✨ WOOOOOOH!! ✨ The bundlejs api is now out at deno.bundlejs.com and/or edge.bundlejs.com, bundle your code and get a badge.
Check out the announcement tweet
I see a badge, you see a badge, we all see badges!!!
To create a badge just replace the domain
bundlejs.com
domain withdeno.bundlejs.com
and add/?badge
, yeah, that simple
A small online tool for checking the minified gzip/brotli size of npm packages.
I used monaco-editor for the code-editor, esbuild as bundler and treeshaker respectively, denoflate as a wasm port of gzip, deno_brotli as a wasm port of brotli, deno_lz4 as a wasm port of lz4, bytes to convert the compressed size to human readable values, esbuild-visualizer to visualize and analyze your esbuild bundle to see which modules are taking up space and, umami for private, publicly available analytics and general usage stats all without cookies.
This project was greatly influenced by @hardfists neo-tools and @mizchi’s uniroll projects.
bundlejs is a quick and easy way to bundle your projects, minify and see it’s gzip size. It’s an online tool similar to bundlephobia, but bundle does all the bundling locally on you browser and can treeshake and bundle multiple packages (both commonjs and esm) together, all without having to install any npm packages and with typescript support.
The project isn’t perfect, and I am still working on an autocomplete, hover intellisence, better mobile support and the high memory usage of esbuild and monaco as well as some edge case packages, e.g. monaco-editor.
If there is something I missed, a mistake, or a feature you would like added please create an issue or a pull request and I’ll try to get to it. You can contribute to this project at okikio/bundle.
bundle uses Conventional Commits as the style of commit, and the Commitizen CLI to make commits easier.
You can join the discussion on github discussions.
Some of bundlejs.com’s latest features were inspired by egoist/play-esbuild and hyrious/esbuild-repl, check them out they each use esbuild in different ways.
You can now use search queries in bundle, all you need to do is add this to the url
?q={packages}&treeshake={methods to treeshake}
e.g.
You want react
, react-dom
, vue
, and @okikio/animate
, but only want the Animate
and toStr
methods exported from @okikio/animate
.
You would add this to the url bundlejs.com/?q=react,react-dom,vue,@okikio/animate&treeshake=[*],[*],[*],[{Animate,toStr}]
If you only want a couple packages and don’t care to treeshake, then all you need is something like this, bundlejs.com?q=react,react-dom,vue,@okikio/animate
There is another way to share a reproduciable bundle, the sharable link. Shareble links look like this /?share=PTAEGEB… with the string value of the input code editor being compressed into a string and placed into the URL.
In order to create a shareble link, you click the Share
button, it copies the share url to your clipboard, and from there you can paste where you wish.
If you would like to bundle your code when the share URL is loaded, add
bundle
to the url, e.g. /?bundle&q=@okikio/animate or /?bundle&share=PTAEGEBs…
You can also add bundle badges, they look like this,
All you need to do is to add this to your README.md
# Light Mode Badge
[![Open Bundle](https://bundlejs.com/badge-light.svg)](https://bundlejs.com/)
# Dark Mode Badge
[![Open Bundle](https://bundlejs.com/badge-dark.svg)](https://bundlejs.com/)
Another options is to use the API, e.g.
[![spring-easing's badge](https://deno.bundlejs.com/?q=spring-easing&badge=detailed&badge-style=for-the-badge)](https://bundlejs.com/?q=spring-easing)
You can use the URL Queries & Shareable Links above, to create unique bundles, when users clicks on the badge.
Backers & Sponsors are awesome people and organizations who use, enjoy, and donate to the project. The list of backers who love and support this project are,