# esm-env Uses export conditions to return environment information in a way that works with major bundlers and runtimes. ## Usage Install with `npm install esm-env`, then import as needed: ```js import { BROWSER, DEV, NODE } from 'esm-env'; ``` Specify `conditions` in your bundler or runtime. For example: - [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html#-c-condition---conditionscondition) - [Bun](https://bun.sh/docs/runtime/modules#custom-conditions) - [Vite/Vitest](https://vite.dev/config/shared-options#resolve-conditions) - [webpack](https://webpack.js.org/configuration/resolve/#resolveconditionnames) If `esm-env` is used in both bundled code and an externalized library, you will need to specify conditions both at build-time and run-time. ## Acknowledgements Thank you to [dominikg](https://github.com/dominikg) for refining the approach used by this library to suggest a more scalable method for adding additional conditions. ## License [MIT](LICENSE)