why, unlike CommonJS, it doesn't actually work everywhere yet, and may never do so. For example, you can't import ESM modules from a CommonJS file! (Update: I've released a module that works around this issue.)

And then there's Rollup, which apparently requires ESM to be used, at least to get things like treeshaking. Which then makes people believe that treeshaking is not possible with CommonJS modules. Well, it is - Rollup just chose not to support it.

And then there's Babel, which tried to transpile import/export to require/module.exports, sidestepping the ongoing effort of standardizing the module semantics for ESM, causing broken imports and require("foo").default nonsense and spec design issues all over the place.

And then people go "but you can use ESM in browsers without a build step!", apparently not realizing that that is an utterly useless feature because loading a full dependency tree over the network would be unreasonably and unavoidably slow - you'd need as many roundtrips as there are levels of depth in your dependency tree - and so you need some kind of build step anyway, eliminating this entire supposed benefit.

And then people go "well you can statically analyze it better!", apparently not realizing that ESM doesn't actually change any of the JS semantics other than the import/export syntax, and that the import/export statements are equally analyzable as top-level require/module.exports.

"But in CommonJS you can use those elsewhere too, and that breaks static analyzers!", I hear you say. Well, yes, absolutely. But that is inherent in dynamic imports, which by the way, ESM also supports with its dynamic import() syntax. So it doesn't solve that either! Any static analyzer still needs to deal with the case of dynamic imports somehow - it's just rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

And then, people go "but now we at least have a standard module system!", apparently not realizing that CommonJS was literally that, the result of an attempt to standardize the various competing module systems in JS. Which, against all odds, actually succeeded!

... and then promptly got destroyed by ESM, which reintroduced a split and all sorts of incompatibility in the ecosystem, rather than just importing some updated variant of CommonJS into the language specification, which would have sidestepped almost all of these issues.

And while the initial CommonJS standardization effort succeeded due to none of the competing module systems being in particularly widespread use yet, CommonJS is so ubiquitous in Javascript-land nowadays that it will never fully go away. Which means that runtimes will forever have to keep supporting two module systems, and developers will forever be paying the cost of the interoperability issues between them.

But it's the future!

Is it really? The vast majority of people who believe they're currently using ESM, aren't even actually doing so - they're feeding their entire codebase through Babel, which deftly converts all of those snazzy import and export statements back into CommonJS syntax. Which works. So what's the point of the new module system again, if it all works with CommonJS anyway?

And it gets worse; import and export are designed as special-cased statements. Aside from the obvious problem of needing to learn a special syntax (which doesn't quite work like object destructuring) instead of reusing core language concepts, this is also a downgrade from CommonJS' require, which is a first-class expression due to just being a function call.

That might sound irrelevant on the face of it, but it has very real consequences. For example, the following pattern is simply not possible with ESM:

const someInitializedModule = require("module-name")(someOptions);

Or how about this one? Also no longer possible:

const app = express();
// ...
app.use("/users", require("./routers/users"));

Having language features available as a first-class expression is one of the most desirable properties in language design; yet for some completely unclear reason, ESM proponents decided to remove that property. There's just no way anymore to directly combine an import statement with some other JS syntax, whether or not the module path is statically specified.

The only way around this is with await import, which would break the supposed static analyzer benefits, only work in async contexts, and even then require weird hacks with parentheses to make it work correctly.

It also means that you now need to make a choice: do you want to be able to use ESM-only dependencies, or do you want to have access to patterns like the above that help you keep your codebase maintainable? ESM or maintainability, your choice!

So, congratulations, ESM proponents. You've destroyed a successful userland specification, wasted many (hundreds of?) thousands of hours of collective developer time, many hours of my own personal unpaid time trying to support people with the fallout, and created ecosystem fragmentation that will never go away, in exchange for... fuck all.

This is a disaster, and the only remaining way I see to fix it is to stop trying to make ESM happen, and deprecate it in favour of some variant of CommonJS modules being absorbed into the spec. It's not too late yet; but at some point it will be.

@mk-pmb
Copy link

mk-pmb commented Jan 19, 2024

Just my default rant about JS "classes" (click to open)

@camj256

I understand wanting to write things as classes

Understanding is ok, I just hope you don't agree. Rather, teach your folks why the class-less object-centric approach is (can be proven to be) mightier than class-centric approach. Hijacking the term "Object-oriented Programming" for the latter was a genious but evil marketing move from false prophets trying to lead all mankind astray.
Last time I checked, ECMAScript still doesn't have classes, and that's a good thing. Recent editions added some ways to abuse the class keyword and a terminology of "class-like" somethings. It's a tradition for JS to introduce footguns. Firing them is entirely optional, and best left to fools.

@camj256
Copy link

camj256 commented Jan 19, 2024

@mk-pmb Yeah exactly. However, there are enough people in this community that don't agree anymore. ...and thats a problem. (clearly, as demonstrated by this thread) It's making things sloppy and less compatible. Yeah, the language is only hurting itself trying to make changes like this at this point.

Our codebase is easy to read, maintain, and is lightning fast for how large it is. For how well its designed actually I don't really want to hack together builds either.

@leonsilicon
Copy link

leonsilicon commented Apr 26, 2024

Update: Node.js (v22, and hopefully v20) now supports requiring (most) ESM code from CommonJS (nodejs/node#51977 (comment); @joyeecheung wrote an insightful post about require(esm) worth reading), so it turns out that the ESM spec wasn't actually inherently incompatible with CommonJS, but rather just due to how Node.js implemented it. So this gist (and all the incompatibility-related criticism towards the ESM spec itself) can now be considered outdated :)

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment