Tag npm moduels with lat/long of where on the planet the module was published
MIT License
A simple module for tagging your npm modules with latitude and longitude (geotagging) of where on the planet the module was published.
npm install geopkg -g
Simply run the following command while in the root of your module directory:
geopkg [command]
The commands are as follows:
help
- Get help for specific command. Run: geopkg help [command]
version
- Bump the version and update the coordinates in a single commitupdate
- Updates the current package.json with current coordinatesedit
- Edit coordinates in package.json by dragging a marker on a mapview
- Views the coordinates found in package.json in the browserpreview
- Finds your current location and previews it in the browserGet help for specific command:
geopkg help [command]
Bump the version of your npm module and automatically tag it with your current geo-coordinates.
geopkg version (<newversion> | major | minor | patch | premajor | preminor | prepatch | prerelease) [options]
This will do exactly the same as npm version
plus add your current
position on planet earth to the package.json file:
{
"coordinates": [55.8079696, 12.502925]
}
Options:
-i
- Interactive mode: Modify the location by dragging a pin on a mapA good way to both streamline the npm version
command and to use geopkg minimally is to add this to your .bash_profile:
function npmv () {
geopkg version "$1"
}
geopkg update [options]
This will update your package.json
file with a coordinates
property
holding the lat/long coordinates:
{
"coordinates": [55.8079696, 12.502925]
}
Options:
-i
- Interactive mode: Modify the location by dragging a pin on a mapTo modify the coordinates in package.json, run:
geopkg edit
This should open up Google Maps zoomed to the coordinates in your favorite browser. You can now just move the marker on the map to the desired location. As soon as you close the browser tab, the location in package.json is updated accordingly.
You can easily view the coordinates that the module in cwd is tagged with - just run:
geopkg view
This should open up Google Maps zoomed to the module coordinates in your favorite browser.
To see your current location (regardless of what is written to package.json), run:
geopkg preview
This should open up Google Maps zoomed to the detected coordinates in your favorite browser.
MIT