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How can I npm install a package into a different directory?

Vincent
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2 Answers2

104

Say you want to install Case package, you can have a specific version under an alias:

npm i case-1.5.3@npm:case@1.5.3

or just give it a different name

npm i kool@npm:case

If you want to edit package.json directly:

"dependencies": {
  "case-1.5.3": "npm:case@^1.5.3",
  "kool": "npm:case@^1.6.1"
}

require():

let Case = require( 'case-1.5.3' );
let Kool = require( 'kool' );

Yarn used to have this functionality for a long time, and npm finally got it since v6.9.0, Mar 2019.

If you want to update your npm:

sudo npm i -g npm@latest
Vincent
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    How do you then get specific dependencies to use a package alias? I'm trying to upgrade from material UI 0.x to 4.x in an existing app. I need React 16.3 for 0.x and 16.8 for 4.x – Greg K Sep 27 '19 at 11:23
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    Is it possible to install a package that has multiple names? – Mathias Lykkegaard Lorenzen Mar 16 '20 at 18:02
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    Thank you so much for including the syntax for the `package.json` - every other answer I came across neglects this. – Slbox Apr 29 '20 at 01:21
  • This is brilliant! We used that to force a browserified version of dependencies of react-pdf/renderer package, in context where we cannot do it using Webpack aliases – Eric Burel Mar 18 '22 at 07:46
1

with PNPM
if want to use two different versions of a package in your project. It is possible with following commands

pnpm add <any-alias-name>@npm:package-name

for example 

pnpm add new-lodash@npm:lodash@2
pnpm add old-lodash@npm:lodash@1

Now we can use both lodash in our project

const newLodash = require('new-lodash');
const oldLodash = require('old-lodash');

Note that it worked only for require and not for ESM import statement i.e.

import oldLodash from 'old-lodash' // will throw error
Akshay Vijay Jain
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