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| NPM-INIT(1) | General Commands Manual | NPM-INIT(1) |
NAME¶
npm-init
Synopsis¶
<!-- AUTOGENERATED USAGE DESCRIPTIONS -->
Description¶
npm init <initializer> can be used to set up a new or existing npm package.
initializer in this case is an npm package named
create-<initializer>,
which will be installed by npm-exec, and then have its main bin
executed -- presumably creating or updating package.json and running
any other initialization-related operations.
The init command is transformed to a corresponding npm exec operation as follows:
- npm init foo -> npm exec create-foo
- npm init @usr/foo -> npm exec @usr/create-foo
- npm init @usr -> npm exec @usr/create
- npm init @usr@2.0.0 -> npm exec @usr/create@2.0.0
- npm init @usr/foo@2.0.0 -> npm exec @usr/create-foo@2.0.0
If the initializer is omitted (by just calling npm init),
init will fall back to legacy init behavior.
It will ask you a bunch of questions, and then write a package.json for you.
It will attempt to make reasonable guesses based on existing fields,
dependencies, and options selected.
It is strictly additive, so it will keep any fields and values that were
already set.
You can also use -y/--yes to skip the questionnaire altogether.
If you pass --scope, it will create a scoped package.
Note: if a user already has the
create-<initializer> package globally installed, that will be
what npm init uses.
If you want npm to use the latest version, or another specific version you
must specify it:
- npm init foo@latest # fetches and runs the latest create-foo from the registry
- npm init foo@1.2.3 # runs create-foo@1.2.3 specifically
Forwarding additional options¶
Any additional options will be passed directly to the command, so npm init foo -- --hello will map to npm exec -- create-foo --hello.
To better illustrate how options are forwarded, here's a more evolved example showing options passed to both the npm cli and a create package, both following commands are equivalent:
- npm init foo -y --registry=<url> -- --hello -a
- npm exec -y --registry=<url> -- create-foo --hello -a
Examples¶
Create a new React-based project using create-react-app:
$ npm init react-app ./my-react-app
Create a new esm-compatible package using create-esm:
$ mkdir my-esm-lib && cd my-esm-lib $ npm init esm --yes
Generate a plain old package.json using legacy init:
$ mkdir my-npm-pkg && cd my-npm-pkg $ git init $ npm init
Generate it without having it ask any questions:
$ npm init -y
Set the private flag to true in package.json:
$ npm init --init-private -y
Workspaces support¶
It's possible to create a new workspace within your project by
using the workspace config option.
When using npm init -w <dir> the cli will create the folders and
boilerplate expected while also adding a reference to your project
package.json "workspaces": [] property in
order to make sure that new generated workspace is properly set up as
such.
Given a project with no workspaces, e.g:
. +-- package.json
You may generate a new workspace using the legacy init:
$ npm init -w packages/a
That will generate a new folder and package.json file, while also updating your top-level package.json to add the reference to this new workspace:
. +-- package.json `-- packages
`-- a
`-- package.json
The workspaces init also supports the npm init
<initializer> -w <dir> syntax, following the same set of
rules explained earlier in the initial
Description section of this page.
Similar to the previous example of creating a new React-based project using
create-react-app, the following syntax will make sure to create the
new react app as a nested workspace within your project and configure
your package.json to recognize it as such:
npm init -w packages/my-react-app react-app .
This will make sure to generate your react app as expected, one important consideration to have in mind is that npm exec is going to be run in the context of the newly created folder for that workspace, and that's the reason why in this example the initializer uses the initializer name followed with a dot to represent the current directory in that context, e.g: react-app .:
. +-- package.json `-- packages
+-- a
| `-- package.json
`-- my-react-app
+-- README
+-- package.json
`-- ...
Configuration¶
<!-- AUTOGENERATED CONFIG DESCRIPTIONS -->
See Also¶
- package spec
- init-package-json module
- package.json
- npm version
- npm scope
- npm exec
- npm workspaces
| March 2026 | 11.12.1 |