How to use package installed locally in node_modules?












368














How do I use a local version of a module in node.js. For example, in my app, I installed coffee-script:



npm install coffee-script


This installs it in ./node_modules and the coffee command is in ./node_modules/.bin/coffee. Is there a way to run this command when I'm in my project's main folder? I guess I'm looking for something similar to bundle exec in bundler. Basically, I'd like to specify a version of coffee-script that everyone involved with the project should use.



I know I can add the -g flag to install it globally so coffee works fine anywhere, but what if I wanted to have different versions of coffee per project?










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  • 6




    A lot of instructions I read say things like npm install niftycommand and then niftycommand. But this will never work unless you have ./node_modules/.bin in your path, will it?
    – Bennett McElwee
    Sep 20 '16 at 5:03






  • 1




    There is a very good writeup here: firstdoit.com/… — Basically it recommends you to put your coffee command into the npm scripts section, like "build": "coffee -co target/directory source/directoy", so you can run npm run build` from the terminal afterwards.
    – Benny Neugebauer
    Jan 22 '17 at 21:27










  • @BennyNeugebauer indeed, that's what I've been doing lately instead of messing with PATH
    – typeoneerror
    Feb 2 '17 at 17:36






  • 3




    Use npx which comes with npm 5.2.0 medium.com/@maybekatz/…
    – onmyway133
    Mar 14 at 13:18
















368














How do I use a local version of a module in node.js. For example, in my app, I installed coffee-script:



npm install coffee-script


This installs it in ./node_modules and the coffee command is in ./node_modules/.bin/coffee. Is there a way to run this command when I'm in my project's main folder? I guess I'm looking for something similar to bundle exec in bundler. Basically, I'd like to specify a version of coffee-script that everyone involved with the project should use.



I know I can add the -g flag to install it globally so coffee works fine anywhere, but what if I wanted to have different versions of coffee per project?










share|improve this question




















  • 6




    A lot of instructions I read say things like npm install niftycommand and then niftycommand. But this will never work unless you have ./node_modules/.bin in your path, will it?
    – Bennett McElwee
    Sep 20 '16 at 5:03






  • 1




    There is a very good writeup here: firstdoit.com/… — Basically it recommends you to put your coffee command into the npm scripts section, like "build": "coffee -co target/directory source/directoy", so you can run npm run build` from the terminal afterwards.
    – Benny Neugebauer
    Jan 22 '17 at 21:27










  • @BennyNeugebauer indeed, that's what I've been doing lately instead of messing with PATH
    – typeoneerror
    Feb 2 '17 at 17:36






  • 3




    Use npx which comes with npm 5.2.0 medium.com/@maybekatz/…
    – onmyway133
    Mar 14 at 13:18














368












368








368


138





How do I use a local version of a module in node.js. For example, in my app, I installed coffee-script:



npm install coffee-script


This installs it in ./node_modules and the coffee command is in ./node_modules/.bin/coffee. Is there a way to run this command when I'm in my project's main folder? I guess I'm looking for something similar to bundle exec in bundler. Basically, I'd like to specify a version of coffee-script that everyone involved with the project should use.



I know I can add the -g flag to install it globally so coffee works fine anywhere, but what if I wanted to have different versions of coffee per project?










share|improve this question















How do I use a local version of a module in node.js. For example, in my app, I installed coffee-script:



npm install coffee-script


This installs it in ./node_modules and the coffee command is in ./node_modules/.bin/coffee. Is there a way to run this command when I'm in my project's main folder? I guess I'm looking for something similar to bundle exec in bundler. Basically, I'd like to specify a version of coffee-script that everyone involved with the project should use.



I know I can add the -g flag to install it globally so coffee works fine anywhere, but what if I wanted to have different versions of coffee per project?







node.js coffeescript npm node-modules






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edited Sep 29 '15 at 8:49









kenorb

64.6k27388391




64.6k27388391










asked Mar 13 '12 at 7:31









typeoneerror

32.8k30115201




32.8k30115201








  • 6




    A lot of instructions I read say things like npm install niftycommand and then niftycommand. But this will never work unless you have ./node_modules/.bin in your path, will it?
    – Bennett McElwee
    Sep 20 '16 at 5:03






  • 1




    There is a very good writeup here: firstdoit.com/… — Basically it recommends you to put your coffee command into the npm scripts section, like "build": "coffee -co target/directory source/directoy", so you can run npm run build` from the terminal afterwards.
    – Benny Neugebauer
    Jan 22 '17 at 21:27










  • @BennyNeugebauer indeed, that's what I've been doing lately instead of messing with PATH
    – typeoneerror
    Feb 2 '17 at 17:36






  • 3




    Use npx which comes with npm 5.2.0 medium.com/@maybekatz/…
    – onmyway133
    Mar 14 at 13:18














  • 6




    A lot of instructions I read say things like npm install niftycommand and then niftycommand. But this will never work unless you have ./node_modules/.bin in your path, will it?
    – Bennett McElwee
    Sep 20 '16 at 5:03






  • 1




    There is a very good writeup here: firstdoit.com/… — Basically it recommends you to put your coffee command into the npm scripts section, like "build": "coffee -co target/directory source/directoy", so you can run npm run build` from the terminal afterwards.
    – Benny Neugebauer
    Jan 22 '17 at 21:27










  • @BennyNeugebauer indeed, that's what I've been doing lately instead of messing with PATH
    – typeoneerror
    Feb 2 '17 at 17:36






  • 3




    Use npx which comes with npm 5.2.0 medium.com/@maybekatz/…
    – onmyway133
    Mar 14 at 13:18








6




6




A lot of instructions I read say things like npm install niftycommand and then niftycommand. But this will never work unless you have ./node_modules/.bin in your path, will it?
– Bennett McElwee
Sep 20 '16 at 5:03




A lot of instructions I read say things like npm install niftycommand and then niftycommand. But this will never work unless you have ./node_modules/.bin in your path, will it?
– Bennett McElwee
Sep 20 '16 at 5:03




1




1




There is a very good writeup here: firstdoit.com/… — Basically it recommends you to put your coffee command into the npm scripts section, like "build": "coffee -co target/directory source/directoy", so you can run npm run build` from the terminal afterwards.
– Benny Neugebauer
Jan 22 '17 at 21:27




There is a very good writeup here: firstdoit.com/… — Basically it recommends you to put your coffee command into the npm scripts section, like "build": "coffee -co target/directory source/directoy", so you can run npm run build` from the terminal afterwards.
– Benny Neugebauer
Jan 22 '17 at 21:27












@BennyNeugebauer indeed, that's what I've been doing lately instead of messing with PATH
– typeoneerror
Feb 2 '17 at 17:36




@BennyNeugebauer indeed, that's what I've been doing lately instead of messing with PATH
– typeoneerror
Feb 2 '17 at 17:36




3




3




Use npx which comes with npm 5.2.0 medium.com/@maybekatz/…
– onmyway133
Mar 14 at 13:18




Use npx which comes with npm 5.2.0 medium.com/@maybekatz/…
– onmyway133
Mar 14 at 13:18












22 Answers
22






active

oldest

votes


















465














UPDATE: As Seyeong Jeong points out in their answer below, since npm 5.2.0 you can use npx [command], which is more convenient.



OLD ANSWER for versions before 5.2.0:



The problem with putting



./node_modules/.bin


into your PATH is that it only works when your current working directory is the root of your project directory structure (i.e. the location of node_modules)



Independent of what your working directory is, you can get the path of locally installed binaries with



npm bin


To execute a locally installed coffee binary independent of where you are in the project directory hierarchy you can use this bash construct



PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH coffee


I aliased this to npm-exec



alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH'


So, now I can



npm-exec coffee


to run the correct copy of coffee no matter of where I am



$ pwd
/Users/regular/project1

$ npm-exec which coffee
/Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

$ cd lib/
$ npm-exec which coffee
/Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

$ cd ~/project2
$ npm-exec which coffee
/Users/regular/project2/node_modules/.bin/coffee





share|improve this answer



















  • 17




    you can even go one step further and alias coffee="npm-exec coffee"
    – regular
    Mar 18 '13 at 6:12








  • 6




    The output changes when you cd into another project. It does not change when you cd within a project. npm bin searches the chain of 'ancestor directories' to the cwd for a node_modules directory. This is exactly the desired behavior if you specifically want to use the binaries of modules listed in the project's package.json.
    – regular
    Oct 3 '13 at 9:12






  • 9




    oh gosh! do I really have to do something like that in order to have my local modules working? it's quite impracticable to explain it to a team! there's nothing a little bit more straightforward?
    – Alexian
    Apr 24 '15 at 17:12






  • 14




    You can always use npm scripts since they always search the local binaries first. You can set up aliases to each of your binaries there or just use generic names like "build".
    – Joe Zim
    Sep 22 '15 at 1:47






  • 6




    @philosodad, actually no, you don't. The PATH will be back to what it was before the command invocation. Setting an environment variable in the same line, before running a command only affects that command's environment.
    – regular
    Sep 22 '15 at 6:28



















267














Nice example



You don't have to manipulate $PATH anymore!



From npm@5.2.0, npm ships with npx package which lets you run commands from a local node_modules/.bin or from a central cache.



Simply run:



$ npx [options] <command>[@version] [command-arg]...


By default, npx will check whether <command> exists in $PATH, or in the local project binaries, and execute that.



Calling npx <command> when <command> isn't already in your $PATH will automatically install a package with that name from the NPM registry for you, and invoke it. When it's done, the installed package won’t be anywhere in your globals, so you won’t have to worry about pollution in the long-term. You can prevent this behaviour by providing --no-install option.



For npm < 5.2.0, you can install npx package manually by running the following command:



$ npm install -g npx





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  • 27




    Definitely should be the modern accepted answer!
    – Mike Rapadas
    Sep 27 '17 at 8:22






  • 10




    I think this needs to be higher up on the thread.
    – wpcarro
    Jan 5 at 19:51










  • I dont like installing 3rd party global npm packages while npm and package.json provides nearly same functionality.
    – guneysus
    Mar 28 at 6:27






  • 3




    This saved me a ton of headache! How is this not the accepted answer? :-)
    – JackWilson
    Jun 1 at 9:13










  • If "Path must be a string. Received undefined" message appears, here is a fix: github.com/zkat/npx/issues/144#issuecomment-391031816
    – Valeriy Katkov
    Aug 2 at 15:56



















84














Use the npm bin command to get the node modules /bin directory of your project



$ $(npm bin)/<binary-name> [args]


e.g.



$ $(npm bin)/bower install





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  • 4




    I like this simple and generic solution. Makes an alias seem unnecessary.
    – Matt Montag
    May 31 '15 at 22:13










  • Seems to be the next best solution that is elegant and more secure than having to do export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"
    – jontsai
    Sep 9 '15 at 23:16






  • 1




    @inf3rno the command is $(npm bin)/jasmine, not node $(npm bin)/jasmine (you probably figured it out but clarifying for others).
    – jassa
    Aug 19 '16 at 19:32








  • 5




    Not a bad solution, but it doesn't run on a standard windows command line with $. Putting it in the package.json scripts section is a better approach I feel, since it's more compatible.
    – Timothy Gonzalez
    Sep 30 '16 at 22:26



















72














Use npm run[-script] <script name>



After using npm to install the bin package to your local ./node_modules directory, modify package.json to add <script name> like this:



$ npm install --save learnyounode
$ edit packages.json
>>> in packages.json
...
"scripts": {
"test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
"learnyounode": "learnyounode"
},
...
$ npm run learnyounode


It would be nice if npm install had a --add-script option or something or if npm run would work without adding to the scripts block.






share|improve this answer



















  • 5




    I found this approach to be more uniform when dealing with multiple developers on a project - it avoids the need to configure anything locally... you just npm install then you have access to your dev dependencies. The only minor down side is you need to npm run eslint (or whatever). You can create a script called "start" that runs gulp so that you only need to type npm start to start your dev server. Pretty cool stuff and no bash goodness, so your windows friends still like you. :)
    – jpoveda
    Sep 21 '15 at 21:28






  • 1




    adding an alias to put $(npm bin) on your path is clever, but the fact that this will work for people without local config wins my heart
    – Conrad.Dean
    Mar 25 '16 at 12:37






  • 8




    this needs more upvotes! Pass args to your scripts after -- like: npm run learnyounode -- --normal-switches --watch -d *.js
    – ptim
    Jun 17 '16 at 8:53










  • I also find this the best solution. There is an in-depth explanation here: lostechies.com/derickbailey/2012/04/24/…
    – adampasz
    Jul 24 '16 at 4:41










  • Wow, I can't believe I looked passed the scripts section. This is truly a good solution.
    – Timothy Gonzalez
    Sep 30 '16 at 22:23



















43














Use npm-run.



From the readme:



npm-run



Find & run local executables from node_modules



Any executable available to an npm lifecycle script is available to npm-run.



Usage



$ npm install mocha # mocha installed in ./node_modules
$ npm-run mocha test/* # uses locally installed mocha executable


Installation



$ npm install -g npm-run





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  • 6




    No longer, see npx referenced above... stackoverflow.com/a/45164863/3246805
    – t.j.
    Sep 1 '17 at 19:00



















39














Update: I no longer recommend this method, both for the mentioned security reasons and not the least the newer npm bin command. Original answer below:



As you have found out, any locally installed binaries are in ./node_modules/.bin. In order to always run binaries in this directory rather than globally available binaries, if present, I suggest you put ./node_modules/.bin first in your path:



export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"


If you put this in your ~/.profile, coffee will always be ./node_modules/.bin/coffee if available, otherwise /usr/local/bin/coffee (or whatever prefix you are installing node modules under).






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    that's probably the best solution. I also created a bash script called "watch" in my project: ./node_modules/.bin/coffee --output lib/ --compile --bare --watch src
    – typeoneerror
    Mar 13 '12 at 18:27








  • 66




    Danger, Will Robinson! Use of relative paths in your $PATH opens up a security hole the size of a planet, especially if you put them right up front as the first item. If the directory you're in is writable by everyone (say somewhere in /tmp), any process or user can hijack your session by putting malicious versions of ordinary commands (like ls, cp, etc.) there. These may spawn 'invisible' sub-shells capturing your passwords, etcetera.
    – ack
    Feb 28 '14 at 20:40










  • will only work in the root and no other places. the alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH' is slicker.
    – oligofren
    May 5 '15 at 16:21






  • 1




    How bad is this if you don't put it as the first thing in your PATH, but the last (using the $(npm bin) form)? so they can't overwrite your existing stuff, and you would have been trusting the executables in the npm bin directory already regardless of the PATH var; would the threat model be that a) someone malicious gets access to your file system, b) they add executables with names that are close to those system tools, and c) you mistype? Trying to understand scenarios that make this bad, given that you're already trusting foreign executables when using npm-installed programs.
    – Omar Diab
    Jul 15 '16 at 1:24












  • You can do shell tricks with an alias and you can path manually and this "works" but it is not quite ideal.
    – al_gor_rithm
    Dec 18 '17 at 19:42



















23














The PATH solution has the issue that if $(npm bin) is placed in your .profile/.bashrc/etc it is evaluated once and is forever set to whichever directory the path was first evaluated in. If instead you modify the current path then every time you run the script your path will grow.



To get around these issues, I create a function and used that. It doesn't modify your environment and is simple to use:



function npm-exec {
$(npm bin)/$@
}


This can then be used like this without making any changes to your environment:



npm-exec r.js <args>





share|improve this answer

















  • 2




    I like this! I simply named my function n
    – jontsai
    Sep 9 '15 at 23:20










  • This is great! Thanks for sharing. I added a fish shell version below.
    – Leon li
    May 19 '17 at 16:49



















18














If you want to keep npm, then npx should do what you need.





If switching to yarn (a npm replacement by facebook) is an option for you, then you can call:



 yarn yourCmd


scripts inside the package.json will take precedence, if none is found it will look inside the ./node_modules/.bin/ folder.



It also outputs what it ran:



$ yarn tsc
yarn tsc v0.27.5
$ "/home/philipp/rate-pipeline/node_modules/.bin/tsc"


So you don't have to setup scripts for each command in your package.json.





