Note: Do guide me if something is missing.
So, I wanted to install a package from https://rnfirebase.io/auth/usage, but I have an npm project. The command on the website has only for yarn. I don't want to add yarn to project because (Is there any harm in using NPM and Yarn in the same project?) it states that it is not recommended.
So, then how do I install it with npm?
You have to use yarn, or you can look for a package that has the functions that you are looking for using npm
You can install it with npm just fine, don't worry. They are all package managers installing npm packages from the same repository. There is no difference in what you are installing or how they are installed. You can get different node_module structures, but for yarn you need config for that.
Yes its not recommended because it generates different lockfiles that will dictate different structures and versions in your node_modules folder. You want multiples devs to have the same "experience". However, lots of JS frameworks will come pre-configured with yarn, like React Native and you just end up having two lockfiles. One for npm and one for yarn. There is no harm in deleting the yarn file and keeping the package-lock. If you delete both, a new lockfile for the package manager you are using will be generated on npm i | yarn i | pnpm anyway.
To install it with npm just use npm i <PACKAGE_NAME> so npm i #react-native-firebase/app.
Here is the npm repo page for that package, https://www.npmjs.com/package/#react-native-firebase/app, notice the install command is npm! Only reason firebase devs only mention yarn is because they are hipsters ;)
I'm working on a vue.js frontend, and I need to patch a package to fit the special needs of the app. The package I'm trying to patch is 'vue-youtube' (not that it really matters). I'm trying to patch it with patch-package (https://www.npmjs.com/package/patch-package)
So basically :
I edited locally the /node_modules/vue-youtube/src/vue-youtube.js to fit my needs
I did add the postinstall script in my package.json : "scripts": { "postinstall": "patch-package" }
I did npm install patch-package --save-dev
Then I ran npx patch-package vue-youtube
It did create a vue-youtube+1.4.0.patch file in a /patches folder with my modifications
BUT, my modifications are not seen. When I do npm run serve and launch my webapp, the package used is still the one not edited. I tried running npm install before, without success. When I go to the /node_modules/vue-youtube/dist/vue-youtube.js (thankfully it is a small package so it is readable), I can see that indeed my modifications have not been "compiled".
What am I missing here ? I feel like I have followed eveything in the patch-package npm page..
Thanks
EDIT : Still investigating.. few more informations/questions :
my patch name is patches/vue-youtube+1.4.0.patch
when i run npm ls vue-youtube it returns just one element : vue-youtube#1.4.0
in my package.json the dependency listed is "vue-youtube": "^1.4.0", should it be different ? should it mention that it needs to be patched ?
EDIT 2 : I realized that I am not editing the node_modules/vue-youtube/dist/vue-youtube.js, but the node_modules/vue-youtube/src/vue-youtube.
If you edit the files in the dist folder, the patch works. (however I thought patch-package would allow me to edit the files in the src folder, in readable JS...)
WORKING SOLUTION :
If you edit the files directly in the dist/ folder of the package instead of the src/ folder, the patch works fine.
Adding below npm script in package.json after patching worked for me.
scripts: {
"prepare": "patch-package",
}
The lines from yarn documentation explains about prepare
For compatibility reasons, scripts called install, postinstall, prepublish, and prepare will all be called after your package has finished installing.
After adding this script in package.json, the changes of module file in patches folder has been patched into respective node module.
I was trying to do the exact same thing with some package, let's call it "some_package". When I saw the EDIT 2 my mind just connected the dots...
To test changes locally
Modify the files in node_modules/some_package/src folder and then, go to the node_modules/some_package and run:
$ npm install
$ npm run <name of the script that generates the dist folder>
No need to run npx patch-package nor postinstall step.
I think that this approach doesn't work for all packages, it depends on how the modified package's package.json is configured. Specifically, pay attention where the browser field is pointing (in my case ./dist/some_package.js).
CAVEAT: You will have to run npm install and npm run every time you make an update to the package.
To test changes and be able to share it among team members (when the package is on Github)
Make a fork of the package you want to modify.
Make all the changes you want to your forked version of the package.
Run the following to automatically update the package.json file to make the dependency point to your forked version:
$ npm install <github's user name>/<package's name of the forked repository>#<branch name> --save-prod
For instance, if your Github's user name is "johndoe", and you forked https://github.com/aurelia/framework, and you made a branch named "mycoolbranch" containing your changes, then it would be:
$ npm install johndoe/aurelia-framework#mycoolbranch --save-prod
Note that the --save-prod flag could be replaced with --save-dev if the dependency is just for development.
