Files
smart-city-digital-twin-mar…/smart-app-city/frontend/node_modules/is-interactive
Eric FELIXINE e30ae8ed09 feat(smart-app): implement complete mobile app MVP
- 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
2026-06-01 18:00:35 -04:00
..

is-interactive Build Status

Check if stdout or stderr is interactive

It checks that the stream is TTY, not a dumb terminal, and not running in a CI.

This can be useful to decide whether to present interactive UI or animations in the terminal.

Install

$ npm install is-interactive

Usage

const isInteractive = require('is-interactive');

isInteractive();
//=> true

API

isInteractive(options?)

options

Type: object

stream

Type: stream.Writable
Default: process.stdout

The stream to check.

FAQ

Why are you not using ci-info for the CI check?

It's silly to have to detect individual CIs. They should identify themselves with the CI environment variable, and most do just that. A manually maintained list of detections will easily get out of date. And if a package using ci-info doesn't update to the latest version all the time, they will not support certain CIs. It also creates unpredictability as you might assume a CI is not supported and then suddenly it gets supported and you didn't account for that. In addition, some of the manual detections are loose and might cause false-positives which could create hard-to-debug bugs.

Why does this even exist? It's just a few lines.

It's not about the number of lines, but rather discoverability and documentation. A lot of people wouldn't even know they need this. Feel free to copy-paste the code if you don't want the dependency. You might also want to read this blog post.