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4cf0ce5bb4
Mostly quite minor edits. Those possibly of more interest are: emitter.setMaxListeners(n) That the limit is per event name for an emitter. fs.readlink() Not a path, but rather the symbolic link's string value, which would be at best a partial path, certainly not a 'resolvedPath' global.__filename This may be "well-known" but this is a full path to the module that referencing code is running in. It is not the main program's path, unless you are in the main program. Each module knows only its own path. server.listen(port,...) I actually needed this functionality... "gimme just _any_ next port" stream.end() stream.destroy() Yeah, everybody knows what happens to the queued data, but let's make it *really* explicit for the first readers.
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console
For printing to stdout and stderr. Similar to the console object functions provided by most web browsers, here the output is sent to stdout or stderr.
console.log()
Prints to stdout with newline. This function can take multiple arguments in a
printf()
-like way. Example:
console.log('count: %d', count);
If formating elements are not found in the first string then util.inspect
is used on each argument.
See util.format() for more infomation.
console.info()
Same as console.log
.
console.warn()
console.error()
Same as console.log
but prints to stderr.
console.dir(obj)
Uses util.inspect
on obj
and prints resulting string to stderr.
console.time(label)
Mark a time.
console.timeEnd(label)
Finish timer, record output. Example
console.time('100-elements');
for (var i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
;
}
console.timeEnd('100-elements');
console.trace()
Print a stack trace to stderr of the current position.
console.assert()
Same as assert.ok()
.