This library will be used to handling data of an array type
A simple organizer for ordering hooks.
An sample code for npm packages
Array manipulation, ordering, searching, summarizing, etc.
Robustly get the byte offset of a Typed Array
Which kind of Typed Array is this JavaScript value? Works cross-realm, without `instanceof`, and despite Symbol.toStringTag.
`Array.prototype.concat`, but made safe by ignoring Symbol.isConcatSpreadable
An ES7/ES2016 spec-compliant `Array.prototype.includes` shim/polyfill/replacement that works as far down as ES3.
Get the ArrayBuffer out of a TypedArray, robustly.
A simple list of possible Typed Array names.
Is this value a JS ArrayBuffer?
Get the byte length of an ArrayBuffer, even in engines without a `.byteLength` method.
Is this value a JS SharedArrayBuffer?
Robustly get the byte length of a Typed Array
Robustly get the length of a Typed Array
General purpose glob-based configuration matching.
Is this value a JS Typed Array? This module works cross-realm/iframe, does not depend on `instanceof` or mutable properties, and despite ES6 Symbol.toStringTag.
Parse postgres array columns
Run an array of functions in parallel
Flatten nested arrays
A beautiful CLI file organizer — no Python required. Scan, sort, clean, find duplicates.
TypeScript definitions for d3-array
Guarantees an array back
Matches strings against configurable strings, globs, regular expressions, and/or functions
Adds more than 155 useful and frequently rather fundamental methods which are missing in Ruby programming language, to Array, File, Hash, Module, Object, String and Symbol classes. It tries to be similar project to Ruby Facets on principle, but less complex, more practical, non-atomic and organized by better way. Thanks to defensive and careful patching it should be compatible with all other libraries.
Designed to efficiently organize the elements of an array in a specific order. Sorting is a fundamental operation in computer science and data processing, and the performance of a sorting algorithm is crucial.
Tokyo Cabinet is a library of routines for managing a database. The database is a simple data file containing records, each is a pair of a key and a value. Every key and value is serial bytes with variable length. Both binary data and character string can be used as a key and a value. There is neither concept of data tables nor data types. Records are organized in hash table, B+ tree, or fixed-length array.
Crowdfund is a Ruby program developed based on Pragmatic Studio's Ruby Programming hands-on video course, and distributed as a Ruby gem. This program has been developed using all the strengths of Ruby including the following. Ruby Programming Environment * Installing Ruby on your favorite operating system (free exercise) * Running Ruby using the interactive Ruby shell (irb) and writing Ruby program files * Using Ruby's documentation system to get help * Installing external Ruby libraries using RubyGems * Troubleshooting common problems Ruby Language Constructs * Expressions and variables * Numbers, string, and symbols (free video & exercise) * Loops and conditional expressions * Arrays and hashes (free video & exercise on hashes) * Classes, modules, and structs Object-Oriented Programming * Using built-in Ruby classes * Defining your own classes with state and behavior (free video & exercise) * Creating unique objects * Telling objects what to do by calling methods * Modeling class-level inheritance relationships * Sharing code with mixins Object-Oriented Design Principles * Encapsulation * Separation of concerns * Polymorphism * Don't Repeat Yourself * Tell, Don't Ask Blocks and Iterators * Calling built-in methods that take blocks * Writing your own methods that yield to blocks * Implementing custom iterators * Effectively using blocks in your programs Organizing Ruby Code * Creating a Ruby project structure * Separating source files for easier reuse and testing * Namespacing to avoid naming clashes * Input/Output * Reading data from files * Writing data to files * Creating an interactive console prompt * Handling command-line input Unit Testing * Writing and running unit tests with RSpec * Test-driven development and the red-green-refactor cycle * Stubbing methods to control tests * Refactoring code, safely! Distribution * Conforming to RubyGems conventions * Writing a GemSpec * Building a RubyGem * Publishing a RubyGem to a public server Ruby Programming Idioms
Studio Game is a Ruby program developed based on Pragmatic Studio' Ruby Programming hands-on video course, and distributed as a Ruby gem. This program has been developed using all the strengths of Ruby including the following. Ruby Programming Environment * Installing Ruby on your favorite operating system (free exercise) * Running Ruby using the interactive Ruby shell (irb) and writing Ruby program files * Using Ruby's documentation system to get help * Installing external Ruby libraries using RubyGems * Troubleshooting common problems Ruby Language Constructs * Expressions and variables * Numbers, string, and symbols (free video & exercise) * Loops and conditional expressions * Arrays and hashes (free video & exercise on hashes) * Classes, modules, and structs Object-Oriented Programming * Using built-in Ruby classes * Defining your own classes with state and behavior (free video & exercise) * Creating unique objects * Telling objects what to do by calling methods * Modeling class-level inheritance relationships * Sharing code with mixins Object-Oriented Design Principles * Encapsulation * Separation of concerns * Polymorphism * Don't Repeat Yourself * Tell, Don't Ask Blocks and Iterators * Calling built-in methods that take blocks * Writing your own methods that yield to blocks * Implementing custom iterators * Effectively using blocks in your programs Organizing Ruby Code * Creating a Ruby project structure * Separating source files for easier reuse and testing * Namespacing to avoid naming clashes * Input/Output * Reading data from files * Writing data to files * Creating an interactive console prompt * Handling command-line input Unit Testing * Writing and running unit tests with RSpec * Test-driven development and the red-green-refactor cycle * Stubbing methods to control tests * Refactoring code, safely! Distribution * Conforming to RubyGems conventions * Writing a GemSpec * Building a RubyGem * Publishing a RubyGem to a public server Ruby Programming Idioms