Adjust European short trip heuristic from >3 days to >1 day to correctly detect when user has returned home from European trips. This fixes the April 29-30, 2023 case where the location incorrectly showed "Sankt Georg, Hamburg" instead of "Bristol" when the user was free (no events scheduled) after the foss-north trip ended on April 27. The previous logic required more than 3 days to pass before assuming return home from European countries, but for short European trips by rail/ferry, users typically return within 1-2 days. 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com> |
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readme.md |
resolve-cwd 
Resolve the path of a module like
require.resolve()
but from the current working directory
Install
$ npm install resolve-cwd
Usage
const resolveCwd = require('resolve-cwd');
console.log(__dirname);
//=> '/Users/sindresorhus/rainbow'
console.log(process.cwd());
//=> '/Users/sindresorhus/unicorn'
console.log(resolveCwd('./foo'));
//=> '/Users/sindresorhus/unicorn/foo.js'
API
resolveCwd(moduleId)
Like require()
, throws when the module can't be found.
resolveCwd.silent(moduleId)
Returns undefined
instead of throwing when the module can't be found.
moduleId
Type: string
What you would use in require()
.
Related
- resolve-from - Resolve the path of a module from a given path
- import-from - Import a module from a given path
- import-cwd - Import a module from the current working directory
- resolve-pkg - Resolve the path of a package regardless of it having an entry point
- import-lazy - Import a module lazily
- resolve-global - Resolve the path of a globally installed module
License
MIT © Sindre Sorhus