If you had a script defined at .scripts inside your package.json:



"tsc": "tsc" // each command defined in the scripts will be executed from `./node_modules/.bin/` first


yarn tsc would be equivalent to yarn run tsc or npm run tsc:



 yarn tsc
yarn tsc v0.27.5
$ tsc





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    6














    If you want your PATH variable to correctly update based on your current working directory, add this to the end of your .bashrc-equivalent (or after anything that defines PATH):



    __OLD_PATH=$PATH
    function updatePATHForNPM() {
    export PATH=$(npm bin):$__OLD_PATH
    }

    function node-mode() {
    PROMPT_COMMAND=updatePATHForNPM
    }

    function node-mode-off() {
    unset PROMPT_COMMAND
    PATH=$__OLD_PATH
    }

    # Uncomment to enable node-mode by default:
    # node-mode


    This may add a short delay every time the bash prompt gets rendered (depending on the size of your project, most likely), so it's disabled by default.



    You can enable and disable it within your terminal by running node-mode and node-mode-off, respectively.






    share|improve this answer





























      6














      I prefer to not rely on shell aliases or another package.



      Adding a simple line to scripts section of your package.json, you can run local npm commands like



      npm run webpack



      package.json



      {
      "scripts": {
      "test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
      "webpack": "webpack"
      },
      "devDependencies": {
      "webpack": "^4.1.1",
      "webpack-cli": "^2.0.11"
      }
      }






      share|improve this answer





























        4














        I've always used the same approach as @guneysus to solve this problem, which is creating a script in the package.json file and use it running npm run script-name.



        However, in the recent months I've been using npx and I love it.



        For example, I downloaded an Angular project and I didn't want to install the Angular CLI globally. So, with npx installed, instead of using the global angular cli command (if I had installed it) like this:



        ng serve


        I can do this from the console:



        npx ng serve


        Here's an article I wrote about NPX and that goes deeper into it
        https://medium.com/ninjadevs/with-npx-you-can-forget-about-installing-unnecessary-npm-packages-globally-and-do-even-more-a28b797ea449






        share|improve this answer































          3














          zxc is like "bundle exec" for nodejs. It is similar to using PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH:



          $ npm install -g zxc
          $ npm install gulp
          $ zxc which gulp
          /home/nathan/code/project1/node_modules/.bin/gulp





          share|improve this answer





























            3














            Same @regular 's accepted solution, but Fish shell flavour



            if not contains (npm bin) $PATH
            set PATH (npm bin) $PATH
            end





            share|improve this answer































              3














              For Windows



              Store the following in a file called npm-exec.bat and add it to your %PATH%



              @echo off
              set cmd="npm bin"
              FOR /F "tokens=*" %%i IN (' %cmd% ') DO SET modules=%%i
              "%modules%"%*


              Usage



              Then you can use it like
              npm-exec <command> <arg0> <arg1> ...



              For example



              To execute wdio installed in local node_modules directory, do:



              npm-exec wdio wdio.conf.js


              i.e. it will run .node_modules.binwdio wdio.conf.js






              share|improve this answer























              • This doesn't work while passing more than 1 argument. E.g. npm-exec gulp <some_task>
                – OK999
                Oct 4 '16 at 15:55










              • @OK9999 I'm sure some minor modification will allow passing arguments (because when you pass it here, it's coming in quoted in ""); What I suggest is copy paste the gulp file from bin to your project root (some modifications needed of the file, but it will just work without writing new code etc)
                – Dheeraj Bhaskar
                Oct 11 '16 at 18:45












              • Yes, i ended up doing so. The node_modules folder have to be in the folder where the gulpfile exist
                – OK999
                Oct 11 '16 at 18:53



















              2














              You can also use direnv and change the $PATH variable only in your working folder.



              $ cat .envrc
              > export PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH





              share|improve this answer





















              • use with direnv. direnv.net
                – kuboon
                Jan 12 '17 at 9:31





















              2














              Add this script to your .bashrc. Then you can call coffee or anyhting locally. This is handy for your laptop, but don't use it on your server.



              DEFAULT_PATH=$PATH;

              add_local_node_modules_to_path(){
              NODE_MODULES='./node_modules/.bin';
              if [ -d $NODE_MODULES ]; then
              PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH:$NODE_MODULES;
              else
              PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH;
              fi
              }

              cd () {
              builtin cd "$@";
              add_local_node_modules_to_path;
              }

              add_local_node_modules_to_path;


              note: this script makes aliase of cd command, and after each call of cd it checks node_modules/.bin and add it to your $PATH.



              note2: you can change the third line to NODE_MODULES=$(npm bin);. But that would make cd command too slow.






              share|improve this answer



















              • 1




                Use $(npm bin) instead of hardcoding ./node_modules/.bin.
                – bfontaine
                Jan 25 '17 at 17:27












              • That makes sense. I've updated the code above.
                – Tsutomu Kawamura
                Jan 26 '17 at 2:12










              • Hmm, $(npm bin) seems too slow to use with each cd command. I've restore the code and added a note for it.
                – Tsutomu Kawamura
                Jan 26 '17 at 2:28



















              2














              For Windows use this:



              /* cmd into "node_modules" folder */
              "%CD%.bingrunt" --version





              share|improve this answer































                1














                I encountered the same problem and I don't particularly like using aliases (as regular's suggested), and if you don't like them too then here's another workaround that I use, you first have to create a tiny executable bash script, say setenv.sh:



                #!/bin/sh

                # Add your local node_modules bin to the path
                export PATH="$(npm bin):$PATH"

                # execute the rest of the command
                exec "$@"


                and then you can then use any executables in your local /bin using this command:



                ./setenv.sh <command>
                ./setenv.sh 6to5-node server.js
                ./setenv.sh grunt


                If you're using scripts in package.json then:



                ...,
                scripts: {
                'start': './setenv.sh <command>'
                }





                share|improve this answer



















                • 2




                  this setenv script isn't necessary for package.json scripts. npm already prepends the local node_modules/.bin directory to path for you when executing npm run {scripts}.
                  – jasonkarns
                  Feb 6 '15 at 19:39



















                1














                I'd love to know if this is an insecure/bad idea, but after thinking about it a bit I don't see an issue here:



                Modifying Linus's insecure solution to add it to the end, using npm bin to find the directory, and making the script only call npm bin when a package.json is present in a parent (for speed), this is what I came up with for zsh:



                find-up () {
                path=$(pwd)
                while [[ "$path" != "" && ! -e "$path/$1" ]]; do
                path=${path%/*}
                done
                echo "$path"
                }

                precmd() {
                if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                new_bin=$(npm bin)
                if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                fi
                else
                if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                fi
                fi
                }


                For bash, instead of using the precmd hook, you can use the $PROMPT_COMMAND variable (I haven't tested this but you get the idea):



                __add-node-to-path() {
                if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                new_bin=$(npm bin)
                if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                fi
                else
                if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                fi
                fi
                }

                export PROMPT_COMMAND="__add-node-to-path"





                share|improve this answer























                • Adding npm bin to end of $PATH may not execute what user expects: basically another executable but more probably a globally installed package with another version !
                  – LoganMzz
                  Nov 8 '17 at 13:46





















                1














                I am a Windows user and this is what worked for me:



                // First set some variable - i.e. replace is with "xo"
                D:projectroot> set xo="./node_modules/.bin/"

                // Next, work with it
                D:projectroot> %xo%/bower install


                Good Luck.






                share|improve this answer





























                  1














                  In case you are using fish shell and do not want to add to $path for security reason. We can add the below function to run local node executables.



                  ### run executables in node_module/.bin directory
                  function n
                  set -l npmbin (npm bin)
                  set -l argvCount (count $argv)
                  switch $argvCount
                  case 0
                  echo please specify the local node executable as 1st argument
                  case 1
                  # for one argument, we can eval directly
                  eval $npmbin/$argv
                  case '*'
                  set --local executable $argv[1]
                  # for 2 or more arguments we cannot append directly after the $npmbin/ since the fish will apply each array element after the the start string: $npmbin/arg1 $npmbin/arg2...
                  # This is just how fish interoperate array.
                  set --erase argv[1]
                  eval $npmbin/$executable $argv
                  end
                  end


                  Now you can run thing like:



                  n coffee



                  or more arguments like:



                  n browser-sync --version



                  Note, if you are bash user, then @Bob9630 answers is the way to go by leveraging bash's $@, which is not available in fishshell.






                  share|improve this answer































                    -8














                    Include coffee-script in package.json with the specific version required in each project, typically like this:



                    "dependencies":{
                    "coffee-script": ">= 1.2.0"


                    Then run npm install to install dependencies in each project. This will install the specified version of coffee-script which will be accessible locally to each project.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • yeah, I got that far as I stated in my question. how do I specifically call the one in my project besides ./node_modules/.bin/coffee?
                      – typeoneerror
                      Mar 13 '12 at 9:47










                    • If you've run npm install with the package.json in your project's main folder, you should have a ./node_modules/.bin/coffee folder in this folder. Using ./node_modules/coffee-script/bin/coffee will run the local version of coffee while just running coffee will run the global installation. If you have another version of coffee installed in another path within this project folder, you can access it using ./path/to/this/installation/coffee.
                      – almypal
                      Mar 13 '12 at 10:42










                    • This did not work for me. I am trying to use "svgo", and it only works when installed globally. I have tried npm install svgo as well as npm install with package.json. Both methods installed "successfully", but the "svgo" command is still not available.
                      – Ryan Wheale
                      Apr 5 '13 at 4:37






                    • 1




                      Grunt uses this in a clever way, and IMHO so should other packages. First you install the grunt-cli package globally, then in your project directory install any (modified) version of the grunt package, then when you run grunt, it will use this local version.
                      – ack
                      Feb 28 '14 at 21:00













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                    22 Answers
                    22






                    active

                    oldest

                    votes








                    22 Answers
                    22






                    active

                    oldest

                    votes









                    active

                    oldest

                    votes






                    active

                    oldest

                    votes









                    465














                    UPDATE: As Seyeong Jeong points out in their answer below, since npm 5.2.0 you can use npx [command], which is more convenient.



                    OLD ANSWER for versions before 5.2.0:



                    The problem with putting



                    ./node_modules/.bin


                    into your PATH is that it only works when your current working directory is the root of your project directory structure (i.e. the location of node_modules)



                    Independent of what your working directory is, you can get the path of locally installed binaries with



                    npm bin


                    To execute a locally installed coffee binary independent of where you are in the project directory hierarchy you can use this bash construct



                    PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH coffee


                    I aliased this to npm-exec



                    alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH'


                    So, now I can



                    npm-exec coffee


                    to run the correct copy of coffee no matter of where I am



                    $ pwd
                    /Users/regular/project1

                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

                    $ cd lib/
                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

                    $ cd ~/project2
                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project2/node_modules/.bin/coffee





                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 17




                      you can even go one step further and alias coffee="npm-exec coffee"
                      – regular
                      Mar 18 '13 at 6:12








                    • 6




                      The output changes when you cd into another project. It does not change when you cd within a project. npm bin searches the chain of 'ancestor directories' to the cwd for a node_modules directory. This is exactly the desired behavior if you specifically want to use the binaries of modules listed in the project's package.json.
                      – regular
                      Oct 3 '13 at 9:12






                    • 9




                      oh gosh! do I really have to do something like that in order to have my local modules working? it's quite impracticable to explain it to a team! there's nothing a little bit more straightforward?
                      – Alexian
                      Apr 24 '15 at 17:12






                    • 14




                      You can always use npm scripts since they always search the local binaries first. You can set up aliases to each of your binaries there or just use generic names like "build".
                      – Joe Zim
                      Sep 22 '15 at 1:47






                    • 6




                      @philosodad, actually no, you don't. The PATH will be back to what it was before the command invocation. Setting an environment variable in the same line, before running a command only affects that command's environment.
                      – regular
                      Sep 22 '15 at 6:28
















                    465














                    UPDATE: As Seyeong Jeong points out in their answer below, since npm 5.2.0 you can use npx [command], which is more convenient.



                    OLD ANSWER for versions before 5.2.0:



                    The problem with putting



                    ./node_modules/.bin


                    into your PATH is that it only works when your current working directory is the root of your project directory structure (i.e. the location of node_modules)



                    Independent of what your working directory is, you can get the path of locally installed binaries with



                    npm bin


                    To execute a locally installed coffee binary independent of where you are in the project directory hierarchy you can use this bash construct



                    PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH coffee


                    I aliased this to npm-exec



                    alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH'


                    So, now I can



                    npm-exec coffee


                    to run the correct copy of coffee no matter of where I am



                    $ pwd
                    /Users/regular/project1

                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

                    $ cd lib/
                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

                    $ cd ~/project2
                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project2/node_modules/.bin/coffee





                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 17




                      you can even go one step further and alias coffee="npm-exec coffee"
                      – regular
                      Mar 18 '13 at 6:12








                    • 6




                      The output changes when you cd into another project. It does not change when you cd within a project. npm bin searches the chain of 'ancestor directories' to the cwd for a node_modules directory. This is exactly the desired behavior if you specifically want to use the binaries of modules listed in the project's package.json.
                      – regular
                      Oct 3 '13 at 9:12






                    • 9




                      oh gosh! do I really have to do something like that in order to have my local modules working? it's quite impracticable to explain it to a team! there's nothing a little bit more straightforward?
                      – Alexian
                      Apr 24 '15 at 17:12






                    • 14




                      You can always use npm scripts since they always search the local binaries first. You can set up aliases to each of your binaries there or just use generic names like "build".
                      – Joe Zim
                      Sep 22 '15 at 1:47






                    • 6




                      @philosodad, actually no, you don't. The PATH will be back to what it was before the command invocation. Setting an environment variable in the same line, before running a command only affects that command's environment.
                      – regular
                      Sep 22 '15 at 6:28














                    465












                    465








                    465






                    UPDATE: As Seyeong Jeong points out in their answer below, since npm 5.2.0 you can use npx [command], which is more convenient.



                    OLD ANSWER for versions before 5.2.0:



                    The problem with putting



                    ./node_modules/.bin


                    into your PATH is that it only works when your current working directory is the root of your project directory structure (i.e. the location of node_modules)



                    Independent of what your working directory is, you can get the path of locally installed binaries with



                    npm bin


                    To execute a locally installed coffee binary independent of where you are in the project directory hierarchy you can use this bash construct



                    PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH coffee


                    I aliased this to npm-exec



                    alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH'


                    So, now I can



                    npm-exec coffee


                    to run the correct copy of coffee no matter of where I am



                    $ pwd
                    /Users/regular/project1

                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

                    $ cd lib/
                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

                    $ cd ~/project2
                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project2/node_modules/.bin/coffee





                    share|improve this answer














                    UPDATE: As Seyeong Jeong points out in their answer below, since npm 5.2.0 you can use npx [command], which is more convenient.



