Library for mocking RequireJS dependencies
Cut out sections from TxtAST.
Cut out specific named exports or do the opposite -- only keep the ones you specify
A React component that renders text as ransom letter-style cut-out images
👉 https://hyper.fun/c/carbon-icon-cut-out/1.3.0
Cut out the middleman and upload your content straight to IPFS
Cut out any portion of a texture and paste it onto another texture.
Auto cut out silent sections from video using ffmpeg filter silencedetect and silenceremove.
(developing) Command line tool: Cut out margins from the image data of the scanned pdf
Cut out the transparent pixels around the png image to reduce the size of the png image.
Converts Zod schemas to Json Schemas
Node.js Streams, a user-land copy of the stream library from Node.js
Calculate specificity of CSS selectors
A better API for making Event Source requests, with all the features of fetch()
Cut extension for Diplodoc platform
🐊Putout plugin adds ability to transform madrun scripts
A better API for making Event Source requests, with all the features of fetch
一款可将 html 上的 element 元素转换为各类 image 图片,并可以通过地址来预览的库
Relocate resource intensive third-party scripts off of the main thread and into a web worker.
Stitches video clips on top of another clip using ffmpeg
Analyze the output of tsc --generatetrace
dom (include <svg>) screen shot
Png validator checks Png files for corruption
Fast HTML to markdown cross-compiler, compatible with both node and the browser
Application templating in ruby. Define beautiful patterns and cut them out.
What is Nexter ? A misspelled tv show or a killer feature ? Almost : it wraps your model with an ordered scope and cuts out the next and previous record. It also works with associations & nested columns.
When ShamRack doesn't quite cut it; when your JavaScript and non-Ruby code needs to hit an external API for your tests; when you're excited about spinning up a full server instead of faking out Net::HTTP: we present the Discoball.
A unified interface to the semantic web. You tell your ERB/Haml this is a "person" object, and it will give you the schema.org microdata, the microformats, or both. Cuts out having to remember these "non-human" keys :).
cuts off most of the file path and prints out the backtrace line by line for easier parsing. Except for native code errors (ie Syntax, method undefined).
Handy Conversion Sexagesimal (base 60) for Short URLs Cuts out ambiguous characters like: * l : lowercase l (looks like a 1 : one) * I : capital I (looks like a 1 : one) * O : capital O (looks like a 0 : zero) Based on work done by Tantek Çelik : [http://tantek.pbworks.com/New_base_60](http://tantek.pbworks.com/New_base_60 "tantek / New_base_60")
rspec-with-args attempts to cut out having to explicitly write the subject of your example group when trying to call methods or add arguments to methods. It works by reading the conventional description syntax to determine what the subject is. Then allowing you to explicitly state what variables will be passed in as arguments. Currently it supports initialization, class methods, and instance methods.
Dive into the world of Python-based structured extraction, empowered by OpenAI's cutting-edge function calling API. Instructor stands out for its simplicity, transparency, and user-centric design. Whether you're a seasoned developer or just starting out, you'll find Instructor's approach intuitive and its results insightful.
The Bro IDS is a phenomenal event driven network analysis system but interacting with the logs directly can be irritating. Even with the bro-cut tool, more effort is required than should be necessary, especially if you'd like to parse and interact with the logs within Ruby or some other language. While there are a few gems out there that parse specific Bro logs, brolog supports any arbitrary Bro log. This is absolutely Alpha software.
advanced_subject attempts to cut out having to explicitly write the subject of your example group when trying to call methods or add arguments to methods. It works by reading the conventional description syntax to determine what the method you are calling is and later you state what you are passing to it. Given you have a file advanced_subject_spec.rb. ```ruby describe Hash do when_initialized_with [:a, :b] do it { should eq({a: :b}) } describe '#fetch' do when_passed :a do it { should eq(:b) } end end end end ``` When you run `rspec -f d advanced_subject_spec.rb` it will output: ``` Hash when initialized with [:a, :b] should eq {:a => :b} #fetch when passed :a should eq :b ```
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