Ad editor
Passport strategy for authenticating with Azure AD using the OAuth 2.0 protocol.
Right-align the text in a string.
Npm module for calculating chi-square test that gives us p-value for statistical significance with practical use in A/B testing.
MCP server for PPC Ad Editor — create Google, Meta & LinkedIn ad previews from AI assistants
TypeScript definitions for passport-azure-ad
Wrap words to a specified length.
Concurrent prettier runner
A framework that provides common functionality needed by video advertisement libraries working with video.js.
Microsoft Authentication Library for js
Microsoft Authentication Library for Node
Concurrent prettier runner [fork to publish Prettier v3 support to npm]

React Native Google Mobile Ads is an easy way to monetize mobile apps with targeted, in-app advertising.
Inquirer multiline editor prompt
Google Ads API Client Library for Node.js
Wrap words to a specified length.
Edit a string with the users preferred text editor using $VISUAL or $ENVIRONMENT
A robust HTML entities encoder/decoder with full Unicode support.
A JavaScript library for escaping CSS strings and identifiers while generating the shortest possible ASCII-only output.
LDAP authentication strategy for Passport
A browser based code editor
MCP server for Context7
Compare strings containing a mix of letters and numbers in the way a human being would in sort order.
Plugin for adding Froala WYSIWYG editor support in Administrate
Spree extension for adding wysiwyg editor in product textarea.
Spree extension for adding a simple, self-contained WYSIWYM editor in product textarea.
adiwg-mdcodes provides code lists for use with editors of ISO 19115-1, ISO 19115-2, ISO 19110, and mdJson compliant metadata. Some codelists include extensions added by the Alaska Data Integration working group (ADIwg).
Reads a text file (if supplied as the first argument) and creates a pdf file with the same name but with .pdf as extension in the current directory via the program pdflatex (the only requirement besides ruby itself). If '-h' is the first argument, then the program displays the helptext and exits. The program can also read the input text from STDIN (STanDard IN) and create the pdf file in the user's home directory. When this method is used, no argument is given to the program and the text is simply piped directly into the program like this: $ echo 'Hello' | txt2pdf This would create a pdf file with only 'Hello' and the page number at the bottom of the resulting pdf page. With this, you could map a key binding in your window manager to create a pdf file from the text you selected in any program, be it the terminal, your browser or your text editor. In my wm of choice, i3, I have added the following to my i3 config: bindsym $mod+p exec xclip -o | txt2pdf This would create a pdf file from the text I have selected as I hit the 'Window Button' and 'p'.
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