test framework
yarn berry versioning using conventional commits
Official OTP flows for Berry SDK on top of WhatsApp native-flow and fallback buttons.
read/write yarnlock v1 and berry
Flutter kick-starter for berry.
MCP (Model Context Protocol) client adapter for Berry Agent SDK
Yarn Berry compatible CLI wrapper for @testomatio/reporter
yarn workspace info implementation for yarn v2 berry, lerna and npm workspaces
AI agent product built on berry-agent-sdk
Deduplication tool for yarn.lock files
Safety guards, LLM classifier, and audit for Berry Agent SDK
yarn berry cli
A plugin for semantic-release to support publishing to NPM with yarn@berry
Deduplication tool for yarn.lock files. auto detect yarn v1 and berry
Check the used package manager in a given repository (npm, yarn classic, yarn berry, pnpm, bun)
Public SDK for Berry Protocol WhatsApp integrations.
A yarn (berry) plugin for running `yarn install` automatically.
Observability & cost tracking for Berry Agent SDK
workspace utils for yarn berry
Shared event and message contracts for Berry Protocol.
Berry Error, General Error Library
Facade package for Berry SDK that exposes BerryProtocol as the main SDK entrypoint.
update yarnlock v1 and berry
Deterministic visual identity helpers for Berry products.
A simple yarn berry lockfile parser
Berry CLI
Berry DB
Berry FS
Berry GUI
100% Rust Native Desktop Code Editor with egui + WGPU Rendering
A embeddable K/V storage engine inspired by RocksDB.
Pokeapi wrapper
Holonomy measurement on the Pythagorean manifold — angular deficit, Berry phase analogy
Dependency upgrade impact analyzer — test upgrades against your projects' real CI before you adopt them
Detect the package manager in use by identifying the associated package.json or lockfile.
A package for calculating band, angle state, linear and nonlinear conductivities based on tight-binding models
WIP
Test code samples embedded in files like readmes
Usefull for sending push notification to blackberry devices
When testing embedded code examples with MountainBerryFields, you may wish to use RSpec. This enables that integration
Test code samples embedded in files like readmes
The Mailit library, by Kevin Berry
All the Pokémon data you'll ever need in one place, easily accessible through a modern free open-source RESTful API. ## What is this? This is a full RESTful API linked to an extensive database detailing everything about the Pokémon main game series. We've covered everything from Pokémon to Berry Flavors. ## Where do I start? We have awesome [documentation](https://pokeapi.co/docs/v2) on how to use this API. It takes minutes to get started. This API will always be publicly available and will never require any extensive setup process to consume. Created by [**Paul Hallett**(]https://github.com/phalt) and other [**PokéAPI contributors***](https://github.com/PokeAPI/pokeapi#contributing) around the world. Pokémon and Pokémon character names are trademarks of Nintendo.
========================================================= Name Parse Copyright (c) 2009 The Rubyists (Jayson Vaughn, Tj Vanderpoel, Michael Fellinger, Kevin Berry) Distributed under the terms of the MIT License. ========================================================== About ----- A ruby library for turning arbitrary name strings such as "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk" into a standardized object usable as parsed = NameParse::Parser.new("Dr Helen Hunt") puts "%s %s" % [parsed.first, parsed.last] Requirements ------------ - ruby (>= 1.8) Usage ----- Example of using on a list: bougyman@zero:~/git_checkouts/name_parse$ irb -r lib/name_parse irb(main):001:0> list = ["Jayson Vaughn", "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk"] => ["Jayson Vaughn", "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk"] irb(main):002:0> list.map { |n| p = NameParse[n]; [p.first, p.last] } => [["Jayson", "Vaughn"], ["Helen", "Hunt"], ["James", "Kirk"]] Support ------- Home page at http://github.com/bougyman/name_parse #rubyists on FreeNode
