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Generated on May 27, 2024 via pnpm

lz-string 1.4.2

LZ-based compression algorithm
Package summary
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1
issue
1
low severity
license
1
1
license
1
WTFPL
Package created
27 Oct 2013
Version published
26 Apr 2015
Maintainers
1
Total deps
1
Direct deps
0
License
WTFPL

Issues

1

1 low severity issue

low
Recommendation: Read and validate the license terms
via: lz-string@1.4.2
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Licenses

Do What The F*ck You Want To Public License

Permissive
Not OSI Approved
This is a human-readable summary of (and not a substitute for) the license. Disclaimer.
Can
commercial-use
sublicense
distribute
modify
Cannot
Must
rename
1 Packages, Including:
lz-string@1.4.2
Disclaimer

This deed highlights only some of the key features and terms of the actual license. It is not a license and has no legal value. You should carefully review all of the terms and conditions of the actual license before using the licensed material.

Sandworm is not a law firm and does not provide legal services. Distributing, displaying, or linking to this deed or the license that it summarizes does not create a lawyer-client or any other relationship.

Direct Dependencies

0
All Dependencies CSV
β“˜ This is a list of lz-string 's direct dependencies. Data on all dependencies, including transitive ones, is available via CSV download.
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Visualizations

Frequently Asked Questions

What does lz-string do?

LZ-String is a powerful JavaScript library specifically designed for compressing data using an LZ-based compression algorithm. This high-performance library makes it possible to compress large chunks of data, like JSON objects, before storing them in local storage or passing them over a network. This significantly improves the overall performance of web applications and optimizes storage usage, meaning more data can be stored in local storage than would otherwise be possible.

How do you use lz-string?

To use the LZ-String library in your JavaScript project, you'd first need to install it via npm, Node's package manager. Open your command line environment and move to your project's directory, then install the LZ-string package globally using the following command:

$ npm install -g lz-string

Once LZ-String is installed, you can use it to compress or decompress your data. Here's a basic JavaScript usage example:

var lz = require('lz-string');

// Compress a string
var compressedString = lz.compress("This is a string to compress");
console.log(compressedString); // Outputs a compressed string

// Decompress a string
var decompressedString = lz.decompress(compressedString);
console.log(decompressedString); // Outputs: 'This is a string to compress'

Where are the lz-string docs?

The official documentation for LZ-String, including additional examples, detailed API information, and a live demo is available on the home page of the project, hosted here. This is an excellent resource for beginners or anyone who needs to get up to speed quickly with LZ-String. Moreover, the LZ-String library is accessible on GitHub, where users can contribute, report issues, or engage with the vibrant developer community surrounding this powerful JavaScript library for data compression.