![Introducing Enhanced Alert Actions and Triage Functionality](https://cdn.sanity.io/images/cgdhsj6q/production/fe71306d515f85de6139b46745ea7180362324f0-2530x946.png?w=800&fit=max&auto=format)
Product
Introducing Enhanced Alert Actions and Triage Functionality
Socket now supports four distinct alert actions instead of the previous two, and alert triaging allows users to override the actions taken for all individual alerts.
@babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys
Advanced tools
Package description
The @babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys npm package is designed to help developers manage object literals in JavaScript that have duplicate keys. When using this plugin, Babel will transform object literals containing duplicate keys by ensuring that the last key-value pair is the one that is ultimately defined, following the standard JavaScript behavior. This can be particularly useful in scenarios where code is being generated or transformed and duplicate keys may be introduced unintentionally.
Transforming Duplicate Keys in Object Literals
This feature allows the transformation of object literals with duplicate keys in JavaScript code. The plugin ensures that if an object literal contains duplicate keys, only the last occurrence of the key is kept, and previous ones are ignored. This aligns with the standard JavaScript behavior where the last property assignment overrides earlier assignments with the same key.
{"type": "object", "properties": {"duplicateKey": {"type": "string"}, "duplicateKey": {"type": "number"}}}
This package provides an ESLint rule to detect and report duplicate keys in object literals, which can help prevent bugs related to unintentional duplicate key definitions. Unlike @babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys, which transforms the code to keep the last duplicate key, eslint-plugin-no-dupe-keys focuses on static code analysis to identify potential issues without modifying the code.
Similar in purpose to @babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys, this plugin aims to address the issue of duplicate keys in object literals. However, instead of ensuring the last key is kept, it removes duplicate keys from object literals entirely during the transformation process. This approach can be useful in minimizing potential confusion and ensuring a cleaner final code output.
Changelog
v7.24.7 (2024-06-05)
babel-node
babel-traverse
constantViolations
with destructuring (@liuxingbaoyu)babel-helper-transform-fixture-test-runner
, babel-plugin-proposal-explicit-resource-management
using
in switch
correctly (@liuxingbaoyu)babel-helpers
, babel-runtime-corejs2
, babel-runtime-corejs3
, babel-runtime
Readme
Compile objects with duplicate keys to valid strict ES5
See our website @babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys for more information.
Using npm:
npm install --save-dev @babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys
or using yarn:
yarn add @babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys --dev
FAQs
Compile objects with duplicate keys to valid strict ES5
The npm package @babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys receives a total of 14,309,601 weekly downloads. As such, @babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @babel/plugin-transform-duplicate-keys demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Product
Socket now supports four distinct alert actions instead of the previous two, and alert triaging allows users to override the actions taken for all individual alerts.
Security News
Polyfill.io has been serving malware for months via its CDN, after the project's open source maintainer sold the service to a company based in China.
Security News
OpenSSF is warning open source maintainers to stay vigilant against reputation farming on GitHub, where users artificially inflate their status by manipulating interactions on closed issues and PRs.