/// export declare const DOMAttributeNames: Record; /** * When a `nonce` is present on an element, browsers such as Chrome and Firefox strip it out of the * actual HTML attributes for security reasons *when the element is added to the document*. Thus, * given two equivalent elements that have nonces, `Element,isEqualNode()` will return false if one * of those elements gets added to the document. Although the `element.nonce` property will be the * same for both elements, the one that was added to the document will return an empty string for * its nonce HTML attribute value. * * This custom `isEqualNode()` function therefore removes the nonce value from the `newTag` before * comparing it to `oldTag`, restoring it afterwards. * * For more information, see: * https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1211471#c12 */ export declare function isEqualNode(oldTag: Element, newTag: Element): boolean; export default function initHeadManager(): { mountedInstances: Set; updateHead: (head: JSX.Element[]) => void; };