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## Global Objects
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These object are available in the global scope and can be accessed from anywhere.
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### global
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The global namespace object.
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In browsers, the top-level scope is the global scope. That means that in
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browsers if you're in the global scope `var something` will define a global
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variable. In Node this is different. The top-level scope is not the global
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scope; `var something` inside a Node module will be local to that module.
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### process
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The process object. See the 'process object' section.
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### require()
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To require modules. See the 'Modules' section.
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### require.resolve()
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Use the internal `require()` machinery to look up the location of a module,
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but rather than loading the module, just return the resolved filename.
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### require.paths
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An array of search paths for `require()`. This array can be modified to add
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custom paths.
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Example: add a new path to the beginning of the search list
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require.paths.unshift('/usr/local/node');
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### __filename
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The filename of the script being executed. This is the absolute path, and not necessarily
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the same filename passed in as a command line argument.
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Example: running `node example.js` from `/Users/mjr`
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console.log(__filename);
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// /Users/mjr/example.js
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### __dirname
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The dirname of the script being executed.
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Example: running `node example.js` from `/Users/mjr`
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console.log(__dirname);
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// /Users/mjr
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### module
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A reference to the current module. In particular
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`module.exports` is the same as the `exports` object. See `src/node.js`
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for more information.
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