                    OLD ANSWER for versions before 5.2.0:



                    The problem with putting



                    ./node_modules/.bin


                    into your PATH is that it only works when your current working directory is the root of your project directory structure (i.e. the location of node_modules)



                    Independent of what your working directory is, you can get the path of locally installed binaries with



                    npm bin


                    To execute a locally installed coffee binary independent of where you are in the project directory hierarchy you can use this bash construct



                    PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH coffee


                    I aliased this to npm-exec



                    alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH'


                    So, now I can



                    npm-exec coffee


                    to run the correct copy of coffee no matter of where I am



                    $ pwd
                    /Users/regular/project1

                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

                    $ cd lib/
                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee

                    $ cd ~/project2
                    $ npm-exec which coffee
                    /Users/regular/project2/node_modules/.bin/coffee






                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Oct 17 at 3:30

























                    answered Mar 1 '13 at 12:06









                    regular

                    5,0171918




                    5,0171918








                    • 17




                      you can even go one step further and alias coffee="npm-exec coffee"
                      – regular
                      Mar 18 '13 at 6:12








                    • 6




                      The output changes when you cd into another project. It does not change when you cd within a project. npm bin searches the chain of 'ancestor directories' to the cwd for a node_modules directory. This is exactly the desired behavior if you specifically want to use the binaries of modules listed in the project's package.json.
                      – regular
                      Oct 3 '13 at 9:12






                    • 9




                      oh gosh! do I really have to do something like that in order to have my local modules working? it's quite impracticable to explain it to a team! there's nothing a little bit more straightforward?
                      – Alexian
                      Apr 24 '15 at 17:12






                    • 14




                      You can always use npm scripts since they always search the local binaries first. You can set up aliases to each of your binaries there or just use generic names like "build".
                      – Joe Zim
                      Sep 22 '15 at 1:47






                    • 6




                      @philosodad, actually no, you don't. The PATH will be back to what it was before the command invocation. Setting an environment variable in the same line, before running a command only affects that command's environment.
                      – regular
                      Sep 22 '15 at 6:28














                    • 17




                      you can even go one step further and alias coffee="npm-exec coffee"
                      – regular
                      Mar 18 '13 at 6:12








                    • 6




                      The output changes when you cd into another project. It does not change when you cd within a project. npm bin searches the chain of 'ancestor directories' to the cwd for a node_modules directory. This is exactly the desired behavior if you specifically want to use the binaries of modules listed in the project's package.json.
                      – regular
                      Oct 3 '13 at 9:12






                    • 9




                      oh gosh! do I really have to do something like that in order to have my local modules working? it's quite impracticable to explain it to a team! there's nothing a little bit more straightforward?
                      – Alexian
                      Apr 24 '15 at 17:12






                    • 14




                      You can always use npm scripts since they always search the local binaries first. You can set up aliases to each of your binaries there or just use generic names like "build".
                      – Joe Zim
                      Sep 22 '15 at 1:47






                    • 6




                      @philosodad, actually no, you don't. The PATH will be back to what it was before the command invocation. Setting an environment variable in the same line, before running a command only affects that command's environment.
                      – regular
                      Sep 22 '15 at 6:28








                    17




                    17




                    you can even go one step further and alias coffee="npm-exec coffee"
                    – regular
                    Mar 18 '13 at 6:12






                    you can even go one step further and alias coffee="npm-exec coffee"
                    – regular
                    Mar 18 '13 at 6:12






                    6




                    6




                    The output changes when you cd into another project. It does not change when you cd within a project. npm bin searches the chain of 'ancestor directories' to the cwd for a node_modules directory. This is exactly the desired behavior if you specifically want to use the binaries of modules listed in the project's package.json.
                    – regular
                    Oct 3 '13 at 9:12




                    The output changes when you cd into another project. It does not change when you cd within a project. npm bin searches the chain of 'ancestor directories' to the cwd for a node_modules directory. This is exactly the desired behavior if you specifically want to use the binaries of modules listed in the project's package.json.
                    – regular
                    Oct 3 '13 at 9:12




                    9




                    9




                    oh gosh! do I really have to do something like that in order to have my local modules working? it's quite impracticable to explain it to a team! there's nothing a little bit more straightforward?
                    – Alexian
                    Apr 24 '15 at 17:12




                    oh gosh! do I really have to do something like that in order to have my local modules working? it's quite impracticable to explain it to a team! there's nothing a little bit more straightforward?
                    – Alexian
                    Apr 24 '15 at 17:12




                    14




                    14




                    You can always use npm scripts since they always search the local binaries first. You can set up aliases to each of your binaries there or just use generic names like "build".
                    – Joe Zim
                    Sep 22 '15 at 1:47




                    You can always use npm scripts since they always search the local binaries first. You can set up aliases to each of your binaries there or just use generic names like "build".
                    – Joe Zim
                    Sep 22 '15 at 1:47




                    6




                    6




                    @philosodad, actually no, you don't. The PATH will be back to what it was before the command invocation. Setting an environment variable in the same line, before running a command only affects that command's environment.
                    – regular
                    Sep 22 '15 at 6:28




                    @philosodad, actually no, you don't. The PATH will be back to what it was before the command invocation. Setting an environment variable in the same line, before running a command only affects that command's environment.
                    – regular
                    Sep 22 '15 at 6:28













                    267














                    Nice example



                    You don't have to manipulate $PATH anymore!



                    From npm@5.2.0, npm ships with npx package which lets you run commands from a local node_modules/.bin or from a central cache.



                    Simply run:



                    $ npx [options] <command>[@version] [command-arg]...


                    By default, npx will check whether <command> exists in $PATH, or in the local project binaries, and execute that.



                    Calling npx <command> when <command> isn't already in your $PATH will automatically install a package with that name from the NPM registry for you, and invoke it. When it's done, the installed package won’t be anywhere in your globals, so you won’t have to worry about pollution in the long-term. You can prevent this behaviour by providing --no-install option.



                    For npm < 5.2.0, you can install npx package manually by running the following command:



                    $ npm install -g npx





                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 27




                      Definitely should be the modern accepted answer!
                      – Mike Rapadas
                      Sep 27 '17 at 8:22






                    • 10




                      I think this needs to be higher up on the thread.
                      – wpcarro
                      Jan 5 at 19:51










                    • I dont like installing 3rd party global npm packages while npm and package.json provides nearly same functionality.
                      – guneysus
                      Mar 28 at 6:27






                    • 3




                      This saved me a ton of headache! How is this not the accepted answer? :-)
                      – JackWilson
                      Jun 1 at 9:13










                    • If "Path must be a string. Received undefined" message appears, here is a fix: github.com/zkat/npx/issues/144#issuecomment-391031816
                      – Valeriy Katkov
                      Aug 2 at 15:56
















                    267














                    Nice example



                    You don't have to manipulate $PATH anymore!



                    From npm@5.2.0, npm ships with npx package which lets you run commands from a local node_modules/.bin or from a central cache.



                    Simply run:



                    $ npx [options] <command>[@version] [command-arg]...


                    By default, npx will check whether <command> exists in $PATH, or in the local project binaries, and execute that.



                    Calling npx <command> when <command> isn't already in your $PATH will automatically install a package with that name from the NPM registry for you, and invoke it. When it's done, the installed package won’t be anywhere in your globals, so you won’t have to worry about pollution in the long-term. You can prevent this behaviour by providing --no-install option.



                    For npm < 5.2.0, you can install npx package manually by running the following command:



                    $ npm install -g npx





                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 27




                      Definitely should be the modern accepted answer!
                      – Mike Rapadas
                      Sep 27 '17 at 8:22






                    • 10




                      I think this needs to be higher up on the thread.
                      – wpcarro
                      Jan 5 at 19:51










                    • I dont like installing 3rd party global npm packages while npm and package.json provides nearly same functionality.
                      – guneysus
                      Mar 28 at 6:27






                    • 3




                      This saved me a ton of headache! How is this not the accepted answer? :-)
                      – JackWilson
                      Jun 1 at 9:13










                    • If "Path must be a string. Received undefined" message appears, here is a fix: github.com/zkat/npx/issues/144#issuecomment-391031816
                      – Valeriy Katkov
                      Aug 2 at 15:56














                    267












                    267








                    267






                    Nice example



                    You don't have to manipulate $PATH anymore!



                    From npm@5.2.0, npm ships with npx package which lets you run commands from a local node_modules/.bin or from a central cache.



                    Simply run:



                    $ npx [options] <command>[@version] [command-arg]...


                    By default, npx will check whether <command> exists in $PATH, or in the local project binaries, and execute that.



                    Calling npx <command> when <command> isn't already in your $PATH will automatically install a package with that name from the NPM registry for you, and invoke it. When it's done, the installed package won’t be anywhere in your globals, so you won’t have to worry about pollution in the long-term. You can prevent this behaviour by providing --no-install option.



                    For npm < 5.2.0, you can install npx package manually by running the following command:



                    $ npm install -g npx





                    share|improve this answer














                    Nice example



                    You don't have to manipulate $PATH anymore!



                    From npm@5.2.0, npm ships with npx package which lets you run commands from a local node_modules/.bin or from a central cache.



                    Simply run:



                    $ npx [options] <command>[@version] [command-arg]...


                    By default, npx will check whether <command> exists in $PATH, or in the local project binaries, and execute that.



                    Calling npx <command> when <command> isn't already in your $PATH will automatically install a package with that name from the NPM registry for you, and invoke it. When it's done, the installed package won’t be anywhere in your globals, so you won’t have to worry about pollution in the long-term. You can prevent this behaviour by providing --no-install option.



                    For npm < 5.2.0, you can install npx package manually by running the following command:



                    $ npm install -g npx






                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Mar 1 at 3:28

























                    answered Jul 18 '17 at 10:59









                    Seyeong Jeong

                    6,40922036




                    6,40922036








                    • 27




                      Definitely should be the modern accepted answer!
                      – Mike Rapadas
                      Sep 27 '17 at 8:22






                    • 10




                      I think this needs to be higher up on the thread.
                      – wpcarro
                      Jan 5 at 19:51










                    • I dont like installing 3rd party global npm packages while npm and package.json provides nearly same functionality.
                      – guneysus
                      Mar 28 at 6:27






                    • 3




                      This saved me a ton of headache! How is this not the accepted answer? :-)
                      – JackWilson
                      Jun 1 at 9:13










                    • If "Path must be a string. Received undefined" message appears, here is a fix: github.com/zkat/npx/issues/144#issuecomment-391031816
                      – Valeriy Katkov
                      Aug 2 at 15:56














                    • 27




                      Definitely should be the modern accepted answer!
                      – Mike Rapadas
                      Sep 27 '17 at 8:22






                    • 10




                      I think this needs to be higher up on the thread.
                      – wpcarro
                      Jan 5 at 19:51










                    • I dont like installing 3rd party global npm packages while npm and package.json provides nearly same functionality.
                      – guneysus
                      Mar 28 at 6:27






                    • 3




                      This saved me a ton of headache! How is this not the accepted answer? :-)
                      – JackWilson
                      Jun 1 at 9:13










                    • If "Path must be a string. Received undefined" message appears, here is a fix: github.com/zkat/npx/issues/144#issuecomment-391031816
                      – Valeriy Katkov
                      Aug 2 at 15:56








                    27




                    27




                    Definitely should be the modern accepted answer!
                    – Mike Rapadas
                    Sep 27 '17 at 8:22




                    Definitely should be the modern accepted answer!
                    – Mike Rapadas
                    Sep 27 '17 at 8:22




                    10




                    10




                    I think this needs to be higher up on the thread.
                    – wpcarro
                    Jan 5 at 19:51




                    I think this needs to be higher up on the thread.
                    – wpcarro
                    Jan 5 at 19:51












                    I dont like installing 3rd party global npm packages while npm and package.json provides nearly same functionality.
                    – guneysus
                    Mar 28 at 6:27




                    I dont like installing 3rd party global npm packages while npm and package.json provides nearly same functionality.
                    – guneysus
                    Mar 28 at 6:27




                    3




                    3




                    This saved me a ton of headache! How is this not the accepted answer? :-)
                    – JackWilson
                    Jun 1 at 9:13




                    This saved me a ton of headache! How is this not the accepted answer? :-)
                    – JackWilson
                    Jun 1 at 9:13












                    If "Path must be a string. Received undefined" message appears, here is a fix: github.com/zkat/npx/issues/144#issuecomment-391031816
                    – Valeriy Katkov
                    Aug 2 at 15:56




                    If "Path must be a string. Received undefined" message appears, here is a fix: github.com/zkat/npx/issues/144#issuecomment-391031816
                    – Valeriy Katkov
                    Aug 2 at 15:56











                    84














                    Use the npm bin command to get the node modules /bin directory of your project



                    $ $(npm bin)/<binary-name> [args]


                    e.g.



                    $ $(npm bin)/bower install





                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 4




                      I like this simple and generic solution. Makes an alias seem unnecessary.
                      – Matt Montag
                      May 31 '15 at 22:13










                    • Seems to be the next best solution that is elegant and more secure than having to do export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"
                      – jontsai
                      Sep 9 '15 at 23:16






                    • 1




                      @inf3rno the command is $(npm bin)/jasmine, not node $(npm bin)/jasmine (you probably figured it out but clarifying for others).
                      – jassa
                      Aug 19 '16 at 19:32








                    • 5




                      Not a bad solution, but it doesn't run on a standard windows command line with $. Putting it in the package.json scripts section is a better approach I feel, since it's more compatible.
                      – Timothy Gonzalez
                      Sep 30 '16 at 22:26
















                    84














                    Use the npm bin command to get the node modules /bin directory of your project



                    $ $(npm bin)/<binary-name> [args]


                    e.g.



                    $ $(npm bin)/bower install





                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 4




                      I like this simple and generic solution. Makes an alias seem unnecessary.
                      – Matt Montag
                      May 31 '15 at 22:13










                    • Seems to be the next best solution that is elegant and more secure than having to do export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"
                      – jontsai
                      Sep 9 '15 at 23:16






                    • 1




                      @inf3rno the command is $(npm bin)/jasmine, not node $(npm bin)/jasmine (you probably figured it out but clarifying for others).
                      – jassa
                      Aug 19 '16 at 19:32








                    • 5




                      Not a bad solution, but it doesn't run on a standard windows command line with $. Putting it in the package.json scripts section is a better approach I feel, since it's more compatible.
                      – Timothy Gonzalez
                      Sep 30 '16 at 22:26














                    84












                    84








                    84






                    Use the npm bin command to get the node modules /bin directory of your project



                    $ $(npm bin)/<binary-name> [args]


                    e.g.



                    $ $(npm bin)/bower install





                    share|improve this answer












                    Use the npm bin command to get the node modules /bin directory of your project



                    $ $(npm bin)/<binary-name> [args]


                    e.g.



                    $ $(npm bin)/bower install






                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Dec 13 '14 at 1:18









                    jassa

                    16.1k32123




                    16.1k32123








                    • 4




                      I like this simple and generic solution. Makes an alias seem unnecessary.
                      – Matt Montag
                      May 31 '15 at 22:13










                    • Seems to be the next best solution that is elegant and more secure than having to do export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"
                      – jontsai
                      Sep 9 '15 at 23:16






                    • 1




                      @inf3rno the command is $(npm bin)/jasmine, not node $(npm bin)/jasmine (you probably figured it out but clarifying for others).
                      – jassa
                      Aug 19 '16 at 19:32








                    • 5




                      Not a bad solution, but it doesn't run on a standard windows command line with $. Putting it in the package.json scripts section is a better approach I feel, since it's more compatible.
                      – Timothy Gonzalez
                      Sep 30 '16 at 22:26














                    • 4




                      I like this simple and generic solution. Makes an alias seem unnecessary.
                      – Matt Montag
                      May 31 '15 at 22:13










                    • Seems to be the next best solution that is elegant and more secure than having to do export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"
                      – jontsai
                      Sep 9 '15 at 23:16






                    • 1




                      @inf3rno the command is $(npm bin)/jasmine, not node $(npm bin)/jasmine (you probably figured it out but clarifying for others).
                      – jassa
                      Aug 19 '16 at 19:32








                    • 5




                      Not a bad solution, but it doesn't run on a standard windows command line with $. Putting it in the package.json scripts section is a better approach I feel, since it's more compatible.
                      – Timothy Gonzalez
                      Sep 30 '16 at 22:26








                    4




                    4




                    I like this simple and generic solution. Makes an alias seem unnecessary.
                    – Matt Montag
                    May 31 '15 at 22:13




                    I like this simple and generic solution. Makes an alias seem unnecessary.
                    – Matt Montag
                    May 31 '15 at 22:13












                    Seems to be the next best solution that is elegant and more secure than having to do export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"
                    – jontsai
                    Sep 9 '15 at 23:16




                    Seems to be the next best solution that is elegant and more secure than having to do export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"
                    – jontsai
                    Sep 9 '15 at 23:16




                    1




                    1




                    @inf3rno the command is $(npm bin)/jasmine, not node $(npm bin)/jasmine (you probably figured it out but clarifying for others).
                    – jassa
                    Aug 19 '16 at 19:32






                    @inf3rno the command is $(npm bin)/jasmine, not node $(npm bin)/jasmine (you probably figured it out but clarifying for others).
                    – jassa
                    Aug 19 '16 at 19:32






                    5




                    5




                    Not a bad solution, but it doesn't run on a standard windows command line with $. Putting it in the package.json scripts section is a better approach I feel, since it's more compatible.
                    – Timothy Gonzalez
                    Sep 30 '16 at 22:26




                    Not a bad solution, but it doesn't run on a standard windows command line with $. Putting it in the package.json scripts section is a better approach I feel, since it's more compatible.
                    – Timothy Gonzalez
                    Sep 30 '16 at 22:26











                    72














                    Use npm run[-script] <script name>



                    After using npm to install the bin package to your local ./node_modules directory, modify package.json to add <script name> like this:



                    $ npm install --save learnyounode
                    $ edit packages.json
                    >>> in packages.json
                    ...
                    "scripts": {
                    "test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
                    "learnyounode": "learnyounode"
                    },
                    ...
                    $ npm run learnyounode


                    It would be nice if npm install had a --add-script option or something or if npm run would work without adding to the scripts block.






