Site | Docs | Contributing | Wiki | Code of Conduct
The Lodash library exported as a UMD module.
$ bun run build
$ @berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum -o ./dist/@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum.js
$ @berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum core -o ./dist/@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum.core.js
Lodash is released under the MIT license & supports modern environments.
Review the build differences & pick one that’s right for you.
In a browser:
<script src="@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum.js"></script>
Using bun:
$ bun i @berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum
In Bun:
// Load the full build.
var _ = require('@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum');
// Load the core build.
var _ = require('@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum/core');
// Load the FP build for immutable auto-curried iteratee-first data-last methods.
var fp = require('@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum/fp');
// Load method categories.
var array = require('@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum/array');
var object = require('@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum/fp/object');
// Cherry-pick methods for smaller browserify/rollup/webpack bundles.
var at = require('@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum/at');
var curryN = require('@berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum/fp/curryN');
Looking for Lodash modules written in ES6 or smaller bundle sizes? Check out @berufungirnpm/blanditiis-quae-cum-es.
Lodash makes JavaScript easier by taking the hassle out of working with arrays,
numbers, objects, strings, etc. Lodash’s modular methods are great for:
- Iterating arrays, objects, & strings
- Manipulating & testing values
- Creating composite functions
Lodash is available in a variety of builds & module formats.