@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ or when referenced by `import` statements within ES module code:
6060* Strings passed in as an argument to ` --eval ` or ` --print ` , or piped to
6161 ` node ` via ` STDIN ` , with the flag ` --input-type=commonjs ` .
6262
63- ## <code >package.json</code > <code >"type"</code > field
63+ ### <code >package.json</code > <code >"type"</code > field
6464
6565Files ending with ` .js ` or ` .mjs ` , or lacking any extension,
6666will be loaded as ES modules when the nearest parent ` package.json ` file
@@ -97,7 +97,13 @@ if the nearest parent `package.json` contains `"type": "module"`.
9797import ' ./startup.js' ; // Loaded as ES module because of package.json
9898```
9999
100- ## Package Scope and File Extensions
100+ Package authors should include the ` "type" ` field, even in packages where all
101+ sources are CommonJS. Being explicit about the ` type ` of the package will
102+ future-proof the package in case the default type of Node.js ever changes, and
103+ it will also make things easier for build tools and loaders to determine how the
104+ files in the package should be interpreted.
105+
106+ ### Package Scope and File Extensions
101107
102108A folder containing a ` package.json ` file, and all subfolders below that
103109folder down until the next folder containing another ` package.json ` , is
@@ -156,7 +162,7 @@ package scope:
156162 extension (since both ` .js ` and ` .cjs ` files are treated as CommonJS within a
157163 ` "commonjs" ` package scope).
158164
159- ## <code >--input-type</code > flag
165+ ### <code >--input-type</code > flag
160166
161167Strings passed in as an argument to ` --eval ` or ` --print ` (or ` -e ` or ` -p ` ), or
162168piped to ` node ` via ` STDIN ` , will be treated as ES modules when the
@@ -174,7 +180,9 @@ For completeness there is also `--input-type=commonjs`, for explicitly running
174180string input as CommonJS. This is the default behavior if ` --input-type ` is
175181unspecified.
176182
177- ## Package Entry Points
183+ ## Packages
184+
185+ ### Package Entry Points
178186
179187The ` package.json ` ` "main" ` field defines the entry point for a package,
180188whether the package is included into CommonJS via ` require ` or into an ES
@@ -209,15 +217,50 @@ be interpreted as CommonJS.
209217
210218The ` "main" ` field can point to exactly one file, regardless of whether the
211219package is referenced via ` require ` (in a CommonJS context) or ` import ` (in an
212- ES module context). Package authors who want to publish a package to be used in
213- both contexts can do so by setting ` "main" ` to point to the CommonJS entry point
214- and informing the package’s users of the path to the ES module entry point. Such
215- a package would be accessible like ` require('pkg') ` and `import
216- 'pkg/module.mjs'` . Alternatively the package ` "main"` could point to the ES
217- module entry point and legacy users could be informed of the CommonJS entry
218- point path, e.g. ` require('pkg/commonjs') ` .
219-
220- ## Package Exports
220+ ES module context).
221+
222+ #### Compatibility with CommonJS-Only Versions of Node.js
223+
224+ Prior to the introduction of support for ES modules in Node.js, it was a common
225+ pattern for package authors to include both CommonJS and ES module JavaScript
226+ sources in their package, with ` package.json ` ` "main" ` specifying the CommonJS
227+ entry point and ` package.json ` ` "module" ` specifying the ES module entry point.
228+ This enabled Node.js to run the CommonJS entry point while build tools such as
229+ bundlers used the ES module entry point, since Node.js ignored (and still
230+ ignores) ` "module" ` .
231+
232+ Node.js can now run ES module entry points, but it remains impossible for a
233+ package to define separate CommonJS and ES module entry points. This is for good
234+ reason: the ` pkg ` variable created from ` import pkg from 'pkg' ` is not the same
235+ singleton as the ` pkg ` variable created from ` const pkg = require('pkg') ` , so if
236+ both are referenced within the same app (including dependencies), unexpected
237+ behavior might occur.
238+
239+ There are two general approaches to addressing this limitation while still
240+ publishing a package that contains both CommonJS and ES module sources:
241+
242+ 1 . Document a new ES module entry point that’s not the package ` "main" ` , e.g.
243+ ` import pkg from 'pkg/module.mjs' ` (or ` import 'pkg/esm' ` , if using [ package
244+ exports] [ ] ). The package ` "main" ` would still point to a CommonJS file, and
245+ thus the package would remain compatible with older versions of Node.js that
246+ lack support for ES modules.
247+
248+ 1 . Switch the package ` "main" ` entry point to an ES module file as part of a
249+ breaking change version bump. This version and above would only be usable on
250+ ES module-supporting versions of Node.js. If the package still contains a
251+ CommonJS version, it would be accessible via a path within the package, e.g.
252+ ` require('pkg/commonjs') ` ; this is essentially the inverse of the previous
253+ approach. Package consumers who are using CommonJS-only versions of Node.js
254+ would need to update their code from ` require('pkg') ` to e.g.
255+ ` require('pkg/commonjs') ` .
256+
257+ Of course, a package could also include only CommonJS or only ES module sources.
258+ An existing package could make a semver major bump to an ES module-only version,
259+ that would only be supported in ES module-supporting versions of Node.js (and
260+ other runtimes). New packages could be published containing only ES module
261+ sources, and would be compatible only with ES module-supporting runtimes.
262+
263+ ### Package Exports
221264
222265By default, all subpaths from a package can be imported (` import 'pkg/x.js' ` ).
223266Custom subpath aliasing and encapsulation can be provided through the
@@ -930,5 +973,6 @@ success!
930973[` import ` ]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/import
931974[` module .createRequire ()` ]: modules.html#modules_module_createrequire_filename
932975[dynamic instantiate hook]: #esm_dynamic_instantiate_hook
976+ [package exports]: #esm_package_exports
933977[special scheme]: https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-scheme
934978[the official standard format]: https://tc39.github.io/ecma262/#sec-modules
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