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 5




                      I found this approach to be more uniform when dealing with multiple developers on a project - it avoids the need to configure anything locally... you just npm install then you have access to your dev dependencies. The only minor down side is you need to npm run eslint (or whatever). You can create a script called "start" that runs gulp so that you only need to type npm start to start your dev server. Pretty cool stuff and no bash goodness, so your windows friends still like you. :)
                      – jpoveda
                      Sep 21 '15 at 21:28






                    • 1




                      adding an alias to put $(npm bin) on your path is clever, but the fact that this will work for people without local config wins my heart
                      – Conrad.Dean
                      Mar 25 '16 at 12:37






                    • 8




                      this needs more upvotes! Pass args to your scripts after -- like: npm run learnyounode -- --normal-switches --watch -d *.js
                      – ptim
                      Jun 17 '16 at 8:53










                    • I also find this the best solution. There is an in-depth explanation here: lostechies.com/derickbailey/2012/04/24/…
                      – adampasz
                      Jul 24 '16 at 4:41










                    • Wow, I can't believe I looked passed the scripts section. This is truly a good solution.
                      – Timothy Gonzalez
                      Sep 30 '16 at 22:23
















                    72














                    Use npm run[-script] <script name>



                    After using npm to install the bin package to your local ./node_modules directory, modify package.json to add <script name> like this:



                    $ npm install --save learnyounode
                    $ edit packages.json
                    >>> in packages.json
                    ...
                    "scripts": {
                    "test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
                    "learnyounode": "learnyounode"
                    },
                    ...
                    $ npm run learnyounode


                    It would be nice if npm install had a --add-script option or something or if npm run would work without adding to the scripts block.






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 5




                      I found this approach to be more uniform when dealing with multiple developers on a project - it avoids the need to configure anything locally... you just npm install then you have access to your dev dependencies. The only minor down side is you need to npm run eslint (or whatever). You can create a script called "start" that runs gulp so that you only need to type npm start to start your dev server. Pretty cool stuff and no bash goodness, so your windows friends still like you. :)
                      – jpoveda
                      Sep 21 '15 at 21:28






                    • 1




                      adding an alias to put $(npm bin) on your path is clever, but the fact that this will work for people without local config wins my heart
                      – Conrad.Dean
                      Mar 25 '16 at 12:37






                    • 8




                      this needs more upvotes! Pass args to your scripts after -- like: npm run learnyounode -- --normal-switches --watch -d *.js
                      – ptim
                      Jun 17 '16 at 8:53










                    • I also find this the best solution. There is an in-depth explanation here: lostechies.com/derickbailey/2012/04/24/…
                      – adampasz
                      Jul 24 '16 at 4:41










                    • Wow, I can't believe I looked passed the scripts section. This is truly a good solution.
                      – Timothy Gonzalez
                      Sep 30 '16 at 22:23














                    72












                    72








                    72






                    Use npm run[-script] <script name>



                    After using npm to install the bin package to your local ./node_modules directory, modify package.json to add <script name> like this:



                    $ npm install --save learnyounode
                    $ edit packages.json
                    >>> in packages.json
                    ...
                    "scripts": {
                    "test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
                    "learnyounode": "learnyounode"
                    },
                    ...
                    $ npm run learnyounode


                    It would be nice if npm install had a --add-script option or something or if npm run would work without adding to the scripts block.






                    share|improve this answer














                    Use npm run[-script] <script name>



                    After using npm to install the bin package to your local ./node_modules directory, modify package.json to add <script name> like this:



                    $ npm install --save learnyounode
                    $ edit packages.json
                    >>> in packages.json
                    ...
                    "scripts": {
                    "test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
                    "learnyounode": "learnyounode"
                    },
                    ...
                    $ npm run learnyounode


                    It would be nice if npm install had a --add-script option or something or if npm run would work without adding to the scripts block.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Aug 25 at 15:33









                    vsync

                    45.4k35157217




                    45.4k35157217










                    answered Feb 16 '15 at 20:10









                    jla

                    3,24512328




                    3,24512328








                    • 5




                      I found this approach to be more uniform when dealing with multiple developers on a project - it avoids the need to configure anything locally... you just npm install then you have access to your dev dependencies. The only minor down side is you need to npm run eslint (or whatever). You can create a script called "start" that runs gulp so that you only need to type npm start to start your dev server. Pretty cool stuff and no bash goodness, so your windows friends still like you. :)
                      – jpoveda
                      Sep 21 '15 at 21:28






                    • 1




                      adding an alias to put $(npm bin) on your path is clever, but the fact that this will work for people without local config wins my heart
                      – Conrad.Dean
                      Mar 25 '16 at 12:37






                    • 8




                      this needs more upvotes! Pass args to your scripts after -- like: npm run learnyounode -- --normal-switches --watch -d *.js
                      – ptim
                      Jun 17 '16 at 8:53










                    • I also find this the best solution. There is an in-depth explanation here: lostechies.com/derickbailey/2012/04/24/…
                      – adampasz
                      Jul 24 '16 at 4:41










                    • Wow, I can't believe I looked passed the scripts section. This is truly a good solution.
                      – Timothy Gonzalez
                      Sep 30 '16 at 22:23














                    • 5




                      I found this approach to be more uniform when dealing with multiple developers on a project - it avoids the need to configure anything locally... you just npm install then you have access to your dev dependencies. The only minor down side is you need to npm run eslint (or whatever). You can create a script called "start" that runs gulp so that you only need to type npm start to start your dev server. Pretty cool stuff and no bash goodness, so your windows friends still like you. :)
                      – jpoveda
                      Sep 21 '15 at 21:28






                    • 1




                      adding an alias to put $(npm bin) on your path is clever, but the fact that this will work for people without local config wins my heart
                      – Conrad.Dean
                      Mar 25 '16 at 12:37






                    • 8




                      this needs more upvotes! Pass args to your scripts after -- like: npm run learnyounode -- --normal-switches --watch -d *.js
                      – ptim
                      Jun 17 '16 at 8:53










                    • I also find this the best solution. There is an in-depth explanation here: lostechies.com/derickbailey/2012/04/24/…
                      – adampasz
                      Jul 24 '16 at 4:41










                    • Wow, I can't believe I looked passed the scripts section. This is truly a good solution.
                      – Timothy Gonzalez
                      Sep 30 '16 at 22:23








                    5




                    5




                    I found this approach to be more uniform when dealing with multiple developers on a project - it avoids the need to configure anything locally... you just npm install then you have access to your dev dependencies. The only minor down side is you need to npm run eslint (or whatever). You can create a script called "start" that runs gulp so that you only need to type npm start to start your dev server. Pretty cool stuff and no bash goodness, so your windows friends still like you. :)
                    – jpoveda
                    Sep 21 '15 at 21:28




                    I found this approach to be more uniform when dealing with multiple developers on a project - it avoids the need to configure anything locally... you just npm install then you have access to your dev dependencies. The only minor down side is you need to npm run eslint (or whatever). You can create a script called "start" that runs gulp so that you only need to type npm start to start your dev server. Pretty cool stuff and no bash goodness, so your windows friends still like you. :)
                    – jpoveda
                    Sep 21 '15 at 21:28




                    1




                    1




                    adding an alias to put $(npm bin) on your path is clever, but the fact that this will work for people without local config wins my heart
                    – Conrad.Dean
                    Mar 25 '16 at 12:37




                    adding an alias to put $(npm bin) on your path is clever, but the fact that this will work for people without local config wins my heart
                    – Conrad.Dean
                    Mar 25 '16 at 12:37




                    8




                    8




                    this needs more upvotes! Pass args to your scripts after -- like: npm run learnyounode -- --normal-switches --watch -d *.js
                    – ptim
                    Jun 17 '16 at 8:53




                    this needs more upvotes! Pass args to your scripts after -- like: npm run learnyounode -- --normal-switches --watch -d *.js
                    – ptim
                    Jun 17 '16 at 8:53












                    I also find this the best solution. There is an in-depth explanation here: lostechies.com/derickbailey/2012/04/24/…
                    – adampasz
                    Jul 24 '16 at 4:41




                    I also find this the best solution. There is an in-depth explanation here: lostechies.com/derickbailey/2012/04/24/…
                    – adampasz
                    Jul 24 '16 at 4:41












                    Wow, I can't believe I looked passed the scripts section. This is truly a good solution.
                    – Timothy Gonzalez
                    Sep 30 '16 at 22:23




                    Wow, I can't believe I looked passed the scripts section. This is truly a good solution.
                    – Timothy Gonzalez
                    Sep 30 '16 at 22:23











                    43














                    Use npm-run.



                    From the readme:



                    npm-run



                    Find & run local executables from node_modules



                    Any executable available to an npm lifecycle script is available to npm-run.



                    Usage



                    $ npm install mocha # mocha installed in ./node_modules
                    $ npm-run mocha test/* # uses locally installed mocha executable


                    Installation



                    $ npm install -g npm-run





                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 6




                      No longer, see npx referenced above... stackoverflow.com/a/45164863/3246805
                      – t.j.
                      Sep 1 '17 at 19:00
















                    43














                    Use npm-run.



                    From the readme:



                    npm-run



                    Find & run local executables from node_modules



                    Any executable available to an npm lifecycle script is available to npm-run.



                    Usage



                    $ npm install mocha # mocha installed in ./node_modules
                    $ npm-run mocha test/* # uses locally installed mocha executable


                    Installation



                    $ npm install -g npm-run





                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 6




                      No longer, see npx referenced above... stackoverflow.com/a/45164863/3246805
                      – t.j.
                      Sep 1 '17 at 19:00














                    43












                    43








                    43






                    Use npm-run.



                    From the readme:



                    npm-run



                    Find & run local executables from node_modules



                    Any executable available to an npm lifecycle script is available to npm-run.



                    Usage



                    $ npm install mocha # mocha installed in ./node_modules
                    $ npm-run mocha test/* # uses locally installed mocha executable


                    Installation



                    $ npm install -g npm-run





                    share|improve this answer












                    Use npm-run.



                    From the readme:



                    npm-run



                    Find & run local executables from node_modules



                    Any executable available to an npm lifecycle script is available to npm-run.



                    Usage



                    $ npm install mocha # mocha installed in ./node_modules
                    $ npm-run mocha test/* # uses locally installed mocha executable


                    Installation



                    $ npm install -g npm-run






                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Oct 28 '16 at 21:20









                    mightyiam

                    1,8111633




                    1,8111633








                    • 6




                      No longer, see npx referenced above... stackoverflow.com/a/45164863/3246805
                      – t.j.
                      Sep 1 '17 at 19:00














                    • 6




                      No longer, see npx referenced above... stackoverflow.com/a/45164863/3246805
                      – t.j.
                      Sep 1 '17 at 19:00








                    6




                    6




                    No longer, see npx referenced above... stackoverflow.com/a/45164863/3246805
                    – t.j.
                    Sep 1 '17 at 19:00




                    No longer, see npx referenced above... stackoverflow.com/a/45164863/3246805
                    – t.j.
                    Sep 1 '17 at 19:00











                    39














                    Update: I no longer recommend this method, both for the mentioned security reasons and not the least the newer npm bin command. Original answer below:



                    As you have found out, any locally installed binaries are in ./node_modules/.bin. In order to always run binaries in this directory rather than globally available binaries, if present, I suggest you put ./node_modules/.bin first in your path:



                    export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"


                    If you put this in your ~/.profile, coffee will always be ./node_modules/.bin/coffee if available, otherwise /usr/local/bin/coffee (or whatever prefix you are installing node modules under).






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 1




                      that's probably the best solution. I also created a bash script called "watch" in my project: ./node_modules/.bin/coffee --output lib/ --compile --bare --watch src
                      – typeoneerror
                      Mar 13 '12 at 18:27








                    • 66




                      Danger, Will Robinson! Use of relative paths in your $PATH opens up a security hole the size of a planet, especially if you put them right up front as the first item. If the directory you're in is writable by everyone (say somewhere in /tmp), any process or user can hijack your session by putting malicious versions of ordinary commands (like ls, cp, etc.) there. These may spawn 'invisible' sub-shells capturing your passwords, etcetera.
                      – ack
                      Feb 28 '14 at 20:40










                    • will only work in the root and no other places. the alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH' is slicker.
                      – oligofren
                      May 5 '15 at 16:21






                    • 1




                      How bad is this if you don't put it as the first thing in your PATH, but the last (using the $(npm bin) form)? so they can't overwrite your existing stuff, and you would have been trusting the executables in the npm bin directory already regardless of the PATH var; would the threat model be that a) someone malicious gets access to your file system, b) they add executables with names that are close to those system tools, and c) you mistype? Trying to understand scenarios that make this bad, given that you're already trusting foreign executables when using npm-installed programs.
                      – Omar Diab
                      Jul 15 '16 at 1:24












                    • You can do shell tricks with an alias and you can path manually and this "works" but it is not quite ideal.
                      – al_gor_rithm
                      Dec 18 '17 at 19:42
















                    39














                    Update: I no longer recommend this method, both for the mentioned security reasons and not the least the newer npm bin command. Original answer below:



                    As you have found out, any locally installed binaries are in ./node_modules/.bin. In order to always run binaries in this directory rather than globally available binaries, if present, I suggest you put ./node_modules/.bin first in your path:



                    export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"


                    If you put this in your ~/.profile, coffee will always be ./node_modules/.bin/coffee if available, otherwise /usr/local/bin/coffee (or whatever prefix you are installing node modules under).






                    share|improve this answer



















                    • 1




                      that's probably the best solution. I also created a bash script called "watch" in my project: ./node_modules/.bin/coffee --output lib/ --compile --bare --watch src
                      – typeoneerror
                      Mar 13 '12 at 18:27








                    • 66




                      Danger, Will Robinson! Use of relative paths in your $PATH opens up a security hole the size of a planet, especially if you put them right up front as the first item. If the directory you're in is writable by everyone (say somewhere in /tmp), any process or user can hijack your session by putting malicious versions of ordinary commands (like ls, cp, etc.) there. These may spawn 'invisible' sub-shells capturing your passwords, etcetera.
                      – ack
                      Feb 28 '14 at 20:40










                    • will only work in the root and no other places. the alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH' is slicker.
                      – oligofren
                      May 5 '15 at 16:21






                    • 1




                      How bad is this if you don't put it as the first thing in your PATH, but the last (using the $(npm bin) form)? so they can't overwrite your existing stuff, and you would have been trusting the executables in the npm bin directory already regardless of the PATH var; would the threat model be that a) someone malicious gets access to your file system, b) they add executables with names that are close to those system tools, and c) you mistype? Trying to understand scenarios that make this bad, given that you're already trusting foreign executables when using npm-installed programs.
                      – Omar Diab
                      Jul 15 '16 at 1:24












                    • You can do shell tricks with an alias and you can path manually and this "works" but it is not quite ideal.
                      – al_gor_rithm
                      Dec 18 '17 at 19:42














                    39












                    39








                    39






                    Update: I no longer recommend this method, both for the mentioned security reasons and not the least the newer npm bin command. Original answer below:



                    As you have found out, any locally installed binaries are in ./node_modules/.bin. In order to always run binaries in this directory rather than globally available binaries, if present, I suggest you put ./node_modules/.bin first in your path:



                    export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"


                    If you put this in your ~/.profile, coffee will always be ./node_modules/.bin/coffee if available, otherwise /usr/local/bin/coffee (or whatever prefix you are installing node modules under).






                    share|improve this answer














                    Update: I no longer recommend this method, both for the mentioned security reasons and not the least the newer npm bin command. Original answer below:



                    As you have found out, any locally installed binaries are in ./node_modules/.bin. In order to always run binaries in this directory rather than globally available binaries, if present, I suggest you put ./node_modules/.bin first in your path:



                    export PATH="./node_modules/.bin:$PATH"


                    If you put this in your ~/.profile, coffee will always be ./node_modules/.bin/coffee if available, otherwise /usr/local/bin/coffee (or whatever prefix you are installing node modules under).







