coresyncreact1/node_modules/safe-regex-test
2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
..
.github C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
test C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
.eslintrc C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
.nycrc C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
CHANGELOG.md C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
index.d.ts C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
index.js C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
LICENSE C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
package.json C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
README.md C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00
tsconfig.json C:\Users\MSI\Desktop\frontend\coresync-react 2025-08-05 00:16:33 +03:00

safe-regex-test Version Badge

github actions coverage License Downloads

npm badge

Give a regex, get a robust predicate function that tests it against a string. This will work even if RegExp.prototype is altered later.

Getting started

npm install --save safe-regex-test

Usage/Examples

var regexTester = require('safe-regex-test');
var assert = require('assert');

var tester = regexTester('a');
assert.ok(tester('a'));
assert.notOk(tester('b'));

Tests

Simply clone the repo, npm install, and run npm test