If you want to see my npmjs profile, you can go to [https://npmjs.org/~winpez]
A simple console calculator for your Console
Generates CRC hashes for strings - for use by node redis clients to determine key slots.
Calculate meta-vulnerabilities from package security advisories
SMS segements calculator
A CVSS vector modeling and score calculation implementation for all CVSS versions by {metæffekt}.
Calculate optimal subnet masks for standard and non-standard IP ranges
Calculate the specificity of a CSS selector
A tiny, permissive CSS selector parser
Calculate time slots for your users to choose from.
Core library for the Ecologits project, port of the ecologits methodology to TypeScript
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Color palettes calculator of Ant Design
An NSubstitute port to TypeScript called substitute.js.
SVG path bounding box calculator
Cars Calculator
TrexMes OEE Calculator from IoBox Data
Cost calculator for Vercel AI SDK token usage. Supports OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, xAI (Grok), and DeepSeek with long context pricing, prompt caching, and reasoning tokens.
JavaScript class for calculating all possible subnets, subnet validity, ip range
figure-out dates across timezones
Calculate the Fade percentage of a CS2 skin using its paint seed.
AWS SDK for JavaScript Bcm Pricing Calculator Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native
A custom Cypress command to wrap the remote debugger protocol low level command
A pre-flop and post-flop odds calculator for Texas Holdem
Your friendly neighborhood console calculator
Console Bowling Game Score Calculator
The Body Mass Index (BMI) Gem is usefull to calculate your BMI from console, and add this gem to your ruby project and use it. See 'bmi -h' to read the instructions of usage.
This four function calculator can be run from the command line. Enter commands and the gem will display results. Run through the irb console by requiring zhalo_calculator.
Adds support for displaying your ActiveRecord tables, named scopes, collections, or plain arrays in a table view when working in rails console, shell, or email template. Enumerable#to_table_display returns the printable strings; Object#pt calls #to_table_display on its first argument and puts out the result. Columns you haven't loaded (eg. from using :select) are omitted, and derived/calculated columns (eg. again, from using :select) are added. Both #to_table_display and Object#pt methods take :only, :except, and :methods which work like the #to_xml method to change what attributes/methods are output. The normal output uses #inspect on the data values to make them printable, so you can see what type the values had. When that's inconvenient or you'd prefer direct display, you can pass the option :inspect => false to disable inspection.
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