Research
Security News
Threat Actor Exposes Playbook for Exploiting npm to Build Blockchain-Powered Botnets
A threat actor's playbook for exploiting the npm ecosystem was exposed on the dark web, detailing how to build a blockchain-powered botnet.
Computes a non-overlapping sequence representing the sum of two floating point numbers.
Computes the sum of two floating point numbers as a non-overlapping sequence using Knuth's method.
Using npm:
npm install two-sum
var twoSum = require("two-sum")
//Add two wildly different sized floats
var result = twoSum(1e64, 1e-64)
console.log(result)
//Prints:
// [1e-64, 1e64]
require("two-sum")(a, b[, result])
Computes a non-overlapping sequence representing the sum of a and b.
a
is a numberb
is a numberresult
is an optional length 2 array encoding the result of the sum of a
and b
Returns A length 2 array representing the non-overlapping sequence encoding the sum of a and b. The first term has smaller magnitude than the second.
Based on an idea from JRS robust geometric predicates paper.
Implementation (c) 2013 Mikola Lysenko. MIT License
FAQs
Computes a non-overlapping sequence representing the sum of two floating point numbers.
The npm package two-sum receives a total of 60,816 weekly downloads. As such, two-sum popularity was classified as popular.
We found that two-sum 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.
Research
Security News
A threat actor's playbook for exploiting the npm ecosystem was exposed on the dark web, detailing how to build a blockchain-powered botnet.
Security News
NVD’s backlog surpasses 20,000 CVEs as analysis slows and NIST announces new system updates to address ongoing delays.
Security News
Research
A malicious npm package disguised as a WhatsApp client is exploiting authentication flows with a remote kill switch to exfiltrate data and destroy files.