ckeditor/ckeditor5-utils

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src/version.js

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/**
 * @license Copyright (c) 2003-2020, CKSource - Frederico Knabben. All rights reserved.
 * For licensing, see LICENSE.md or https://ckeditor.com/legal/ckeditor-oss-license
 */

/**
 * @module utils/version
 */

/* globals window, global */

import CKEditorError from './ckeditorerror';

const version = '19.0.0';

/* istanbul ignore next */
const windowOrGlobal = typeof window === 'object' ? window : global;

/* istanbul ignore next */
if ( windowOrGlobal.CKEDITOR_VERSION ) {
    /**
     * This error is thrown when due to a mistake in how CKEditor 5 was installed or initialized, some
     * of its modules were duplicated (evaluated and executed twice). Module duplication leads to inevitable runtime
     * errors.
     *
     * There are many situations in which some modules can be loaded twice. In the worst case scenario,
     * you may need to check your project for each of these issues and fix them all.
     *
     * # Trying to add a plugin to an existing build
     *
     * If you import an existing CKEditor 5 build and a plugin like this:
     *
     *        import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic';
     *        import Highlight from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-highlight/src/highlight';
     *
     * Then your project loads some CKEditor 5 packages twice. How does it happen?
     *
     * The build package contains a file which is already compiled with webpack. This means
     * that it contains all the necessary code from e.g. `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-engine` and `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-utils`.
     *
     * However, the `Highlight` plugin imports some of the modules from these packages, too. If you ask webpack to
     * build such a project, you will end up with the modules being included (and run) twice — first, because they are
     * included inside the build package, and second, because they are required by the `Highlight` plugin.
     *
     * Therefore, **you must never add plugins to an existing build** unless your plugin has no dependencies.
     *
     * Adding plugins to a build is done by taking the source version of this build (so, before it was built with webpack)
     * and adding plugins there. In this situation, webpack will know that it only needs to load each plugin once.
     *
     * Read more in the {@glink builds/guides/integration/installing-plugins "Installing plugins"} guide.
     *
     * # Confused an editor build with an editor implementation
     *
     * This scenario is very similar to the previous one, but has a different origin.
     *
     * Let's assume that you wanted to use CKEditor 5 from source, as explained in the
     * {@glink builds/guides/integration/advanced-setup#scenario-2-building-from-source "Building from source"} section
     * or in the {@glink framework/guides/quick-start "Quick start"} guide of CKEditor 5 Framework.
     *
     * The correct way to do so is to import an editor and plugins and run them together like this:
     *
     *        import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-editor-classic/src/classiceditor';
     *        import Essentials from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-essentials/src/essentials';
     *        import Paragraph from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-paragraph/src/paragraph';
     *        import Bold from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-basic-styles/src/bold';
     *        import Italic from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-basic-styles/src/italic';
     *
     *        ClassicEditor
     *            .create( document.querySelector( '#editor' ), {
     *                plugins: [ Essentials, Paragraph, Bold, Italic ],
     *                toolbar: [ 'bold', 'italic' ]
     *            } )
     *            .then( editor => {
     *                console.log( 'Editor was initialized', editor );
     *            } )
     *            .catch( error => {
     *                console.error( error.stack );
     *            } );
     *
     * However, you might have mistakenly imported a build instead of the source `ClassicEditor`. In this case
     * your imports will look like this:
     *
     *        import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic';
     *        import Essentials from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-essentials/src/essentials';
     *        import Paragraph from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-paragraph/src/paragraph';
     *        import Bold from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-basic-styles/src/bold';
     *        import Italic from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-basic-styles/src/italic';
     *
     * This creates the same situation as in the previous section because you use a build together with source plugins.
     *
     * Remember: `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-*` packages contain editor builds and `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-editor-*` contain source editors.
     *
     * # Loading two or more builds on one page
     *
     * If you use CKEditor 5 builds, you might have loaded two (or more) `ckeditor.js` files on one web page.
     * Check your web page for duplicated `<script>` elements or make sure your page builder/bundler includes CKEditor only once.
     *
     * If you want to use two different types of editors at once, see the
     * {@glink builds/guides/integration/advanced-setup#scenario-3-using-two-different-editors "Using two different editors"}
     * section.
     *
     * # Using outdated packages
     *
     * Building CKEditor 5 from source requires using multiple npm packages. These packages have their dependencies
     * to other packages. If you use the latest version of, for example, `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-editor-classic` with
     * an outdated version of `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-image`, npm or yarn will need to install two different versions of
     * `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-core` because `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-editor-classic` and `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-image` may require
     * different versions of the core package.
     *
     * The solution to this issue is to update all packages to their latest version. We recommend
     * using tools like [`node-check-updates`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm-check-updates) which simplify this process.
     *
     * # Conflicting version of dependencies
     *
     * This is a special case of the previous scenario. If you use CKEditor 5 with some third-party plugins,
     * it may happen that even if you use the latest versions of the official packages and the latest version of
     * these third-party packages, there will be a conflict between some of their dependencies.
     *
     * Such a problem can be resolved by either downgrading CKEditor 5 packages (which we do not recommend) or
     * asking the author of the third-party package to upgrade its depdendencies (or forking their project and doing this yourself).
     *
     * **Note:** All official CKEditor 5 packages (excluding integrations and `ckeditor5-dev-*` packages) are released in the
     * same major version. This is &mdash; in the `x.y.z`, the `x` is the same for all packages. This is the simplest way to check
     * whether you use packages coming from the same CKEditor 5 version. You can read more about versioning in the
     * {@glink framework/guides/support/versioning-policy Versioning policy} guide.
     *
     * # Packages were duplicated in `node_modules`
     *
     * In some situations, especially when calling `npm install` multiple times, it may happen
     * that npm will not correctly "deduplicate" packages.
     *
     * Normally, npm deduplicates all packages so, for example, `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-core` is installed only once in `node_modules/`.
     * However, it is known to fail to do so from time to time.
     *
     * We recommend checking if any of the steps listed below help:
     *
     * * `rm -rf node_modules && npm install` to make sure you have a clean `node_modules/` directory. This step
     * is known to help in most cases.
     * * If you use `yarn.lock` or `package-lock.json`, remove it before `npm install`.
     * * Check whether all CKEditor 5 packages are up to date and reinstall them
     * if you changed anything (`rm -rf node_modules && npm install`).
     *
     * If all packages are correct and compatible with each other, the steps above are known to help. If not, you may
     * try to check with `npm ls` how many times packages like `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-core`, `@ckeditor/ckeditor5-engine` and
     *`@ckeditor/ckeditor5-utils` are installed. If more than once, verify which package causes that.
     *
     * @error ckeditor-duplicated-modules
     */
    throw new CKEditorError(
        'ckeditor-duplicated-modules: Some CKEditor 5 modules are duplicated.',
        null
    );
} else {
    windowOrGlobal.CKEDITOR_VERSION = version;
}