The most simple logger imaginable
TypeScript definitions for console-log-level
Various console log level prefixes with support for color symbols and tags.
Light logger only console. Log level DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR. Using namespace and timestamp.
Detect whether a terminal supports color
Minimal lightweight logging for JavaScript, adding reliable log level methods to any available console.log methods
Definitions of levels for logging purposes & shareable Symbol constants.
ANSI escape codes for styling strings in the terminal
a streaming interface for archive generation
Winston-lite-esque Log lib for terminal and browser debugging, with piles of unignorable log tags and marker styles.
just emit 'log' events on the process object
Patch NodeJS console methods in order to add timestamp information by pattern
A helper utility for logging of WebdriverIO packages
A beautiful and minimal logger for all applications
JSON logger for Node.js and browser.
An mutable object-based log format designed for chaining & objectMode streams.
Microsoft Azure SDK for JavaScript - Logger
A simple npm utility module for logging
Call a callback when a readable/writable/duplex stream has completed or failed.
Universal pluggable logging utility
Parses data: URLs
A simple file-logger for React Native
A modern logging library for Node.js and modern browsers that provides log level mapping to the console
Performance-aware simple logger for React-Native with namespaces, custom levels and custom transports (colored console, file writing, etc.)
logging data to file, console etc. Data can be pushed using info\warning\error\debug-levels categories
Proclib allows easy management of subprocess with a very high-level interface, with niceties such as multiplexed logging of output to logfiles and the console, output capture, and signal propagation.
Object Inspector takes Object#inspect to the next level. Specify any combination of identification attributes, flags, issues, info, and/or a name along with an optional, self-definable scope option to represents objects. Great for the console, logging, etc.
Logifyer transforms Rails console logs into well-structured JSON format, enhancing log readability and enabling easy integration with log management tools by providing formatted logs with key-value pairs, such as timestamps, log levels, and messages.
go (to project) do (stuffs) godo provides a smart way of opening a project folder in multiple terminal tabs and, in each tab, invoking a commands appropriate to that project. For example if the folder contains a Rails project the actions might include: starting mongrel, tailing one or more logs, starting consoles or IRB sessions, tailing production logs, opening an editor, running autospec, or gitk. godo works by searching your project paths for a given search string and trying to match it against paths found in one or more configured project roots. It will make some straightforward efforts to disambiguate among multiple matches to find the one you want. godo then uses configurable heuristics to figure out what type of project it is, for example "a RoR project using RSpec and Subversion". From that it will invokes a series of action appropriate to the type of project detected with each action being run, from the project folder, in its own terminal session. godo is entirely configured by a YAML file (~/.godo) that contains project types, heuristics, actions, project paths, and a session controller. A sample configuration file is provided that can be installed using godo --install. godo comes with an iTerm session controller for MacOSX that uses the rb-appscript gem to control iTerm (see lib/session.rb and lib/sessions/iterm_session.rb). It should be relatively straightforward to add new controller (e.g. for Leopard Terminal.app), or a controller that works in a different way (e.g. by creating new windows instead of new tabs). There is nothing MacOSX specific about the rest of godo so creating controllers for other unixen should be straightforward if they can be controlled from ruby. godo is a rewrite of my original 'gp' script (http://matt.blogs.it/entries/00002674.html) which fixes a number of the deficiencies of that script, turns it into a gem, has a better name, and steals the idea of using heuristics to detect project types from Solomon White's gp variant (http://onrails.org/articles/2007/11/28/scripting-the-leopard-terminal). godo now includes contributions from Lee Marlow <lee.marlow@gmail.com> including support for project level .godo files to override the global configuration, support for Terminal.app, and maximum depth support to speed up the finder. godo lives at the excellent GitHub: http://github.com/mmower/godo/ and accepts patches and forks.
Contentful API wrapper library exposing an ActiveRecord-like interface
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