integrate-esm.md
July 23, 2022 ยท View on GitHub
Integrating the ESM version of the Monaco Editor
Using webpack
Here is the most basic script that imports the editor using ESM with webpack.
More self-contained samples are available in the samples folder.
Option 1: Using the Monaco Editor WebPack Plugin
This is the easiest method, and it allows for options to be passed into the plugin in order to select only a subset of editor features or editor languages. Read more about the Monaco Editor WebPack Plugin, which is a community authored plugin.
index.js
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';
monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('container'), {
value: ['function x() {', '\tconsole.log("Hello world!");', '}'].join('\n'),
language: 'javascript'
});
webpack.config.js
const MonacoWebpackPlugin = require('monaco-editor-webpack-plugin');
const path = require('path');
module.exports = {
entry: './index.js',
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
filename: 'app.js'
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: ['style-loader', 'css-loader']
},
{
test: /\.ttf$/,
use: ['file-loader']
}
]
},
plugins: [new MonacoWebpackPlugin()]
};
Option 2: Using plain webpack
Full working samples are available at https://github.com/microsoft/monaco-editor/tree/main/samples/browser-esm-webpack or https://github.com/microsoft/monaco-editor/tree/main/samples/browser-esm-webpack-small
index.js
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';
// Since packaging is done by you, you need
// to instruct the editor how you named the
// bundles that contain the web workers.
self.MonacoEnvironment = {
getWorkerUrl: function (moduleId, label) {
if (label === 'json') {
return './json.worker.bundle.js';
}
if (label === 'css' || label === 'scss' || label === 'less') {
return './css.worker.bundle.js';
}
if (label === 'html' || label === 'handlebars' || label === 'razor') {
return './html.worker.bundle.js';
}
if (label === 'typescript' || label === 'javascript') {
return './ts.worker.bundle.js';
}
return './editor.worker.bundle.js';
}
};
monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('container'), {
value: ['function x() {', '\tconsole.log("Hello world!");', '}'].join('\n'),
language: 'javascript'
});
webpack.config.js:
const path = require('path');
module.exports = {
entry: {
app: './index.js',
// Package each language's worker and give these filenames in `getWorkerUrl`
'editor.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/editor/editor.worker.js',
'json.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/json/json.worker',
'css.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/css/css.worker',
'html.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/html/html.worker',
'ts.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/typescript/ts.worker'
},
output: {
globalObject: 'self',
filename: '[name].bundle.js',
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist')
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: ['style-loader', 'css-loader']
},
{
test: /\.ttf$/,
use: ['file-loader']
}
]
}
};
Using parcel
A full working sample is available at https://github.com/microsoft/monaco-editor/tree/main/samples/browser-esm-parcel
When using parcel, we need to use the getWorkerUrl function and build the workers seperately from our main source. To simplify things, we can write a tiny bash script to build the workers for us.
index.js
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';
self.MonacoEnvironment = {
getWorkerUrl: function (moduleId, label) {
if (label === 'json') {
return './json.worker.js';
}
if (label === 'css' || label === 'scss' || label === 'less') {
return './css.worker.js';
}
if (label === 'html' || label === 'handlebars' || label === 'razor') {
return './html.worker.js';
}
if (label === 'typescript' || label === 'javascript') {
return './ts.worker.js';
}
return './editor.worker.js';
}
};
monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('container'), {
value: ['function x() {', '\tconsole.log("Hello world!");', '}'].join('\n'),
language: 'javascript'
});
build_workers.sh
ROOT=$PWD/node_modules/monaco-editor/esm/vs
OPTS="--no-source-maps --log-level 1" # Parcel options - See: https://parceljs.org/cli.html
parcel build $ROOT/language/json/json.worker.js $OPTS
parcel build $ROOT/language/css/css.worker.js $OPTS
parcel build $ROOT/language/html/html.worker.js $OPTS
parcel build $ROOT/language/typescript/ts.worker.js $OPTS
parcel build $ROOT/editor/editor.worker.js $OPTS
Then, simply run sh ./build_workers.sh && parcel index.html. This builds the workers into the same directory as your main bundle (usually ./dist). If you want to change the --out-dir of the workers, you must change the paths in index.js to reflect their new location.
note - the getWorkerUrl paths are relative to the build directory of your src bundle
Using Vite
Adding monaco editor to Vite is simple since it has built-in support for web workers. You only need to implement the getWorker function (NOT the getWorkerUrl) to use Vite's output (Source):
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';
self.MonacoEnvironment = {
getWorker: function (workerId, label) {
const getWorkerModule = (moduleUrl, label) => {
return new Worker(self.MonacoEnvironment.getWorkerUrl(moduleUrl), {
name: label,
type: 'module'
});
};
switch (label) {
case 'json':
return getWorkerModule('/monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/json/json.worker?worker', label);
case 'css':
case 'scss':
case 'less':
return getWorkerModule('/monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/css/css.worker?worker', label);
case 'html':
case 'handlebars':
case 'razor':
return getWorkerModule('/monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/html/html.worker?worker', label);
case 'typescript':
case 'javascript':
return getWorkerModule('/monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/typescript/ts.worker?worker', label);
default:
return getWorkerModule('/monaco-editor/esm/vs/editor/editor.worker?worker', label);
}
}
};
monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('container'), {
value: "function hello() {\n\talert('Hello world!');\n}",
language: 'javascript'
});