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Oct 6 '15 at 14:02

























                    answered Mar 13 '12 at 11:52









                    Linus Gustav Larsson Thiel

                    32.8k68993




                    32.8k68993








                    • 1




                      that's probably the best solution. I also created a bash script called "watch" in my project: ./node_modules/.bin/coffee --output lib/ --compile --bare --watch src
                      – typeoneerror
                      Mar 13 '12 at 18:27








                    • 66




                      Danger, Will Robinson! Use of relative paths in your $PATH opens up a security hole the size of a planet, especially if you put them right up front as the first item. If the directory you're in is writable by everyone (say somewhere in /tmp), any process or user can hijack your session by putting malicious versions of ordinary commands (like ls, cp, etc.) there. These may spawn 'invisible' sub-shells capturing your passwords, etcetera.
                      – ack
                      Feb 28 '14 at 20:40










                    • will only work in the root and no other places. the alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH' is slicker.
                      – oligofren
                      May 5 '15 at 16:21






                    • 1




                      How bad is this if you don't put it as the first thing in your PATH, but the last (using the $(npm bin) form)? so they can't overwrite your existing stuff, and you would have been trusting the executables in the npm bin directory already regardless of the PATH var; would the threat model be that a) someone malicious gets access to your file system, b) they add executables with names that are close to those system tools, and c) you mistype? Trying to understand scenarios that make this bad, given that you're already trusting foreign executables when using npm-installed programs.
                      – Omar Diab
                      Jul 15 '16 at 1:24












                    • You can do shell tricks with an alias and you can path manually and this "works" but it is not quite ideal.
                      – al_gor_rithm
                      Dec 18 '17 at 19:42














                    • 1




                      that's probably the best solution. I also created a bash script called "watch" in my project: ./node_modules/.bin/coffee --output lib/ --compile --bare --watch src
                      – typeoneerror
                      Mar 13 '12 at 18:27








                    • 66




                      Danger, Will Robinson! Use of relative paths in your $PATH opens up a security hole the size of a planet, especially if you put them right up front as the first item. If the directory you're in is writable by everyone (say somewhere in /tmp), any process or user can hijack your session by putting malicious versions of ordinary commands (like ls, cp, etc.) there. These may spawn 'invisible' sub-shells capturing your passwords, etcetera.
                      – ack
                      Feb 28 '14 at 20:40










                    • will only work in the root and no other places. the alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH' is slicker.
                      – oligofren
                      May 5 '15 at 16:21






                    • 1




                      How bad is this if you don't put it as the first thing in your PATH, but the last (using the $(npm bin) form)? so they can't overwrite your existing stuff, and you would have been trusting the executables in the npm bin directory already regardless of the PATH var; would the threat model be that a) someone malicious gets access to your file system, b) they add executables with names that are close to those system tools, and c) you mistype? Trying to understand scenarios that make this bad, given that you're already trusting foreign executables when using npm-installed programs.
                      – Omar Diab
                      Jul 15 '16 at 1:24












                    • You can do shell tricks with an alias and you can path manually and this "works" but it is not quite ideal.
                      – al_gor_rithm
                      Dec 18 '17 at 19:42








                    1




                    1




                    that's probably the best solution. I also created a bash script called "watch" in my project: ./node_modules/.bin/coffee --output lib/ --compile --bare --watch src
                    – typeoneerror
                    Mar 13 '12 at 18:27






                    that's probably the best solution. I also created a bash script called "watch" in my project: ./node_modules/.bin/coffee --output lib/ --compile --bare --watch src
                    – typeoneerror
                    Mar 13 '12 at 18:27






                    66




                    66




                    Danger, Will Robinson! Use of relative paths in your $PATH opens up a security hole the size of a planet, especially if you put them right up front as the first item. If the directory you're in is writable by everyone (say somewhere in /tmp), any process or user can hijack your session by putting malicious versions of ordinary commands (like ls, cp, etc.) there. These may spawn 'invisible' sub-shells capturing your passwords, etcetera.
                    – ack
                    Feb 28 '14 at 20:40




                    Danger, Will Robinson! Use of relative paths in your $PATH opens up a security hole the size of a planet, especially if you put them right up front as the first item. If the directory you're in is writable by everyone (say somewhere in /tmp), any process or user can hijack your session by putting malicious versions of ordinary commands (like ls, cp, etc.) there. These may spawn 'invisible' sub-shells capturing your passwords, etcetera.
                    – ack
                    Feb 28 '14 at 20:40












                    will only work in the root and no other places. the alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH' is slicker.
                    – oligofren
                    May 5 '15 at 16:21




                    will only work in the root and no other places. the alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH' is slicker.
                    – oligofren
                    May 5 '15 at 16:21




                    1




                    1




                    How bad is this if you don't put it as the first thing in your PATH, but the last (using the $(npm bin) form)? so they can't overwrite your existing stuff, and you would have been trusting the executables in the npm bin directory already regardless of the PATH var; would the threat model be that a) someone malicious gets access to your file system, b) they add executables with names that are close to those system tools, and c) you mistype? Trying to understand scenarios that make this bad, given that you're already trusting foreign executables when using npm-installed programs.
                    – Omar Diab
                    Jul 15 '16 at 1:24






                    How bad is this if you don't put it as the first thing in your PATH, but the last (using the $(npm bin) form)? so they can't overwrite your existing stuff, and you would have been trusting the executables in the npm bin directory already regardless of the PATH var; would the threat model be that a) someone malicious gets access to your file system, b) they add executables with names that are close to those system tools, and c) you mistype? Trying to understand scenarios that make this bad, given that you're already trusting foreign executables when using npm-installed programs.
                    – Omar Diab
                    Jul 15 '16 at 1:24














                    You can do shell tricks with an alias and you can path manually and this "works" but it is not quite ideal.
                    – al_gor_rithm
                    Dec 18 '17 at 19:42




                    You can do shell tricks with an alias and you can path manually and this "works" but it is not quite ideal.
                    – al_gor_rithm
                    Dec 18 '17 at 19:42











                    23














                    The PATH solution has the issue that if $(npm bin) is placed in your .profile/.bashrc/etc it is evaluated once and is forever set to whichever directory the path was first evaluated in. If instead you modify the current path then every time you run the script your path will grow.



                    To get around these issues, I create a function and used that. It doesn't modify your environment and is simple to use:



                    function npm-exec {
                    $(npm bin)/$@
                    }


                    This can then be used like this without making any changes to your environment:



                    npm-exec r.js <args>





                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 2




                      I like this! I simply named my function n
                      – jontsai
                      Sep 9 '15 at 23:20










                    • This is great! Thanks for sharing. I added a fish shell version below.
                      – Leon li
                      May 19 '17 at 16:49
















                    23














                    The PATH solution has the issue that if $(npm bin) is placed in your .profile/.bashrc/etc it is evaluated once and is forever set to whichever directory the path was first evaluated in. If instead you modify the current path then every time you run the script your path will grow.



                    To get around these issues, I create a function and used that. It doesn't modify your environment and is simple to use:



                    function npm-exec {
                    $(npm bin)/$@
                    }


                    This can then be used like this without making any changes to your environment:



                    npm-exec r.js <args>





                    share|improve this answer

















                    • 2




                      I like this! I simply named my function n
                      – jontsai
                      Sep 9 '15 at 23:20










                    • This is great! Thanks for sharing. I added a fish shell version below.
                      – Leon li
                      May 19 '17 at 16:49














                    23












                    23








                    23






                    The PATH solution has the issue that if $(npm bin) is placed in your .profile/.bashrc/etc it is evaluated once and is forever set to whichever directory the path was first evaluated in. If instead you modify the current path then every time you run the script your path will grow.



                    To get around these issues, I create a function and used that. It doesn't modify your environment and is simple to use:



                    function npm-exec {
                    $(npm bin)/$@
                    }


                    This can then be used like this without making any changes to your environment:



                    npm-exec r.js <args>





                    share|improve this answer












                    The PATH solution has the issue that if $(npm bin) is placed in your .profile/.bashrc/etc it is evaluated once and is forever set to whichever directory the path was first evaluated in. If instead you modify the current path then every time you run the script your path will grow.



                    To get around these issues, I create a function and used that. It doesn't modify your environment and is simple to use:



                    function npm-exec {
                    $(npm bin)/$@
                    }


                    This can then be used like this without making any changes to your environment:



                    npm-exec r.js <args>






                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Aug 17 '15 at 21:09









                    Bob9630

                    715617




                    715617








                    • 2




                      I like this! I simply named my function n
                      – jontsai
                      Sep 9 '15 at 23:20










                    • This is great! Thanks for sharing. I added a fish shell version below.
                      – Leon li
                      May 19 '17 at 16:49














                    • 2




                      I like this! I simply named my function n
                      – jontsai
                      Sep 9 '15 at 23:20










                    • This is great! Thanks for sharing. I added a fish shell version below.
                      – Leon li
                      May 19 '17 at 16:49








                    2




                    2




                    I like this! I simply named my function n
                    – jontsai
                    Sep 9 '15 at 23:20




                    I like this! I simply named my function n
                    – jontsai
                    Sep 9 '15 at 23:20












                    This is great! Thanks for sharing. I added a fish shell version below.
                    – Leon li
                    May 19 '17 at 16:49




                    This is great! Thanks for sharing. I added a fish shell version below.
                    – Leon li
                    May 19 '17 at 16:49











                    18














                    If you want to keep npm, then npx should do what you need.





                    If switching to yarn (a npm replacement by facebook) is an option for you, then you can call:



                     yarn yourCmd


                    scripts inside the package.json will take precedence, if none is found it will look inside the ./node_modules/.bin/ folder.



                    It also outputs what it ran:



                    $ yarn tsc
                    yarn tsc v0.27.5
                    $ "/home/philipp/rate-pipeline/node_modules/.bin/tsc"


                    So you don't have to setup scripts for each command in your package.json.





                    If you had a script defined at .scripts inside your package.json:



                    "tsc": "tsc" // each command defined in the scripts will be executed from `./node_modules/.bin/` first


                    yarn tsc would be equivalent to yarn run tsc or npm run tsc:



                     yarn tsc
                    yarn tsc v0.27.5
                    $ tsc





                    share|improve this answer




























                      18














                      If you want to keep npm, then npx should do what you need.





                      If switching to yarn (a npm replacement by facebook) is an option for you, then you can call:



                       yarn yourCmd


                      scripts inside the package.json will take precedence, if none is found it will look inside the ./node_modules/.bin/ folder.



                      It also outputs what it ran:



                      $ yarn tsc
                      yarn tsc v0.27.5
                      $ "/home/philipp/rate-pipeline/node_modules/.bin/tsc"


                      So you don't have to setup scripts for each command in your package.json.





                      If you had a script defined at .scripts inside your package.json:



                      "tsc": "tsc" // each command defined in the scripts will be executed from `./node_modules/.bin/` first


                      yarn tsc would be equivalent to yarn run tsc or npm run tsc:



                       yarn tsc
                      yarn tsc v0.27.5
                      $ tsc





                      share|improve this answer


























                        18












                        18








                        18






                        If you want to keep npm, then npx should do what you need.





                        If switching to yarn (a npm replacement by facebook) is an option for you, then you can call:



                         yarn yourCmd


                        scripts inside the package.json will take precedence, if none is found it will look inside the ./node_modules/.bin/ folder.



                        It also outputs what it ran:



                        $ yarn tsc
                        yarn tsc v0.27.5
                        $ "/home/philipp/rate-pipeline/node_modules/.bin/tsc"


                        So you don't have to setup scripts for each command in your package.json.





                        If you had a script defined at .scripts inside your package.json:



                        "tsc": "tsc" // each command defined in the scripts will be executed from `./node_modules/.bin/` first


                        yarn tsc would be equivalent to yarn run tsc or npm run tsc:



                         yarn tsc
                        yarn tsc v0.27.5
                        $ tsc





                        share|improve this answer














                        If you want to keep npm, then npx should do what you need.





                        If switching to yarn (a npm replacement by facebook) is an option for you, then you can call:



                         yarn yourCmd


                        scripts inside the package.json will take precedence, if none is found it will look inside the ./node_modules/.bin/ folder.



                        It also outputs what it ran:



                        $ yarn tsc
                        yarn tsc v0.27.5
                        $ "/home/philipp/rate-pipeline/node_modules/.bin/tsc"


                        So you don't have to setup scripts for each command in your package.json.





                        If you had a script defined at .scripts inside your package.json:



                        "tsc": "tsc" // each command defined in the scripts will be executed from `./node_modules/.bin/` first


                        yarn tsc would be equivalent to yarn run tsc or npm run tsc:



                         yarn tsc
                        yarn tsc v0.27.5
                        $ tsc






                        share|improve this answer














                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer








                        edited Feb 5 at 14:54

























                        answered Aug 11 '17 at 10:54









                        k0pernikus

                        17.2k23104186




                        17.2k23104186























                            6














                            If you want your PATH variable to correctly update based on your current working directory, add this to the end of your .bashrc-equivalent (or after anything that defines PATH):



                            __OLD_PATH=$PATH
                            function updatePATHForNPM() {
                            export PATH=$(npm bin):$__OLD_PATH
                            }

                            function node-mode() {
                            PROMPT_COMMAND=updatePATHForNPM
                            }

                            function node-mode-off() {
                            unset PROMPT_COMMAND
                            PATH=$__OLD_PATH
                            }

                            # Uncomment to enable node-mode by default:
                            # node-mode


                            This may add a short delay every time the bash prompt gets rendered (depending on the size of your project, most likely), so it's disabled by default.



                            You can enable and disable it within your terminal by running node-mode and node-mode-off, respectively.






                            share|improve this answer


























                              6














                              If you want your PATH variable to correctly update based on your current working directory, add this to the end of your .bashrc-equivalent (or after anything that defines PATH):



                              __OLD_PATH=$PATH
                              function updatePATHForNPM() {
                              export PATH=$(npm bin):$__OLD_PATH
                              }

                              function node-mode() {
                              PROMPT_COMMAND=updatePATHForNPM
                              }

                              function node-mode-off() {
                              unset PROMPT_COMMAND
                              PATH=$__OLD_PATH
                              }

                              # Uncomment to enable node-mode by default:
                              # node-mode


                              This may add a short delay every time the bash prompt gets rendered (depending on the size of your project, most likely), so it's disabled by default.



                              You can enable and disable it within your terminal by running node-mode and node-mode-off, respectively.






                              share|improve this answer
























                                6












                                6








                                6






                                If you want your PATH variable to correctly update based on your current working directory, add this to the end of your .bashrc-equivalent (or after anything that defines PATH):



                                __OLD_PATH=$PATH
                                function updatePATHForNPM() {
                                export PATH=$(npm bin):$__OLD_PATH
                                }

                                function node-mode() {
                                PROMPT_COMMAND=updatePATHForNPM
                                }

                                function node-mode-off() {
                                unset PROMPT_COMMAND
                                PATH=$__OLD_PATH
                                }

                                # Uncomment to enable node-mode by default:
                                # node-mode


                                This may add a short delay every time the bash prompt gets rendered (depending on the size of your project, most likely), so it's disabled by default.



                                You can enable and disable it within your terminal by running node-mode and node-mode-off, respectively.






                                share|improve this answer












                                If you want your PATH variable to correctly update based on your current working directory, add this to the end of your .bashrc-equivalent (or after anything that defines PATH):



                                __OLD_PATH=$PATH
                                function updatePATHForNPM() {
                                export PATH=$(npm bin):$__OLD_PATH
                                }

                                function node-mode() {
                                PROMPT_COMMAND=updatePATHForNPM
                                }

                                function node-mode-off() {
                                unset PROMPT_COMMAND
                                PATH=$__OLD_PATH
                                }

                                # Uncomment to enable node-mode by default:
                                # node-mode


                                This may add a short delay every time the bash prompt gets rendered (depending on the size of your project, most likely), so it's disabled by default.



                                You can enable and disable it within your terminal by running node-mode and node-mode-off, respectively.







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Nov 11 '13 at 6:14









                                namuol

                                7,35943151




                                7,35943151























                                    6














                                    I prefer to not rely on shell aliases or another package.



                                    Adding a simple line to scripts section of your package.json, you can run local npm commands like



                                    npm run webpack



                                    package.json



                                    {
                                    "scripts": {
                                    "test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
                                    "webpack": "webpack"
                                    },
                                    "devDependencies": {
                                    "webpack": "^4.1.1",
                                    "webpack-cli": "^2.0.11"
                                    }
                                    }






                                    share|improve this answer


























                                      6














                                      I prefer to not rely on shell aliases or another package.



