Files
tegwick d0abaab63a
Some checks failed
Test Suite / unit-tests (3.11) (push) Has been cancelled
Test Suite / unit-tests (3.12) (push) Has been cancelled
Test Suite / code-quality (push) Has been cancelled
Test Suite / security-scan (push) Has been cancelled
Test Suite / integration-tests (push) Has been cancelled
Test Suite / e2e-tests (push) Has been cancelled
Test Suite / performance-tests (push) Has been cancelled
Test Suite / test-summary (push) Has been cancelled
chore: update project state and prepare for image support development
- Add comprehensive image test document with various image types
- Update project structure with development artifacts
- Prepare foundation for image support enhancement phase
- Include test files for validating image editing workflows

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-10-26 08:06:22 +01:00

43 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown

Browser-friendly inheritance fully compatible with standard node.js
[inherits](http://nodejs.org/api/util.html#util_util_inherits_constructor_superconstructor).
This package exports standard `inherits` from node.js `util` module in
node environment, but also provides alternative browser-friendly
implementation through [browser
field](https://gist.github.com/shtylman/4339901). Alternative
implementation is a literal copy of standard one located in standalone
module to avoid requiring of `util`. It also has a shim for old
browsers with no `Object.create` support.
While keeping you sure you are using standard `inherits`
implementation in node.js environment, it allows bundlers such as
[browserify](https://github.com/substack/node-browserify) to not
include full `util` package to your client code if all you need is
just `inherits` function. It worth, because browser shim for `util`
package is large and `inherits` is often the single function you need
from it.
It's recommended to use this package instead of
`require('util').inherits` for any code that has chances to be used
not only in node.js but in browser too.
## usage
```js
var inherits = require('inherits');
// then use exactly as the standard one
```
## note on version ~1.0
Version ~1.0 had completely different motivation and is not compatible
neither with 2.0 nor with standard node.js `inherits`.
If you are using version ~1.0 and planning to switch to ~2.0, be
careful:
* new version uses `super_` instead of `super` for referencing
superclass
* new version overwrites current prototype while old one preserves any
existing fields on it