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I've just started using Grunt. It is pretty hard to set up and I am at the point of creating a package.json file.

Following this tutorial, it says there are 3 ways to create a package.json file.

The first is to do npm install grunt --save-dev

The first method is to navigate to the project directory via command-line(Terminal) and install grunt using npm : sudo npm install grunt –save-dev. After the install, you can use grunt-init task to automatically generate a project-specific package.json file.

But what does --save-dev mean? I tried looking but it ends in vain.

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8 Answers 8

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--save-dev: Package will appear in your devDependencies.

According to the npm install docs.

If someone is planning on downloading and using your module in their program, then they probably don't want or need to download and build the external test or documentation framework that you use.

In other words, when you run npm install, your project's devDependencies will be installed, but the devDependencies for any packages that your app depends on will not be installed; further, other apps having your app as a dependency need not install your devDependencies. Such modules should only be needed when developing the app (eg grunt, mocha etc).

According to the package.json docs

Edit: Attempt at visualising what npm install does:

  • yourproject
    • dependency installed
      • dependency installed
        • dependency installed
        • devDependency NOT installed
      • devDependency NOT installed
    • devDependency installed
      • dependency installed
      • devDependency NOT installed
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  • 2
    by default it wont install with dev dependencies but how i install with then? npm install --dev flag? Sep 16, 2014 at 18:34
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    @stanzheng I'm not sure what you need to know. If you're in a project and run npm install, the project's devDependencies will also be installed. You don't want a dependency's devDependencies installed. If you want to develop on an npm package, you'd git clone xxx that project, and run npm install in it. Sep 16, 2014 at 18:38
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    "devDependencies for your app's dependencies will not be installed when you run npm install" is incorrect. If I have a package.json and it only contains "devDependencies" with my npm packages, and I then type "npm install," those "devDependecies" get installed.
    – core
    Jan 28, 2015 at 23:20
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    I tried to understand and I didn't. Then I tried to understand the visualization and I didn't. What does each bullet-point item mean? A folder? What the strikethrough item mean? A non-existing directory? If that is true, how can you list exhaustively non-existing things? Feb 21, 2015 at 0:31
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    To clarify, if npm install is run in your project, all devDependencies in package.json will be installed, but if you package your project as a new npm package and publish it, when somebody else installs your package with npm install, the devDependencies will not be installed on their system. Is that right? @stanzheng or you can run npm install --production to install everything in package.json except the dev dependencies
    – Reese
    Jun 4, 2015 at 19:26
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There are (at least) two types of package dependencies you can indicate in your package.json files:

  1. Those packages that are required in order to use your module are listed under the "dependencies" property. Using npm you can add those dependencies to your package.json file this way:

    npm install --save packageName
    
  2. Those packages required in order to help develop your module are listed under the "devDependencies" property. These packages are not necessary for others to use the module, but if they want to help develop the module, these packages will be needed. Using npm you can add those devDependencies to your package.json file this way:

    npm install --save-dev packageName
    
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To add on to Andreas' answer, you can install only the dependencies by using:

npm install --production
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When you use the parameter "--save" your dependency will go inside the #1 below in package.json. When you use the parameter "--save-dev" your dependency will go inside the #2 below in package.json.

#1. "dependencies": these packages are required by your application in production.

#2. "devDependencies": these packages are only needed for development and testing

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    This is the clearest simplest explanation in English. Oct 10, 2021 at 0:10
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Documentation from npm for npm install <package-name> --save and npm install <package-name> --save-dev can be found here:

https://docs.npmjs.com/getting-started/using-a-package.json#the-save-and-save-dev-install-flags

A package.json file declares metadata about the module you are developing. Both aforementioned commands modify this package.json file. --save will declare the installed package (in this case, grunt) as a dependency for your module; --save-dev will declare it as a dependency for development of your module.

Ask yourself: will the installed package be required for use of my module, or will it only be required for developing it?

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For me the first answer appears a bit confusing, so to make it short and clean:

npm install <package_name> saves any specified packages into dependencies by default. Additionally, you can control where and how they get saved with some additional flags:

npm install <package_name> --no-save Prevents saving to dependencies.

npm install <package_name> ---save-dev updates the devDependencies in your package. These are only used for local testing and development.

You can read more at in the dcu

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–save

The package installed is core dependency.

–save-dev

The package installed is not a core rather development dependency.

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Use only when developing

  • --save-dev means omit in production environments, use only in development environments (smaller, and probably faster).

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