I just setup a test, and tried to npm install express even though express already exists globally on my system. To my surprise, instead of using the global version, it ended up re-installing a version locally!? Isn't it supposed to use the global version... Or am I suppose to use -g every time, even when I only want to use the existing global version. Otherwise, what's the point of installing anything locally!?
The answer is "NO". It isn't supposed to use your global version.
If you want to use your global version, then you doesn't need to execute npm install at all because it is already installed.
If you do it then, obviously, you are saying "I want to install it locally to my project". And more than that: "I want to install its latest version unless it is declared in my package.json with other explicitly specified version".
In fact, the actual question is: Why in the hell would you want to not install a dependency of your project locally? To have more version mismatch issues?
As #anshuman_singh says, best practice is to always do an npm install --save.
You are able to use globally installed packages, of course. It could be handy for fast testing code that you will drop just after a few hours or so.
But, anyway: If you doesn't have really hard disk or network bandwidth issues, installing all dependencies locally will avoid you too much trouble in the future.
On the other hand, uploading that modules to your code repository is also a bad idea (maybe that is what you were trying to avoid) because, with different versions of node, most native modules won't work if not rebuild. But most VCS support ignoring files and or directories that must not be uploaded.
For example, in git (.gitignore file):
**/node_modules
In summary:
npm init (if you didn't already it).
npm install --save for all your project dependencies.
npm install --save-dev for dependencies not needed in production (testing stuff).
Don't upload node_modules to your VCS.
After new checkout: npm install or npm install --production (to not install dev-dependencies).
npm install -g only for tools you will use in console.
This way, you are sure that you will have in production (or other dev environments) the exact same version of each package.
And, finally, if you ever want to upgrade some package to its latest version, simply run:
npm install --save <pagkage_name>#latest.
If you’re installing something that you want to use in your program, using require('whatever'), then install it locally, at the root of your project.
If you’re installing something that you want to use in your shell, on the command line or something, install it globally, so that its binaries end up in your PATH environment variable.
The first option is the best in my opinion. Simple, clear, explicit. The second is really handy if you are going to re-use the same library in a bunch of different projects
Install locally-
npm install moduleName
install locally and save in package.json-
npm install moduleName --save
install globally-
npm install moduleName -g
I'm using JointsWP (an excellent Foundation 6 port to Wordpress).
I'm using the Sass version and it's working great. However, I seem to have to install npm with every project. Is this nessesary?
Is there a way to install npm globally and link to it from my project? Or have the project find it automatically?
I think you are confused about what the command npm install actually does. npm install installs all the npm dependencies for your project into the node_modules directory. It doesn't actually install npm. To run npm install you have to have Node.js installed (npm is included with node).
So to answer your question, yes it is necessary to run npm install for every project.
Relevant Article: Global vs Local installation
The article above shared by Colin Marshall is great and sums up the answer perfectly.
In general, the rule of thumb is:
If you’re installing something that you want to use in your program,
using require('whatever'), then install it locally, at the root of
your project. If you’re installing something that you want to use in
your shell, on the command line or something, install it globally, so
that its binaries end up in your PATH environment variable.
So to answer your question, is it possible? Yes.
Is it recommended? No.
https://nodejs.org/en/blog/npm/npm-1-0-global-vs-local-installation/
You can install gulp sass globally with the command:
npm install -g gulp-sass
Hello I am just a noob and still learning. I have already downloaded and tried the chat tutorial of get-started part from socket.io. Now, I am again learning from another source. What's confusing me is that, do I always have to npm install in the beginning of every project after writing the dependencies in the package.json? Or is there any other way? I would be very glad if you could help me understand my confusion. Thank you!
Yes, before running, all dependencies must be installed. So you must run npm install.
When developing, you can use npm install --save <package_name> to install a dependency and automatically add it to package.json.
NPM means Node Package Manager. It is used to manage your dependencies to other node modules dynamically thanks to a configuration file called package.json. This way you can easily define the exact versions you need or a mask in order to always retrieve the stable ones for instance.
The command npm install allows to interpret your configuration file and then download the good versions (and this recursively).
What is the difference between:
npm install [package_name]
and:
npm install [package_name] --save
and:
npm install [package_name] --save-dev
What does this mean? And what is really the effect of --save and -dev keywords?
The difference between --save and --save-dev may not be immediately noticeable if you have tried them both on your own projects. So here are a few examples...
Let's say you were building an app that used the moment package to parse and display dates. Your app is a scheduler so it really needs this package to run, as in: cannot run without it. In this case you would use
npm install moment --save
This would create a new value in your package.json
"dependencies": {
...
