Irina Glushko 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
..
.github 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
example 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
test 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
.travis.yml 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
CHANGELOG.md 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
LICENSE 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
index.js 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
package.json 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
readme.markdown 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos
security.md 2389e7160b HW1 done %!s(int64=3) %!d(string=hai) anos

readme.markdown

vm-browserify

emulate node's vm module for the browser

Build Status

example

Just write some client-side javascript:

var vm = require('vm');

window.addEventListener('load', function () {
    var res = vm.runInNewContext('a + 5', { a : 100 });
    document.querySelector('#res').textContent = res;
});

compile it with browserify:

browserify entry.js -o bundle.js

then whip up some html:

<html>
  <head>
    <script src="/bundle.js"></script>
  </head>
  <body>
    result = <span id="res"></span>
  </body>
</html>

and when you load the page you should see:

result = 105

methods

vm.runInNewContext(code, context={})

Evaluate some code in a new iframe with a context.

Contexts are like wrapping your code in a with() except slightly less terrible because the code is sandboxed into a new iframe.

install

This module is depended upon by browserify, so you should just be able to require('vm') and it will just work. However if you want to use this module directly you can install it with npm:

npm install vm-browserify

license

MIT