What is exenv?
The exenv npm package is a utility library for managing environment-specific code in JavaScript applications. It allows developers to write conditional code based on the current execution environment, such as development, test, or production. This can be particularly useful for configuring application behavior without exposing sensitive environment details or for optimizing the application by excluding unnecessary code in production.
What are exenv's main functionalities?
Environment Checking
This feature allows developers to check if the DOM is available in the current environment. It's useful for avoiding errors in non-browser environments like server-side rendering.
if (exenv.canUseDOM) {
console.log('This code runs only if DOM is available');
}
Development vs Production Code
This feature enables conditional execution of code based on whether the environment is set to 'production' or not. It helps in implementing environment-specific logic such as logging and debugging.
if (exenv.env === 'production') {
console.log('Running in production mode');
} else {
console.log('Not running in production mode');
}
Other packages similar to exenv
envify
Envify is a package that replaces environment variables in your code during the build step with Browserify. It is similar to exenv in that it helps manage environment-specific code, but it does so by compiling time replacements rather than runtime checks.
dotenv
Dotenv is a module that loads environment variables from a .env file into process.env. While it serves a different purpose from exenv by managing environment variables, it similarly aids in configuring different behaviors based on the environment.
exenv
React's ExecutionEnvironment module extracted for use in other packages & components.
Usage
npm install exenv --save
var ExecutionEnvironment = require('exenv');
ExecutionEnvironment.canUseDOM
ExecutionEnvironment.canUseWorkers
ExecutionEnvironment.canUseEventListeners
ExecutionEnvironment.canUseViewport
Differences from React's ExecutionEnvironment
The ExecutionEnvironment
lib in React 0.13 includes an isInWorker
property, which is !canUseDOM
. This is highly specific to React internals and probably (a) hacky and (b) not useful to other packages, so it has been left out. Please open an issue with your thoughts if you disagree or have a better idea.
Why?
A number of packages and components use React's private ExecutionEnvironment lib to detect available features, particularly to detect server-side rendering, e.g
canUseDOM = require('react/lib/ExecutionEnvironment').canUseDOM; // BAD
It is bad practice to use React internals and this is likely to be broken / disabled in the future.
Use this package instead!