Find the dominant colours in an image and set one as the background colour of a DOM element
Seamlessly transition your website’s backgrounds as users scroll with AdaptiveBackground.
Adaptive Cards Javascript library for HTML Clients
This tool will crop and resize PNG source images into appropriate sizes for modern iOS and Android devices.
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Bot Framework Adaptive Dialogs runtime core components
Self-Optimizing Neural Architecture (SONA) - Runtime-adaptive learning with LoRA, EWC++, and ReasoningBank for LLM routers and AI systems. Sub-millisecond learning overhead, WASM and Node.js support.
Adaptive Card data binding and templating engine for JavaScript
An implementation of the CSSStyleDeclaration class from the CSS Object Model specification
Common Expression Language
A library of styleable components built using React Aria
CLI for sharp.
A collection of design utilities supporting basic styling and Adaptive UI
Optimizes FullCalendar for print
adaptive and scalable 2D bezier curves
adaptive and scalable 2D quadratic curves
get colors in your node.js console
Queues failed requests and uses the Background Sync API to replay them when the network is available
A library of pure JS/HTML controls designed for use with Adaptive Cards.
SharePoint Framework Adaptive Card Extensions
Background component with different variants for React Flow
adaptive-timeout
PostCSS plugin to fallback initial keyword.
mjml-section
This handy adapter will let you enqueue delayed jobs from a Ruby/Rails app and have the job processed by Mosquito in Crystal. The idea behind this came from a Ruby/Rails app needing a better way to process massive background jobs more effeciently, and a desire to stay curious and explore.
A Rails plugin that drops into models and provides indexing functionality.
Module for Rails mailers that sends the mail in the background. Adapted from the resque_mailer gem.
Message provides flexible & reliable background/asynchronous job processing mechanism on top of simple queue interface. Any developer can create queue adapter for Message to hook up different messaging/queue system. One in-memory queue is included with Message for you to start development and test, and you can easily swap in other queues later.
OmniTrack is a production-grade tracking and conversion gem for Ruby on Rails. It supports multiple ad/analytics platforms (Google Ads, GA4, Meta, TikTok, Snapchat) via a clean adapter pattern, works in both full-stack and API-only Rails apps, and provides structured logging, background job support, and an extensible pipeline.
RcrewAI Rails is a comprehensive Rails engine that brings AI agent orchestration to your Rails applications. Build intelligent AI crews that collaborate to solve complex tasks with full database persistence, background job integration, and a beautiful web dashboard for monitoring and management. Features: • ActiveRecord models for crews, agents, tasks, and executions with full persistence • Rails generators for scaffolding AI crews and agents • ActiveJob integration for asynchronous crew execution (works with any Rails background job adapter) • Web dashboard with real-time monitoring and management interface • Multi-LLM support: OpenAI GPT, Anthropic Claude, Google Gemini, Azure OpenAI, Ollama • Production-ready with logging, error handling, and security controls • Human-in-the-loop workflows with approval mechanisms • Tool ecosystem: web search, file operations, SQL, email, code execution
ALPHA Alert -- just uploaded initial release. Linux inotify is a means to receive events describing file system activity (create, modify, delete, close, etc). Sinotify was derived from aredridel's package (http://raa.ruby-lang.org/project/ruby-inotify/), with the addition of Paul Boon's tweak for making the event_check thread more polite (see http://www.mindbucket.com/2009/02/24/ruby-daemons-verifying-good-behavior/) In sinotify, the classes Sinotify::PrimNotifier and Sinotify::PrimEvent provide a low level wrapper to inotify, with the ability to establish 'watches' and then listen for inotify events using one of inotify's synchronous event loops, and providing access to the events' masks (see 'man inotify' for details). Sinotify::PrimEvent class adds a little semantic sugar to the event in to the form of 'etypes', which are just ruby symbols that describe the event mask. If the event has a raw mask of (DELETE_SELF & IS_DIR), then the etypes array would be [:delete_self, :is_dir]. In addition to the 'straight' wrapper in inotify, sinotify provides an asynchronous implementation of the 'observer pattern' for notification. In other words, Sinotify::Notifier