========================================================= Name Parse Copyright (c) 2009 The Rubyists (Jayson Vaughn, Tj Vanderpoel, Michael Fellinger, Kevin Berry) Distributed under the terms of the MIT License. ========================================================== About ----- A ruby library for turning arbitrary name strings such as "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk" into a standardized object usable as parsed = NameParse::Parser.new("Dr Helen Hunt") puts "%s %s" % [parsed.first, parsed.last] Requirements ------------ - ruby (>= 1.8) Usage ----- Example of using on a list: bougyman@zero:~/git_checkouts/name_parse$ irb -r lib/name_parse irb(main):001:0> list = ["Jayson Vaughn", "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk"] => ["Jayson Vaughn", "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk"] irb(main):002:0> list.map { |n| p = NameParse[n]; [p.first, p.last] } => [["Jayson", "Vaughn"], ["Helen", "Hunt"], ["James", "Kirk"]] Support ------- Home page at http://github.com/bougyman/name_parse #rubyists on FreeNode
Studio Game Program is meant to add multiple players to a game, and then give or remove health and points based on random rolls of a die. These players also accumulate random treasures that give them bonus points. Included are some other mixins that have weighted die, or players that have higher chances of gaining health and different point values dependent upon their treasures. After many rounds, the stats are printed to see what player came out on top. A great game if you want to bet against random odds with your coworkers that know too much about sports. Getting Started: Just need Ruby to make this baby work. Prerequisites: Computer (preferably a mac), and ruby 2.3.3, plus some of that good ol' worldwide web. License: This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE.md file for details Acknowledgments: The Pragmatic Studio, Radbear, God, my parents (probably), spotify mathrock playlists, the movie Swordfish because of that one scene where Halle Berry does that thing to the guy coding, etc.
========================================================= FreeSWITCHeR Copyright (c) 2009 The Rubyists (Jayson Vaughn, Tj Vanderpoel, Michael Fellinger, Kevin Berry) Distributed under the terms of the MIT License. ========================================================== About ----- *** STILL UNDER HEAVY DEVELOPMENT *** A ruby library for interacting with the "FreeSWITCH" (http://www.freeswitch.org) opensource telephony platform *** STILL UNDER HEAVY DEVELOPMENT *** Requirements ------------ - ruby (>= 1.8) - eventmachine (If you wish to use Outbound and Inbound listener) Usage ----- Example of originating a new call in 'irb' using FSR::CommandSocket#originate: irb(main):001:0> require 'fsr' => true irb(main):002:0> FSR.load_all_commands => [:sofia, :originate] irb(main):003:0> sock = FSR::CommandSocket.new => #<FSR::CommandSocket:0xb7a89104 @server="127.0.0.1", @socket=#<TCPSocket:0xb7a8908c>, @port="8021", @auth="ClueCon"> irb(main):007:0> sock.originate(:target => 'sofia/gateway/carlos/8179395222', :endpoint => FSR::App::Bridge.new("user/bougyman")).run => {"Job-UUID"=>"732075a4-7dd5-4258-b124-6284a82a5ae7", "body"=>"", "Content-Type"=>"command/reply", "Reply-Text"=>"+OK Job-UUID: 732075a4-7dd5-4258-b124-6284a82a5ae7"} Example of creating an Outbound Eventsocket listener: #!/usr/bin/env ruby require 'fsr' require "fsr/listener/outbound" class OesDemo < FSR::Listener::Outbound def session_initiated(session) number = session.headers[:caller_caller_id_number] # Grab the inbound caller id FSR::Log.info "*** Answering incoming call from #{number}" answer # Answer the call set "hangup_after_bridge=true" # Set a variable speak 'Hello, This is your phone switch. Have a great day' # use mod_flite to speak hangup # Hangup the call end end FSR.start_oes!(OesDemo, :port => 1888, :host => "localhost") Example of creating an Inbound Eventsocket listener: #!/usr/bin/env ruby require 'fsr' require "fsr/listener/inbound" class IesDemo < FSR::Listener::Inbound def on_event(event) pp event.headers pp event.content[:event_name] end end FSR.start_ies!(IesDemo, :host => "localhost", :port => 8021) Support ------- Home page at http://code.rubyists.com/projects/fs #rubyists on FreeNode
