It seems imports are not implemented in either Node 6 or Chrome 51 so Electron also does not support them, according to this post: https://discuss.atom.io/t/does-electron-support-es6/19366/18
And also the last electron doc doesn't use imports, they use destructuring syntax:
const { BrowserWindow } = require('electron').remote
// or
const { remote } = require('electron')
const { BrowserWindow } = remote
http://electron.atom.io/docs/api/remote/
But you can use babel with the require hook:
http://babeljs.io/docs/usage/require/
To be auto compile each required modules so you will be able to use imports.
Of course the script given to electron (the one that require babel) is not compiled so you need to make a bootstrap:
// bootwithbabel.js
require("babel-register");
require( process.argv.splice(2) );
In shell (sh):
electron bootwithbabel.js app.es
alias electrones="electron bootwithbabel.js "
electrones coron.es // ^^
Then in your app you can then write:
import electron from 'electron';
import { remote } from 'electron';
You can also import only the remote module:
import { remote } from 'electron';
But you can only import both in one statement:
import electron, { remote } from 'electron'
electron.ipcRenderer.on();
let win = new remote.BrowserWindow({width: 800, height: 600});
remote.getGlobal(name)
playground
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…