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aliased

v1.0.0

Published

Allow explicit aliasing of packages

Downloads

4

Readme

aliased

Simple module aliasing.

EXAMPLE

package.json:

{
  "aliases": {
    "underscore": "lodash"
  }
}

example.js:

const _ = require('underscore')
…
$ node -r aliased example.js // uses lodash instead of underscore

Or…

server.js:

require('aliased').register()
const example = require('./example.js') // uses lodash instead of underscore

USAGE

This module provides simple module aliasing. Aliases go in your package.json in the aliases property. The key is the name of the alias, the value is the name of the actual package.

While you can provide aliases of relative requires, eg require('./foo') this treats the string as opaque, so it'll catch anyone requiring the relative path, even if it would oridinarly point at a different file.

Similarly, values can be relative, but they're substituted literally and so anything using them that's not in the same path as your package root will probably have a bad day.

So... probably don't use relative paths with this. module-alias and path-alias are better choices for that.

DISCLAIMER

I'm not saying this module is a good idea. Loading something different off disk than you required is probably going to lead to confusion. But if you must have aliases, it's an option.

PRIOR ART

  • module-alias to treat local files like packages.
  • getmod is an alternative module loader (eg, thing other than require) with aliases.
  • load-alias is another alternative module loader with aliases.
  • path-alias to treat local files like packages.