                                      Adding a simple line to scripts section of your package.json, you can run local npm commands like



                                      npm run webpack



                                      package.json



                                      {
                                      "scripts": {
                                      "test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
                                      "webpack": "webpack"
                                      },
                                      "devDependencies": {
                                      "webpack": "^4.1.1",
                                      "webpack-cli": "^2.0.11"
                                      }
                                      }






                                      share|improve this answer
























                                        6












                                        6








                                        6






                                        I prefer to not rely on shell aliases or another package.



                                        Adding a simple line to scripts section of your package.json, you can run local npm commands like



                                        npm run webpack



                                        package.json



                                        {
                                        "scripts": {
                                        "test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
                                        "webpack": "webpack"
                                        },
                                        "devDependencies": {
                                        "webpack": "^4.1.1",
                                        "webpack-cli": "^2.0.11"
                                        }
                                        }






                                        share|improve this answer












                                        I prefer to not rely on shell aliases or another package.



                                        Adding a simple line to scripts section of your package.json, you can run local npm commands like



                                        npm run webpack



                                        package.json



                                        {
                                        "scripts": {
                                        "test": "echo "Error: no test specified" && exit 1",
                                        "webpack": "webpack"
                                        },
                                        "devDependencies": {
                                        "webpack": "^4.1.1",
                                        "webpack-cli": "^2.0.11"
                                        }
                                        }







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered Mar 11 at 16:21









                                        guneysus

                                        3,92812929




                                        3,92812929























                                            4














                                            I've always used the same approach as @guneysus to solve this problem, which is creating a script in the package.json file and use it running npm run script-name.



                                            However, in the recent months I've been using npx and I love it.



                                            For example, I downloaded an Angular project and I didn't want to install the Angular CLI globally. So, with npx installed, instead of using the global angular cli command (if I had installed it) like this:



                                            ng serve


                                            I can do this from the console:



                                            npx ng serve


                                            Here's an article I wrote about NPX and that goes deeper into it
                                            https://medium.com/ninjadevs/with-npx-you-can-forget-about-installing-unnecessary-npm-packages-globally-and-do-even-more-a28b797ea449






                                            share|improve this answer




























                                              4














                                              I've always used the same approach as @guneysus to solve this problem, which is creating a script in the package.json file and use it running npm run script-name.



                                              However, in the recent months I've been using npx and I love it.



                                              For example, I downloaded an Angular project and I didn't want to install the Angular CLI globally. So, with npx installed, instead of using the global angular cli command (if I had installed it) like this:



                                              ng serve


                                              I can do this from the console:



                                              npx ng serve


                                              Here's an article I wrote about NPX and that goes deeper into it
                                              https://medium.com/ninjadevs/with-npx-you-can-forget-about-installing-unnecessary-npm-packages-globally-and-do-even-more-a28b797ea449






                                              share|improve this answer


























                                                4












                                                4








                                                4






                                                I've always used the same approach as @guneysus to solve this problem, which is creating a script in the package.json file and use it running npm run script-name.



                                                However, in the recent months I've been using npx and I love it.



                                                For example, I downloaded an Angular project and I didn't want to install the Angular CLI globally. So, with npx installed, instead of using the global angular cli command (if I had installed it) like this:



                                                ng serve


                                                I can do this from the console:



                                                npx ng serve


                                                Here's an article I wrote about NPX and that goes deeper into it
                                                https://medium.com/ninjadevs/with-npx-you-can-forget-about-installing-unnecessary-npm-packages-globally-and-do-even-more-a28b797ea449






                                                share|improve this answer














                                                I've always used the same approach as @guneysus to solve this problem, which is creating a script in the package.json file and use it running npm run script-name.



                                                However, in the recent months I've been using npx and I love it.



                                                For example, I downloaded an Angular project and I didn't want to install the Angular CLI globally. So, with npx installed, instead of using the global angular cli command (if I had installed it) like this:



                                                ng serve


                                                I can do this from the console:



                                                npx ng serve


                                                Here's an article I wrote about NPX and that goes deeper into it
                                                https://medium.com/ninjadevs/with-npx-you-can-forget-about-installing-unnecessary-npm-packages-globally-and-do-even-more-a28b797ea449







                                                share|improve this answer














                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer








                                                edited Dec 19 at 3:10

























                                                answered Aug 30 at 22:31









                                                Jair Reina

                                                1,2151210




                                                1,2151210























                                                    3














                                                    zxc is like "bundle exec" for nodejs. It is similar to using PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH:



                                                    $ npm install -g zxc
                                                    $ npm install gulp
                                                    $ zxc which gulp
                                                    /home/nathan/code/project1/node_modules/.bin/gulp





                                                    share|improve this answer


























                                                      3














                                                      zxc is like "bundle exec" for nodejs. It is similar to using PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH:



                                                      $ npm install -g zxc
                                                      $ npm install gulp
                                                      $ zxc which gulp
                                                      /home/nathan/code/project1/node_modules/.bin/gulp





                                                      share|improve this answer
























                                                        3












                                                        3








                                                        3






                                                        zxc is like "bundle exec" for nodejs. It is similar to using PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH:



                                                        $ npm install -g zxc
                                                        $ npm install gulp
                                                        $ zxc which gulp
                                                        /home/nathan/code/project1/node_modules/.bin/gulp





                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        zxc is like "bundle exec" for nodejs. It is similar to using PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH:



                                                        $ npm install -g zxc
                                                        $ npm install gulp
                                                        $ zxc which gulp
                                                        /home/nathan/code/project1/node_modules/.bin/gulp






                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                        answered Jan 18 '16 at 22:09









                                                        Nathan

                                                        4,05921922




                                                        4,05921922























                                                            3














                                                            Same @regular 's accepted solution, but Fish shell flavour



                                                            if not contains (npm bin) $PATH
                                                            set PATH (npm bin) $PATH
                                                            end





                                                            share|improve this answer




























                                                              3














                                                              Same @regular 's accepted solution, but Fish shell flavour



                                                              if not contains (npm bin) $PATH
                                                              set PATH (npm bin) $PATH
                                                              end





                                                              share|improve this answer


























                                                                3












                                                                3








                                                                3






                                                                Same @regular 's accepted solution, but Fish shell flavour



                                                                if not contains (npm bin) $PATH
                                                                set PATH (npm bin) $PATH
                                                                end





                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                Same @regular 's accepted solution, but Fish shell flavour



                                                                if not contains (npm bin) $PATH
                                                                set PATH (npm bin) $PATH
                                                                end






                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                edited Feb 7 '17 at 11:58

























                                                                answered Sep 8 '15 at 14:42









                                                                Pioneer Skies

                                                                1,2501911




                                                                1,2501911























                                                                    3














                                                                    For Windows



                                                                    Store the following in a file called npm-exec.bat and add it to your %PATH%



                                                                    @echo off
                                                                    set cmd="npm bin"
                                                                    FOR /F "tokens=*" %%i IN (' %cmd% ') DO SET modules=%%i
                                                                    "%modules%"%*


                                                                    Usage



                                                                    Then you can use it like
                                                                    npm-exec <command> <arg0> <arg1> ...



                                                                    For example



                                                                    To execute wdio installed in local node_modules directory, do:



                                                                    npm-exec wdio wdio.conf.js


                                                                    i.e. it will run .node_modules.binwdio wdio.conf.js






                                                                    share|improve this answer























                                                                    • This doesn't work while passing more than 1 argument. E.g. npm-exec gulp <some_task>
                                                                      – OK999
                                                                      Oct 4 '16 at 15:55










                                                                    • @OK9999 I'm sure some minor modification will allow passing arguments (because when you pass it here, it's coming in quoted in ""); What I suggest is copy paste the gulp file from bin to your project root (some modifications needed of the file, but it will just work without writing new code etc)
                                                                      – Dheeraj Bhaskar
                                                                      Oct 11 '16 at 18:45












                                                                    • Yes, i ended up doing so. The node_modules folder have to be in the folder where the gulpfile exist
                                                                      – OK999
                                                                      Oct 11 '16 at 18:53
















                                                                    3














                                                                    For Windows



                                                                    Store the following in a file called npm-exec.bat and add it to your %PATH%



                                                                    @echo off
                                                                    set cmd="npm bin"
                                                                    FOR /F "tokens=*" %%i IN (' %cmd% ') DO SET modules=%%i
                                                                    "%modules%"%*


                                                                    Usage



                                                                    Then you can use it like
                                                                    npm-exec <command> <arg0> <arg1> ...



                                                                    For example



                                                                    To execute wdio installed in local node_modules directory, do:



                                                                    npm-exec wdio wdio.conf.js


                                                                    i.e. it will run .node_modules.binwdio wdio.conf.js






                                                                    share|improve this answer























                                                                    • This doesn't work while passing more than 1 argument. E.g. npm-exec gulp <some_task>
                                                                      – OK999
                                                                      Oct 4 '16 at 15:55










                                                                    • @OK9999 I'm sure some minor modification will allow passing arguments (because when you pass it here, it's coming in quoted in ""); What I suggest is copy paste the gulp file from bin to your project root (some modifications needed of the file, but it will just work without writing new code etc)
                                                                      – Dheeraj Bhaskar
                                                                      Oct 11 '16 at 18:45












                                                                    • Yes, i ended up doing so. The node_modules folder have to be in the folder where the gulpfile exist
                                                                      – OK999
                                                                      Oct 11 '16 at 18:53














                                                                    3












                                                                    3








                                                                    3






                                                                    For Windows



                                                                    Store the following in a file called npm-exec.bat and add it to your %PATH%



                                                                    @echo off
                                                                    set cmd="npm bin"
                                                                    FOR /F "tokens=*" %%i IN (' %cmd% ') DO SET modules=%%i
                                                                    "%modules%"%*


                                                                    Usage



                                                                    Then you can use it like
                                                                    npm-exec <command> <arg0> <arg1> ...



                                                                    For example



                                                                    To execute wdio installed in local node_modules directory, do:



                                                                    npm-exec wdio wdio.conf.js


                                                                    i.e. it will run .node_modules.binwdio wdio.conf.js






                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                    For Windows



                                                                    Store the following in a file called npm-exec.bat and add it to your %PATH%



                                                                    @echo off
                                                                    set cmd="npm bin"
                                                                    FOR /F "tokens=*" %%i IN (' %cmd% ') DO SET modules=%%i
                                                                    "%modules%"%*


                                                                    Usage



                                                                    Then you can use it like
                                                                    npm-exec <command> <arg0> <arg1> ...



                                                                    For example



                                                                    To execute wdio installed in local node_modules directory, do:



                                                                    npm-exec wdio wdio.conf.js


                                                                    i.e. it will run .node_modules.binwdio wdio.conf.js







                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                    edited Nov 15 '17 at 11:38









                                                                    LoganMzz

                                                                    1,22021226




                                                                    1,22021226










                                                                    answered Aug 3 '16 at 23:00









                                                                    Dheeraj Bhaskar

                                                                    14.2k74352




                                                                    14.2k74352












                                                                    • This doesn't work while passing more than 1 argument. E.g. npm-exec gulp <some_task>
                                                                      – OK999
                                                                      Oct 4 '16 at 15:55










                                                                    • @OK9999 I'm sure some minor modification will allow passing arguments (because when you pass it here, it's coming in quoted in ""); What I suggest is copy paste the gulp file from bin to your project root (some modifications needed of the file, but it will just work without writing new code etc)
                                                                      – Dheeraj Bhaskar
                                                                      Oct 11 '16 at 18:45












                                                                    • Yes, i ended up doing so. The node_modules folder have to be in the folder where the gulpfile exist
                                                                      – OK999
                                                                      Oct 11 '16 at 18:53


















                                                                    • This doesn't work while passing more than 1 argument. E.g. npm-exec gulp <some_task>
                                                                      – OK999
                                                                      Oct 4 '16 at 15:55










                                                                    • @OK9999 I'm sure some minor modification will allow passing arguments (because when you pass it here, it's coming in quoted in ""); What I suggest is copy paste the gulp file from bin to your project root (some modifications needed of the file, but it will just work without writing new code etc)
                                                                      – Dheeraj Bhaskar
                                                                      Oct 11 '16 at 18:45












                                                                    • Yes, i ended up doing so. The node_modules folder have to be in the folder where the gulpfile exist
                                                                      – OK999
                                                                      Oct 11 '16 at 18:53
















                                                                    This doesn't work while passing more than 1 argument. E.g. npm-exec gulp <some_task>
                                                                    – OK999
                                                                    Oct 4 '16 at 15:55




                                                                    This doesn't work while passing more than 1 argument. E.g. npm-exec gulp <some_task>
                                                                    – OK999
                                                                    Oct 4 '16 at 15:55












                                                                    @OK9999 I'm sure some minor modification will allow passing arguments (because when you pass it here, it's coming in quoted in ""); What I suggest is copy paste the gulp file from bin to your project root (some modifications needed of the file, but it will just work without writing new code etc)
                                                                    – Dheeraj Bhaskar
                                                                    Oct 11 '16 at 18:45






                                                                    @OK9999 I'm sure some minor modification will allow passing arguments (because when you pass it here, it's coming in quoted in ""); What I suggest is copy paste the gulp file from bin to your project root (some modifications needed of the file, but it will just work without writing new code etc)
                                                                    – Dheeraj Bhaskar
                                                                    Oct 11 '16 at 18:45














                                                                    Yes, i ended up doing so. The node_modules folder have to be in the folder where the gulpfile exist
                                                                    – OK999
                                                                    Oct 11 '16 at 18:53




                                                                    Yes, i ended up doing so. The node_modules folder have to be in the folder where the gulpfile exist
                                                                    – OK999
                                                                    Oct 11 '16 at 18:53











                                                                    2














                                                                    You can also use direnv and change the $PATH variable only in your working folder.



                                                                    $ cat .envrc
                                                                    > export PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH





                                                                    share|improve this answer





















                                                                    • use with direnv. direnv.net
                                                                      – kuboon
                                                                      Jan 12 '17 at 9:31


















                                                                    2














                                                                    You can also use direnv and change the $PATH variable only in your working folder.



                                                                    $ cat .envrc
                                                                    > export PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH





                                                                    share|improve this answer





















                                                                    • use with direnv. direnv.net
                                                                      – kuboon
                                                                      Jan 12 '17 at 9:31
















                                                                    2












                                                                    2








                                                                    2






                                                                    You can also use direnv and change the $PATH variable only in your working folder.



                                                                    $ cat .envrc
                                                                    > export PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH





                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                    You can also use direnv and change the $PATH variable only in your working folder.



                                                                    $ cat .envrc
                                                                    > export PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH






                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                                    answered Nov 16 '16 at 0:22









                                                                    Erem

                                                                    67821017




                                                                    67821017












                                                                    • use with direnv. direnv.net
                                                                      – kuboon
                                                                      Jan 12 '17 at 9:31




















                                                                    • use with direnv. direnv.net
                                                                      – kuboon
                                                                      Jan 12 '17 at 9:31


















                                                                    use with direnv. direnv.net
                                                                    – kuboon
                                                                    Jan 12 '17 at 9:31






                                                                    use with direnv. direnv.net
                                                                    – kuboon
                                                                    Jan 12 '17 at 9:31













                                                                    2














                                                                    Add this script to your .bashrc. Then you can call coffee or anyhting locally. This is handy for your laptop, but don't use it on your server.



                                                                    DEFAULT_PATH=$PATH;

                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path(){
                                                                    NODE_MODULES='./node_modules/.bin';
                                                                    if [ -d $NODE_MODULES ]; then
                                                                    PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH:$NODE_MODULES;
                                                                    else
                                                                    PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH;
                                                                    fi
                                                                    }

                                                                    cd () {
                                                                    builtin cd "$@";
                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path;
                                                                    }

                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path;


                                                                    note: this script makes aliase of cd command, and after each call of cd it checks node_modules/.bin and add it to your $PATH.



                                                                    note2: you can change the third line to NODE_MODULES=$(npm bin);. But that would make cd command too slow.






                                                                    share|improve this answer



















                                                                    • 1




                                                                      Use $(npm bin) instead of hardcoding ./node_modules/.bin.
                                                                      – bfontaine
                                                                      Jan 25 '17 at 17:27












                                                                    • That makes sense. I've updated the code above.
                                                                      – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                      Jan 26 '17 at 2:12










                                                                    • Hmm, $(npm bin) seems too slow to use with each cd command. I've restore the code and added a note for it.
                                                                      – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                      Jan 26 '17 at 2:28
















                                                                    2














                                                                    Add this script to your .bashrc. Then you can call coffee or anyhting locally. This is handy for your laptop, but don't use it on your server.



