99

I'm getting this error from my Node.js application:

ENOENT, no such file or directory '~/Desktop/MyApp/newversion/partials/navigation.jade'

I know the file is there because when I try to open the file using the exact copied and pasted path, it works. I also know the application is using the right directory because, well, it outputs it in the error.

1
  • 21
    Delete package-lock.json and run npm install again
    – Mathiasfc
    Mar 20, 2019 at 16:10

17 Answers 17

50

I believe the accepted answer is the correct answer to this problem but I was getting this error when I tried installing my npm package with npm install mailgun-js (see below):

Output for npm install mailgun-js

The fix for me was: npm init --yes

Output for the previous command npm init --yes, then checking with npm install mailgun-js

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30

Tilde expansion is a shell thing. Write the proper pathname (probably /home/yourusername/Desktop/etcetcetc) or use
process.env.HOME + '/Desktop/blahblahblah'

4
  • Hmm, I thought that was handled by app.locals.basedir = '~/Desktop/BitBox/thenewbox'; I tried app.set('home', process.env.HOME || '/Users/Kinnard/Desktop/BitBox/thenewbox'); But that didn't work, same error. Dec 24, 2013 at 1:43
  • Ok, just changing app.locals.basedir = '~/Desktop/BitBox/thenewbox'; to the absolute path worked. Thanks! Dec 24, 2013 at 1:44
  • I'm having this error too. I have no path: ..node_module/rxjs. What am i doing wrong? my issue: ** ./node_modules/rxjs/_esm5/index.js Module build failed: Error: ENOENT: no such file or directory, open '..\ClientApp\node_modules\rxjs_esm5\index.js'**
    – pnet
    Jul 4, 2018 at 18:55
  • You might want to look at this answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/21637099/… Dec 21, 2018 at 0:37
21

I was also plagued by this error, and after trying all the other answers, magically found the following solution:

Delete file package-lock.json and the node_modules folder, and then run npm install again.

If that doesn't work, try running these in order:

npm install
npm cache clean --force
npm install -g npm
npm install

(taken from @Thisuri's answer and @Mathias Falci's comment respectively)

And then re-deleting the above files and rerunning npm install.

It worked for me!

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  • After deleting node_modules : command not found: npm Apr 1, 2023 at 18:19
20
  1. First try npm install. If the issue is not yet fixed, try the following one after the other.
  2. npm cache clean, then
  3. npm install -g npm , then npm install. Finally
  4. ng serve --o to run the project.
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  • 2
    what does npm install -g npm do? any doc i can find info about it?
    – Prusio
    Mar 9, 2021 at 11:30
  • 2
    @Prusio It is the command to update npm (after it has been installed).
    – Damien
    Jun 7, 2021 at 10:40
10
__dirname

Gives you the current Node.js application's root directory.

In your case, you'd use

__dirname + '/Desktop/MyApp/newversion/partials/navigation.jade';

See this answer:

How can I get the application base path from a module in Node.js?

4

I had that issue using the path module:

const path = require('path');

And also do not forget to create the uploads directory first period.

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  • What do you mean by "create the uploads directory first period"? Jan 1, 2023 at 12:08
  • How does this answer the question? Jan 1, 2023 at 12:09
  • This seems like a completely bogus answer. Jan 1, 2023 at 12:11
2

Specifically, rm yarn.lock and then yarn install fixed this for me.

2

For those running Laravel Mix with npm run watch, just terminate the script and run the command again.

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  • 1
    How is that related to the question? Please respond by editing (changing) your answer, not here in comments (*********** without *********** "Edit:", "Update:", or similar - the answer should appear as if it was written today). Jan 1, 2023 at 12:19
1

When this happened to me, it was when trying to run Karma tests in an Angular project. The tsconfig.spec.js file turned out to be incorrect. It was basically pointing to the wrong directory, and so the error was simply trying to tell me this.

Enter image description here

For example, we had ../tsconfig.json instead of ./tsconfig.json, so the runner was looking for tests in the wrong folder. This may be a different use case from the OP, but the same error message brought me here and led me down the rabbit hole of trying the npm install solutions to no avail.

1

It usually occurs due to a mismatch in the npm version used while creating the package-lock.json that currently exist and the one you are using now.

Removing the package-lock.json and running npm install worked for me.

1
  • forgot about this one! Thanks!
    – Frizzant
    Feb 6, 2023 at 12:42
1

For me, the trouble was caused by the fact that my code folder was a subdirectory of my Dropbox folder, on Windows 10. During the build process, the Dropbox application would complain about working with more than 500,000 files.

I moved my folder out from the Dropbox directory and now it builds fine!

0

Reason: I have the same issue, where a few guys work on one project and change package dependencies.

Solution: Just kill file package-lock.json and run npm i again

0

In my case, I was running the terminal in the wrong folder. Please make sure that you navigate to the folder containing your code (App.js and others) and then use a command prompt (for Windows) to open the code. I am using Visual Studio Code, so it is to type "code." after I have opened the command prompt in the exact folder where my code is in.

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  • Re "code.": Do you mean "code" or "code ."? Jan 1, 2023 at 13:22
0

Sometimes you are just not in the right directory. Check that once and try "npm start" again.

0

I ran into this upgrading a Phoenix app to 1.6, which does not use Node.js, so in fact it is not needed. However, elixir_buildpack.config had a reference to phoenix_static_buildpack.config, which defined node. Remove the reference, and the error goes away.

0

My problem was that I didn't have a package.json file in my working directory.

0

Another possibility is that you are missing an .npmrc file if you are pulling any packages that are not publicly available.

You will need to add an .npmrc file at the root directory and add the private/internal registry inside of the .npmrc file like this:

registry=http://private.package.source/secret/npm-packages/

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