Package Exports
- @humanwhocodes/env
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (@humanwhocodes/env) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
Env utility
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Description
A utility for verifying that environment variables are present in Node.js. The main use case is to easily throw an error when an environment variable is missing. This is most useful immediately after a Node.js program has been initiated, to fail fast and let you know that environment variables haven't been setup correctly.
Usage
Node.js
npm install @humanwhocodes/env --save
# or
yarn add @humanwhocodes/envImport into your Node.js project:
// CommonJS
const { Env } = require("@humanwhocodes/env");
// ESM
import { Env } from "@humanwhocodes/env";By default, an Env instance will read from process.env.
Deno
Import into your Deno project:
import { Env } from "https://unpkg.com/@humanwhocodes/env/dist/env.js";By default, an Env instance will read from Deno.env().
Browser
It's recommended to import the minified version to save bandwidth:
import { Env } from "https://unpkg.com/@humanwhocodes/env/dist/env.min.js";However, you can also import the unminified version for debugging purposes:
import { Env } from "https://unpkg.com/@humanwhocodes/env/dist/env.js";By default, an Env instance will read from an empty object.
API
After importing, create a new instance of Env to start reading environment variables:
const env = new Env();
// read a variable and don't care if it's empty
const username = env.get("USERNAME");
// read a variable and use a default if empty
const username = env.get("USERNAME", "humanwhocodes");
// read a variable and throw an error if it doesn't exist
const username = env.require("USERNAME");You can also specify an alternate object to read variables from. This can be useful for testing or in the browser (where there is no environment variable to read from by default):
const env = new Env({
USERNAME: "humanwhocodes"
});
// read a variable and don't care if it's empty
const username = env.get("USERNAME");
// read a variable and throw an error if it doesn't exist
const username = env.require("PASSWORD");