create-html-app
webpack utilities used by Create React App
The Quill rich-text editor as a React component.
Official React bindings for Redux
Babel preset used by Create React App
ESLint configuration used by Create React App
RFC9562 UUIDs
Configuration and scripts for Create React App.
The official, opinionated, batteries-included toolset for efficient Redux development
GitHub App authentication for JavaScript
Predictable state container for JavaScript apps
GitHub OAuth App authentication for JavaScript
Highly configurable, well-tested, JavaScript-based HTML minifier.
A webpack plugin for converting external script files to inline script block. Requires 'html-webpack-plugin' to work.
Embeddable fullscript components
HTML Support feature for CKEditor 5.
HTML embed feature for CKEditor 5.
Pretty print JavaScript data types in the terminal and the browser
HTML/XML processor
interpolate custom variables into index.html
Angular Schematics - Library
Create Next.js-powered React apps with one command
Descope WC
TypeScript definitions for react-dev-utils
A DSL to create HTML/CSS/JS apps using Ruby.
Creates an inlined html app using sprockets and tilt
Chaplin maps JSON APIs to Mustache templates to quickly create HTML apps, without writing glue code.
Create View templates and bootstrap interfaces in HTML without controllers. A system for creating and making design decisions. Make design decisions before building your app.
Rewritten is a lookup-based rewriting engine that rewrites requested URLs on the fly. The URL manipulations depend on translations found in a redis database. If a matching translation is found, the result of a request is either a redirection or a modification of path and request parameters. For URLs without translation entries the request is left unmodified. Rewritten takes larges parts from the Resque codebase (which rocks). The gem is compromised of four parts: 1. A Ruby library for creating, modifying and querying translations 2. A Sinatra app for displaying and managing translations 3. A Rack app for rewriting and redirecting request (Rack::Rewritten::Url) 4. A Rack app for substituting URLs in HTML pages with their current translation (Rack::Rewritten::Html) 5. A Rack app for recording successful request (Rack::Rewritten::Record)
Antenna aims to take the pain out of creating and distributing all the necessary files for Enterprise iOS over-the-air distribution. It generates the mandatory XML manifest, app icons and an HTML file, automatically extracting all the needed information from the specified .ipa file.
Ruby Hail is fast-by-design Rack-based nano-framework. It provides generator and helper to quickly create Rack-based web-apps. You have options to make plain html-based app with basic templates. You can chain htmls and utilize ruby string interpolation. You can generate simple json API with authentication. Or you can go with SPA (single-page app). It uses Vue.js for UI because it shares fast-by-design philosophy and very similar to AngularJS 1. In all cases you have database (sqlite by default) available out of the box.
Rind is a templating engine that turns HTML (and XML) into node trees and allows you to create custom tags or reuse someone else’s genius. Rind gives web devs tags to work with and provides the same thing to app devs as an object. This project is just getting started so watch out for sharp corners and unfinished rooms.
Antenna aims to take the pain out of creating and distributing all the necessary files for Enterprise iOS over-the-air distribution. It generates the mandatory XML manifest, app icons and an HTML file, automatically extracting all the needed information from the specified .ipa file.
The code to check for the iPhone user agent is from http://developer.apple.com. This doesn't have any dependencies. - in app/controllers/application.rb require 'is_it_iphone' class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base include IsItIPhone before_filter :adjust_format_for_iphone # Always show iPhone views end You will have these functions: iphone_user_agent? Returns true if the user agent is an iPhone. (as spec'ed on http://developer.apple.com) iphone_request? Returns true if the request came from an iPhone. Override being an iPhone with ?format=xxxx in the URL. adjust_format_for_iphone Call when you want to show iPhone views to iPhone users. Note: It is recommended by Apple that you default to showing your "normal" html page to iPhone users and allow them to choose if they want an iPhone version. With Rails 2.0, you can use its multiview capabilities by simply adding this to your app: - in config/initializers/mime_types.rb Mime::Type.register_alias "text/html", :iphone Then, just create your views using suffices of iphone.erb instead of html.erb: index.iphone.erb show.iphone.erb etc. Note: you will probably want to use a Web library specific for iPhone applications. FWIW, I use Da shcode (in the iPhone SDK) to write and debug the iPhone application and then integrate it with my Rails project.
Synfeld is a web application framework that does practically nothing. Synfeld is little more than a small wrapper for Rack::Mount (see http://github.com/josh/rack-mount). If you want a web framework that is mostly just going to serve up json blobs, and occasionally serve up some simple content (eg. help files) and media, Synfeld makes that easy. The sample app below shows pretty much everything there is to know about synfeld, in particular: * How to define routes. * Simple rendering of erb, haml, html, json, and static files. * In the case of erb and haml, passing variables into the template is demonstrated. * A dynamic action where the status code, headers, and body are created 'manually' (/my/special/route below) * A simple way of creating format sensitive routes (/alphabet.html vs. /alphabet.json) * The erb demo link also demos the rendering of a partial (not visible in the code below, you have to look at the template file examples/public/erb_files/erb_test.erb).
Synfeld is a web application framework that does practically nothing. Synfeld is little more than a small wrapper for Rack::Mount (see http://github.com/josh/rack-mount). If you want a web framework that is mostly just going to serve up json blobs, and occasionally serve up some simple content (eg. help files) and media, Synfeld makes that easy. The sample app below shows pretty much everything there is to know about synfeld, in particular: * How to define routes. * Simple rendering of erb, haml, html, json, and static files. * In the case of erb and haml, passing variables into the template is demonstrated. * A dynamic action where the status code, headers, and body are created 'manually' (/my/special/route below) * A simple way of creating format sensitive routes (/alphabet.html vs. /alphabet.json) * The erb demo link also demos the rendering of a partial (not visible in the code below, you have to look at the template file examples/public/erb_files/erb_test.erb).
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