Doodle: watch JS files and reload pages via websocket
Based on icons created by Khushmeen Sidhu @ [Doodle Icons](https://khushmeen.com/icons.html)
Command-line tool for css-doodle to preview and generate images/videos
Self-host the Rubik Doodle Shadow font in a neatly bundled NPM package.
A simple doodle board
CLI tools for Doodle Engine game development
A web component for visual art & creative coding
Self-host the Rubik Doodle Triangles font in a neatly bundled NPM package.
Doodle with vue [For learning vue.js]
A simple [styled-components](https://styled-components.com/)-esque wrapper for [css-doodle](https://css-doodle.com/) library.
Porting of css-doodle to VueJs, a web component for drawing patterns with CSS - SSR Compatible
Cordova doodle plugin.
React components for doodle-style icons, optimized for modern apps (ESM, TypeScript, tree-shakable)
Parses Doodle polls and returns the results
a simple pad to doodle on
PostCSS plugin that enables the use of css-doodle generators
A friendly web-component for writing and rendering shaders.
shadcn/ui doodle-style adapter for @intent-driven/renderer
A portmanteau of "2d" and "doodle", toodle is a simple 2d graphics engine focused on using WebGPU to render textured quads and text.
Create a doodle to make your contribution history look fun 😎🤠 🤡
react doodle library
A simple React component to make doodle-like collaborative polls.
vue canvse beautify crop doodle
Use the Rubik Doodle Triangles font family from Google Fonts in your Expo app
Doodle is a Schema documentation helper library
Implementation of #[derive(Schema)]
A library for handling and working with multiple different unit types.
Reso: A visual pixel-art logic-circuit design language
A comprehensive developer toolkit for project analysis and management
Simple k-means clustering to find dominant colors in images. Backed by a generic k-means implementation offered as a standalone library.
A simple reminder service inspired by Diane Skoll's 'remind'
Doodle is a gem for simplifying the definition of Ruby classes by making attributes and their properties more declarative. Doodle is eco-friendly: it does not globally modify Object, Class or Module.
A Rails Engine for vists based in Layer Plataform
Provides a way to programmatically vote on polls/schedules from doodle.com
Dark theme for a playful and creative aesthetic
Doodl is a graph drawing framework.
Ruby image processing package using ChunkyPNG
Save time building and deploying your Expo React Native app.
Although made popular by Windows, INI files can be used on any system thanks to their flexibility. They allow a program to store configuration data, which can then be easily parsed and changed. Two notable systems that use the INI format are Samba and Trac. More information about INI files can be found on the [Wikipedia Page](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/INI_file). ### Properties The basic element contained in an INI file is the property. Every property has a name and a value, delimited by an equals sign *=*. The name appears to the left of the equals sign and the value to the right. name=value ### Sections Section declarations start with *[* and end with *]* as in `[section1]` and `[section2]` shown in the example below. The section declaration marks the beginning of a section. All properties after the section declaration will be associated with that section. ### Comments All lines beginning with a semicolon *;* or a number sign *#* are considered to be comments. Comment lines are ignored when parsing INI files. ### Example File Format A typical INI file might look like this: [section1] ; some comment on section1 var1 = foo var2 = doodle var3 = multiline values \ are also possible [section2] # another comment var1 = baz var2 = shoodle
Although made popular by Windows, INI files can be used on any system thanks to their flexibility. They allow a program to store configuration data, which can then be easily parsed and changed. Two notable systems that use the INI format are Samba and Trac. More information about INI files can be found on the [Wikipedia Page](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/INI_file). ### Properties The basic element contained in an INI file is the property. Every property has a name and a value, delimited by an equals sign *=*. The name appears to the left of the equals sign and the value to the right. name=value ### Sections Section declarations start with *[* and end with *]* as in `[section1]` and `[section2]` shown in the example below. The section declaration marks the beginning of a section. All properties after the section declaration will be associated with that section. ### Comments All lines beginning with a semicolon *;* or a number sign *#* are considered to be comments. Comment lines are ignored when parsing INI files. ### Example File Format A typical INI file might look like this: [section1] ; some comment on section1 var1 = foo var2 = doodle var3 = multiline values \ are also possible [section2] # another comment var1 = baz var2 = shoodle
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