Take a look at this answer, it may help.
https://stackoverflow.com/a/71153240/9981565
For me it was happening because of version mismatch between package.json intended version of package and yarn.lock / package-lock.json
I cloned a repository from github which has a package-lock.json (but no package.json). Then in a git bash terminal I go to the directory and run npm install but I just get a message saying there is no package.json and then everything in package-lock.json gets deleted so it's basically empty except for the project name and version.
I thought running npm install with a package-lock.json in the directory was enough to re-create node_modules, but am I seriously misunderstanding how this works? By the way I have node 8.12.0 and npm 6.4.1 and am running on Windows 10. Also, I think the package-lock.json was created on a unix system so could there be problems when using package-lock.json on a different OS?
I already tried running npm init just to get a package.json file and then running npm install but that still didn't get me a node_modules folder.
Starting from Mar 5, 2018, you can run npm ci to install packages from package-lock.json.
npm ci bypasses a package’s package.json to install modules from a
package’s lockfile.
https://blog.npmjs.org/post/171556855892/introducing-npm-ci-for-faster-more-reliable
package-lock.json records the exact version and url of packages need to install, thus you can use npm to install them accordingly:
npm can install from urls that point to tarballs
--no-package-lock option to tell npm to not touch package-lock.json file
For example, to install all packages in package-lock.json:
cat package-lock.json | jq '.dependencies[].resolved' | xargs npm i --no-package-lock
jq is a command line tool to pares jq, you can write a simple JavaScript script to parse it instead (if you do not want to install jq or learn jq's query syntax).
AFAIK, the package-lock.json file relies on the presence of a package.json file, so you'll not be able to recreate your node_modules folder from the package-lock.json file alone (happy to be proved wrong here).
Therefore, your best bet is to (mis)use a module like auto-install that is capable of generating the package.json file based on a project's dependencies, as they appear in the files.
Install it globally (npm install -g auto-install), then you'll need to generate an empty package.json file for it to run (use npm init -y in your project root). Kick things off with the command auto-install and it should add the dependencies to the package.json file.
HTH
I am Learning React.js and i am using windows 8 OS.i have navigate to my root folder
1.Created the package.json file by npm init
2. install webpack by npm install -S webpack.now webpack has been downloaded to my modules folder
3. install webpack globally by typing npm install webpack -g
4. i am also having a webpack.config.js in my root folder which contains the source and ouput directory
5. when i type the webpack command i am getting the below error.
webpack is not recognized as a internal or external command,operable program or batch file
Better solution to this problem is to install Webpack globally.
This always works and it worked for me. Try below command.
npm install -g webpack
As an alternative, if you have Webpack installed locally, you can explicitly specify where Command Prompt should look to find it, like so:
node_modules\.bin\webpack
(This does assume that you're inside the directory with your package.json and that you've already run npm install webpack.)
I had this issue for a long time too. (webpack installed globally etc. but still not recognized)
It turned out that I haven't specified enviroment variable for npm (where is file webpack.cmd sitting)
So I add to my Path variable
%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\npm\
If you are using Powershell, you can type the following command to effectively add to your path :
[Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("Path", "$env:Path;%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\npm\", "User")
IMPORTANT : Don't forget to close and re-open your powershell window in order to apply this.
npm install -g webpack-dev-server will solve your issue
Try deleting node_modules in local directory and re-run npm install.
Maybe a clean install will fix the problem. This "command" removes all previous modules and re-installs them, perhaps while the webpack module is incompletely downloaded and installed.
npm clean-install
Add webpack command as an npm script in your package.json.
{
"name": "react-app",
"version": "1.0.0",
"scripts": {
"compile": "webpack --config webpack.config.js"
}
}
Then run
npm run compile
When the webpack is installed it creates a binary in ./node_modules/.bin folder. npm scripts also looks for executable created in this folder
Webpack CLI is now in a separate package and must be installed globally in order to use the 'webpack' command:
npm install -g webpack-cli
EDIT: Much has changed. Webpack folks do not recommend installing the CLI globally (or separately for that matter). This issue should be fixed now but the proper install command is:
npm install --save-dev webpack
This answer was originally intended as a "work-around" for the OPs problem.
We also experienced this problem and I like all the answers that suggest using a script defined in package.json.
For our solutions we often use the following sequence:
npm install --save-dev webpack-cli (if you're using webpack v4 or later, otherwise use npm install --save-dev webpack, see webpack installation, retrieved 19 Jan 2019)
npx webpack
Step 1 is a one-off. Step 2 also checks ./node_modules/.bin. You can add the second step as a npm script to package.json as well, for example:
{
...
"scripts": {
...
"build": "npx webpack --mode development",
...
},
...
