DIY MVC Framework inspired by SAM pattern.
the complete solution for node.js command-line programs
Infer strong typings for commander options and action handlers
A module for making CLI applications with NestJS. Decorators for running commands and separating out config parsers included. This package works on top of commander.
Export commander command as a Fig spec
A testing utility for nest-commander. It builds on top of ideas from @nestjs/testing and is not tied to any test framework directly.
🛹 Modern TypeScript tools for SVG
Commander.js with integrated interactive prompts
A small collection of option validators for commander
MCP server for terminal operations and file editing
Webpack plugin to replace the AWS SAM CLI build command
SAM - The Software Automatic Mouth
the complete solution for node.js command-line programs
AI and ML Interfaces for Cornerstone3D
A wrapper for Commander that automatically sets the version based on your package.json
Redis web-based management tool written in node.js
TypeScript definitions for babel-types
A TypeScript utility for building type-safe CLI commands using commander and zod.
Effortlessly add intelligent autocomplete support to your Commander.js CLI app using Carapace. Supports Bash, Zsh, Fish, Nushell and more
A NestJS module that provide a cli
I2P SAM: peer-to-peer communication between applications over I2P
A module to globally install libraries to prevent installing the same libraries again and again
This library enables you to utilize AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway to respond to web and API requests using your existing Node.js application framework.
TypeScript definitions for office-js
Hammer-CLI-SAM is a Hammer module which provides connectivity to a SAM server.
A command line program to produce builds for aws-sam-cli for nodejs/yarn projects
New Sambamba library comes with a command-line tool for working with SAM/BAM files. This gem brings some of its functionality to Ruby.
title_case is a set of Ruby String methods for title casing, and a command-line utility using those methods. Not to be confused with Sam Souder's titlecase.
==== Topic Maps for Rails (rtm-rails) RTM-Rails is the Rails-Adapter for Ruby Topic Maps. It allows simple configuration of topicmaps in config/topicmaps.yml. ==== Overview From a developer's perspective, RTM is a schema-less database management system. The Topic Maps standard (described below) on which RTM is based provides a way of creating a self-describing schema just by using it. You can use RTM as a complement data storage to ActiveRecord in your Rails apps. ==== Quickstart - existing Rails project jruby script/generate topicmaps Run the command above after installing rtm-rails. This will create * a minimal default configuration: config/topicmaps.yml and * a file with more examples and explanations config/topicmaps.example.yml * a file README.topicmaps.txt which contains more information how to use it and where to find more information * an initializer to load the topicmaps at startup * a rake task to migrate the topic maps backends in your rails application. ==== Quickstart - new Rails project For a new Rails application these are the complete initial steps: jruby -S rails my_topicmaps_app cd my_topicmaps_app jruby -S script/generate jdbc jruby -S script/generate topicmaps # The following lines are necessary because Rails does not have a template # for the H2 database and Ontopia does not support the Rails default SQLite3. sed -e "s/sqlite3/h2/" config/database.yml > config/database.yml.h2 mv config/database.yml.h2 config/database.yml # Prepare the database and then check if all is OK jruby -S rake topicmaps:migrate_backends jruby -S rake topicmaps:check ==== Usage inside the application When everything is fine, let's create our first topic: jruby -S script/console TM[:example].get!("http://example.org/my/first/topic") # and save the topic map TM[:example].commit Access the configured topic maps anywhere in your application like this: TM[:example] To retrieve all topics, you can do TM[:example].topics To retrieve a specific topic by its subject identifier: TM[:example].get("http://example.org/my/topic") Commit the changes to the database permanently: TM[:example].commit ... or abort the transaction: TM[:example].abort More information can be found on http://rtm.topicmapslab.de/ ==== Minimal configuration default: topicmaps: example: http://rtm.topicmapslab.de/example1/ The minimal configuration creates a single topic map, named :example with the locator given. This topic map will be persisted in the same database as your ActiveRecord connection if not specified otherwise. The default backend is OntopiaRDBMS (from the rtm-ontopia gem). A more complete configuration can be found in config/topicmaps.example.yml after running "jruby script/generate topicmaps". It also includes how to specifiy multiple connections to different data stores and so on. ==== Topic Maps Topic Maps is an international industry standard (ISO13250) for interchangeably representing information about the structure of information resources used to define topics, and the relationships between topics. A set of one or more interrelated documents that employs the notation defined by this International Standard is called a topic map. A topic map defines a multidimensional topic space - a space in which the locations are topics, and in which the distances between topics are measurable in terms of the number of intervening topics which must be visited in order to get from one topic to another, and the kinds of relationships that define the path from one topic to another, if any, through the intervening topics, if any. In addition, information objects can have properties, as well as values for those properties, assigned to them. The Topic Maps Data Model which is used in this implementation can be found on http://www.isotopicmaps.org/sam/sam-model/. ==== License Copyright 2009 Topic Maps Lab, University of Leipzig. Apache License, Version 2.0