                                                                    DEFAULT_PATH=$PATH;

                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path(){
                                                                    NODE_MODULES='./node_modules/.bin';
                                                                    if [ -d $NODE_MODULES ]; then
                                                                    PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH:$NODE_MODULES;
                                                                    else
                                                                    PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH;
                                                                    fi
                                                                    }

                                                                    cd () {
                                                                    builtin cd "$@";
                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path;
                                                                    }

                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path;


                                                                    note: this script makes aliase of cd command, and after each call of cd it checks node_modules/.bin and add it to your $PATH.



                                                                    note2: you can change the third line to NODE_MODULES=$(npm bin);. But that would make cd command too slow.






                                                                    share|improve this answer



















                                                                    • 1




                                                                      Use $(npm bin) instead of hardcoding ./node_modules/.bin.
                                                                      – bfontaine
                                                                      Jan 25 '17 at 17:27












                                                                    • That makes sense. I've updated the code above.
                                                                      – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                      Jan 26 '17 at 2:12










                                                                    • Hmm, $(npm bin) seems too slow to use with each cd command. I've restore the code and added a note for it.
                                                                      – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                      Jan 26 '17 at 2:28














                                                                    2












                                                                    2








                                                                    2






                                                                    Add this script to your .bashrc. Then you can call coffee or anyhting locally. This is handy for your laptop, but don't use it on your server.



                                                                    DEFAULT_PATH=$PATH;

                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path(){
                                                                    NODE_MODULES='./node_modules/.bin';
                                                                    if [ -d $NODE_MODULES ]; then
                                                                    PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH:$NODE_MODULES;
                                                                    else
                                                                    PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH;
                                                                    fi
                                                                    }

                                                                    cd () {
                                                                    builtin cd "$@";
                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path;
                                                                    }

                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path;


                                                                    note: this script makes aliase of cd command, and after each call of cd it checks node_modules/.bin and add it to your $PATH.



                                                                    note2: you can change the third line to NODE_MODULES=$(npm bin);. But that would make cd command too slow.






                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                    Add this script to your .bashrc. Then you can call coffee or anyhting locally. This is handy for your laptop, but don't use it on your server.



                                                                    DEFAULT_PATH=$PATH;

                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path(){
                                                                    NODE_MODULES='./node_modules/.bin';
                                                                    if [ -d $NODE_MODULES ]; then
                                                                    PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH:$NODE_MODULES;
                                                                    else
                                                                    PATH=$DEFAULT_PATH;
                                                                    fi
                                                                    }

                                                                    cd () {
                                                                    builtin cd "$@";
                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path;
                                                                    }

                                                                    add_local_node_modules_to_path;


                                                                    note: this script makes aliase of cd command, and after each call of cd it checks node_modules/.bin and add it to your $PATH.



                                                                    note2: you can change the third line to NODE_MODULES=$(npm bin);. But that would make cd command too slow.







                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                    edited Jan 26 '17 at 2:25

























                                                                    answered Dec 19 '16 at 16:49









                                                                    Tsutomu Kawamura

                                                                    1,068810




                                                                    1,068810








                                                                    • 1




                                                                      Use $(npm bin) instead of hardcoding ./node_modules/.bin.
                                                                      – bfontaine
                                                                      Jan 25 '17 at 17:27












                                                                    • That makes sense. I've updated the code above.
                                                                      – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                      Jan 26 '17 at 2:12










                                                                    • Hmm, $(npm bin) seems too slow to use with each cd command. I've restore the code and added a note for it.
                                                                      – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                      Jan 26 '17 at 2:28














                                                                    • 1




                                                                      Use $(npm bin) instead of hardcoding ./node_modules/.bin.
                                                                      – bfontaine
                                                                      Jan 25 '17 at 17:27












                                                                    • That makes sense. I've updated the code above.
                                                                      – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                      Jan 26 '17 at 2:12










                                                                    • Hmm, $(npm bin) seems too slow to use with each cd command. I've restore the code and added a note for it.
                                                                      – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                      Jan 26 '17 at 2:28








                                                                    1




                                                                    1




                                                                    Use $(npm bin) instead of hardcoding ./node_modules/.bin.
                                                                    – bfontaine
                                                                    Jan 25 '17 at 17:27






                                                                    Use $(npm bin) instead of hardcoding ./node_modules/.bin.
                                                                    – bfontaine
                                                                    Jan 25 '17 at 17:27














                                                                    That makes sense. I've updated the code above.
                                                                    – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                    Jan 26 '17 at 2:12




                                                                    That makes sense. I've updated the code above.
                                                                    – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                    Jan 26 '17 at 2:12












                                                                    Hmm, $(npm bin) seems too slow to use with each cd command. I've restore the code and added a note for it.
                                                                    – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                    Jan 26 '17 at 2:28




                                                                    Hmm, $(npm bin) seems too slow to use with each cd command. I've restore the code and added a note for it.
                                                                    – Tsutomu Kawamura
                                                                    Jan 26 '17 at 2:28











                                                                    2














                                                                    For Windows use this:



                                                                    /* cmd into "node_modules" folder */
                                                                    "%CD%.bingrunt" --version





                                                                    share|improve this answer




























                                                                      2














                                                                      For Windows use this:



                                                                      /* cmd into "node_modules" folder */
                                                                      "%CD%.bingrunt" --version





                                                                      share|improve this answer


























                                                                        2












                                                                        2








                                                                        2






                                                                        For Windows use this:



                                                                        /* cmd into "node_modules" folder */
                                                                        "%CD%.bingrunt" --version





                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                        For Windows use this:



                                                                        /* cmd into "node_modules" folder */
                                                                        "%CD%.bingrunt" --version






                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                                        edited Feb 22 '17 at 16:35

























                                                                        answered Feb 2 '17 at 12:59









                                                                        b3wii

                                                                        454313




                                                                        454313























                                                                            1














                                                                            I encountered the same problem and I don't particularly like using aliases (as regular's suggested), and if you don't like them too then here's another workaround that I use, you first have to create a tiny executable bash script, say setenv.sh:



                                                                            #!/bin/sh

                                                                            # Add your local node_modules bin to the path
                                                                            export PATH="$(npm bin):$PATH"

                                                                            # execute the rest of the command
                                                                            exec "$@"


                                                                            and then you can then use any executables in your local /bin using this command:



                                                                            ./setenv.sh <command>
                                                                            ./setenv.sh 6to5-node server.js
                                                                            ./setenv.sh grunt


                                                                            If you're using scripts in package.json then:



                                                                            ...,
                                                                            scripts: {
                                                                            'start': './setenv.sh <command>'
                                                                            }





                                                                            share|improve this answer



















                                                                            • 2




                                                                              this setenv script isn't necessary for package.json scripts. npm already prepends the local node_modules/.bin directory to path for you when executing npm run {scripts}.
                                                                              – jasonkarns
                                                                              Feb 6 '15 at 19:39
















                                                                            1














                                                                            I encountered the same problem and I don't particularly like using aliases (as regular's suggested), and if you don't like them too then here's another workaround that I use, you first have to create a tiny executable bash script, say setenv.sh:



                                                                            #!/bin/sh

                                                                            # Add your local node_modules bin to the path
                                                                            export PATH="$(npm bin):$PATH"

                                                                            # execute the rest of the command
                                                                            exec "$@"


                                                                            and then you can then use any executables in your local /bin using this command:



                                                                            ./setenv.sh <command>
                                                                            ./setenv.sh 6to5-node server.js
                                                                            ./setenv.sh grunt


                                                                            If you're using scripts in package.json then:



                                                                            ...,
                                                                            scripts: {
                                                                            'start': './setenv.sh <command>'
                                                                            }





                                                                            share|improve this answer



















                                                                            • 2




                                                                              this setenv script isn't necessary for package.json scripts. npm already prepends the local node_modules/.bin directory to path for you when executing npm run {scripts}.
                                                                              – jasonkarns
                                                                              Feb 6 '15 at 19:39














                                                                            1












                                                                            1








                                                                            1






                                                                            I encountered the same problem and I don't particularly like using aliases (as regular's suggested), and if you don't like them too then here's another workaround that I use, you first have to create a tiny executable bash script, say setenv.sh:



                                                                            #!/bin/sh

                                                                            # Add your local node_modules bin to the path
                                                                            export PATH="$(npm bin):$PATH"

                                                                            # execute the rest of the command
                                                                            exec "$@"


                                                                            and then you can then use any executables in your local /bin using this command:



                                                                            ./setenv.sh <command>
                                                                            ./setenv.sh 6to5-node server.js
                                                                            ./setenv.sh grunt


                                                                            If you're using scripts in package.json then:



                                                                            ...,
                                                                            scripts: {
                                                                            'start': './setenv.sh <command>'
                                                                            }





                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                            I encountered the same problem and I don't particularly like using aliases (as regular's suggested), and if you don't like them too then here's another workaround that I use, you first have to create a tiny executable bash script, say setenv.sh:



                                                                            #!/bin/sh

                                                                            # Add your local node_modules bin to the path
                                                                            export PATH="$(npm bin):$PATH"

                                                                            # execute the rest of the command
                                                                            exec "$@"


                                                                            and then you can then use any executables in your local /bin using this command:



                                                                            ./setenv.sh <command>
                                                                            ./setenv.sh 6to5-node server.js
                                                                            ./setenv.sh grunt


                                                                            If you're using scripts in package.json then:



                                                                            ...,
                                                                            scripts: {
                                                                            'start': './setenv.sh <command>'
                                                                            }






                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                            edited May 23 '17 at 11:55









                                                                            Community

                                                                            11




                                                                            11










                                                                            answered Dec 30 '14 at 22:20









                                                                            nkh

                                                                            4,0761910




                                                                            4,0761910








                                                                            • 2




                                                                              this setenv script isn't necessary for package.json scripts. npm already prepends the local node_modules/.bin directory to path for you when executing npm run {scripts}.
                                                                              – jasonkarns
                                                                              Feb 6 '15 at 19:39














                                                                            • 2




                                                                              this setenv script isn't necessary for package.json scripts. npm already prepends the local node_modules/.bin directory to path for you when executing npm run {scripts}.
                                                                              – jasonkarns
                                                                              Feb 6 '15 at 19:39








                                                                            2




                                                                            2




                                                                            this setenv script isn't necessary for package.json scripts. npm already prepends the local node_modules/.bin directory to path for you when executing npm run {scripts}.
                                                                            – jasonkarns
                                                                            Feb 6 '15 at 19:39




                                                                            this setenv script isn't necessary for package.json scripts. npm already prepends the local node_modules/.bin directory to path for you when executing npm run {scripts}.
                                                                            – jasonkarns
                                                                            Feb 6 '15 at 19:39











                                                                            1














                                                                            I'd love to know if this is an insecure/bad idea, but after thinking about it a bit I don't see an issue here:



                                                                            Modifying Linus's insecure solution to add it to the end, using npm bin to find the directory, and making the script only call npm bin when a package.json is present in a parent (for speed), this is what I came up with for zsh:



                                                                            find-up () {
                                                                            path=$(pwd)
                                                                            while [[ "$path" != "" && ! -e "$path/$1" ]]; do
                                                                            path=${path%/*}
                                                                            done
                                                                            echo "$path"
                                                                            }

                                                                            precmd() {
                                                                            if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                                                                            new_bin=$(npm bin)
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                                                                            fi
                                                                            else
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                                                                            fi
                                                                            fi
                                                                            }


                                                                            For bash, instead of using the precmd hook, you can use the $PROMPT_COMMAND variable (I haven't tested this but you get the idea):



                                                                            __add-node-to-path() {
                                                                            if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                                                                            new_bin=$(npm bin)
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                                                                            fi
                                                                            else
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                                                                            fi
                                                                            fi
                                                                            }

                                                                            export PROMPT_COMMAND="__add-node-to-path"





                                                                            share|improve this answer























                                                                            • Adding npm bin to end of $PATH may not execute what user expects: basically another executable but more probably a globally installed package with another version !
                                                                              – LoganMzz
                                                                              Nov 8 '17 at 13:46


















                                                                            1














                                                                            I'd love to know if this is an insecure/bad idea, but after thinking about it a bit I don't see an issue here:



                                                                            Modifying Linus's insecure solution to add it to the end, using npm bin to find the directory, and making the script only call npm bin when a package.json is present in a parent (for speed), this is what I came up with for zsh:



                                                                            find-up () {
                                                                            path=$(pwd)
                                                                            while [[ "$path" != "" && ! -e "$path/$1" ]]; do
                                                                            path=${path%/*}
                                                                            done
                                                                            echo "$path"
                                                                            }

                                                                            precmd() {
                                                                            if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                                                                            new_bin=$(npm bin)
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                                                                            fi
                                                                            else
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                                                                            fi
                                                                            fi
                                                                            }


                                                                            For bash, instead of using the precmd hook, you can use the $PROMPT_COMMAND variable (I haven't tested this but you get the idea):



                                                                            __add-node-to-path() {
                                                                            if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                                                                            new_bin=$(npm bin)
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                                                                            fi
                                                                            else
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                                                                            fi
                                                                            fi
                                                                            }

                                                                            export PROMPT_COMMAND="__add-node-to-path"





                                                                            share|improve this answer























                                                                            • Adding npm bin to end of $PATH may not execute what user expects: basically another executable but more probably a globally installed package with another version !
                                                                              – LoganMzz
                                                                              Nov 8 '17 at 13:46
















                                                                            1












                                                                            1








                                                                            1






                                                                            I'd love to know if this is an insecure/bad idea, but after thinking about it a bit I don't see an issue here:



                                                                            Modifying Linus's insecure solution to add it to the end, using npm bin to find the directory, and making the script only call npm bin when a package.json is present in a parent (for speed), this is what I came up with for zsh:



                                                                            find-up () {
                                                                            path=$(pwd)
                                                                            while [[ "$path" != "" && ! -e "$path/$1" ]]; do
                                                                            path=${path%/*}
                                                                            done
                                                                            echo "$path"
                                                                            }

                                                                            precmd() {
                                                                            if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                                                                            new_bin=$(npm bin)
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                                                                            fi
                                                                            else
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                                                                            fi
                                                                            fi
                                                                            }


                                                                            For bash, instead of using the precmd hook, you can use the $PROMPT_COMMAND variable (I haven't tested this but you get the idea):



                                                                            __add-node-to-path() {
                                                                            if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                                                                            new_bin=$(npm bin)
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                                                                            fi
                                                                            else
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                                                                            fi
                                                                            fi
                                                                            }

                                                                            export PROMPT_COMMAND="__add-node-to-path"





                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                            I'd love to know if this is an insecure/bad idea, but after thinking about it a bit I don't see an issue here:



                                                                            Modifying Linus's insecure solution to add it to the end, using npm bin to find the directory, and making the script only call npm bin when a package.json is present in a parent (for speed), this is what I came up with for zsh:



                                                                            find-up () {
                                                                            path=$(pwd)
                                                                            while [[ "$path" != "" && ! -e "$path/$1" ]]; do
                                                                            path=${path%/*}
                                                                            done
                                                                            echo "$path"
                                                                            }

                                                                            precmd() {
                                                                            if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                                                                            new_bin=$(npm bin)
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                                                                            fi
                                                                            else
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                                                                            fi
                                                                            fi
                                                                            }


                                                                            For bash, instead of using the precmd hook, you can use the $PROMPT_COMMAND variable (I haven't tested this but you get the idea):



                                                                            __add-node-to-path() {
                                                                            if [ "$(find-up package.json)" != "" ]; then
                                                                            new_bin=$(npm bin)
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "$new_bin" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}:$new_bin
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=$new_bin
                                                                            fi
                                                                            else
                                                                            if [ "$NODE_MODULES_PATH" != "" ]; then
                                                                            export PATH=${PATH%:$NODE_MODULES_PATH}
                                                                            export NODE_MODULES_PATH=""
                                                                            fi
                                                                            fi
                                                                            }

                                                                            export PROMPT_COMMAND="__add-node-to-path"






                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                            edited Aug 23 '16 at 5:30

























                                                                            answered Jul 15 '16 at 1:48









                                                                            Omar Diab

                                                                            623924




                                                                            623924












                                                                            • Adding npm bin to end of $PATH may not execute what user expects: basically another executable but more probably a globally installed package with another version !
                                                                              – LoganMzz
                                                                              Nov 8 '17 at 13:46




















                                                                            • Adding npm bin to end of $PATH may not execute what user expects: basically another executable but more probably a globally installed package with another version !
                                                                              – LoganMzz
                                                                              Nov 8 '17 at 13:46


















                                                                            Adding npm bin to end of $PATH may not execute what user expects: basically another executable but more probably a globally installed package with another version !
                                                                            – LoganMzz
                                                                            Nov 8 '17 at 13:46






                                                                            Adding npm bin to end of $PATH may not execute what user expects: basically another executable but more probably a globally installed package with another version !
                                                                            – LoganMzz
                                                                            Nov 8 '17 at 13:46













                                                                            1














                                                                            I am a Windows user and this is what worked for me:



                                                                            // First set some variable - i.e. replace is with "xo"
                                                                            D:projectroot> set xo="./node_modules/.bin/"

                                                                            // Next, work with it
                                                                            D:projectroot> %xo%/bower install


                                                                            Good Luck.






