Shared types, error codes, HMAC + retry helpers, EIP-712 definitions for the Arae SDK ecosystem.
Typed client SDK for the Arae A2A escrow + dispute + reputation protocol. Auto-generated from OpenAPI, hand-written ergonomics on top.
Reference agent runtime for the Arae A2A protocol. Handles registration, bid requests, webhook verification, and EIP-712 release signing.
Cursed data structures
A Reporting library for for Ara Programming Language 📃
A fault-tolerant, recursive-descent parser for Ara Programming Language 🌲
SOME/IP transport backend for ara-com Adaptive AUTOSAR communication
A Source library for Ara Programming Language 🗃
Core traits and async abstractions for Adaptive AUTOSAR communication in Rust
Async random access I/O traits
Rust client library for the Kinara ARA-2 neural network accelerator on NXP i.MX platforms
Safe Rust bindings for the Celemony ARA2 SDK
Raw FFI bindings for Celemony ARA2 SDK
FFI bindings to libaraclient for the Kinara ARA-2 neural network accelerator
Safe Rust bindings for the Celemony ARA2 SDK
Convert proprietary file format of Across v6 for exporting and (re-)importing projects into the YAML.
A simple time-tracking tool, compatible with Ara T. Howard's punch gem.
Ported Ara Howard's Map gem to RubyMotion
Ara is a tiny class that’s allow you to use actors in Ruby
copy and paste between ruby arrays in irb/rails console and a spreadsheet (tab delimited) and vise versa. Based on irbcp by Ara T. Howard
This is an application used to cover lost of aras in Ruby. You can contact me here http://twitter.com/ahmedandar.
forkify.rb makes it easy to process a bunch of data using 'n' worker processes. It is based off of forkoff and threadify by Ara Howard. It aims to be safe to use on Ruby 1.8.6+ and Ruby 1.9.1+
forkify.rb makes it easy to process a bunch of data using 'n' worker processes. It is based off of forkoff and threadify by Ara Howard. It aims to be safe to use on Ruby 1.8.6+ and Ruby 1.9.1+
Descriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
Descriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like: Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for 'nested' p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
Descriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.