I had tried that earlier but got an error when calling 
BindToCurrentContext. I'm gonna make a few more tests to see if I can make 
it work like that. Thanks for the suggestion.

On Monday, November 14, 2016 at 4:55:33 AM UTC-2, Yang Guo wrote:
>
> If you are only interested in sharing code between contexts, but not 
> actual objects, you don't have to set security tokens. You can 
> use ScriptCompiler::CompileUnboundScript to compile a script. The compile 
> result can be then bound to a context via 
> UnboundScript::BindToCurrentContext and run.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Yang
>
> On Monday, November 14, 2016 at 12:48:38 AM UTC+1, George Marques wrote:
>>
>> For starters, I want two things:
>>
>>    1. Have a JS file with global functions to use in my application. I 
>>    already the global object set with the C++ functions, but also need to 
>> mix 
>>    the JS ones since it's a lot faster sometimes.
>>    2. Have a module system akin to Node.js/CommonJS and load JS files 
>>    from the file system.
>>
>> Also, I want both of those things to work across multiple contexts, since 
>> each script in my application runs in a different context and I have a 
>> bunch of scripts.
>>
>> So, I expected that it would be possible to pre-compile a script in one 
>> temporary context then run it in each of the other contexts to add the 
>> global functions. It turned out that none of my tests to do so worked (and 
>> I really don't understand the cryptic error messages I get, something like 
>> that 
>> == 0 || (*reinterpret_cast<v8::internal::Object* 
>> const*>(that))->IsJSFunction() and similar stuff). Tried to use the same 
>> security token in both contexts, use ScriptCompiler::CompileUnbound()
>>  and Script::GetUnboundScript() (those failed when using 
>> BindToCurrentContext() later).
>>
>> Maybe there's a better way to do this, but I am completely thrown off by 
>> the absence of documentation and reference material (or my inability to 
>> find them, though I accomplished quite a lot until now without needing to 
>> ask). Anyway, if there's some easy and fast way to do both of my points 
>> above without context-switching then please point me the way.
>>
>> My main question that (I think) will solve my problem: How to share a 
>> compiled script between different contexts?
>>
>> Thanks in advance.
>>
>

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