Package Exports
- fluid-resolve
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 (fluid-resolve) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
resolve - Fluid Community Edition
This was forked from version 1.1.7 of substack's node-resolve in order to incorporate a fix for issue #106 and some test cases.
Implements the node require.resolve()
algorithm
such that you can require.resolve()
on behalf of a file asynchronously and
synchronously
example
asynchronously resolve:
var resolve = require('resolve');
resolve('tap', { basedir: __dirname }, function (err, res) {
if (err) console.error(err)
else console.log(res)
});
$ node example/async.js
/home/substack/projects/node-resolve/node_modules/tap/lib/main.js
synchronously resolve:
var resolve = require('resolve');
var res = resolve.sync('tap', { basedir: __dirname });
console.log(res);
$ node example/sync.js
/home/substack/projects/node-resolve/node_modules/tap/lib/main.js
methods
var resolve = require('resolve')
resolve(id, opts={}, cb)
Asynchronously resolve the module path string id
into cb(err, res [, pkg])
, where pkg
(if defined) is the data from package.json
.
options are:
opts.basedir - directory to begin resolving from
opts.package -
package.json
data applicable to the module being loadedopts.extensions - array of file extensions to search in order
opts.readFile - how to read files asynchronously
opts.isFile - function to asynchronously test whether a file exists
opts.packageFilter - transform the parsed package.json contents before looking at the "main" field
opts.pathFilter(pkg, path, relativePath) - transform a path within a package
- pkg - package data
- path - the path being resolved
- relativePath - the path relative from the package.json location
- returns - a relative path that will be joined from the package.json location
opts.paths - require.paths array to use if nothing is found on the normal node_modules recursive walk (probably don't use this)
opts.moduleDirectory - directory (or directories) in which to recursively look for modules. default:
"node_modules"
default opts
values:
{
paths: [],
basedir: __dirname,
extensions: [ '.js' ],
readFile: fs.readFile,
isFile: function (file, cb) {
fs.stat(file, function (err, stat) {
if (err && err.code === 'ENOENT') cb(null, false)
else if (err) cb(err)
else cb(null, stat.isFile())
});
},
moduleDirectory: 'node_modules'
}
resolve.sync(id, opts)
Synchronously resolve the module path string id
, returning the result and
throwing an error when id
can't be resolved.
options are:
opts.basedir - directory to begin resolving from
opts.extensions - array of file extensions to search in order
opts.readFile - how to read files synchronously
opts.isFile - function to synchronously test whether a file exists
opts.packageFilter(pkg, pkgfile)
- transform the parsed package.jsoncontents before looking at the "main" field
opts.paths - require.paths array to use if nothing is found on the normal node_modules recursive walk (probably don't use this)
opts.moduleDirectory - directory (or directories) in which to recursively look for modules. default:
"node_modules"
default opts
values:
{
paths: [],
basedir: __dirname,
extensions: [ '.js' ],
readFileSync: fs.readFileSync,
isFile: function (file) {
try { return fs.statSync(file).isFile() }
catch (e) { return false }
},
moduleDirectory: 'node_modules'
}
resolve.isCore(pkg)
Return whether a package is in core.
install
With npm do:
npm install resolve
license
MIT