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{"version":3,"file":"has-magic.js","sourceRoot":"","sources":["../../src/has-magic.ts"],"names":[],"mappings":"AAAA,OAAO,EAAE,SAAS,EAAE,MAAM,WAAW,CAAA;AAGrC;;;;;;;;;;GAUG;AACH,MAAM,CAAC,MAAM,QAAQ,GAAG,CACtB,OAA0B,EAC1B,UAAuB,EAAE,EAChB,EAAE;IACX,IAAI,CAAC,KAAK,CAAC,OAAO,CAAC,OAAO,CAAC,EAAE;QAC3B,OAAO,GAAG,CAAC,OAAO,CAAC,CAAA;KACpB;IACD,KAAK,MAAM,CAAC,IAAI,OAAO,EAAE;QACvB,IAAI,IAAI,SAAS,CAAC,CAAC,EAAE,OAAO,CAAC,CAAC,QAAQ,EAAE;YAAE,OAAO,IAAI,CAAA;KACtD;IACD,OAAO,KAAK,CAAA;AACd,CAAC,CAAA","sourcesContent":["import { Minimatch } from 'minimatch'\nimport { GlobOptions } from './glob.js'\n\n/**\n * Return true if the patterns provided contain any magic glob characters,\n * given the options provided.\n *\n * Brace expansion is not considered \"magic\" unless the `magicalBraces` option\n * is set, as brace expansion just turns one string into an array of strings.\n * So a pattern like `'x{a,b}y'` would return `false`, because `'xay'` and\n * `'xby'` both do not contain any magic glob characters, and it's treated the\n * same as if you had called it on `['xay', 'xby']`. When `magicalBraces:true`\n * is in the options, brace expansion _is_ treated as a pattern having magic.\n */\nexport const hasMagic = (\n pattern: string | string[],\n options: GlobOptions = {}\n): boolean => {\n if (!Array.isArray(pattern)) {\n pattern = [pattern]\n }\n for (const p of pattern) {\n if (new Minimatch(p, options).hasMagic()) return true\n }\n return false\n}\n"]}