This CLI tool automates the process of refactoring `.js`, `.jsx`, `.ts`, `.tsx` files by using the OpenAI Codex model. It reads files from a "src" directory, including subdirectories, sends them to the OpenAI API for refactoring suggestions, and then writ
Angular Schematics - Library
Storybook framework-agnostic API
Curried property accessor function that resolves deeply-nested object properties via dot/bracket-notation string path while mitigating TypeErrors via friendly and composable API.
AWS SDK for JavaScript Migration Hub Refactor Spaces Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native
Node Implementation of Foreman
AWS CDK CLI, the command line tool for CDK apps
A deep deletion module for node (like `rm -rf`)
Define and resolve aliases for bundle dependencies
JavaScript build tool, similar to Make or Rake
Node.js native addon build tool
git conventional commits util
Node Implementation of Foreman
Helpers and control plane to handle simulators and observability
AggRoot - AI Assistant (Node.js/TypeScript Version)
CLI to upgrade Strapi applications effortless
Refactoring Assistant MCP - Extract functions, convert callbacks to async/await, simplify conditionals, and apply design patterns. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, Roo Code, and any MCP-compatible editor.
A CLI tool for refactoring an existing NodeJs application to a fully functional TypeScript application.
Library exposing methods for the creation and consumption of Bitcoin transactions pertaining to Babylon's Bitcoin Staking protocol.
AggRoot - AI Assistant (Node.js/TypeScript Version)
Shareable commitlint config enforcing conventional commits
Detect if code is running in an AI agent or automated development environment
Skillflag producer CLI reference implementation.
AWS CDK CLI, the command line tool for CDK apps
Kasoba is a tool meant to assist programmers with large-scale code refactors.
Refactor tests generated by awspec generate tool in order to make them more generic. i.e. remove hard coded references to resources or swap for regex
A simple yet powerful tool to analyze method usage in Ruby/Rails codebases. Track which methods are called most frequently, filter by receivers or method names, and export results in table, JSON, or CSV format. Perfect for understanding code patterns, refactoring decisions, and identifying heavily-used APIs.
I don't want a single thing preventing me from starting off (even the smallest) library without a good infrastructure to support TDD and clean coding standards. I got tired of reconfiguring the same tools in basically the same way every time. With this one command you can set up a library, fire up Guard, and jump right into the TDD loop: Red, Green, Refactor.
Have you ever asked yourself, "Is this method even being used?!" Or, "What the heck is this method receiving?" Does your application use Rails? If the answers these questions are yes, this gem may be of use to you! Large applications can accrue cruft; old methods that might once have been important, but are now unused or code that is difficult to understand, but dangerous to refactor. Unfortunately, software is _complex_ and sometimes it's unclear what's really going on. This adds maintenance burdens, headaches, and uncertainty. This gem aims to give you a couple tools to make it easier to know what (and how) your code is being used (or not). CruftTracker supports Rails versions 5.2 to 6.1 at this time. As of now the gem only supports MySQL, but contributions for Postgres or other DBMS would be welcome.
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