almeidx / discord-ban-sync

Sync bans across multiple Discord servers
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Bump the non-major group across 1 directory with 3 updates #301

Closed dependabot[bot] closed 2 months ago

dependabot[bot] commented 2 months ago

Bumps the non-major group with 3 updates in the / directory: @biomejs/biome, esbuild and typescript.

Updates @biomejs/biome from 1.8.2 to 1.8.3

Release notes

Sourced from @​biomejs/biome's releases.

CLI v1.8.3

CLI

Bug fixes

  • Fix #3104 by suppressing node warnings when using biome migrate. Contributed by @​SuperchupuDev

  • Force colors to be off when using the GitHub reporter to properly create annotations in GitHub actions (#3148). Contributed by @​Sec-ant

Parser

Bug fixes

Formatter

Bug fixes

Linter

New features

Bug fixes

  • useConsistentArrayType and useShorthandArrayType now ignore Array in the extends and implements clauses. Fix #3247. Contributed by @​Conaclos
  • Fixes #3066 by taking into account the dependencies declared in the package.json. Contributed by @​ematipico
  • The code action of the useArrowFunction rule now preserves a trailing comma when there is only a single type parameter in the arrow function and JSX is enabled. Fixes #3292. Contributed by @​Sec-ant

Enhancements

  • Enhance tailwind sorting lint rule #1274 with variant support.

    Every preconfigured variant is assigned a weight that concurs on establishing the output sorting order. Since nesting variants on the same utility class is possible, the resulting weight is the Bitwise XOR of all the variants weight for that class. Dynamic variants (e.g. has-[.custom-class], group-[:checked]) are also supported and they take the weight of their base variant name the custom value attached (e.g. has-[.custom-class] takes has weight). Arbitrary variants (e.g. [&nth-child(2)]) don't have a weight assigned and they are placed after every known variant. Classes with the same amount of arbitrary variants follow lexicographical order. The class that has the highest number of nested arbitrary variants is placed last. Screen variants (e.g. sm:, max-md:, min-lg:) are not supported yet.

    Contributed by @​lutaok

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from @​biomejs/biome's changelog.

v1.8.3 (2024-06-27)

CLI

Bug fixes

  • Fix #3104 by suppressing node warnings when using biome migrate. Contributed by @​SuperchupuDev

  • Force colors to be off when using the GitHub reporter to properly create annotations in GitHub actions (#3148). Contributed by @​Sec-ant

Parser

Bug fixes

Formatter

Bug fixes

Linter

New features

Enhancements

Bug fixes

  • useConsistentArrayType and useShorthandArrayType now ignore Array in the extends and implements clauses. Fix #3247. Contributed by @​Conaclos
  • Fixes #3066 by taking into account the dependencies declared in the package.json. Contributed by @​ematipico
  • The code action of the useArrowFunction rule now preserves a trailing comma when there is only a single type parameter in the arrow function and JSX is enabled. Fixes #3292. Contributed by @​Sec-ant

Enhancements

  • Enhance tailwind sorting lint rule #1274 with variant support.

    Every preconfigured variant is assigned a weight that concurs on establishing the output sorting order. Since nesting variants on the same utility class is possible, the resulting weight is the Bitwise XOR of all the variants weight for that class. Dynamic variants (e.g. has-[.custom-class], group-[:checked]) are also supported and they take the weight of their base variant name the custom value attached (e.g. has-[.custom-class] takes has weight). Arbitrary variants (e.g. [&nth-child(2)]) don't have a weight assigned and they are placed after every known variant. Classes with the same amount of arbitrary variants follow lexicographical order. The class that has the highest number of nested arbitrary variants is placed last. Screen variants (e.g. sm:, max-md:, min-lg:) are not supported yet.

... (truncated)

Commits


Updates esbuild from 0.21.5 to 0.23.0

Release notes

Sourced from esbuild's releases.

v0.23.0

This release deliberately contains backwards-incompatible changes. To avoid automatically picking up releases like this, you should either be pinning the exact version of esbuild in your package.json file (recommended) or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as ^0.22.0 or ~0.22.0. See npm's documentation about semver for more information.

  • Revert the recent change to avoid bundling dependencies for node (#3819)

    This release reverts the recent change in version 0.22.0 that made --packages=external the default behavior with --platform=node. The default is now back to --packages=bundle.

    I've just been made aware that Amazon doesn't pin their dependencies in their "AWS CDK" product, which means that whenever esbuild publishes a new release, many people (potentially everyone?) using their SDK around the world instantly starts using it without Amazon checking that it works first. This change in version 0.22.0 happened to break their SDK. I'm amazed that things haven't broken before this point. This revert attempts to avoid these problems for Amazon's customers. Hopefully Amazon will pin their dependencies in the future.

    In addition, this is probably a sign that esbuild is used widely enough that it now needs to switch to a more complicated release model. I may have esbuild use a beta channel model for further development.

  • Fix preserving collapsed JSX whitespace (#3818)

    When transformed, certain whitespace inside JSX elements is ignored completely if it collapses to an empty string. However, the whitespace should only be ignored if the JSX is being transformed, not if it's being preserved. This release fixes a bug where esbuild was previously incorrectly ignoring collapsed whitespace with --jsx=preserve. Here is an example:

    // Original code
    <Foo>
      <Bar />
    </Foo>
    

    // Old output (with --jsx=preserve)
    <Foo><Bar /></Foo>;

    // New output (with --jsx=preserve)
    <Foo>
    <Bar />
    </Foo>;

v0.22.0

This release deliberately contains backwards-incompatible changes. To avoid automatically picking up releases like this, you should either be pinning the exact version of esbuild in your package.json file (recommended) or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as ^0.21.0 or ~0.21.0. See npm's documentation about semver for more information.

