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/JavaScript

import

The static import statement is used to import bindings which are exported by another module. Imported modules are in strict mode whether you declare them as such or not. The import statement cannot be used in embedded scripts unless such script has a type="module".

There is also a function-like dynamic import(), which does not require scripts of type="module".

Dynamic import is useful in situations where you wish to load a module conditionally, or on demand. The static form is preferable for loading initial dependencies, and can benefit more readily from static analysis tools and tree shaking.

Syntax

import defaultExport from "module-name";
import * as name from "module-name";
import { export } from "module-name";
import { export as alias } from "module-name";
import { export1 , export2 } from "module-name";
import { foo , bar } from "module-name/path/to/specific/un-exported/file";
import { export1 , export2 as alias2 , [...] } from "module-name";
import defaultExport, { export [ , [...] ] } from "module-name";
import defaultExport, * as name from "module-name";
import "module-name";
var promise = import("module-name");
defaultExport
Name that will refer to the default export from the module.
module-name
The module to import from. This is often a relative or absolute path name to the .js file containing the module. Certain bundlers may permit or require the use of the extension; check your environment. Only single quotes and double quotes Strings are allowed.
name
Name of the module object that will be used as a kind of namespace when referring to the imports.
export, exportN
Name of the exports to be imported.
alias, aliasN
Names that will refer to the named imports.

Description

The name parameter is the name of the "module object" which will be used as a kind of namespace to refer to the exports. The export parameters specify individual named exports, while the import * as name syntax imports all of them. Below are examples to clarify the syntax.

Import an entire module's contents

This inserts myModule into the current scope, containing all the exports from the module in the file located in /modules/my-module.js.

import * as myModule from '/modules/my-module.js';

Here, accessing the exports means using the module name ("myModule" in this case) as a namespace. For example, if the module imported above includes an export doAllTheAmazingThings(), you would call it like this:

myModule.doAllTheAmazingThings();

Import a single export from a module

Given an object or value named myExport which has been exported from the module my-module either implicitly (because the entire module is exported) or explicitly (using the export statement), this inserts myExport into the current scope.

import {myExport} from '/modules/my-module.js';

Import multiple exports from module

This inserts both foo and bar into the current scope.

import {foo, bar} from '/modules/my-module.js';

Import an export with a more convenient alias

You can rename an export when importing it. For example, this inserts shortName into the current scope.

import {reallyReallyLongModuleExportName as shortName}
  from '/modules/my-module.js';

Rename multiple exports during import

Import multiple exports from a module with convenient aliases.

import {
  reallyReallyLongModuleExportName as shortName,
  anotherLongModuleName as short
} from '/modules/my-module.js';

Import a module for its side effects only

Import an entire module for side effects only, without importing anything. This runs the module's global code, but doesn't actually import any values.

import '/modules/my-module.js';

Importing defaults

It is possible to have a default export (whether it is an object, a function, a class, etc.). The import statement may then be used to import such defaults.

The simplest version directly imports the default:

import myDefault from '/modules/my-module.js';

It is also possible to use the default syntax with the ones seen above (namespace imports or named imports). In such cases, the default import will have to be declared first. For instance:

import myDefault, * as myModule from '/modules/my-module.js';
// myModule used as a namespace

or

import myDefault, {foo, bar} from '/modules/my-module.js';
// specific, named imports

Dynamic Imports

The import keyword may be called as a function to dynamically import a module. When used this way, it returns a promise.

import('/modules/my-module.js')
  .then((module) => {
    // Do something with the module.
  });

This form also supports the await keyword.

let module = await import('/modules/my-module.js');

Examples

Standard Import

The code below shows how to import from a secondary module to assist in processing an AJAX JSON request.

The module: file.js

function getJSON(url, callback) {
  let xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
  xhr.onload = function () { 
    callback(this.responseText) 
  };
  xhr.open('GET', url, true);
  xhr.send();
}

export function getUsefulContents(url, callback) {
  getJSON(url, data => callback(JSON.parse(data)));
}

The main program: main.js

import { getUsefulContents } from '/modules/file.js';

getUsefulContents('http://www.example.com',
    data => { doSomethingUseful(data); });

Dynamic Import

This example shows how to load functionality on to a page based on a user action, in this case a button click, and then call a function within that module. This is not the only way to implement this functionality. The import() function also supports await.

const main = document.querySelector("main");
for (const link of document.querySelectorAll("nav > a")) {
  link.addEventListener("click", e => {
    e.preventDefault();

    import('/modules/my-module.js')
      .then(module => {
        module.loadPageInto(main);
      })
      .catch(err => {
        main.textContent = err.message;
      });
  });
}

Specifications

Browser compatibilityUpdate compatibility data on GitHub

Desktop
Chrome Edge Firefox Internet Explorer Opera Safari
Basic support 61 16
16
15
Disabled
Disabled From version 15: this feature is behind the Experimental JavaScript Features preference.
60
60
54 — 60
Disabled
Disabled From version 54 until version 60 (exclusive): this feature is behind the dom.moduleScripts.enabled preference. To change preferences in Firefox, visit about:config.
No 47 10.1
Dynamic import 63 No
No
See development status.
No
No
See bug 1342012.
No 50 11.1
Mobile
Android webview Chrome for Android Edge Mobile Firefox for Android Opera for Android iOS Safari Samsung Internet
Basic support 61 61 Yes 60
60
54 — 60
Disabled
Disabled From version 54 until version 60 (exclusive): this feature is behind the dom.moduleScripts.enabled preference. To change preferences in Firefox, visit about:config.
47 10.1 No
Dynamic import 63 63 No No
No
See bug 1342012.
50 11.1 ?
Server
Node.js
Basic support 8.5.0
Disabled
8.5.0
Disabled
files must have suffix .mjs, not .js
Disabled From version 8.5.0: this feature is behind the --experimental-modules runtime flag.
Dynamic import ?

See also

© 2005–2018 Mozilla Developer Network and individual contributors.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/import