Rocky_Mountain_Vending/.pnpm-store/v10/files/dd/f1a25715d036dbdf3618bff8939e79aefb4e4582313e62cfdccb2bcdb20e0ce12e1685ad3f965aeb26656304d692ffc8cea97589b46e2ab0dfcc17b5de5742
DMleadgen 46d973904b
Initial commit: Rocky Mountain Vending website
Next.js website for Rocky Mountain Vending company featuring:
- Product catalog with Stripe integration
- Service areas and parts pages
- Admin dashboard with Clerk authentication
- SEO optimized pages with JSON-LD structured data

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>
2026-02-12 16:22:15 -07:00

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/**
* NOTE: In order to avoid circular dependencies, if you add a function to this module and it needs to print something,
* you must either a) use `console.log` rather than the `debug` singleton, or b) put your function elsewhere.
*/
/**
* Checks whether we're in the Node.js or Browser environment
*
* @returns Answer to given question
*/
export declare function isNodeEnv(): boolean;
/**
* Helper for dynamically loading module that should work with linked dependencies.
* The problem is that we _should_ be using `require(require.resolve(moduleName, { paths: [cwd()] }))`
* However it's _not possible_ to do that with Webpack, as it has to know all the dependencies during
* build time. `require.resolve` is also not available in any other way, so we cannot create,
* a fake helper like we do with `dynamicRequire`.
*
* We always prefer to use local package, thus the value is not returned early from each `try/catch` block.
* That is to mimic the behavior of `require.resolve` exactly.
*
* @param moduleName module name to require
* @param existingModule module to use for requiring
* @returns possibly required module
*/
export declare function loadModule<T>(moduleName: string, existingModule?: any): T | undefined;
//# sourceMappingURL=node.d.ts.map