Assign a value or extend a deeply nested property of an object using object path notation.
Similar to assign-value but deeply merges object values or nested values using object path/dot notation.
Check for the existential value of a variable. Assign value by default.
assign value to JSON based on query
Easily assign value to `this`
Assign the enumerable es6 Symbol properties from one or more objects to the first object passed on the arguments. Can be used as a supplement to other extend, assign or merge methods as a polyfill for the Symbols part of the es6 Object.assign method.
ES2015 `Object.assign()` ponyfill
Check for the existential value of a variable. Assign value by default.
check if some one assign value to $store.state directly unless using $store.dispatch
Replace Object.assign with an inline helper
An RFC-6901 JSON Pointer implementation
Elysia plugin to support Cross Origin Requests (CORs)
pvtsutils is a set of common utility functions used in various Peculiar Ventures TypeScript based projects.
ECMAScript 2015 (ES6) Object.assign polyfill and ponyfill
🐊Putout plugin adds ability apply optional chaining
The lodash method `_.assign` exported as a module.
The same useRef, but with callback
Material Components for the web RTL Scss helpers
Simple implementation of Object.assign
Simple {{assign}} helper for Ember
Deeply assign the values of all enumerable-own-properties and symbols from one or more source objects to a target object. Returns the target object.
A simple module that works exactly as Object.assign, but skips assigning undefined values.
A polyfill for Ember.assign in <= 2.4
🐊Putout plugin adds ability to convert Object.assign to merge spread
Restrict the values assignable to ActiveRecord attributes or associations
An ActiveRecord plugin to strip whitespace from strings and coerce empty strings to nil values on assignment.
Hash values are set/retrieved using a number, a string, symbol or other hashable object. If the value is almost always stored as a string/symbol, retrieving from hash is quite ambiguous because Ruby treat symbol and string differently, which is good. Condensable class allow creating accessor on demand.
A gem for adding attr_boolean to objects, assigning by various 'falsey' values
A gem for making fields that need partial value assignments easier
A Ruby port of Perl Lingua::EN::Tagger, a probability based, corpus-trained tagger that assigns POS tags to English text based on a lookup dictionary and a set of probability values.
This gem is a Logstash plugin required to be installed on top of the Logstash core pipeline using $LS_HOME/bin/logstash-plugin install gemname. This gem is not a stand-alone program
Hash that would return values that has been assigned to keys that are superclasses of asked key
#assignment >> Getter, #assignment? >> Returns true if assignment is having value other than nil else false, #assignment = >> Setter. Acceptable inputs are file upload(ActionDispatch::Http::UploadedFile), filer handle and String(format validation is ignored), #assignment_path >> File path of assignment, #assignment_path_to_write >> File path of assignment to write (specific to writing. Used internally), #assignment_persisted? >> true if provided file/data is stored on disk, #assignment_store! >> to store provided file/data on disk, #assignment_destroy! >> to store destroy stored file/data from disk
This is a very simple mixin to support quiescing constants (which we call "quiescents") in Ruby. You may assign a value to a quiescing constant once during the execution of the program; however, a quiescing constant's value is fixed after the first time it is read. Quiescing constants may have default values (specified either as explicit values or argumentless blocks to compute that value) that take effect if they are not explicitly assigned to before their first use.
An alternative to OpenStruct that more strict in assigning values and deeper in consuming the passed Hash and transforming it back to Hash or JSON, equipped with deep digging capabilities.
Is there a way to blindly assign nested values to a Ruby hash without creating each key’s hash separately? Yes, but it’s more involved than you’d think.
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