Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
doc: sort globals alphabetically
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
Reorders, with no contextual changes, the globals documentation
alphabetically.

PR-URL: #3662
Reviewed-By: Evan Lucas <evanlucas@me.com>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Jeremiah Senkpiel <fishrock123@rocketmail.com>
  • Loading branch information
tflanagan authored and Myles Borins committed Nov 17, 2015
1 parent fc346fb commit 806b694
Showing 1 changed file with 96 additions and 97 deletions.
193 changes: 96 additions & 97 deletions doc/api/globals.markdown
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -5,33 +5,6 @@
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

<!-- type=global -->

* {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.js this is different. The top-level scope is not the global
scope; `var something` inside an Node.js module will be local to that module.

## process

<!-- type=global -->

* {Object}

The process object. See the [process object][] section.

## console

<!-- type=global -->

* {Object}

Used to print to stdout and stderr. See the [console][] section.

## Class: Buffer

<!-- type=global -->
Expand All @@ -40,48 +13,20 @@ Used to print to stdout and stderr. See the [console][] section.

Used to handle binary data. See the [buffer section][]

## require()
## __dirname

<!-- type=var -->

* {Function}

To require modules. See the [Modules][] section. `require` isn't actually a
global but rather local to each module.

### require.resolve()

Use the internal `require()` machinery to look up the location of a module,
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.

### require.extensions

Stability: 0 - Deprecated

* {Object}

Instruct `require` on how to handle certain file extensions.
* {String}

Process files with the extension `.sjs` as `.js`:
The name of the directory that the currently executing script resides in.

require.extensions['.sjs'] = require.extensions['.js'];
Example: running `node example.js` from `/Users/mjr`

**Deprecated** In the past, this list has been used to load
non-JavaScript modules into Node.js by compiling them on-demand.
However, in practice, there are much better ways to do this, such as
loading modules via some other Node.js program, or compiling them to
JavaScript ahead of time.
console.log(__dirname);
// /Users/mjr

Since the Module system is locked, this feature will probably never go
away. However, it may have subtle bugs and complexities that are best
left untouched.
`__dirname` isn't actually a global but rather local to each module.

## __filename

Expand All @@ -101,21 +46,57 @@ Example: running `node example.js` from `/Users/mjr`

`__filename` isn't actually a global but rather local to each module.

## __dirname
## clearInterval(t)

Stop a timer that was previously created with `setInterval()`. The callback
will not execute.

<!--type=global-->

The timer functions are global variables. See the [timers][] section.

[buffer section]: buffer.html
[module system documentation]: modules.html
[Modules]: modules.html#modules_modules
[process object]: process.html#process_process
[console]: console.html
[timers]: timers.html

## clearTimeout(t)

Stop a timer that was previously created with `setTimeout()`. The callback will
not execute.

## console

<!-- type=global -->

* {Object}

Used to print to stdout and stderr. See the [console][] section.

## exports

<!-- type=var -->

* {String}
A reference to the `module.exports` that is shorter to type.
See [module system documentation][] for details on when to use `exports` and
when to use `module.exports`.

The name of the directory that the currently executing script resides in.
`exports` isn't actually a global but rather local to each module.

Example: running `node example.js` from `/Users/mjr`
See the [module system documentation][] for more information.

console.log(__dirname);
// /Users/mjr
## global

`__dirname` isn't actually a global but rather local to each module.
<!-- type=global -->

* {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.js this is different. The top-level scope is not the global
scope; `var something` inside an Node.js module will be local to that module.

## module

Expand All @@ -131,33 +112,56 @@ available through `require()`.

See the [module system documentation][] for more information.

## exports
## process

<!-- type=global -->

* {Object}

The process object. See the [process object][] section.

## require()

<!-- type=var -->

A reference to the `module.exports` that is shorter to type.
See [module system documentation][] for details on when to use `exports` and
when to use `module.exports`.
* {Function}

`exports` isn't actually a global but rather local to each module.
To require modules. See the [Modules][] section. `require` isn't actually a
global but rather local to each module.

See the [module system documentation][] for more information.
### require.cache

## setTimeout(cb, ms)
* {Object}

Run callback `cb` after *at least* `ms` milliseconds. The actual delay depends
on external factors like OS timer granularity and system load.
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.

The timeout must be in the range of 1-2,147,483,647 inclusive. If the value is
outside that range, it's changed to 1 millisecond. Broadly speaking, a timer
cannot span more than 24.8 days.
### require.extensions

Returns an opaque value that represents the timer.
Stability: 0 - Deprecated

## clearTimeout(t)
* {Object}

Stop a timer that was previously created with `setTimeout()`. The callback will
not execute.
Instruct `require` on how to handle certain file extensions.

Process files with the extension `.sjs` as `.js`:

require.extensions['.sjs'] = require.extensions['.js'];

**Deprecated** In the past, this list has been used to load
non-JavaScript modules into Node.js by compiling them on-demand.
However, in practice, there are much better ways to do this, such as
loading modules via some other Node.js program, or compiling them to
JavaScript ahead of time.

Since the Module system is locked, this feature will probably never go
away. However, it may have subtle bugs and complexities that are best
left untouched.

### require.resolve()

Use the internal `require()` machinery to look up the location of a module,
but rather than loading the module, just return the resolved filename.

## setInterval(cb, ms)

Expand All @@ -171,18 +175,13 @@ cannot span more than 24.8 days.

Returns an opaque value that represents the timer.

## clearInterval(t)

Stop a timer that was previously created with `setInterval()`. The callback
will not execute.
## setTimeout(cb, ms)

<!--type=global-->
Run callback `cb` after *at least* `ms` milliseconds. The actual delay depends
on external factors like OS timer granularity and system load.

The timer functions are global variables. See the [timers][] section.
The timeout must be in the range of 1-2,147,483,647 inclusive. If the value is
outside that range, it's changed to 1 millisecond. Broadly speaking, a timer
cannot span more than 24.8 days.

[buffer section]: buffer.html
[module system documentation]: modules.html
[Modules]: modules.html#modules_modules
[process object]: process.html#process_process
[console]: console.html
[timers]: timers.html
Returns an opaque value that represents the timer.

0 comments on commit 806b694

Please sign in to comment.