Browse Source

doc refactor: globals

v0.9.1-release
isaacs 13 years ago
parent
commit
af7314e190
  1. 69
      doc/api/globals.markdown

69
doc/api/globals.markdown

@ -1,30 +1,50 @@
## Global Objects
# Global Objects
<!-- type=misc -->
These objects are available in all modules. Some of these objects aren't
actually in the global scope but in the module scope - this will be noted.
### global
## global
<!-- type=global -->
The global namespace object.
* {Object} The global namespace object.
In browsers, the top-level scope is the global scope. That means that in
browsers if you're in the global scope `var something` will define a global
variable. In Node this is different. The top-level scope is not the global
scope; `var something` inside a Node module will be local to that module.
### process
## process
<!-- type=global -->
* {Object}
The process object. See the [process object](process.html#process) section.
### console
## console
<!-- type=global -->
* {Object}
Used to print to stdout and stderr. See the [stdio](stdio.html) section.
### Buffer
## Buffer
<!-- type=global -->
* {Object}
Used to handle binary data. See the [buffers](buffers.html) section.
### require()
## require()
<!-- type=var -->
* {Function}
To require modules. See the [Modules](modules.html#modules) section.
`require` isn't actually a global but rather local to each module.
@ -37,11 +57,16 @@ but rather than loading the module, just return the resolved filename.
### require.cache
* {Object}
Modules are cached in this object when they are required. By deleting a key
value from this object, the next `require` will reload the module.
## __filename
<!-- type=var -->
### __filename
* {String}
The filename of the code being executed. This is the resolved absolute path
of this code file. For a main program this is not necessarily the same
@ -55,7 +80,11 @@ Example: running `node example.js` from `/Users/mjr`
`__filename` isn't actually a global but rather local to each module.
### __dirname
## __dirname
<!-- type=var -->
* {String}
The name of the directory that the currently executing script resides in.
@ -67,7 +96,11 @@ Example: running `node example.js` from `/Users/mjr`
`__dirname` isn't actually a global but rather local to each module.
### module
## module
<!-- type=var -->
* {Object}
A reference to the current module. In particular
`module.exports` is the same as the `exports` object.
@ -77,7 +110,9 @@ See the [module system documentation](modules.html) for more
information.
### exports
## exports
<!-- type=var -->
An object which is shared between all instances of the current module and
made accessible through `require()`.
@ -87,9 +122,13 @@ made accessible through `require()`.
See the [module system documentation](modules.html) for more
information.
### setTimeout(cb, ms)
### clearTimeout(t)
### setInterval(cb, ms)
### clearInterval(t)
See the [module section](modules.html) for more information.
## setTimeout(cb, ms)
## clearTimeout(t)
## setInterval(cb, ms)
## clearInterval(t)
<!--type=global-->
The timer functions are global variables. See the [timers](timers.html) section.

Loading…
Cancel
Save