- App.tsx: full navigation (Auth stack + Main tabs with 5 screens) - Auth: LoginScreen, RegisterScreen, ForgotPasswordScreen - HomeScreen: dashboard with IoT metrics, weather widget, alerts, quick actions, sensors - MapScreen: interactive map with layer toggles (6 layers) - MarketplaceScreen: categories (6), products (5), search - ChatScreen: AI chat with quick prompts (4), bot responses - ProfileScreen: user info, stats, menu (9 items), logout - AlertsScreen: alert list with severity, acknowledge - SensorsScreen: sensor list with type filters (6 types), search - ZonesScreen: zone cards with stats - SettingsScreen: language picker (FR/EN/ES/DE), privacy, about - Stores: iotStore (sensors, zones, alerts), notificationStore, uiStore + i18n - Hooks: useSensors, useAlerts, useNotifications, useLocation - Components: Card, Button, LoadingSpinner, ErrorBoundary, Header - Services: iotService, notificationService (with axios API client) - Utils: formatters (temp, AQI, noise, dates), validators (email, password, IBAN) - Theme: colors.ts with full design system (Blue Ocean palette) - Ditto: fixed MongoDB connection, new JWT secrets, official gateway image
2.1 KiB
2.1 KiB
which-module
Find the module object for something that was require()d
Find the module object in require.cache for something that was require()d
or imported - essentially a reverse require() lookup.
Useful for libs that want to e.g. lookup a filename for a module or submodule
that it did not require() itself.
Install and Usage
npm install --save which-module
const whichModule = require('which-module')
console.log(whichModule(require('something')))
// Module {
// id: '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/index.js',
// exports: [Function],
// parent: ...,
// filename: '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/index.js',
// loaded: true,
// children: [],
// paths: [ '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/node_modules',
// '/path/to/project/node_modules',
// '/path/to/node_modules',
// '/path/node_modules',
// '/node_modules' ] }
API
whichModule(exported)
Return the module object,
if any, that represents the given argument in the require.cache.
exported can be anything that was previously require()d or imported as a
module, submodule, or dependency - which means exported is identical to the
module.exports returned by this method.
If exported did not come from the exports of a module in require.cache,
then this method returns null.
License
ISC © Contributors