}
and then use npm run build to execute this script.
Tested this solution with npm version 6.5.0, webpack version 4.28.4 and webpack-cli version 3.2.1 on Windows 10, executing all commands inside of a PowerShell window. My nodejs version is/was 10.14.2. I also tested this on Ubuntu Linux version 18.04.
I'd advise against installing webpack globally, in particular if you are working with a lot of different projects each of which may require a different version of webpack. Installing webpack globally locks you down to a particular version across all projects on the same machine.
npx webpack
It is worked for me. I'm using Windows 10 and I installed webpack locally.
For me it worked to install webpack separately. So simply:
$npm install
$npm install webpack
I'm not sure why this should be necessary, but it worked.
Just run your command line (cmd) as an administrator.
I've had same issue and just added the code block into my package.json file;
"scripts": {
"build": "webpack -d --progress --colors"
}
and then run command on terminal;
npm run build
you have to install webpack and webpack-cli in the same scope.
npm i -g webpack webpack-cli
or,
npm i webpack webpack-cli
if you install it locally you need to call it specifially
node_modules/.bin/webpack -v
Install WebPack globally
npm install --global webpack
I had this issue when upgrading to React 16.12.0.
I had two errors one regarding webpack and the other regarding the store when rendering the DOM.
Webpack Error:
webpack is not recognized as a internal or external command,operable program or batch file
Webpack Solution:
Close related VS Solution
Delete node_modules folder
Deleted package-lock.json
npm install
npm rebuild
Repeated this 2-3 times
Store Error:
Type Store<()> is not assignable to type Store<any, AnyAction>
Store Solution:
Suggestions to update my React version didn't fix this error for me, but irrespective I would recommend doing it.
My code ended up looking like this:
ReactDOM.render(
<Provider store={store as any}>
<ConnectedApp />
</Provider>,
document.getElementById('app')
);
As per this solution
This below-given commands worked for me.
npm cache clean --force
npm install -g webpack
Note - Run these commands as administrator. Once installed then close your command prompt and restart it to see the applied changes.
If you create a boilerplate folder for your JS projects so that you can use JS Modules, webpack and Babel are great tools.
Don't install webpack globally and after installing the most recent versions of both, your package.json file will be loaded up and ready to copy for future projects.
Make sure to delete the node_modules folder to decrease file size in your boilerplate folder and then to reinstall node_modules use npm install.
I forgot to run npm install and kept getting this error when trying to run my webpack dev-server until I realized I needed to run npm install to install node_modules and then it worked.
If you have just cloned a repo, you first need to run
npm install
The error your getting will be generated if you are missing project dependencies. The above command will download and install them.
I got the same error, none of the solutions worked for me, I reinstalled node and that repaired my environment, everything works again.
I also Face the same issue this command works for me
npm install --save-dev webpack
Try this folks, the cli needs to be updated to the latest version
npm install --save-dev #angular/cli#latest
credit goes go to R.Richards
https://stackoverflow.com/a/44526528/1908827
The fix for me was locally installing webpack as devDependency. Although I have it as devDependencies it was not installed in node_modules folder. So I ran
npm install --only=dev
Sometimes npm install -g webpack does not save properly. Better to use npm install webpack --save . It worked for me.
I had this same problem and I couldn't figure it out. I went through every line of code and couldn't find my error. Then I realized that I installed webpack in the wrong folder. My error was not paying attention to the folder I was installing webpack to.
I'm building a grunt javascript project with grunt, and I have a package.json file that looks something like:
{
... name, author, etc here ...
"dependencies": {
"grunt-html":"0.2.1"
}
}
I can run npm install to install grunt-html and this works just fine. But when I add new dependencies, all developers on the team must know to run npm install again. Is there a way to automatically install any packages that have not yet been installed? Should I just run npm install always to ensure I'm up to date?
Yes npm install is the easiest way IMO. Getting everyone familiar with the other npm commands makes managing deps easier as well. Such as:
npm ls to list out the currently installed modules.
Or the --save flag ie, npm install grunt-html --save to install and insert the package and version into your package.json.
npm prune to remove modules not included in your package.json.
Other ways to manage dependencies are to commit the node_modules folder in your repository to avoid other devs from having to run npm install. Or for more complex projects consider using npm shrinkwrap to lock down dependencies to specific versions: npm shrinkwrap docs.
I have not tried grunt-install-dependencies (https://github.com/ahutchings/grunt-install-dependencies), but it seems this may fullfill your needs. Just add the command install-dependencies as first task within your custom definfed grunt tasts, e.g.
grunt.registerTask('build', [ 'install-dependencies', 'useminPrepare', ... ]);