Use i4q-dependencytrack in your Deno project
You have a number of ways to add i4q-dependencytrack to your project. This install command might feel most familar to regular npm users.
$ deno install npm:i4q-dependencytrack
Other ways to add i4q-dependencytrack to your project:
Importing packages directly
Using the npm prefix in an import statement imports the package directly from npm.*
main.ts
import i4q-dependencytrack from "npm:i4q-dependencytrack";
Using the Deno CLI
Use deno add
or deno install
to add packages to your project.*
$ deno install npm:i4q-dependencytrack
Using an import map
Use an import map to map the npm package to a local import.*
deno.json
...
{
"imports": {
"i4q-dependencytrack": "npm:i4q-dependencytrack"
...
}
}
main.ts
import i4q-dependencytrack from "i4q-dependencytrack";
*Examples shown here use general import syntax, but exports and proper usage vary depending on the package. See package docs for specific usage instructions.
Manage dependency versions with ease
Did you know Deno has a built-in dependency version manager?
Whether your packages are from npm or JSR, Deno can help you manage them and keep the installed versions up-to-date.
Use deno outdated
to track and manage dependecy versions in your project.
$ deno outdated
┌───────────┬─────────┬────────┬────────┐
│ Package │ Current │ Update │ Latest │
├───────────┼─────────┼────────┼────────┤
│ npm:react │ 18.2.0 │ 18.2.0 │ 19.1.0 │
├───────────┼─────────┼────────┼────────┤
│ npm:vite │ 4.5.10 │ 4.5.11 │ 6.2.4 │
└───────────┴─────────┴────────┴────────┘
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