Upgraded from Babel 6 to Babel 7.
The only significant change seems to be the way `@babel/plugin-transform-classes` handles classes differently from `babel-plugin-transform-es2015-classes`. In regular mode, the former injects a `_createClass` function that increases the bundle size, and in the latter it removes the safeguard checks. However, this is okay because we don't all classes in new features, and we want to deprecate class usage in the future in the react repo.
Co-authored-by: Luna Ruan <luna@fb.com>
Co-authored-by: Abdul Rauf <abdulraufmujahid@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Maksim Markelov <maks-markel@mail.ru>
Removes `--extract-errors` argument from CI build script command.
Instead, the author is expected to run `yarn extract-errors` locally
or manually edit the error code map.
The lint rule should be sufficient to catch unminified errors, but
as an extra precaution, I added a post-build step that greps the
production bundles. The post-build step works even if someone disables
the lint rule for a specific line or file.
The React Native build does not minify error messages in production,
but it still needs to run the error messages transform to compile
`invariant` calls to `ReactError`. To do this, I added a `noMinify`
option to the Babel plugin. I also renamed it from
`minify-error-messages` to the more generic `transform-error-messages`.
* Transform invariant to custom error type
This transforms calls to the invariant module:
```js
invariant(condition, 'A %s message that contains %s', adj, noun);
```
Into throw statements:
```js
if (!condition) {
if (__DEV__) {
throw ReactError(`A ${adj} message that contains ${noun}`);
} else {
throw ReactErrorProd(ERR_CODE, adj, noun);
}
}
```
The only thing ReactError does is return an error whose name is set
to "Invariant Violation" to match the existing behavior.
ReactErrorProd is a special version used in production that throws
a minified error code, with a link to see to expanded form. This
replaces the reactProdInvariant module.
As a next step, I would like to replace our use of the invariant module
for user facing errors by transforming normal Error constructors to
ReactError and ReactErrorProd. (We can continue using invariant for
internal React errors that are meant to be unreachable, which was the
original purpose of invariant.)
* Use numbers instead of strings for error codes
* Use arguments instead of an array
I wasn't sure about this part so I asked Sebastian, and his rationale
was that using arguments will make ReactErrorProd slightly slower, but
using an array will likely make all the functions that throw slightly
slower to compile, so it's hard to say which way is better. But since
ReactErrorProd is in an error path, and fewer bytes is generally better,
no array is good.
* Casing nit