Basically, I am using javascript to scrape data from Google Play store using:
1-Request
2-Cheerios
3-QueryString
I used Google Market API from Github which uses require as following:
var request = require('request'); var cheerio = require('cheerio'); var qs = require('querystring'); But I am getting the following
ReferenceError: require is not defined ...
So, I don't have require in javascript which is either new for me or this is something out of the ordinary.
16 Answers
RequireJS is a JavaScript file and module loader. It is optimized for in-browser use, but it can be used in other JavaScript environments, like Rhino and Node. Using a modular script loader like RequireJS will improve the speed and quality of your code.
IE 6+ .......... compatible ✔ Firefox 2+ ..... compatible ✔ Safari 3.2+ .... compatible ✔ Chrome 3+ ...... compatible ✔ Opera 10+ ...... compatible ✔
By default require() is not a valid function in client side javascript. I recommend you look into require.js as this does extend the client side to provide you with that function.
Yes, require is a Node.JS function and doesn't work in client side scripting without certain requirements. If you're getting this error while writing electronJS code, try the following:
In your BrowserWindow declaration, add the following webPreferences field: i.e, instead of plain mainWindow = new BrowserWindow(), write
mainWindow = new BrowserWindow({ webPreferences: { nodeIntegration: true } }); 1Require () is an AMD API . I had a similar issue while implementing monaco-editor in my application. This script tag helped me:
<script src=""></script> 1For me the issue was I did not have my webpack build mode set to production for the package I was referencing in. Explicitly setting it to "build": "webpack --mode production" fixed the issue.
Browsers don't have the require method defined, but Node.js does. With Browserify you can write code that uses require in the same way that you would use it in Node.
Use the following command to install browserify
npm install -g browserify Now recursively bundle up all the required modules like main.js into a single file called bundle.js with the browserify command:
browserify main.js -o bundle.js Drop a single tag into your html and you're done!
<script src="bundle.js"></script>