Vendored dependencies for Victory.
D3 has released most of its libraries as ESM-only. This means that consumers in Node.js applications can no longer just require()
anything with a d3 transitive dependency, including much of Victory.
To help provide an easy path to folks still using CommonJS in their Node.js applications that consume Victory, we now provide this package to vendor in various d3-related packages.
We presently provide the following top-level libraries:
- d3-ease
- d3-interpolate
- d3-scale
- d3-shape
- d3-timer
This is the total list of top and transitive libraries we vendor:
- d3-array
- d3-color
- d3-ease
- d3-format
- d3-interpolate
- d3-path
- d3-scale
- d3-shape
- d3-time
- d3-time-format
- d3-timer
- internmap
Note that this does not include the following D3 libraries that still support CommonJS:
- d3-voronoi
We provide two alternate paths and behaviors -- for ESM and CommonJS
If you do a Node.js import like:
import { interpolate } from "victory-vendor/d3-interpolate";
under the hood it's going to just re-export and pass you through to node_modules/d3-interpolate
, the real ESM library from D3.
If you do a Node.js import like:
const { interpolate } = require("victory-vendor/d3-interpolate");
under the hood it's going to will go to an alternate path that contains the transpiled version of the underlying d3 library to be found at victory-vendor/lib-vendor/d3-interpolate/**/*.js
. This futher has internally consistent import references to other victory-vendor/lib-vendor/<pkg-name>
paths.
Note that for some tooling (like Jest) that doesn't play well with package.json:exports
routing to this CommonJS path, we also output a root file in the form of victory-vendor/d3-interpolate.js
.
This project is released under the MIT license, but the vendor'ed in libraries include other licenses (e.g. ISC) that we enumerate in our package.json:license
field.