resolve-dependency-path  
 
Convert a dependency path into a filepath
npm install --save resolve-dependency-path
Usage
var resolvePath = require('resolve-dependency-path');
var resolved = resolvePath({
  dependency: './foobar',
  filename: 'path/to/file/containing/dependency.js',
  directory: 'path/to/all/files'
});
- dependency: the actual dependency path (probably extracted from a- require())
- filename: the file that required this dependency (likely the file whose dependencies are being extracted)
- directory: the root of all modules being processed. Dependencies are often about this root unless they're relative.
Example
If you have a file like:
myapp/foo.js
var require('./bar');
Then if you want to open the file associated with the dependency, you need to resolve ./bar onto the filesystem.
Since ./bar is a relative path, it should be resolved relative to foo.js,
more specifically the directory containing foo.js, myapp/. This resolution would yield
myapp/bar.js.
This is why the filename attribute is required to use this library.
If you have a non-relative dependency path like:
myapp/foo.js
define([
  'bar'
], function(bar) {
});
Then bar is relative to the root of all files, myapp. The resolution would yield
myapp/bar.js.
A more complex example with subdirectories:
myapp/feature1/foo.js
define([
  'feature2/bar'
], function(bar) {
});
The dependency feature2/bar is relative to the root of all files, myapp, not the file foo.js.
This is why the directory attribute is required to use this library.