                                                                            share|improve this answer


























                                                                              1














                                                                              I am a Windows user and this is what worked for me:



                                                                              // First set some variable - i.e. replace is with "xo"
                                                                              D:projectroot> set xo="./node_modules/.bin/"

                                                                              // Next, work with it
                                                                              D:projectroot> %xo%/bower install


                                                                              Good Luck.






                                                                              share|improve this answer
























                                                                                1












                                                                                1








                                                                                1






                                                                                I am a Windows user and this is what worked for me:



                                                                                // First set some variable - i.e. replace is with "xo"
                                                                                D:projectroot> set xo="./node_modules/.bin/"

                                                                                // Next, work with it
                                                                                D:projectroot> %xo%/bower install


                                                                                Good Luck.






                                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                                I am a Windows user and this is what worked for me:



                                                                                // First set some variable - i.e. replace is with "xo"
                                                                                D:projectroot> set xo="./node_modules/.bin/"

                                                                                // Next, work with it
                                                                                D:projectroot> %xo%/bower install


                                                                                Good Luck.







                                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                share|improve this answer










                                                                                answered Jan 26 '17 at 9:27









                                                                                Akash

                                                                                6,12013840




                                                                                6,12013840























                                                                                    1














                                                                                    In case you are using fish shell and do not want to add to $path for security reason. We can add the below function to run local node executables.



                                                                                    ### run executables in node_module/.bin directory
                                                                                    function n
                                                                                    set -l npmbin (npm bin)
                                                                                    set -l argvCount (count $argv)
                                                                                    switch $argvCount
                                                                                    case 0
                                                                                    echo please specify the local node executable as 1st argument
                                                                                    case 1
                                                                                    # for one argument, we can eval directly
                                                                                    eval $npmbin/$argv
                                                                                    case '*'
                                                                                    set --local executable $argv[1]
                                                                                    # for 2 or more arguments we cannot append directly after the $npmbin/ since the fish will apply each array element after the the start string: $npmbin/arg1 $npmbin/arg2...
                                                                                    # This is just how fish interoperate array.
                                                                                    set --erase argv[1]
                                                                                    eval $npmbin/$executable $argv
                                                                                    end
                                                                                    end


                                                                                    Now you can run thing like:



                                                                                    n coffee



                                                                                    or more arguments like:



                                                                                    n browser-sync --version



                                                                                    Note, if you are bash user, then @Bob9630 answers is the way to go by leveraging bash's $@, which is not available in fishshell.






                                                                                    share|improve this answer




























                                                                                      1














                                                                                      In case you are using fish shell and do not want to add to $path for security reason. We can add the below function to run local node executables.



                                                                                      ### run executables in node_module/.bin directory
                                                                                      function n
                                                                                      set -l npmbin (npm bin)
                                                                                      set -l argvCount (count $argv)
                                                                                      switch $argvCount
                                                                                      case 0
                                                                                      echo please specify the local node executable as 1st argument
                                                                                      case 1
                                                                                      # for one argument, we can eval directly
                                                                                      eval $npmbin/$argv
                                                                                      case '*'
                                                                                      set --local executable $argv[1]
                                                                                      # for 2 or more arguments we cannot append directly after the $npmbin/ since the fish will apply each array element after the the start string: $npmbin/arg1 $npmbin/arg2...
                                                                                      # This is just how fish interoperate array.
                                                                                      set --erase argv[1]
                                                                                      eval $npmbin/$executable $argv
                                                                                      end
                                                                                      end


                                                                                      Now you can run thing like:



                                                                                      n coffee



                                                                                      or more arguments like:



                                                                                      n browser-sync --version



                                                                                      Note, if you are bash user, then @Bob9630 answers is the way to go by leveraging bash's $@, which is not available in fishshell.






                                                                                      share|improve this answer


























                                                                                        1












                                                                                        1








                                                                                        1






                                                                                        In case you are using fish shell and do not want to add to $path for security reason. We can add the below function to run local node executables.



                                                                                        ### run executables in node_module/.bin directory
                                                                                        function n
                                                                                        set -l npmbin (npm bin)
                                                                                        set -l argvCount (count $argv)
                                                                                        switch $argvCount
                                                                                        case 0
                                                                                        echo please specify the local node executable as 1st argument
                                                                                        case 1
                                                                                        # for one argument, we can eval directly
                                                                                        eval $npmbin/$argv
                                                                                        case '*'
                                                                                        set --local executable $argv[1]
                                                                                        # for 2 or more arguments we cannot append directly after the $npmbin/ since the fish will apply each array element after the the start string: $npmbin/arg1 $npmbin/arg2...
                                                                                        # This is just how fish interoperate array.
                                                                                        set --erase argv[1]
                                                                                        eval $npmbin/$executable $argv
                                                                                        end
                                                                                        end


                                                                                        Now you can run thing like:



                                                                                        n coffee



                                                                                        or more arguments like:



                                                                                        n browser-sync --version



                                                                                        Note, if you are bash user, then @Bob9630 answers is the way to go by leveraging bash's $@, which is not available in fishshell.






                                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                                        In case you are using fish shell and do not want to add to $path for security reason. We can add the below function to run local node executables.



                                                                                        ### run executables in node_module/.bin directory
                                                                                        function n
                                                                                        set -l npmbin (npm bin)
                                                                                        set -l argvCount (count $argv)
                                                                                        switch $argvCount
                                                                                        case 0
                                                                                        echo please specify the local node executable as 1st argument
                                                                                        case 1
                                                                                        # for one argument, we can eval directly
                                                                                        eval $npmbin/$argv
                                                                                        case '*'
                                                                                        set --local executable $argv[1]
                                                                                        # for 2 or more arguments we cannot append directly after the $npmbin/ since the fish will apply each array element after the the start string: $npmbin/arg1 $npmbin/arg2...
                                                                                        # This is just how fish interoperate array.
                                                                                        set --erase argv[1]
                                                                                        eval $npmbin/$executable $argv
                                                                                        end
                                                                                        end


                                                                                        Now you can run thing like:



                                                                                        n coffee



                                                                                        or more arguments like:



                                                                                        n browser-sync --version



                                                                                        Note, if you are bash user, then @Bob9630 answers is the way to go by leveraging bash's $@, which is not available in fishshell.







                                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                                                        edited May 19 '17 at 16:45

























                                                                                        answered May 19 '17 at 16:29









                                                                                        Leon li

                                                                                        2,6642428




                                                                                        2,6642428























                                                                                            -8














                                                                                            Include coffee-script in package.json with the specific version required in each project, typically like this:



                                                                                            "dependencies":{
                                                                                            "coffee-script": ">= 1.2.0"


                                                                                            Then run npm install to install dependencies in each project. This will install the specified version of coffee-script which will be accessible locally to each project.






                                                                                            share|improve this answer





















                                                                                            • yeah, I got that far as I stated in my question. how do I specifically call the one in my project besides ./node_modules/.bin/coffee?
                                                                                              – typeoneerror
                                                                                              Mar 13 '12 at 9:47










                                                                                            • If you've run npm install with the package.json in your project's main folder, you should have a ./node_modules/.bin/coffee folder in this folder. Using ./node_modules/coffee-script/bin/coffee will run the local version of coffee while just running coffee will run the global installation. If you have another version of coffee installed in another path within this project folder, you can access it using ./path/to/this/installation/coffee.
                                                                                              – almypal
                                                                                              Mar 13 '12 at 10:42










                                                                                            • This did not work for me. I am trying to use "svgo", and it only works when installed globally. I have tried npm install svgo as well as npm install with package.json. Both methods installed "successfully", but the "svgo" command is still not available.
                                                                                              – Ryan Wheale
                                                                                              Apr 5 '13 at 4:37






                                                                                            • 1




                                                                                              Grunt uses this in a clever way, and IMHO so should other packages. First you install the grunt-cli package globally, then in your project directory install any (modified) version of the grunt package, then when you run grunt, it will use this local version.
                                                                                              – ack
                                                                                              Feb 28 '14 at 21:00


















                                                                                            -8














                                                                                            Include coffee-script in package.json with the specific version required in each project, typically like this:



                                                                                            "dependencies":{
                                                                                            "coffee-script": ">= 1.2.0"


                                                                                            Then run npm install to install dependencies in each project. This will install the specified version of coffee-script which will be accessible locally to each project.






                                                                                            share|improve this answer





















                                                                                            • yeah, I got that far as I stated in my question. how do I specifically call the one in my project besides ./node_modules/.bin/coffee?
                                                                                              – typeoneerror
                                                                                              Mar 13 '12 at 9:47










                                                                                            • If you've run npm install with the package.json in your project's main folder, you should have a ./node_modules/.bin/coffee folder in this folder. Using ./node_modules/coffee-script/bin/coffee will run the local version of coffee while just running coffee will run the global installation. If you have another version of coffee installed in another path within this project folder, you can access it using ./path/to/this/installation/coffee.
                                                                                              – almypal
                                                                                              Mar 13 '12 at 10:42










                                                                                            • This did not work for me. I am trying to use "svgo", and it only works when installed globally. I have tried npm install svgo as well as npm install with package.json. Both methods installed "successfully", but the "svgo" command is still not available.
                                                                                              – Ryan Wheale
                                                                                              Apr 5 '13 at 4:37






                                                                                            • 1




                                                                                              Grunt uses this in a clever way, and IMHO so should other packages. First you install the grunt-cli package globally, then in your project directory install any (modified) version of the grunt package, then when you run grunt, it will use this local version.
                                                                                              – ack
                                                                                              Feb 28 '14 at 21:00
















                                                                                            -8












                                                                                            -8








                                                                                            -8






                                                                                            Include coffee-script in package.json with the specific version required in each project, typically like this:



                                                                                            "dependencies":{
                                                                                            "coffee-script": ">= 1.2.0"


                                                                                            Then run npm install to install dependencies in each project. This will install the specified version of coffee-script which will be accessible locally to each project.






                                                                                            share|improve this answer












                                                                                            Include coffee-script in package.json with the specific version required in each project, typically like this:



                                                                                            "dependencies":{
                                                                                            "coffee-script": ">= 1.2.0"


                                                                                            Then run npm install to install dependencies in each project. This will install the specified version of coffee-script which will be accessible locally to each project.







                                                                                            share|improve this answer












                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                                                            answered Mar 13 '12 at 7:58









                                                                                            almypal

                                                                                            5,14931723




                                                                                            5,14931723












                                                                                            • yeah, I got that far as I stated in my question. how do I specifically call the one in my project besides ./node_modules/.bin/coffee?
                                                                                              – typeoneerror
                                                                                              Mar 13 '12 at 9:47










                                                                                            • If you've run npm install with the package.json in your project's main folder, you should have a ./node_modules/.bin/coffee folder in this folder. Using ./node_modules/coffee-script/bin/coffee will run the local version of coffee while just running coffee will run the global installation. If you have another version of coffee installed in another path within this project folder, you can access it using ./path/to/this/installation/coffee.
                                                                                              – almypal
                                                                                              Mar 13 '12 at 10:42










                                                                                            • This did not work for me. I am trying to use "svgo", and it only works when installed globally. I have tried npm install svgo as well as npm install with package.json. Both methods installed "successfully", but the "svgo" command is still not available.
                                                                                              – Ryan Wheale
                                                                                              Apr 5 '13 at 4:37






                                                                                            • 1




                                                                                              Grunt uses this in a clever way, and IMHO so should other packages. First you install the grunt-cli package globally, then in your project directory install any (modified) version of the grunt package, then when you run grunt, it will use this local version.
                                                                                              – ack
                                                                                              Feb 28 '14 at 21:00




















                                                                                            • yeah, I got that far as I stated in my question. how do I specifically call the one in my project besides ./node_modules/.bin/coffee?
                                                                                              – typeoneerror
                                                                                              Mar 13 '12 at 9:47










                                                                                            • If you've run npm install with the package.json in your project's main folder, you should have a ./node_modules/.bin/coffee folder in this folder. Using ./node_modules/coffee-script/bin/coffee will run the local version of coffee while just running coffee will run the global installation. If you have another version of coffee installed in another path within this project folder, you can access it using ./path/to/this/installation/coffee.
                                                                                              – almypal
                                                                                              Mar 13 '12 at 10:42










                                                                                            • This did not work for me. I am trying to use "svgo", and it only works when installed globally. I have tried npm install svgo as well as npm install with package.json. Both methods installed "successfully", but the "svgo" command is still not available.
                                                                                              – Ryan Wheale
                                                                                              Apr 5 '13 at 4:37






                                                                                            • 1




                                                                                              Grunt uses this in a clever way, and IMHO so should other packages. First you install the grunt-cli package globally, then in your project directory install any (modified) version of the grunt package, then when you run grunt, it will use this local version.
                                                                                              – ack
                                                                                              Feb 28 '14 at 21:00


















                                                                                            yeah, I got that far as I stated in my question. how do I specifically call the one in my project besides ./node_modules/.bin/coffee?
                                                                                            – typeoneerror
                                                                                            Mar 13 '12 at 9:47




                                                                                            yeah, I got that far as I stated in my question. how do I specifically call the one in my project besides ./node_modules/.bin/coffee?
                                                                                            – typeoneerror
                                                                                            Mar 13 '12 at 9:47












                                                                                            If you've run npm install with the package.json in your project's main folder, you should have a ./node_modules/.bin/coffee folder in this folder. Using ./node_modules/coffee-script/bin/coffee will run the local version of coffee while just running coffee will run the global installation. If you have another version of coffee installed in another path within this project folder, you can access it using ./path/to/this/installation/coffee.
                                                                                            – almypal
                                                                                            Mar 13 '12 at 10:42




                                                                                            If you've run npm install with the package.json in your project's main folder, you should have a ./node_modules/.bin/coffee folder in this folder. Using ./node_modules/coffee-script/bin/coffee will run the local version of coffee while just running coffee will run the global installation. If you have another version of coffee installed in another path within this project folder, you can access it using ./path/to/this/installation/coffee.
                                                                                            – almypal
                                                                                            Mar 13 '12 at 10:42












                                                                                            This did not work for me. I am trying to use "svgo", and it only works when installed globally. I have tried npm install svgo as well as npm install with package.json. Both methods installed "successfully", but the "svgo" command is still not available.
                                                                                            – Ryan Wheale
                                                                                            Apr 5 '13 at 4:37




                                                                                            This did not work for me. I am trying to use "svgo", and it only works when installed globally. I have tried npm install svgo as well as npm install with package.json. Both methods installed "successfully", but the "svgo" command is still not available.
                                                                                            – Ryan Wheale
                                                                                            Apr 5 '13 at 4:37




                                                                                            1




                                                                                            1




                                                                                            Grunt uses this in a clever way, and IMHO so should other packages. First you install the grunt-cli package globally, then in your project directory install any (modified) version of the grunt package, then when you run grunt, it will use this local version.
                                                                                            – ack
                                                                                            Feb 28 '14 at 21:00






                                                                                            Grunt uses this in a clever way, and IMHO so should other packages. First you install the grunt-cli package globally, then in your project directory install any (modified) version of the grunt package, then when you run grunt, it will use this local version.
                                                                                            – ack
                                                                                            Feb 28 '14 at 21:00




















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