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Baapan brings the all of the NPM goodness right into your REPL. On-the-fly!!.
Using Node REPL for quick local testing is a common practice among JavaScript/Node developers. But the problem with the REPL is, you don't have the luxury to take advantage of the entire NPM ecosystem out-of-the-box.
An alternative is, using something like RunKit. But fiddling with sensitive data in an online tool is not the best choice for many developers.
While using Node REPL, if you feel you need an NPM module to quickly test something (e.g, lodash
to do some quick object/array manipulation, uuid
to quickly generate some uuid), you'll have to manually install it via NPM and load it onto the REPL. Here's how baapan
makes it easy!!!
Baapan intercepts require()
calls and automatically install the module if the module is not locally available. You can require()
whatever you want, and Baapan will require()
it for you? Don't you think it's cool??
Simply run:
npm install -g baapan
This will install baapan
CLI command.
You can launch Baapan by just running baapan
command on terminal after installation. baapan
will launch the NodeJS REPL for you.
$ baapan
This time I need to generate a random IP address. I can require chance
to do that.
Switching to workspace /Users/deepal/.baapan/workspace_13531_1583696915861
Workspace loaded!
> const chance = require('chance').Chance()
undefined
> chance.ip()
'213.15.210.129'
Baapan supports top-level REPL await
from node v10 and above. You can enable it by passing --experimental-repl-await
argument as follows:
e.g.
$ baapan --experimental-repl-await
Switching to workspace /Users/deepal/.baapan/workspace_13531_1583696915861
Workspace loaded!
> await Promise.resolve('It works')
'It works'
>
Every instance of baapan
REPL server has its own workspace independent of each other. All module installations are done within the boundary of the workspace. This helps you open multiple baapan
REPLs at once, install different modules without any conflicts. Current workspace for the REPL is automatically cleaned-up when you gracefully exit the REPL shell (e.g, pressing ctrl+c
twice or .exit
command).
Note! If the REPL process was killed forcefully, the workspace directory will not be cleaned up automatically. You have to clean up these stale workspace directories manually.
Workspaces are by-default created in $HOME/.baapan/
directory. You can see the workspace directory for your REPL session by reading the BAAPAN_WS_PATH
environment variable.
e.g,
> process.env.BAAPAN_WS_PATH
'/Users/djayasekara/.baapan/workspace_44023_1562678000424'
Baapan will not create a fresh workspace upon startup if the user has explicitly provided one using the BAAPAN_WS_PATH
environment variable.
If it was provided explicitly, baapan will not clean up the workspace when the session is closed and you can persist the workspace and modules you install.
You can explicitly provide BAAPAN_WS_PATH
as follows:
e.g.
$ set process.env.BAAPAN_WS_PATH=D:\nodejs\baapan-modules-repo
$ baapan
Switching to workspace D:\nodejs\baapan-modules-repo
Workspace loaded!
> process.env.BAAPAN_WS_PATH
'D:\\nodejs\\baapan-modules-repo'
$ BAAPAN_WS_PATH=/Users/johndoe/baapan-modules-repo baapan
Switching to workspace /Users/johndoe/baapan-modules-repo
Workspace loaded!
> process.env.BAAPAN_WS_PATH
'/Users/johndoe/baapan-modules-repo'
Feel free to drop any issues/feature requests/PRs at any time!!
baapan
i.e, "බාපං" in Sinhala language is the translation for fetch/download 🇱🇰
FAQs
Super Cool NPM Playground right on the Node REPL
The npm package baapan receives a total of 7 weekly downloads. As such, baapan popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that baapan demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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