Post-processor that stores the result of a customize-run in a local directory
Read and write files atomically and reliably.
Package manager detector
Write files in an atomic fashion w/configurable ownership
Adds TypeScript support to Gatsby
MarkdownLint Command Line Interface
A Storybook builder to dev and build with Vite
JSON for Humans
A lossless JSON5 tokenizer and parser for Node.js that maintains indentation, spacing, and comments.
Shared core utilities for Vercel global configuration
The Node.js bindings of the humanfs library.
Lint files staged by git
Format, lint and more in a fraction of seconds.
Downloading and running time plugin for Size Limit
Extremely fast utf8 only stream implementation
Helps to create your own Protocol Buffers code generators.
Write simple `*.xlsx` files in a browser or Node.js
Svelte plugin for prettier
Clean files and folders
[](https://badge.fury.io/js/fixturify-project) [](https://github.com/stefanpenner/node-fixturify-project/acti
Forces webpack-dev-server to write bundle files to the file system.
Scrape documentation frameworks to Mintlify docs
ESLint plugin for Playwright testing.
Jest plugin to use babel for transformation.
Are you tired of writing custom code to parse and represent every new configuration file utilized in your programs? The Config Toolkit generates configuration classes and can populate them robustly by parsing different formats of configuration files.
This plugin is a group of Asciidoctor extensions that perform directory walking, resolving the location of titles and anchors in all adoc files so that inter-document cross-references are resolved automatically. Also included are some custom macros and blocks that are useful for techinical writing.
ledgerjournal is a Ruby gem to read and write ledger accounting files. For parsing, it uses the xml output from ledger. For outputting, it formats the ledger data to String in custom Ruby code. The ledger binary needs to be installed to parse and pretty-print.
This plugin is a group of Asciidoctor extensions that perform directory walking, resolving the location of titles and anchors in all adoc files so that inter-document cross-references in a Jekyll project are resolved automatically. Also included are some custom macros and blocks that are useful for techinical writing.
The topologygenerator gem is a tool for building a custom output file format out of a given network topology. The topology can be retrieved from a custom file written in ruby by the user, or from an SDN controller (by specifying the API uri). The ONOS controller is currently supported, while the API for OpenDayLight is in progress. When building your output, you have to write a module that describes how to each class defined in the network topology. The topologygenerator gem will then use the defined modules to generate the output desired. You can see examples of how to use this gem in the public github webpage.
Embedded ViewComponents (EVC) is a Rails template handler that brings JSX-like syntax to ViewComponent, allowing you to write custom component tags directly in your .evc templates. It's a drop-in replacement for .erb files that works seamlessly with existing ViewComponents, supporting self-closing tags, attributes, namespaced components, slots, and complex nesting while maintaining full ERB compatibility.
Deprecated. I'm planning to discontinue this gem. Although it has enormous flexibility and power, it is in my view too complex. 80% of requirements can be met through custom shell scripts which are much simpler to write and maintain. Sifts through your log files in real time, using stateful intelligence to determine what is really important. REC can alert you (by email or IM) or it can simply condense a large log file into a much shorter and more meaningful log. REC is inspired by Risto Vaarandi's brilliant *sec* (simple-evcorr.sourceforge.net) but is original code and any defects are entirely mine. While event correlation is inherently complex, REC attempts to make common tasks easy while preserving plenty of power and flexibility for ambitious tasks.
