{ "source": "doc/api/globals.md", "introduced_in": "v0.10.0", "globals": [ { "textRaw": "Class: Buffer", "type": "global", "name": "Buffer", "meta": { "added": [ "v0.1.103" ], "changes": [] }, "desc": "
Used to handle binary data. See the buffer section.
\n" }, { "textRaw": "clearImmediate(immediateObject)", "type": "global", "name": "clearImmediate", "meta": { "added": [ "v0.9.1" ], "changes": [] }, "desc": "clearImmediate
is described in the timers section.
clearInterval
is described in the timers section.
clearTimeout
is described in the timers section.
Used to print to stdout and stderr. See the console
section.
In browsers, the top-level scope is the global scope. This means that\nwithin the browser var something
will define a new global variable. In\nNode.js this is different. The top-level scope is not the global scope;\nvar something
inside a Node.js module will be local to that module.
The process object. See the process
object section.
setImmediate
is described in the timers section.
setInterval
is described in the timers section.
setTimeout
is described in the timers section.
The WHATWG URL
class. See the URL
section.
The WHATWG URLSearchParams
class. See the URLSearchParams
section.
This variable may appear to be global but is not. See require()
.
These objects are available in all modules. The following variables may appear\nto be global but are not. They exist only in the scope of modules, see the\nmodule system documentation:
\n__dirname
__filename
exports
module
require()
The objects listed here are specific to Node.js. There are a number of\nbuilt-in objects that are part of the JavaScript language itself, which are\nalso globally accessible.
\n", "globals": [ { "textRaw": "Class: Buffer", "type": "global", "name": "Buffer", "meta": { "added": [ "v0.1.103" ], "changes": [] }, "desc": "Used to handle binary data. See the buffer section.
\n" }, { "textRaw": "clearImmediate(immediateObject)", "type": "global", "name": "clearImmediate", "meta": { "added": [ "v0.9.1" ], "changes": [] }, "desc": "clearImmediate
is described in the timers section.
clearInterval
is described in the timers section.
clearTimeout
is described in the timers section.
Used to print to stdout and stderr. See the console
section.
In browsers, the top-level scope is the global scope. This means that\nwithin the browser var something
will define a new global variable. In\nNode.js this is different. The top-level scope is not the global scope;\nvar something
inside a Node.js module will be local to that module.
The process object. See the process
object section.
setImmediate
is described in the timers section.
setInterval
is described in the timers section.
setTimeout
is described in the timers section.
The WHATWG URL
class. See the URL
section.
The WHATWG URLSearchParams
class. See the URLSearchParams
section.
This variable may appear to be global but is not. See __dirname
.
This variable may appear to be global but is not. See __filename
.
This variable may appear to be global but is not. See exports
.
This variable may appear to be global but is not. See module
.
This variable may appear to be global but is not. See require()
.