2c2d60a5dc
The foreign-markdown import normalizer rewrote GFM reference footnotes (`[^id]` + `[^id]: def`) into canonical inline `^[def]` footnotes, but two edge cases corrupted content: 1. A `[^id]` inside an inline-code span (backticks) was rewritten like prose text — only fenced code blocks were protected. Now the rewrite pass splits each line on inline-code spans and only touches the text outside them. 2. An unbalanced `]` in a definition body truncated the resulting `^[...]` footnote at the canonical tokenizer, leaking the tail as literal text. The body's square brackets are now backslash-escaped before wrapping. Adds golden cases for both. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
A progressive Node.js framework for building efficient and scalable server-side applications.
Description
Nest framework TypeScript starter repository.
Installation
$ npm install
Running the app
# development
$ npm run start
# watch mode
$ npm run start:dev
# production mode
$ npm run start:prod
Migrations
# This creates a new empty migration file named 'init'
$ npm run migration:create --name=init
# Generates 'init' migration file from existing entities to update the database schema
$ npm run migration:generate --name=init
# Runs all pending migrations to update the database schema
$ npm run migration:run
# Reverts the last executed migration
$ npm run migration:revert
# Reverts all migrations
$ npm run migration:revert
# Shows the list of executed and pending migrations
$ npm run migration:show
## Test
```bash
# unit tests
$ npm run test
# e2e tests
$ npm run test:e2e
# test coverage
$ npm run test:cov
Support
Nest is an MIT-licensed open source project. It can grow thanks to the sponsors and support by the amazing backers. If you'd like to join them, please read more here.
Stay in touch
- Author - Kamil Myśliwiec
- Website - https://nestjs.com
- Twitter - @nestframework
License
Nest is MIT licensed.