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Changes related to node
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Since node-webkit supports GUI applications instead of console applications, the output of console.log()
(and other similar methods such as console.warn()
and console.error()
) is redirected to WebKit's console. You may see it in your “Developer Tools” window (on its “Console” tab).
A couple of new fields is added to the global process
object:
-
process.versions['node-webkit']
is set with node-webkit's version. -
process.versions['chromium']
is set with the chromium version which node-webkit is based on. (since v0.7.3) -
process.mainModule
is set for the start page (such asindex.html
) as specified in the manifest'smain
field. However, when thenode-main
field is also specified in the manifest,process.mainModule
points to the file specified in thenode-main
field.
The following names are inserted to the global object in Node's context:
-
require
- this is therequire()
function within the main module.
Behaviour of relative paths in Node's require()
method depends on how the parent file is used in the application (where “the parent file” is the file in which the require()
method is called):
- If the parent file was also required by Node (using
require()
), then the child's relative path is treated as relative to its parent. - If the parent file is included by WebKit (using any web technology: classic DOM
window.open()
, node-webkit'sWindow.open()
, classic DOMXMLHttpRequest
, jQuery's$.getScript()
, HTML<script src="...">
element, etc.), then the child's relative path is treated as relative to the application's root directory.
WebKit (Chrome) has its own DOM crypto
object. When you require()
the Node API module of the same name (see http://nodejs.org/docs/latest/api/crypto.html for details), you have to use some other name (see issue 540 for example).
Only Node modules (called by require()
method) can use the __dirname
global to read the path to their file's directory.
This global is not available in WebKit's context (including the “Developer Tools” window).
Put exports.dirname = __dirname;
in a util.js
file and require it in your main JS file:
var dirname = require('./util').dirname;
console.log(dirname);
//=> /Users/johndoe/dev/project/
Currently child_process.fork
is broken in node-webkit
works fine after 0.10.3 on Linux and 0.10.4 on Windows.