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I've been learning about node.js and modules, and can't seem to get the Underscore library to work properly... it seems that the first time I use a function from Underscore, it overwrites the _ object with the result of my function call. Anyone know what's going on? For example, here is a session from the node.js REPL:

Admin-MacBook-Pro:test admin$ node
> require("./underscore-min")
{ [Function]
  _: [Circular],
  VERSION: '1.1.4',
  forEach: [Function],
  each: [Function],
  map: [Function],
  inject: [Function],
  (...more functions...)
  templateSettings: { evaluate: /<%([\s\S]+?)%>/g, interpolate: /<%=([\s\S]+?)%>/g },
  template: [Function] }
> _.max([1,2,3])
3
> _.max([4,5,6])
TypeError: Object 3 has no method 'max'
    at [object Context]:1:3
    at Interface.<anonymous> (repl.js:171:22)
    at Interface.emit (events.js:64:17)
    at Interface._onLine (readline.js:153:10)
    at Interface._line (readline.js:408:8)
    at Interface._ttyWrite (readline.js:585:14)
    at ReadStream.<anonymous> (readline.js:73:12)
    at ReadStream.emit (events.js:81:20)
    at ReadStream._emitKey (tty_posix.js:307:10)
    at ReadStream.onData (tty_posix.js:70:12)
> _
3

When I make Javascript files myself and import them, they seem to be working properly. Maybe there's something special with the Underscore library?

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4 Answers

up vote 53 down vote accepted

The Node REPL uses the underscore variable to hold the result of the last operation, so it conflicts with the Underscore library's use of the same variable. Try something like this:

Admin-MacBook-Pro:test admin$ node
> _und = require("./underscore-min")
{ [Function]
  _: [Circular],
  VERSION: '1.1.4',
  forEach: [Function],
  each: [Function],
  map: [Function],
  inject: [Function],
  (...more functions...)
  templateSettings: { evaluate: /<%([\s\S]+?)%>/g, interpolate: /<%=([\s\S]+?)%>/g },
  template: [Function] }
> _und.max([1,2,3])
3
> _und.max([4,5,6])
6
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2  
Thank you. That was straightforward. – Jeff Apr 17 '11 at 21:36

As of today (April 30, 2012) you can use Underscore as usual on your Node.js code. Previous comments are right pointing that REPL interface (Node's command line mode) uses the "_" to hold the last result BUT on you are free to use it on your code files and it will work without a problem by doing the standard:

var _ = require('underscore');

Happy coding!

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2  
Note, this doesn't work if you try to globalize underscore: gist.github.com/3220108 – Lance Pollard Jul 31 '12 at 20:16
5  
Someone once told me that Globals are bad on all development languages. I do not see a problem having to specify var _ = require('underscore') on the modules who require it. nodejs.org/api/modules.html#modules_caching – Erick Ruiz de Chavez Aug 1 '12 at 23:08
What Node version does 30-apri-2012 correspond with? – poseid May 14 at 13:10

Or :

    var _ = require('underscore')._;
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6  
"npm install underscore" first – iwill Apr 2 '12 at 18:33

The name _ used by the node.js REPL to hold the previous input. Choose another name.

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1  
__ double underscore? :) – Andrei Cristof Dec 11 '12 at 22:48
double underscore is better than _und i feel :) – ktkaushik Mar 12 at 6:41

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