Showing content from https://rustwasm.github.io/docs/wasm-pack/tutorials/npm-browser-packages/building-your-project.html below:
Building your project - Hello wasm-pack!
Building your project - Hello wasm-pack!
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Quickstart
- 3. Prerequisites
-
- 3.1. npm (optional)
- 3.2. considerations
- 3.3. Non-rustup setups
- 4. Commands
-
- 4.1. new
- 4.2. build
- 4.3. test
- 4.4. pack and publish
- 4.5. init (DEPRECATED)
- 5. Tutorials
-
- 5.1. Hybrid applications with Webpack
-
- 5.1.1. Getting started
- 5.1.2. Using your library
- 5.2. npm browser packages
-
- 5.2.1. Getting started
-
- 5.2.1.1. Manual Setup
- 5.2.2. Template deep dive
-
- 5.2.2.1. Cargo.toml
- 5.2.2.2. src/lib.rs
- 5.2.2.3. src/utils.rs
- 5.2.2.4. wee_alloc
- 5.2.2.5. tests/web.rs
- 5.2.3. Building your project
- 5.2.4. Testing your project
- 5.2.5. Packaging and publishing
- 5.2.6. Using your library
- 6. Cargo.toml Configuration
- 7. Contributing
This documentation is no longer maintained at this domain, and is now maintained at drager.github.io/wasm-pack instead.
Hello wasm-pack! Building your project
We've written our code so now we need to build it.
We are writing a crate that should be used in the browser, so we run this in our terminal:
$ wasm-pack build
If you were writing a package that should be used in Node.js (with CommonJS modules, e.g. require
), you would run this in your terminal:
$ wasm-pack build --target nodejs
This command when run does a few things:
- It'll compile your code to wasm if you haven't already
- It'll generate a
pkg
folder with the wasm file, a JS wrapper file around the wasm, your README, and a package.json
file.
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