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Integrating the ESM version of the Monaco Editor

Using webpack

Here is the most basic script that imports the editor using ESM with webpack.

More self-contained samples are available in the samples folder.


Option 1: Using the Monaco Editor WebPack Plugin

This is the easiest method, and it allows for options to be passed into the plugin in order to select only a subset of editor features or editor languages. Read more about the Monaco Editor WebPack Plugin, which is a community authored plugin.

  • index.js
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';

monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('container'), {
	value: ['function x() {', '\tconsole.log("Hello world!");', '}'].join('\n'),
	language: 'javascript'
});
  • webpack.config.js
const MonacoWebpackPlugin = require('monaco-editor-webpack-plugin');
const path = require('path');

module.exports = {
	entry: './index.js',
	output: {
		path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
		filename: 'app.js'
	},
	module: {
		rules: [
			{
				test: /\.css$/,
				use: ['style-loader', 'css-loader']
			},
			{
				test: /\.ttf$/,
				use: ['file-loader']
			}
		]
	},
	plugins: [new MonacoWebpackPlugin()]
};

Option 2: Using plain webpack

Full working samples are available at https://github.com/microsoft/monaco-editor/tree/main/samples/browser-esm-webpack or https://github.com/microsoft/monaco-editor/tree/main/samples/browser-esm-webpack-small

  • index.js
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';

// Since packaging is done by you, you need
// to instruct the editor how you named the
// bundles that contain the web workers.
self.MonacoEnvironment = {
	getWorkerUrl: function (moduleId, label) {
		if (label === 'json') {
			return './json.worker.bundle.js';
		}
		if (label === 'css' || label === 'scss' || label === 'less') {
			return './css.worker.bundle.js';
		}
		if (label === 'html' || label === 'handlebars' || label === 'razor') {
			return './html.worker.bundle.js';
		}
		if (label === 'typescript' || label === 'javascript') {
			return './ts.worker.bundle.js';
		}
		return './editor.worker.bundle.js';
	}
};

monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('container'), {
	value: ['function x() {', '\tconsole.log("Hello world!");', '}'].join('\n'),
	language: 'javascript'
});
  • webpack.config.js:
const path = require('path');

module.exports = {
	entry: {
		app: './index.js',
		// Package each language's worker and give these filenames in `getWorkerUrl`
		'editor.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/editor/editor.worker.js',
		'json.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/json/json.worker',
		'css.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/css/css.worker',
		'html.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/html/html.worker',
		'ts.worker': 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/typescript/ts.worker'
	},
	output: {
		globalObject: 'self',
		filename: '[name].bundle.js',
		path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist')
	},
	module: {
		rules: [
			{
				test: /\.css$/,
				use: ['style-loader', 'css-loader']
			},
			{
				test: /\.ttf$/,
				use: ['file-loader']
			}
		]
	}
};

Using parcel

A full working sample is available at https://github.com/microsoft/monaco-editor/tree/main/samples/browser-esm-parcel

When using parcel, we need to use the getWorkerUrl function and build the workers seperately from our main source. To simplify things, we can write a tiny bash script to build the workers for us.

  • index.js
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';

self.MonacoEnvironment = {
	getWorkerUrl: function (moduleId, label) {
		if (label === 'json') {
			return './json.worker.js';
		}
		if (label === 'css' || label === 'scss' || label === 'less') {
			return './css.worker.js';
		}
		if (label === 'html' || label === 'handlebars' || label === 'razor') {
			return './html.worker.js';
		}
		if (label === 'typescript' || label === 'javascript') {
			return './ts.worker.js';
		}
		return './editor.worker.js';
	}
};

monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('container'), {
	value: ['function x() {', '\tconsole.log("Hello world!");', '}'].join('\n'),
	language: 'javascript'
});
  • build_workers.sh
ROOT=$PWD/node_modules/monaco-editor/esm/vs
OPTS="--no-source-maps --log-level 1"        # Parcel options - See: https://parceljs.org/cli.html

parcel build $ROOT/language/json/json.worker.js $OPTS
parcel build $ROOT/language/css/css.worker.js $OPTS
parcel build $ROOT/language/html/html.worker.js $OPTS
parcel build $ROOT/language/typescript/ts.worker.js $OPTS
parcel build $ROOT/editor/editor.worker.js $OPTS

Then, simply run sh ./build_workers.sh && parcel index.html. This builds the workers into the same directory as your main bundle (usually ./dist). If you want to change the --out-dir of the workers, you must change the paths in index.js to reflect their new location.

note - the getWorkerUrl paths are relative to the build directory of your src bundle


Using Vite

Adding monaco editor to Vite is simple since it has built-in support for web workers. You only need to implement the getWorker function (NOT the getWorkerUrl) to use Vite's output (Source):

import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';
import editorWorker from 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/editor/editor.worker?worker';
import jsonWorker from 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/json/json.worker?worker';
import cssWorker from 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/css/css.worker?worker';
import htmlWorker from 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/html/html.worker?worker';
import tsWorker from 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/language/typescript/ts.worker?worker';

self.MonacoEnvironment = {
	getWorker(_, label) {
		if (label === 'json') {
			return new jsonWorker();
		}
		if (label === 'css' || label === 'scss' || label === 'less') {
			return new cssWorker();
		}
		if (label === 'html' || label === 'handlebars' || label === 'razor') {
			return new htmlWorker();
		}
		if (label === 'typescript' || label === 'javascript') {
			return new tsWorker();
		}
		return new editorWorker();
	}
};

monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('container'), {
	value: "function hello() {\n\talert('Hello world!');\n}",
	language: 'javascript'
});