========================================================= FreeSWITCHeR Copyright (c) 2009 The Rubyists (Jayson Vaughn, Tj Vanderpoel, Michael Fellinger, Kevin Berry) Distributed under the terms of the MIT License. ========================================================== ABOUT ----- A ruby library for interacting with the "FreeSWITCH" (http://www.freeswitch.org) opensource telephony platform REQUIREMENTS ------------ * ruby (>= 1.8) * eventmachine (If you wish to use Outbound and Inbound listener) USAGE ----- An Outbound Event Listener Example that reads and returns DTMF input: -------------------------------------------------------------------- Simply just create a subclass of FSR::Listner::Outbound and all new calls/sessions will invoke the "session_initiated" callback method. <b>NOTE</b>: FSR uses blocks within the 'session_inititated' method to ensure that the next "freeswich command" is not executed until the previous "Freeswitch command" has finished. This is kicked off by "answer do" #!/usr/bin/ruby require 'fsr' require 'fsr/listener/outbound' class OutboundDemo < FSR::Listener::Outbound def session_initiated exten = @session.headers[:caller_caller_id_number] FSR::Log.info "*** Answering incoming call from #{exten}" answer do FSR::Log.info "***Reading DTMF from #{exten}" read("/home/freeswitch/freeswitch/sounds/music/8000/sweet.wav", 4, 10, "input", 7000) do |read_var| FSR::Log.info "***Success, grabbed #{read_var.strip} from #{exten}" # Tell the caller what they entered speak("Got the DTMF of: #{read_var}") do #Hangup the call hangup end end end end end FSR.start_oes! OutboundDemo, :port => 8084, :host => "127.0.0.1" An Inbound Event Socket Listener example using FreeSWITCHeR's hook system: -------------------------------------------------------------------------- #!/usr/bin/ruby require 'pp' require 'fsr' require "fsr/listener/inbound" # EXAMPLE 1 # This adds a hook on CHANNEL_CREATE events. You can also create a method to handle the event you're after. See the next example FSL::Inbound.add_event_hook(:CHANNEL_CREATE) {|event| FSR::Log.info "*** [#{event.content[:unique_id]}] Channel created - greetings from the hook!" } # EXAMPLE 2 # Define a method to handle CHANNEL_HANGUP events. def custom_channel_hangup_handler(event) FSR::Log.info "*** [#{event.content[:unique_id]}] Channel hangup. The event:" pp event end # This adds a hook for EXAMPLE 2 FSL::Inbound.add_event_hook(:CHANNEL_HANGUP) {|event| custom_channel_hangup_handler(event) } # Start FSR Inbound Listener FSR.start_ies!(FSL::Inbound, :host => "localhost", :port => 8021) An Inbound Event Socket Listener example using the on_event callback method instead of hooks: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- #!/usr/bin/ruby require 'pp' require 'fsr' require "fsr/listener/inbound" class IesDemo < FSR::Listener::Inbound def on_event(event) pp event.headers pp event.content[:event_name] end end FSR.start_ies!(IesDemo, :host => "localhost", :port => 8021, :auth => "ClueCon") An example of using FSR::CommandSocket to originate a new call in irb: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- irb(main):001:0> require 'fsr' => true irb(main):002:0> FSR.load_all_commands => [:sofia, :originate] irb(main):003:0> sock = FSR::CommandSocket.new => #<FSR::CommandSocket:0xb7a89104 @server="127.0.0.1", @socket=#<TCPSocket:0xb7a8908c>, @port="8021", @auth="ClueCon"> irb(main):007:0> sock.originate(:target => 'sofia/gateway/carlos/8179395222', :endpoint => FSR::App::Bridge.new("user/bougyman")).run => {"Job-UUID"=>"732075a4-7dd5-4258-b124-6284a82a5ae7", "body"=>"", "Content-Type"=>"command/reply", "Reply-Text"=>"+OK Job-UUID: 732075a4-7dd5-4258-b124-6284a82a5ae7"} SUPPORT ------- Home page at http://code.rubyists.com/projects/fs #rubyists on FreeNode
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