[](https://travis-ci.org/bitovi-components/can-tabs)
Bottom tab navigator following iOS design guidelines
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Integration for the animated tab view component from react-native-tab-view
provides locking mechanism to sync across browser tabs
tabs ui component for react
An accessible and easy tab component for ReactJS
React Native Bottom Tabs React Navigation integration
Fluent UI React tabs components
Spectrum UI components in React
Spectrum UI components in React
tabs ui component for react
Spectrum UI components in React
Tabs are used to organize content by grouping similar information on the same page.
Native Bottom Tabs for React Native
Convert tabs to spaces in a string
Core logic for the tabs widget implemented as a state machine
Accessible React Tabs Component
Tabs organize content into multiple sections and allow users to navigate between them.
remark-lint rule to warn when hard tabs are used instead of spaces
Containers relating to tabs in the Garden Design System
Accessible Tabs component for React and Chakra UI
A middleware for redux to sync state in different tabs
A multi-tab docking layout manager
This gem you can use to restrict the user to a particular tab for performing the request and then only move to the next tab after the request from a tab is fullfilled.
This Widget gives you tabbed content boxes that can be filled with widgets.
Create and install double-tab ('tab tab') auto-completions for any command-line application on any shell (bash, fish, ksh, etc). When you use the command-line, you can double-tab to auto-complete the name of a command-line application or a target file or folder. Its possible to provide your own completions for applications: git comes with bash shell completions, and the fish shell includes a library of completions for many applications.
Give your application or gem an interactive shell, complete with custom prompts, tab completion, and various callbacks. Commands are defined as Ruby methods and can be grouped into logical subshells.
Rake is a Make-like program implemented in Ruby. Tasks and dependencies are specified in standard Ruby syntax. Rake has the following features: * Rakefiles (rake's version of Makefiles) are completely defined in standard Ruby syntax. No XML files to edit. No quirky Makefile syntax to worry about (is that a tab or a space?) * Users can specify tasks with prerequisites. * Rake supports rule patterns to synthesize implicit tasks. * Flexible FileLists that act like arrays but know about manipulating file names and paths. * Supports parallel execution of tasks.
Seeks to mimic the familiar UX of HTML5 form elements, with placeholder attributes, in an ANSI-compatible terminal. Allows a program to present a line with one or more "blanks" which can be edited and cycled between at will (with tab & shift-tab or up & down arrow keys). On new line, returns the values of the blanks (treating placeholders as a default values if no editing occured)
BoxBot aims to generate an SVG or PDF template that is meant to be used with a laser cutter. Boxbot will generate a 2D cut layout for a 3D box (parallelepiped) with matching tabs that allow the box to be "snapped into place" without screws, although screws and T-joins can also be added. This gem is currently work in progress, and is a rewrite of the laser-cutter box drawing logic.
Search, browse, and open bookmarks from the command line. Supports Chrome, Chromium, Firefox, and Safari. Browse all bookmarks interactively, or search by keyword. ZSH users get tab completion through bookmark matches. Can also open websites directly or search with your preferred search engine.
The best I could come up with was to just show you: $ atcat dbi://pg/localhost/database_name/table_name csv://table_name.csv That exports a table from Postgres into a comma separated value file. You can read from or write to: tab, csv, dbi, etc. You can opaquely treat any of those 'table of records' based sources as an opaque URI. Want to read more? https://github.com/kyleburton/abstract-tables
This is a rudimentary info scraper and command line "browser" for the Humble Bundle website, using plain Ruby and Nokogiri. Upon firing up, it will scrape the Game Bundles, Book Bundles, and Mobiles Bundles tabs (along with any sub-tabs) for ongoing bundles. Once it's finished, you can query the scraped information via the command prompt. Available information for each bundle includes: Name, Supported Charities, Donation Tiers and Included Products, Total MSRP, and URL. Available products can also be filtered by tags like linux, or drm-free, or multiple at once (windows linux drm-free).
This wrapper will access the Linkshare LinkLocator Direct Web Service, which is available to all publishers. The authentication of a publisher is done using the publisher’s Web services token. Publishers that do not have a Web services token, can go to Web Services under the Links tab on the Publisher Dashboard and click the button to generate a token. Since the token is used for authentication, it is a required parameter for all requests.
CommandSet is a user interface framework. Its focus is a DSL for defining commands, much like Rake or RSpec. A default readline based terminal interpreter (complete with context sensitive tab completion, and the amenities of readline: history editing, etc) is included. It could very well be adapted to interact with CGI or a GUI - both are planned. CommandSet has a lot of very nice features. First is the domain-specific language for defining commands and sets of commands. Those sets can further be neatly composed into larger interfaces, so that useful or standard commands can be resued. Optional application modes, much like Cisco's IOS, with a little bit more flexibility. Arguments have their own sub-language, that allows them to provide interface hints (like tab completion) as well as input validation. On the output side of things, CommandSet has a very flexible output capturing mechanism, which generates a tree of data as it's generated, even capturing writes to multiple places at once (even from multiple threads) and keeping everything straight. Methods that normally write to stdout are interposed and fed into the tree, so you can hack in existing scripts with minimal adjustment. The final output can be presented to the user in a number of formats, including contextual coloring and indentation, or even progress hashes. XML is also provided, although it needs some work. Templates are on the way. While you're developing your application, you might find the record and playback utilities useful. cmdset-record will start up with your defaults for your command set, and spit out an interaction script. Then you can replay the script against the live set with cmdset-playback. Great for ad hoc testing, usability surveys and general demos.
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