Ben Newman 9acd33b93a Make buildExportAll generate pure ES5 code.
The untransformed `let` keyword causes problems for older parsers. I
understand using `let` instead of `var` ensures each getter function has
its own binding for the KEY variable, but the same can be accomplished
(with less code) using a `.forEach` callback function, and this way
there's no need to worry about generating a unique name for the `key`
variable.
2016-03-02 00:08:55 -05:00

65 lines
1.2 KiB
JavaScript

"use strict";
Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", {
value: true
});
var _foo = require("foo");
Object.keys(_foo).forEach(function (key) {
if (key === "default") return;
Object.defineProperty(exports, key, {
enumerable: true,
get: function () {
return _foo[key];
}
});
});
Object.defineProperty(exports, "foo", {
enumerable: true,
get: function () {
return _foo.foo;
}
});
Object.defineProperty(exports, "foo", {
enumerable: true,
get: function () {
return _foo.foo;
}
});
Object.defineProperty(exports, "bar", {
enumerable: true,
get: function () {
return _foo.bar;
}
});
Object.defineProperty(exports, "bar", {
enumerable: true,
get: function () {
return _foo.foo;
}
});
Object.defineProperty(exports, "default", {
enumerable: true,
get: function () {
return _foo.foo;
}
});
Object.defineProperty(exports, "default", {
enumerable: true,
get: function () {
return _foo.foo;
}
});
Object.defineProperty(exports, "bar", {
enumerable: true,
get: function () {
return _foo.bar;
}
});
Object.defineProperty(exports, "foo", {
enumerable: true,
get: function () {
return babelHelpers.interopRequireDefault(_foo).default;
}
});