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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T19:55:07+00:00 2026-05-15T19:55:07+00:00

I am creating a small application with a JavaScript client (run in the browser)

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I am creating a small application with a JavaScript client (run in the browser) and a Node.js server, communicating using WebSocket.

I would like to share code between the client and the server. I have only just started with Node.js and my knowledge of modern JavaScript is a little rusty, to say the least. So I am still getting my head around the CommonJS require() function. If I am creating my packages by using the ‘export’ object, then I cannot see how I could use the same JavaScript files in the browser.

I want to create a set of methods and classes that are used on both ends to facilitate encoding and decoding messages, and other mirrored tasks. However, the Node.js/CommonJS packaging systems seems to preclude me from creating JavaScript files that can be used on both sides.

I also tried using JS.Class to get a tighter OO model, but I gave up because I couldn’t figure out how to get the provided JavaScript files to work with require(). Is there something am I missing here?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T19:55:08+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 7:55 pm

    If you want to write a module that can be used both client side and server side, I have a short blog post on a quick and easy method: Writing for Node.js and the browser, essentially the following (where this is the same as window):

    (function(exports){
    
        // Your code goes here
    
       exports.test = function(){
            return 'hello world'
        };
    
    })(typeof exports === 'undefined'? this['mymodule']={}: exports);
    

    Alternatively there are some projects aiming to implement the Node.js API on the client side, such as Marak’s gemini.

    You might also be interested in DNode, which lets you expose a JavaScript function so that it can be called from another machine using a simple JSON-based network protocol.

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