listens in the background for inotify events, adapting them into instances of Sinotify::Event as they come in and immediately placing them in a concurrent queue, from which they are 'announced' to 'subscribers' of the event. [Sinotify uses the 'cosell' implementation of the Announcements event notification framework, hence the terminology 'subscribe' and 'announce' rather then 'listen' and 'trigger' used in the standard event observer pattern. See the 'cosell' package on github for details.] A variety of 'knobs' are provided for controlling the behavior of the notifier: whether a watch should apply to a single directory or should recurse into subdirectores, how fast it should broadcast queued events, etc (see Sinotify::Notifier, and the example in the synopsis section below). An event 'spy' can also be setup to log all Sinotify::PrimEvents and Sinotify::Events. Sinotify::Event simplifies inotify's muddled event model, sending events only for those files/directories that have changed. That's not to say you can't setup a notifier that recurses into subdirectories, just that any individual event will apply to a single file, and not to its children. Also, event types are identified using words (in the form of ruby :symbols) instead of inotify's event masks. See Sinotify::Event for more explanation. The README for inotify: http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/rml/inotify/README Selected quotes from the README for inotify: * "Rumor is that the 'd' in 'dnotify' does not stand for 'directory' but for 'suck.'" * "The 'i' in inotify does not stand for 'suck' but for 'inode' -- the logical choice since inotify is inode-based." (The 's' in 'sinotify' does in fact stand for 'suck.')
ALPHA Alert -- just uploaded initial release. Linux inotify is a means to receive events describing file system activity (create, modify, delete, close, etc). Sinotify was derived from aredridel's package (http://raa.ruby-lang.org/project/ruby-inotify/), with the addition of Paul Boon's tweak for making the event_check thread more polite (see http://www.mindbucket.com/2009/02/24/ruby-daemons-verifying-good-behavior/) In sinotify, the classes Sinotify::PrimNotifier and Sinotify::PrimEvent provide a low level wrapper to inotify, with the ability to establish 'watches' and then listen for inotify events using one of inotify's synchronous event loops, and providing access to the events' masks (see 'man inotify' for details). Sinotify::PrimEvent class adds a little semantic sugar to the event in to the form of 'etypes', which are just ruby symbols that describe the event mask. If the event has a raw mask of (DELETE_SELF & IS_DIR), then the etypes array would be [:delete_self, :is_dir]. In addition to the 'straight' wrapper in inotify, sinotify provides an asynchronous implementation of the 'observer pattern' for notification. In other words, Sinotify::Notifier listens in the background for inotify events, adapting them into instances of Sinotify::Event as they come in and immediately placing them in a concurrent queue, from which they are 'announced' to 'subscribers' of the event. [Sinotify uses the 'cosell' implementation of the Announcements event notification framework, hence the terminology 'subscribe' and 'announce' rather then 'listen' and 'trigger' used in the standard event observer pattern. See the 'cosell' package on github for details.] A variety of 'knobs' are provided for controlling the behavior of the notifier: whether a watch should apply to a single directory or should recurse into subdirectores, how fast it should broadcast queued events, etc (see Sinotify::Notifier, and the example in the synopsis section below). An event 'spy' can also be setup to log all Sinotify::PrimEvents and Sinotify::Events. Sinotify::Event simplifies inotify's muddled event model, sending events only for those files/directories that have changed. That's not to say you can't setup a notifier that recurses into subdirectories, just that any individual event will apply to a single file, and not to its children. Also, event types are identified using words (in the form of ruby :symbols) instead of inotify's event masks. See Sinotify::Event for more explanation. The README for inotify: http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/rml/inotify/README Selected quotes from the README for inotify: * "Rumor is that the 'd' in 'dnotify' does not stand for 'directory' but for 'suck.'" * "The 'i' in inotify does not stand for 'suck' but for 'inode' -- the logical choice since inotify is inode-based." (The 's' in 'sinotify' does in fact stand for 'suck.')
Contentful API wrapper library exposing an ActiveRecord-like interface