"moment": "^2.17.1"
}
When you are developing, it really helps to use tools such as test suites and may need jasmine-core and karma. In this case you would use
npm install jasmine-core --save-dev
npm install karma --save-dev
This would also create a new value in your package.json
"devDependencies": {
...
"jasmine-core": "^2.5.2",
"karma": "^1.4.1",
}
You do not need the test suite to run the app in its normal state, so it is a --save-dev type dependency, nothing more. You can see how if you do not understand what is really happening, it is a bit hard to imagine.
Taken directly from NPM docs docs#dependencies
Dependencies
Dependencies are specified in a simple object that maps a package name
to a version range. The version range is a string that has one or
more space-separated descriptors. Dependencies can also be identified
with a tarball or git URL.
Please do not put test harnesses or transpilers in your dependencies
object. See devDependencies, below.
Even in the docs, it asks you to use --save-dev for modules such as test harnesses.
--save-dev is used to save the package for development purpose.
Example: unit tests, minification..
--save is used to save the
package required for the application to run.
By default, NPM simply installs a package under node_modules. When you're trying to install dependencies for your app/module, you would need to first install them, and then add them to the dependencies section of your package.json.
--save-dev adds the third-party package to the package's development dependencies. It won't be installed when someone runs npm install directly to install your package. It's typically only installed if someone clones your source repository first and then runs npm install in it.
--save adds the third-party package to the package's dependencies. It will be installed together with the package whenever someone runs npm install package.
Dev dependencies are those dependencies that are only needed for developing the package. That can include test runners, compilers, packagers, etc.
Both types of dependencies are stored in the package's package.json file. --save adds to dependencies, --save-dev adds to devDependencies
npm install documentation can be referred here.
--
Please note that --save is now the default option, since NPM 5. Therefore, it is not explicitly needed anymore. It is possible to run npm install without the --save to achieve the same result.
Let me give you an example,
You are a developer of a very SERIOUS npm library which uses different testing libraries to test the package.
Users download your library and want to use it in their code. Do they need to download your testing libraries as well? Maybe you use jest for testing and they use mocha. Do you want them to install jest as well? Just To run your library?
No. right? That's why they are in devDependencies.
When someone does, npm i yourPackage only the libraries required to RUN your library will be installed. Other libraries you used to bundle your code with or testing and mocking will not be installed because you put them in devDependencies. Pretty neat right?
So, Why do the developers need to expose the devDependancies?
Let's say your package is an open-source package and 100s of people are sending pull requests to your package. Then how they will test the package? They will git clone your repo and when they would do an npm i the dependencies as well as devDependencies.
Because they are not using your package. They are developing the package further, thus, in order to test your package they need to pass the existing test cases as well write new. So, they need to use your devDependencies which contain all the testing/building/mocking libraries that YOU used.
A perfect example of this is:
$ npm install typescript --save-dev
In this case, you'd want to have Typescript (a javascript-parseable coding language) available for development, but once the app is deployed, it is no longer necessary, as all of the code has been transpiled to javascript. As such, it would make no sense to include it in the published app. Indeed, it would only take up space and increase download times.
As suggested by #andreas-hultgren in this answer and according to the npm docs:
If someone is planning on downloading and using your module in their program, then they probably don't want or need to download and build the external test or documentation framework that you use.
However, for webapp development, Yeoman (a scaffolding tool that installs a peer-reviewed, pre-written package.json file amongst other things) places all packages in devDependencies and nothing in dependencies, so it appears that the use of --save-dev is a safe bet in webapp development, at least.
--save-dev saves semver spec into "devDependencies" array in your package descriptor file, --save saves it into "dependencies" instead.
--save-dev is used for modules used in development of the application,not require while running it in production environment
--save is used to add it in package.json and it is required for running of the application.
Example: express,body-parser,lodash,helmet,mysql all these are used while running the application use --save to put in dependencies while mocha,istanbul,chai,sonarqube-scanner all are used during development ,so put those in dev-dependencies .
npm link or npm install will also install the dev-dependency modules along with dependency modules in your project folder
Read Complete And Forget --save-dev Headache
Simplest answer is that --save-dev is useful when you are creating packages for other developers and want to host your package at NPM Registry like lodash, mongoose, express etc. When you are building or writing a Node Server there is no difference between --save and --save-dev because your Node Server implementation is private to you and you will never publish it on NPM.
