Security News
tea.xyz Spam Plagues npm and RubyGems Package Registries
Tea.xyz, a crypto project aimed at rewarding open source contributions, is once again facing backlash due to an influx of spam packages flooding public package registries.
@isaacs/string-locale-compare
Advanced tools
Readme
Compare strings with Intl.Collator if available, falling back to String.localeCompare otherwise.
This also forces the use of a specific locale, to avoid using the system locale, which is non-deterministic.
const stringLocaleCompare = require('@isaacs/string-locale-compare')
myArrayOfStrings.sort(stringLocaleCompare('en'))
// can also pass extra options
myArrayOfNumericStrings.sort(stringLocaleCompare('en', { numeric: true }))
stringLocaleCompare(locale, [options])
Locale is required, must be a valid locale string.
Options is optional. The following options are supported:
sensitivity
numeric
ignorePunctuation
caseFirst
FAQs
Compare strings with Intl.Collator if available, falling back to String.localeCompare otherwise
The npm package @isaacs/string-locale-compare receives a total of 1,602,557 weekly downloads. As such, @isaacs/string-locale-compare popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @isaacs/string-locale-compare demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer 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.
Security News
Tea.xyz, a crypto project aimed at rewarding open source contributions, is once again facing backlash due to an influx of spam packages flooding public package registries.
Security News
As cyber threats become more autonomous, AI-powered defenses are crucial for businesses to stay ahead of attackers who can exploit software vulnerabilities at scale.
Security News
UnitedHealth Group disclosed that the ransomware attack on Change Healthcare compromised protected health information for millions in the U.S., with estimated costs to the company expected to reach $1 billion.