the-forest/client/node_modules/web-streams-polyfill
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dist client raw doggin the db 2024-09-17 20:35:18 -04:00
es6 client raw doggin the db 2024-09-17 20:35:18 -04:00
es2018 client raw doggin the db 2024-09-17 20:35:18 -04:00
ponyfill client raw doggin the db 2024-09-17 20:35:18 -04:00
LICENSE client raw doggin the db 2024-09-17 20:35:18 -04:00
package.json client raw doggin the db 2024-09-17 20:35:18 -04:00
README.md client raw doggin the db 2024-09-17 20:35:18 -04:00

web-streams-polyfill

Web Streams, based on the WHATWG spec reference implementation.

build status npm version license

Usage

This library comes in multiple variants:

  • web-streams-polyfill: a polyfill that replaces the native stream implementations. Recommended for use in web apps supporting older browsers through a <script> tag.
  • web-streams-polyfill/es6: a polyfill targeting ES2015+ environments. Recommended for use in web apps supporting modern browsers through a <script> tag.
  • web-streams-polyfill/es2018: a polyfill targeting ES2018+ environments.
  • web-streams-polyfill/ponyfill: a ponyfill that provides the stream implementations without replacing any globals. Recommended for use in legacy Node applications, or in web libraries supporting older browsers.
  • web-streams-polyfill/ponyfill/es6: a ponyfill targeting ES2015+ environments. Recommended for use in Node 6+ applications, or in web libraries supporting modern browsers.
  • web-streams-polyfill/ponyfill/es2018: a ponyfill targeting ES2018+ environments. Recommended for use in Node 10+ applications.

Each variant also includes TypeScript type definitions, compatible with the DOM type definitions for streams included in TypeScript.

Usage as a polyfill:

<!-- option 1: hosted by unpkg CDN -->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/web-streams-polyfill/dist/polyfill.min.js"></script>
<!-- option 2: self hosted -->
<script src="/path/to/web-streams-polyfill/dist/polyfill.min.js"></script>
<script>
var readable = new ReadableStream();
</script>

Usage as a Node module:

var streams = require("web-streams-polyfill/ponyfill");
var readable = new streams.ReadableStream();

Usage as a ES2015 module:

import { ReadableStream } from "web-streams-polyfill/ponyfill";
const readable = new ReadableStream();

Compatibility

The polyfill and ponyfill variants work in any ES5-compatible environment that has a global Promise. If you need to support older browsers or Node versions that do not have a native Promise implementation (check the support table), you must first include a Promise polyfill (e.g. promise-polyfill).

The polyfill/es6 and ponyfill/es6 variants work in any ES2015-compatible environment.

The polyfill/es2018 and ponyfill/es2018 variants work in any ES2018-compatible environment.

Async iterable support for ReadableStream is available in all variants, but requires an ES2018-compatible environment or a polyfill for Symbol.asyncIterator.

WritableStreamDefaultController.signal is available in all variants, but requires a global AbortController constructor. If necessary, consider using a polyfill such as abortcontroller-polyfill.

Reading with a BYOB reader is available in all variants, but requires ArrayBuffer.prototype.transfer() or structuredClone() to exist in order to correctly transfer the given view's buffer. If not available, then the buffer won't be transferred during the read.

Compliance

The polyfill implements version 4dc123a (13 Nov 2023) of the streams specification.

The polyfill is tested against the same web platform tests that are used by browsers to test their native implementations. The polyfill aims to pass all tests, although it allows some exceptions for practical reasons:

  • The es2018 variant passes all of the tests.
  • The es6 variant passes the same tests as the es2018 variant, except for the test for the prototype of ReadableStream's async iterator. Retrieving the correct %AsyncIteratorPrototype% requires using an async generator (async function* () {}), which is invalid syntax before ES2018. Instead, the polyfill creates its own version which is functionally equivalent to the real prototype.
  • The es5 variant passes the same tests as the es6 variant, except for various tests about specific characteristics of the constructors, properties and methods. These test failures do not affect the run-time behavior of the polyfill. For example:
    • The name property of down-leveled constructors is incorrect.
    • The length property of down-leveled constructors and methods with optional arguments is incorrect.
    • Not all properties and methods are correctly marked as non-enumerable.
    • Down-leveled class methods are not correctly marked as non-constructable.

The type definitions are compatible with the built-in stream types of TypeScript 3.3.

Contributors

Thanks to these people for their work on the original polyfill: