
Security News
Browserslist-rs Gets Major Refactor, Cutting Binary Size by Over 1MB
Browserslist-rs now uses static data to reduce binary size by over 1MB, improving memory use and performance for Rust-based frontend tools.
rufflib-validate
Advanced tools
A RuffLIB library for succinctly validating JavaScript values.
▶ Version: 2.0.4
▶ Homepage: https://richplastow.com/rufflib-validate
▶ NPM: https://www.npmjs.com/package/rufflib-validate
▶ Repo: https://github.com/richplastow/rufflib-validate
▶ Tests: https://richplastow.com/rufflib-validate/test/run-browser-tests.html
import Validate from 'rufflib-validate';
function sayOk(n, allowInvalid) {
const v = new Validate('sayOk()', allowInvalid);
if (!v.number(n, 'n', 100)) return v.err;
return 'ok!';
}
sayOk(123); // ok!
sayOk(null); // sayOk(): 'n' is null not type 'number'
sayOk(3); // 'n' 3 is < 100
sayOk(3, true); // ok! (less safe, but faster)
Run the test suite in ‘src/docs/’, while working on this library:
npm test --src
npm start --src --open --test
Build the minified and unminified bundles in ‘dist/’ and ‘docs/’:
npm run build
Run the test suite in ‘docs/’, after a build:
npm test
npm start --open --test
FAQs
A RuffLIB library for succinctly validating JavaScript values.
The npm package rufflib-validate receives a total of 3 weekly downloads. As such, rufflib-validate popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that rufflib-validate 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
Browserslist-rs now uses static data to reduce binary size by over 1MB, improving memory use and performance for Rust-based frontend tools.
Research
Security News
Eight new malicious Firefox extensions impersonate games, steal OAuth tokens, hijack sessions, and exploit browser permissions to spy on users.
Security News
The official Go SDK for the Model Context Protocol is in development, with a stable, production-ready release expected by August 2025.