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Oracle Drags Its Feet in the JavaScript Trademark Dispute
Oracle seeks to dismiss fraud claims in the JavaScript trademark dispute, delaying the case and avoiding questions about its right to the name.
deep-lockdown
Advanced tools
Recursively call Object.freeze()
, Object.seal()
, and Object.preventExtensions()
on objects.
This is based on the deep-freeze library but takes it a step further and prevents new properties from being added or removed to the object. It also marks all existing properties as non-configurable.
npm install deep-lockdown
var deepLockdown = require('deep-lockdown');
var myObj = {
a: 'a',
b: 'b',
c: {
e: {
q: 'word'
}
}
};
deepLockdown(myObj);
myObj.d = 'd';
myObj.a = 'jkl';
myObj.c.e.q = 'different-word';
myObj.c.e.f = 'add-some-words';
console.log(myObj);
var myObj = { a: 'a', b: 'b', c: { e: { q: 'word' } } };
FAQs
Freeze and Seal Objects Recursively
The npm package deep-lockdown receives a total of 4 weekly downloads. As such, deep-lockdown popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that deep-lockdown demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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