A few uses of `array.sort()` have been left alone:
- sorting in `data/` because they aren't supposed to import anything
- `set-importer` because I still have no clue what that's for and what
dependencies it is/isn't allowed to have
- `sort()` with no arguments used as a lexical sort (at which point
`sortBy` offers no benefits)
All other cases have been replaced with `Utils.sortBy`, which should
be a massive increase in readability.
Sort orders should be much more readable now, without needing to puzzle
through sign issues. The order is always low-to-high, A-to-Z,
true-to-false.
It turns out that when I switched us from `assert` to `assert.strict`,
I didn't actually update any existing tests or tell anyone:
0df0d234f2
So apparently everyone else just kept on using `strictEqual`.
This will be a PR and also throw an error if people continue trying to
use it, which should make it much clearer what PS policy is on this.
A lot of the problem may be that TypeScript marks assert.strict.equal
as deprecated when it's not. This was fixed 4 days ago:
https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/pull/48452
But this probably hasn't made it to a thing yet. Until then, you'll
have to deal with TS marking your tests as deprecated, but it shouldn't
be too long.
Accidentally using `assert` instead of `assert.strict` should now show
an error. This protects against the probably much worse mistake of
accidentally using `assert.equal` rather than `assert.strict.equal`.
`assert.ok` is also deprecated now.