nice(2) bindings for Node.js
"Is this number 69?"
Shared types, alert matcher, and NIP-69 helpers for p2psats
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Omega-Level Development Kit - AI Team System for Claude Code. 41 agents, 174 commands, 162 skills, 69 workflows.
Information 69, 69b, metadata and xml
fib(69)
The number 69 exported as an npm package.
chrome-devtools MCP (69% less tokens). Quick setup: npx chrome-devtools-slim --setup
A library for minting and configuring ARC-3, ARC-19, and ARC-69 compliant Algorand Standard Assets (ASA) NFTs.
Real-time European & GB electricity grid data via MCP. 69 tools, most free.
Check if a value is equal to negative number 69
MCP server for Adobe Launch (Tags) and Adobe Experience Platform APIs — 69 tools for complete tag management, schema configuration, and data collection via Web SDK and Mobile SDK
Security Trust Report: koishi-plugin-ai-image@1.4.0 — 69/100 (B, standard). Maintainer risk, supply chain analysis from 8 security databases.
MCP server for real-time browser automation and debugging via Patchright (Playwright stealth fork). 69 tools: stealth, network intercept, multi-tab, raw CDP, session storage.
SDK unificado SOLWED — 69 clases (entities + auth), cliente HTTP Mind/Bridge, Zod schemas, logger, errores, utils y templates de email, todo con herencia y FS-compat
Package 69
Check if a value is equal to positive number 69
Pretty-prints a Buffer
TouchDesigner MCP Server v2.8.0 - 21 MCP tools, 629 operators with clean parameter data, 69 Python API classes, 14 tutorials, 32 workflow patterns. Includes version system, experimental techniques KB, core tool enhancements, and experimental build support
A simple package to check if a number is equal to 69.
Machine-readable JSON of GF 0011-2009《汉字部首表》 (Table of Indexing Chinese Character Components): 201 main radicals, 83 variant forms, and 69 cross-reference groupings.
MCP server for invoicing, WooCommerce, expenses, POS, inventory, tasks, tax declarations, and business management. 69 AI tools for Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and Windsurf. Freelancers, e-commerce, and startups.
MCP server providing temporal intelligence for AI: 69 tools for timezone conversions, 32 cultural calendars, 247+ country holidays, 5 financial markets, business time calculations, astronomical events, prayer times, astrology, duration/period calculations
hexdmp is a command line utility that dumps the contents of one or more files to stdout in hex.
Enable AES keys transfer on unsecure channel using quantum-resistant Kyber
Rust Library for AttackerKB API
Format a byte slice into a hex table.
cryptographic multi-tool with file analysis, encoding, bitflipping, splitting, hashing, encryption, signing, and more
this is a binary key value structure with a high performance a reader and writer
Memory Viewer is a Rust library that provides a macro and display the memory content of various types of variables. It allows users to view the name, type, size, and memory content of a variable in a formatted way. It supports viewing memory content of different data types including integers, floating-point numbers, strings, pointers, vectors, boxed variables, and structs.
Slices that may be accessed from multiple threads with different levels of safety
A hexdump library to display binary blobs.
CLI tool that shows all possible interpretations of any data input
Core library for data format detection and conversion
A formatter for raw memory
A comprehensive Ruby client library for JPS platform APIs with 69+ API modules, modular loading, OAuth authentication, and optimized performance
Have you ever wanted to call <code>exit()</code> with an error condition, but weren't sure what exit status to use? No? Maybe it's just me, then. Anyway, I was reading manpages late one evening before retiring to bed in my palatial estate in rural Oregon, and I stumbled across <code>sysexits(3)</code>. Much to my chagrin, I couldn't find a +sysexits+ for Ruby! Well, for the other 2 people that actually care about <code>style(9)</code> as it applies to Ruby code, now there is one! Sysexits is a *completely* *awesome* collection of human-readable constants for the standard (BSDish) exit codes, used as arguments to +exit+ to indicate a specific error condition to the parent process. It's so fantastically fabulous that you'll want to fork it right away to avoid being thought of as that guy that's still using Webrick for his blog. I mean, <code>exit(1)</code> is so passé! This is like the 14-point font of Systems Programming. Like the C header file from which this was derived (I mean forked, naturally), error numbers begin at <code>Sysexits::EX__BASE</code> (which is way more cool than plain old +64+) to reduce the possibility of clashing with other exit statuses that other programs may already return. The codes are available in two forms: as constants which can be imported into your own namespace via <code>include Sysexits</code>, or as <code>Sysexits::STATUS_CODES</code>, a Hash keyed by Symbols derived from the constant names. Allow me to demonstrate. First, the old way: exit( 69 ) Whaaa...? Is that a euphemism? What's going on? See how unattractive and... well, 1970 that is? We're not changing vaccuum tubes here, people, we're <em>building a totally-awesome future in the Cloud™!</em> include Sysexits exit EX_UNAVAILABLE Okay, at least this is readable to people who have used <code>fork()</code> more than twice, but you could do so much better! include Sysexits exit :unavailable Holy Toledo! It's like we're writing Ruby, but our own made-up dialect in which variable++ is possible! Well, okay, it's not quite that cool. But it does look more Rubyish. And no monkeys were patched in the filming of this episode! All the simpletons still exiting with icky _numbers_ can still continue blithely along, none the wiser.
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