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write

  Write data to a file, replacing the file if it already exists and
  creating any intermediate directories if they don't already exist.
  Thin wrapper around node's native fs methods.

Please consider following this project's author, Jon Schlinkert, and
consider starring the project to show your ❤️ and support.

Install

Install with npm (requires Node.js >=10):

    $ npm install --save write

Usage

    const write = require('write');

Options

The following options may be used with any method.

options.newline

Type: boolean

Default: undefined

Ensure that contents has a trailing newline before writing it to the
file system.

    write.sync('foo.txt', 'some data...', { newline: true }); 

options.overwrite

Type: boolean

Default: undefined

Set to false to prevent existing files from being overwritten. See
increment for a less severe alternative.

    write.sync('foo.txt', 'some data...', { overwrite: false });

options.increment

Type: boolean

Default: undefined

Set to true to automatically rename files by appending an increment,
like foo (2).txt, to prevent foo.txt from being overwritten. This is
useful when writing log files, or other information where the file name
is less important than the contents being written.

    write.sync('foo.txt', 'some data...', { increment: true });
    // if "foo.txt" exists, the file will be renamed to "foo (2).txt"

API

write

Asynchronously writes data to a file, replacing the file if it already
exists and creating any intermediate directories if they don't already
exist. Data can be a string or a buffer. Returns a promise if a callback
function is not passed.

Params

-   filepath {String}: file path.
-   data {String|Buffer|Uint8Array}: Data to write.
-   options {Object}: Options to pass to fs.writeFile
-   callback {Function}: (optional) If no callback is provided, a
    promise is returned.
-   returns {Object}: Returns an object with the path and contents of
    the file that was written to the file system. This is useful for
    debugging when options.increment is used and the path might have
    been modified.

Example

    const write = require('write');

    // async/await
    (async () => {
      await write('foo.txt', 'This is content...');
    })();

    // promise
    write('foo.txt', 'This is content...')
      .then(() => {
        // do stuff
      });

    // callback
    write('foo.txt', 'This is content...', err => {
      // do stuff with err
    });

.sync

The synchronous version of write. Returns undefined.

Params

-   filepath {String}: file path.
-   data {String|Buffer|Uint8Array}: Data to write.
-   options {Object}: Options to pass to fs.writeFileSync
-   returns {Object}: Returns an object with the path and contents of
    the file that was written to the file system. This is useful for
    debugging when options.increment is used and the path might have
    been modified.

Example

    const write = require('write');
    write.sync('foo.txt', 'This is content...');

.stream

Returns a new WriteStream object. Uses fs.createWriteStream to write
data to a file, replacing the file if it already exists and creating any
intermediate directories if they don't already exist. Data can be a
string or a buffer.

Params

-   filepath {String}: file path.
-   options {Object}: Options to pass to fs.createWriteStream
-   returns {Stream}: Returns a new WriteStream object. (See Writable
    Stream).

Example

    const fs = require('fs');
    const write = require('write');
    fs.createReadStream('README.md')
      .pipe(write.stream('a/b/c/other-file.md'))
      .on('close', () => {
        // do stuff
      });

Release history

See [CHANGELOG.md].

About

Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature
requests, please create an issue.

Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with
a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with
the following command:

    $ npm install && npm test

(This project's readme.md is generated by verb, please don't edit the
readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the .verb.md
readme template.)

To generate the readme, run the following command:

    $ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb

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-   read-data: Read JSON or YAML files. | homepage
-   read-yaml: Very thin wrapper around js-yaml for directly reading in
    YAML files. | homepage
-   strip-filename-increment: Operating systems commonly add a trailing
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-   write-data: Write a YAML or JSON file to disk. Automatically detects
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-   write-json: Write a JSON file to disk, also creates intermediate
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-   write-yaml: Write YAML. Converts JSON to YAML writes it to the
    specified file. | homepage

Contributors

  Commits   Contributor
  --------- ---------------
  42        jonschlinkert
  2         jpetitcolas
  1         tunnckoCore

Author

Jon Schlinkert

-   GitHub Profile
-   Twitter Profile
-   LinkedIn Profile

License

Copyright © 2019, Jon Schlinkert. Released under the MIT License.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

This file was generated by verb-generate-readme, v0.8.0, on September
04, 2019.

Generated by dwww version 1.16 on Tue Dec 16 11:17:07 CET 2025.