Common stuff to the SEI Adaptive apps
Common Expression Language
Adaptive Cards Javascript library for HTML Clients
Bot Framework Adaptive Dialogs runtime core components
<p> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/@microsoft/teams.cards" target="_blank"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/@microsoft/teams.cards/latest" /> </a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/@microsoft/teams.cards?activeTab=c
Adaptive Card data binding and templating engine for JavaScript
A library of styleable components built using React Aria
Optimizes FullCalendar for print
adaptive and scalable 2D bezier curves
adaptive and scalable 2D quadratic curves
A library of pure JS/HTML controls designed for use with Adaptive Cards.
SharePoint Framework Adaptive Card Extensions
Give users a great experience best suited to their device and network constraints
a few common utility template tags for ES2015
adaptive-timeout
Adaptive Card designer embeddable control
Utilities for SQL instrumentations
Redis utilities for redis instrumentations
Microsoft Authentication Library for js
A common tooling library used by the googleapis npm module. You probably don't want to use this directly.
Syntax tree data structure and parser interfaces for the lezer parser
Common functionality for ts-morph packages.
A React Component library implementing the News design language
DASH/EME video player library
Hurley provides a common interface for working with different HTTP adapters.
RGeo is a geospatial data library for Ruby. RGeo::ActiveRecord is an optional RGeo module providing some spatial extensions to ActiveRecord, as well as common tools used by RGeo-based spatial adapters.
Enables flexible logging to multiple adapters by providing common interface
RGeo is a geospatial data library for Ruby. RGeo::ActiveRecord is an optional RGeo module providing some spatial extensions to ActiveRecord, as well as common tools used by RGeo-based spatial adapters.
RGeo is a geospatial data library for Ruby. RGeo::ActiveRecord is an optional RGeo module providing some spatial extensions to ActiveRecord, as well as common tools used by RGeo-based spatial adapters.
The suckysockets gem provides the user with the opportunity to check whether a power adapter is needed when travelling from one country to another. 1. How to install the gem gem install suckysockets 2. How to use it To run the program just type 'suckysockets' in the command line. You will be asked in which country you currently live. Please type the country name and press 'enter'. Next you need to enter your destination country and press 'enter' again. Then you receive the result telling you whether or nor you need an adapter travelling from you current country to the destination country. Three outcomes are possible: - an adapter is not needed. That is the case when all plugs common in your country of living fit all of the sockets in your destination country. - an adapter is definetely needed. That is the case when none of the plugs in your home country fit any of the sockets in your destination country. - an adapter is needed in certain cases: when some of your home country plugs fit some of the sockets, but some plugs don't. In that case you will get a detailed response telling you for which particular cases an adapter is needed.
Devex provides a unified `dx` command for common development tasks. Features include: - CLI framework with automatic help generation and nested subcommands - Agent-aware output (detects AI agents and adapts output format) - Environment orchestration (mise, bundle exec, dotenv integration) - Project path conventions with fail-fast feedback - Zero-dependency support library (Path class, ANSI colors, core extensions)
Graphviz wrapper for Ruby. This can be used as a common library, a rails plugin and a command line tool. == FEATURES/PROBLEMS: GraphvizR is graphviz adapter for Ruby, and it can: * generate a graphviz dot file, * generate an image file by means of utilizing graphviz, * interprete rdot file and generate an image file, * and, generate a graph image file in rails application as a rails plugin. == SYNOPSYS: === Command Line: bin/graphviz_r sample/record.rdot === In Your Code: This ruby code: gvr = GraphvizR.new 'sample' gvr.graph [:label => 'example', :size => '1.5, 2.5'] gvr.beta [:shape => :box] gvr.alpha >> gvr.beta (gvr.beta >> gvr.delta) [:label => 'label1'] gvr.delta >> gvr.gamma gvr.to_dot replies the dot code: digraph sample { graph [label = "example", size = "1.5, 2.5"]; beta [shape = box]; alpha -> beta; beta -> delta [label = "label1"]; delta -> gamma; } To know more detail, please see test/test_graphviz_r.rb === On Rails : <b>use _render :rdot_ in controller</b> def show_graph render :rdot do graph [:size => '1.5, 2.5'] node [:shape => :record] node1 [:label => "<p_left> left|<p_center>center|<p_right> right"] node2 [:label => "left|center|right"] node1 >> node2 node1(:p_left) >> node2 node2 >> node1(:p_center) (node2 >> node1(:p_right)) [:label => 'record'] end end <b>use rdot view template</b> class RdotGenController < ApplicationController def index @label1 = "<p_left> left|<p_center>center|<p_right> right" @label2 = "left|center|right" end end # view/rdot_gen/index.rdot graph [:size => '1.5, 2.5'] node [:shape => :record] node1 [:label => @label1] node2 [:label => @label2] node1 >> node2 node1(:p_left) >> node2 node2 >> node1(:p_center) (node2 >> node1(:p_right)) [:label => 'record'] == DEPENDENCIES: * Graphviz (http://www.graphviz.org) == TODO: == INSTALL: * sudo gem install graphviz_r * if you want to use this in ruby on rails * script/plugin install http://technohippy.net/svn/repos/graphviz_r/trunk/vendor/plugins/rdot == LICENSE: (The MIT License)
Diff and patch tables
Diff and patch tables
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.