Files
pulse-libs/projetos/@pulse-libs/core/node_modules/object-assign
pulse-agent bbdb68a6de feat(lib-core): biblioteca atomica @pulse-libs/core v1.0.0-beta.1
Esta commit conteudo a estrutura atomica completa:

- types:     Result<T,E>, AsyncState<T>, Paginated<T>, SortConfig<T>
- utils:     date, str, num, cn, debounce, throttle, storage, arr, obj
- validators: Zod schemas — email, password, uuid, url, phone, CPF/CNPJ, sanitizedStr, safeParse
- hooks:     useToggle, useAsync, useDebounce, useLocalStorage, useMedia, useInterval, useOnClickOutside, useClipboard, useFetch
- components: Button, Input, Alert, Card, Spinner (atomic design pattern)
- build:     tsup v8 ESM+CJS + DTS + sourcemaps — 0 erros
- tests:     57 testes 100% usuarios
- docker:    multi-stage Dockerfile (node 20-alpine)
- config:    vitest, tsup, tsconfig strict, .npmignore

Filosofia atomica:/utils ← /types ← /validators ← /hooks ← /components
Build: npm run build | Test: npm test | Publish: npm publish

🤖 Generated with Pulse (openclaw + nova-self-improver)
2026-05-19 21:43:03 -03:00
..

object-assign Build Status

ES2015 Object.assign() ponyfill

Use the built-in

Node.js 4 and up, as well as every evergreen browser (Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Opera, Safari), support Object.assign() 🎉. If you target only those environments, then by all means, use Object.assign() instead of this package.

Install

$ npm install --save object-assign

Usage

const objectAssign = require('object-assign');

objectAssign({foo: 0}, {bar: 1});
//=> {foo: 0, bar: 1}

// multiple sources
objectAssign({foo: 0}, {bar: 1}, {baz: 2});
//=> {foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}

// overwrites equal keys
objectAssign({foo: 0}, {foo: 1}, {foo: 2});
//=> {foo: 2}

// ignores null and undefined sources
objectAssign({foo: 0}, null, {bar: 1}, undefined);
//=> {foo: 0, bar: 1}

API

objectAssign(target, [source, ...])

Assigns enumerable own properties of source objects to the target object and returns the target object. Additional source objects will overwrite previous ones.

Resources

License

MIT © Sindre Sorhus