Mohammad Asif cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
..
example cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
test cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
.editorconfig cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
.eslintrc cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
.nycrc cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
CHANGELOG.md cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
LICENSE cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
assert.js cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
index.js cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
package.json cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois
readme.markdown cf937194cb Removed un-waned things 1. il y a 5 mois

readme.markdown

deep-equal Version Badge

Node's assert.deepEqual() algorithm as a standalone module, that also works in browser environments.

It mirrors the robustness of node's own assert.deepEqual and is robust against later builtin modification.

github actions coverage License Downloads

npm badge

example

var equal = require('deep-equal');
console.dir([
    equal(
        { a : [ 2, 3 ], b : [ 4 ] },
        { a : [ 2, 3 ], b : [ 4 ] }
    ),
    equal(
        { x : 5, y : [6] },
        { x : 5, y : 6 }
    )
]);

methods

var deepEqual = require('deep-equal')

deepEqual(a, b, opts)

Compare objects a and b, returning whether they are equal according to a recursive equality algorithm.

If opts.strict is true, use strict equality (===) to compare leaf nodes. The default is to use coercive equality (==) because that's how assert.deepEqual() works by default.

install

With npm do:

npm install deep-equal

test

With npm do:

npm test