Crowdfund is a Ruby program developed based on Pragmatic Studio's Ruby Programming hands-on video course, and distributed as a Ruby gem. This program has been developed using all the strengths of Ruby including the following. Ruby Programming Environment * Installing Ruby on your favorite operating system (free exercise) * Running Ruby using the interactive Ruby shell (irb) and writing Ruby program files * Using Ruby's documentation system to get help * Installing external Ruby libraries using RubyGems * Troubleshooting common problems Ruby Language Constructs * Expressions and variables * Numbers, string, and symbols (free video & exercise) * Loops and conditional expressions * Arrays and hashes (free video & exercise on hashes) * Classes, modules, and structs Object-Oriented Programming * Using built-in Ruby classes * Defining your own classes with state and behavior (free video & exercise) * Creating unique objects * Telling objects what to do by calling methods * Modeling class-level inheritance relationships * Sharing code with mixins Object-Oriented Design Principles * Encapsulation * Separation of concerns * Polymorphism * Don't Repeat Yourself * Tell, Don't Ask Blocks and Iterators * Calling built-in methods that take blocks * Writing your own methods that yield to blocks * Implementing custom iterators * Effectively using blocks in your programs Organizing Ruby Code * Creating a Ruby project structure * Separating source files for easier reuse and testing * Namespacing to avoid naming clashes * Input/Output * Reading data from files * Writing data to files * Creating an interactive console prompt * Handling command-line input Unit Testing * Writing and running unit tests with RSpec * Test-driven development and the red-green-refactor cycle * Stubbing methods to control tests * Refactoring code, safely! Distribution * Conforming to RubyGems conventions * Writing a GemSpec * Building a RubyGem * Publishing a RubyGem to a public server Ruby Programming Idioms
= id3lib-ruby id3lib-ruby provides a Ruby interface to the id3lib C++ library for easily editing ID3 tags (v1 and v2) of MP3 audio files. The class documentation starts at ID3Lib::Tag. == Features * Read and write ID3v1 and ID3v2 tags * Simple interface for adding, changing and removing frames * Quick access to common text frames like title and performer * Custom data frames like attached picture (APIC) * Pretty complete coverage of id3lib's features * UTF-16 support (warning: id3lib writes broken UTF-16 frames) * Windows binary gem available The CHANGES file contains a list of changes between versions. == Installation See INSTALL. == Online Information The home of id3lib-ruby is http://id3lib-ruby.rubyforge.org == Usage require 'rubygems' require 'id3lib' # Load a tag from a file tag = ID3Lib::Tag.new('talk.mp3') # Get and set text frames with convenience methods tag.title #=> "Talk" tag.album = 'X&Y' tag.track = '5/13' # Tag is a subclass of Array and each frame is a Hash tag[0] #=> { :id => :TPE1, :textenc => 0, :text => "Coldplay" } # Get the number of frames tag.length #=> 7 # Remove all comment frames tag.delete_if{ |frame| frame[:id] == :COMM } # Get info about APIC frame to see which fields are allowed ID3Lib::Info.frame(:APIC) #=> [ 2, :APIC, "Attached picture", #=> [:textenc, :mimetype, :picturetype, :description, :data] ] # Add an attached picture frame cover = { :id => :APIC, :mimetype => 'image/jpeg', :picturetype => 3, :description => 'A pretty picture', :textenc => 0, :data => File.read('cover.jpg') } tag << cover # Last but not least, apply changes tag.update! == Licence This library has Ruby's licence: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt == Author Robin Stocker <robinstocker at rubyforge.org>
Studio Game is a Ruby program developed based on Pragmatic Studio' Ruby Programming hands-on video course, and distributed as a Ruby gem. This program has been developed using all the strengths of Ruby including the following. Ruby Programming Environment * Installing Ruby on your favorite operating system (free exercise) * Running Ruby using the interactive Ruby shell (irb) and writing Ruby program files * Using Ruby's documentation system to get help * Installing external Ruby libraries using RubyGems * Troubleshooting common problems Ruby Language Constructs * Expressions and variables * Numbers, string, and symbols (free video & exercise) * Loops and conditional expressions * Arrays and hashes (free video & exercise on hashes) * Classes, modules, and structs Object-Oriented Programming * Using built-in Ruby classes * Defining your own classes with state and