
Security News
MCP Community Begins Work on Official MCP Metaregistry
The MCP community is launching an official registry to standardize AI tool discovery and let agents dynamically find and install MCP servers.
monster-candidate-api
Advanced tools
A simple and typed npm package providing a wrapper around the Monster Candidate API. This package is designed to be used in a Node.js environment.
npm install monster-candidate-api
import { CandidateSearchAPI } from "monster-candidate-api";
const api = new CandidateSearchAPI({
clientId: "your-api-key",
clientSecret: "your-api-secret",
});
api.searchCandidates({
country: "CA",
searchType: "JobDetail",
jobDetail: {
jobTitle: "Software Developer",
},
})
.then((candidates) => {
console.log(candidates);
})
.catch((error) => {
console.error(error);
});
You can find the API reference this package is based on here
This package is not affiliated with Monster. It is an unofficial package created by a third party.
Much of the code in this package is generated with the help of AI. As such, it may not be perfect. If you find any issues, please report them in the GitHub repository
This package is licensed under GPL-3.0. You can find the full license text here
FAQs
A small, typed, API wrapper for the Monster Candidate API
We found that monster-candidate-api 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
The MCP community is launching an official registry to standardize AI tool discovery and let agents dynamically find and install MCP servers.
Research
Security News
Socket uncovers an npm Trojan stealing crypto wallets and BullX credentials via obfuscated code and Telegram exfiltration.
Research
Security News
Malicious npm packages posing as developer tools target macOS Cursor IDE users, stealing credentials and modifying files to gain persistent backdoor access.