How NPM Install Works
Whenever we install a new package using npm like npm install express then NPM installs that package to our system and put it into node_modules folder, now NPM will analyze the package.json file of newly installed package i.e express in this case, after analyzing NPM will install all those packages which were mentioned in dependencies section of package.json file of express package. After installing those packages on which express was dependent NPM again analyze the package.json file of all newly installed packages and again install the packages for them, this cycle goes on until all packages are available into node_modules folder to function properly. You can check package dependencies by running npm list in terminal where terminal should point location of your project directory.
How --save-dev Is Related To Above Explained Stuff
Suppose you want to create a new package like express, now while development of this new package you probably want to write some unit testing code and test the package with any other available testing package let's assume mocha in this case. Now you know mocha is only required to test the package not required to use the package. In this case you should install mocha using --save-dev flag, otherwise NPM will install it whenever a developer install your package using NPM. So if we want a dependency not installed when someone install our package from NPM we must install that package using --save-dev in development phase.
Last Thing
Do not mix --save-dev with collaboration development, if someone cloned your package code from a source version control system like github then NPM will surely install all devDependencies i.e package installed using --save-dev also.
Clear answers are already provided. But it's worth mentioning how devDependencies affects installing packages:
By default, npm install will install all modules listed as dependencies in package.json . With the --production flag (or when the NODE_ENV environment variable is set to production ), npm will not install modules listed in devDependencies .
See: https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/install
When you install an npm package using npm install <package-name>, you are installing it as a dependency.
The package is automatically listed in the package.json file, under the dependencies list (as of npm 5: before you had to manually specify --save).
ex. npm install lodash
After pressing enter check your package.json file.
"dependencies": {
"lodash": "4.x",
},
When you add the -D flag, or --save-dev, you are installing it as a development dependency, which adds it to the devDependencies list.
ex. npm install --save-dev lite-server
After pressing enter check your package.json file
"devDependencies": {
"lite-server": "^2.6.1"
},
Development dependencies are intended as development-only packages, that are unneeded in production. For example testing packages, webpack, or Babel.
When you go in production, if you type npm install and the folder contains a package.json file, they are installed, as npm assumes this is a development deploy.
You need to set the --production flag (npm install --production) to avoid installing those development dependencies.
All explanations here are great, but lacking a very important thing: How do you install production dependencies only? (without the development dependencies).
We separate dependencies from devDependencies by using --save or --save-dev.
To install all we use:
npm i
To install only production packages we should use:
npm i --only=production
You generally don't want to bloat production package with things that you only intend to use for Development purposes.
Use --save-dev (or -D) option to separate packages such as Unit Test frameworks (jest, jasmine, mocha, chai, etc.)
Any other packages that your app needs for Production, should be installed using --save (or -S).
npm install --save lodash //prod dependency
npm install -S moment // " "
npm install -S opentracing // " "
npm install -D jest //dev only dependency
npm install --save-dev typescript //dev only dependency
If you open the package.json file then you will see these entries listed under two different sections:
"dependencies": {
"lodash": "4.x",
"moment": "2.x",
"opentracing": "^0.14.1"
},
"devDependencies": {
"jest": "22.x",
"typescript": "^2.8.3"
},
--save-dev (only used in the development, not in production)
--save (production dependencies)
--global or -g (used globally i.e can be used anywhere in our local system)
People use npm on production to do wicked cool stuff, Node.js is an example of this, so you don't want all your dev tools being run.
If you are using gulp (or similar) to create build files to put on your server then it doesn't really matter.
Basically We Write
npm install package_name
But specially for Testing Purpose we don't need to run some package while Application is Running in Normal State so that Node introduce good way to solve this problem. Whenever we write
npm install package_name --save-dev
at that time this package is only installed for development purpose.
I want to add some of my ideas as
I think all differences will appear when someone uses your codes instead of using by yourself
For example, you write an HTTP library called node's request
In your library,
you used lodash to handle string and object, without lodash, your codes cannot run
If someone uses your HTTP library as a part of his code. Your codes will be compiled with his.
your codes need lodash, So you need to put in dependencies to compile
If you write a project like monaco-editor, which is a web editor,
you have bundled all your codes and your product env library using webpack, when build completed, only have a monaco-min.js
So someone doesn't care whether --save or --save-dependencies, only he needs is monaco-min.js
Summary:
If someone wants to compile your codes (use as a library),
put lodash which used by your codes into dependencies
If someone want to add more feature to your codes, he needs unit test and compiler, put these into dev-dependencies
as --save is default option for npm, so I use
npm i package
and for --save-dev, I use
npm i package -D
default option will install package as project dependency where as -D is for development dependencies like testing, lint etc. and install package for development process
you can find all the flags here https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v8/commands/npm-install