behavior (free video & exercise) * Creating unique objects * Telling objects what to do by calling methods * Modeling class-level inheritance relationships * Sharing code with mixins Object-Oriented Design Principles * Encapsulation * Separation of concerns * Polymorphism * Don't Repeat Yourself * Tell, Don't Ask Blocks and Iterators * Calling built-in methods that take blocks * Writing your own methods that yield to blocks * Implementing custom iterators * Effectively using blocks in your programs Organizing Ruby Code * Creating a Ruby project structure * Separating source files for easier reuse and testing * Namespacing to avoid naming clashes * Input/Output * Reading data from files * Writing data to files * Creating an interactive console prompt * Handling command-line input Unit Testing * Writing and running unit tests with RSpec * Test-driven development and the red-green-refactor cycle * Stubbing methods to control tests * Refactoring code, safely! Distribution * Conforming to RubyGems conventions * Writing a GemSpec * Building a RubyGem * Publishing a RubyGem to a public server Ruby Programming Idioms
Glimmer DSL for SWT (JRuby Desktop Development Cross-Platform Native GUI Framework) is a native-GUI cross-platform desktop development library written in JRuby, an OS-threaded faster JVM version of Ruby. It includes SWT 4.30 (released on December 1, 2023). Glimmer's main innovation is a declarative Ruby DSL that enables productive and efficient authoring of professional-grade desktop applications by relying on the robust Eclipse SWT library, with the familiar native look, feel, and behavior of GUI on Mac, Windows, and Linux. Glimmer additionally innovates by having built-in data-binding support, which greatly facilitates synchronizing the GUI with domain models, thus achieving true decoupling of object oriented components and enabling developers to solve business problems (test-first) without worrying about GUI concerns, or alternatively drive development GUI-first, and then write clean business models (test-first) afterwards. Not only does Glimmer provide a large set of GUI widgets, but it also supports drawing Canvas Graphics like Shapes and Animations. To get started quickly, Glimmer offers scaffolding options for Apps, Gems, and Custom Widgets. Glimmer also includes native-executable packaging support, sorely lacking in other libraries, thus enabling the delivery of desktop apps written in Ruby as truly native DMG/PKG/APP files on the Mac, MSI/EXE files on Windows, and DEB/RPM files on Linux. Glimmer was the first Ruby gem to bring SWT (Standard Widget Toolkit) to Ruby, thanks to creator Andy Maleh, EclipseCon/EclipseWorld/RubyConf speaker. If you liked Shoes, You'll love Glimmer!
==== QDox - http://qdox.codehaus.org QDox is a high speed, small footprint parser for extracting class/interface/method definitions from Java source files complete with JavaDoc @tags. It is designed to be used by active code generators or documentation tools. QDox is a Java library. Therefore this RubyGem needs JRuby. ==== Quickstart Step 1: Load your Java sources. In JRuby (or +jirb+) write: require 'qdox' builder = QDox::JavaDocBuilder.new builder.add_source_tree(java.io.File.new(".") (Source: http://qdox.codehaus.org/usage.html) Step 2: Inspect the source model. src = builder.sources.first pkg = src.package puts pkg.name # e.g. "com.bla.foo" imports = src.imports # => e.g. ["java.util.List", "java.util.Set"] some_class = src.classes.first # => a QDox::Model::JavaClass # output the javadoc comment for the first method in some_class puts some_class.methods.first.comment (Source: http://qdox.codehaus.org/model.html) As you may have noticed, the Java packages used have been aliased to shorter Ruby Module names: The Java package com.thoughtworks.qdox is the Ruby module QDox etc. ==== In a Nutshell A custom built parser has been built using JFlex and BYacc/J. These have been chosen because of their proven performance and they require no external libraries at runtime. The parser skims the source files only looking for things of interest such as class/interface definitions, import statements, JavaDoc and member declarations. The parser ignores things such as actual method implementations to avoid overhead (while in method blocks, curly brace counting suffices). The end result of the parser is a very simple document model containing enough information to be useful. ==== License Apache License, Version 2.0 QDox was created by Joe Walnes, Aslak Hellesoy, Paul Hammant, Mike Williams, Mauro Talevi, Robert Scholte, and others. The RubyGem was created by Benjamin Bock.