  • Omit packages from bundles by default when targeting node (#1874, #2830, #2846, #2915, #3145, #3294, #3323, #3582, #3809, #3815)

    This breaking change is an experiment. People are commonly confused when using esbuild to bundle code for node (i.e. for --platform=node) because some packages may not be intended for bundlers, and may use node-specific features that don't work with a bundler. Even though esbuild's "getting started" instructions say to use --packages=external to work around this problem, many people don't read the documentation and don't do this, and are then confused when it doesn't work. So arguably this is a bad default behavior for esbuild to have if people keep tripping over this.

    With this release, esbuild will now omit packages from the bundle by default when the platform is node (i.e. the previous behavior of --packages=external is now the default in this case). Note that your dependencies must now be present on the file system when your bundle is run. If you don't want this behavior, you can do --packages=bundle to allow packages to be included in the bundle (i.e. the previous default behavior). Note that --packages=bundle doesn't mean all packages are bundled, just that packages are allowed to be bundled. You can still exclude individual packages from the bundle using --external: even when --packages=bundle is present.

    The --packages= setting considers all import paths that "look like" package imports in the original source code to be package imports. Specifically import paths that don't start with a path segment of / or . or .. are considered to be package imports. The only two exceptions to this rule are subpath imports (which start with a # character) and TypeScript path remappings via paths and/or baseUrl in tsconfig.json (which are applied first).

  • Drop support for older platforms (#3802)

    This release drops support for the following operating systems:

    • Windows 7
    • Windows 8
    • Windows Server 2008
    • Windows Server 2012

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from esbuild's changelog.

0.23.0

This release deliberately contains backwards-incompatible changes. To avoid automatically picking up releases like this, you should either be pinning the exact version of esbuild in your package.json file (recommended) or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as ^0.22.0 or ~0.22.0. See npm's documentation about semver for more information.

  • Revert the recent change to avoid bundling dependencies for node (#3819)

    This release reverts the recent change in version 0.22.0 that made --packages=external the default behavior with --platform=node. The default is now back to --packages=bundle.

    I've just been made aware that Amazon doesn't pin their dependencies in their "AWS CDK" product, which means that whenever esbuild publishes a new release, many people (potentially everyone?) using their SDK around the world instantly starts using it without Amazon checking that it works first. This change in version 0.22.0 happened to break their SDK. I'm amazed that things haven't broken before this point. This revert attempts to avoid these problems for Amazon's customers. Hopefully Amazon will pin their dependencies in the future.

    In addition, this is probably a sign that esbuild is used widely enough that it now needs to switch to a more complicated release model. I may have esbuild use a beta channel model for further development.

  • Fix preserving collapsed JSX whitespace (#3818)

    When transformed, certain whitespace inside JSX elements is ignored completely if it collapses to an empty string. However, the whitespace should only be ignored if the JSX is being transformed, not if it's being preserved. This release fixes a bug where esbuild was previously incorrectly ignoring collapsed whitespace with --jsx=preserve. Here is an example:

    // Original code
    <Foo>
      <Bar />
    </Foo>
    

    // Old output (with --jsx=preserve)
    <Foo><Bar /></Foo>;

    // New output (with --jsx=preserve)
    <Foo>
    <Bar />
    </Foo>;

0.22.0

This release deliberately contains backwards-incompatible changes. To avoid automatically picking up releases like this, you should either be pinning the exact version of esbuild in your package.json file (recommended) or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as ^0.21.0 or ~0.21.0. See npm's documentation about semver for more information.

  • Omit packages from bundles by default when targeting node (#1874, #2830, #2846, #2915, #3145, #3294, #3323, #3582, #3809, #3815)

    This breaking change is an experiment. People are commonly confused when using esbuild to bundle code for node (i.e. for --platform=node) because some packages may not be intended for bundlers, and may use node-specific features that don't work with a bundler. Even though esbuild's "getting started" instructions say to use --packages=external to work around this problem, many people don't read the documentation and don't do this, and are then confused when it doesn't work. So arguably this is a bad default behavior for esbuild to have if people keep tripping over this.

    With this release, esbuild will now omit packages from the bundle by default when the platform is node (i.e. the previous behavior of --packages=external is now the default in this case). Note that your dependencies must now be present on the file system when your bundle is run. If you don't want this behavior, you can do --packages=bundle to allow packages to be included in the bundle (i.e. the previous default behavior). Note that --packages=bundle doesn't mean all packages are bundled, just that packages are allowed to be bundled. You can still exclude individual packages from the bundle using --external: even when --packages=bundle is present.

    The --packages= setting considers all import paths that "look like" package imports in the original source code to be package imports. Specifically import paths that don't start with a path segment of / or . or .. are considered to be package imports. The only two exceptions to this rule are subpath imports (which start with a # character) and TypeScript path remappings via paths and/or baseUrl in tsconfig.json (which are applied first).

  • Drop support for older platforms (#3802)

    This release drops support for the following operating systems:

    • Windows 7
    • Windows 8
    • Windows Server 2008

... (truncated)

Commits


Updates typescript from 5.5.2 to 5.5.3

Release notes

Sourced from typescript's releases.

TypeScript 5.5.3

For release notes, check out the release announcement.

For the complete list of fixed issues, check out the

Downloads are available on:

Commits


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