/** * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Libraries Imports * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * Recho has some built-in libraries that you can access directly through the * namespace `recho`. There is no extra setup needed. */ const now = recho.now(); //➜ 1757422790999 echo(now); /** * Refer to https://recho.dev/docs/api-reference for more built-in libraries. * * For using external libraries, Recho stdlib provides the `recho.require` * function to import one or more JavaScript packages. * * For example, let's import the `d3-time` package to count the number of days * between two dates. */ const d3Time = recho.require("d3-time"); const start = new Date(2025, 8, 1); const end = new Date(2025, 9, 1); //➜ 30 echo(d3Time.timeDay.count(start, end)); /** * The following example demonstrates how to import multiple packages at once. */ const d3Math = recho.require("d3-random", "d3-array"); //➜ [ 4, 1, 1, 7, 1, 0, 8, 3, 1, 5 ] echo(d3Math.range(10).map(d3Math.randomInt(0, 10))); /** * !! NOTE: Not all the libraries are importable with `recho.require`. !! * * If you see the following error when you try to import a library, it means * that the library is not satisfied the constraints of `d3-require`. (We use * `d3-require` under the hood.) */ //➜ { [RuntimeError: invalid module] input: "figlet", [Symbol(next.console.error.digest)]: "NEXT_CONSOLE_ERROR" } echo(figlet); const figlet = recho.require("figlet"); /** * If this happens, you can try to find a alternative package. Please refer to * https://github.com/d3/d3-require#browser-packages for more details. */