Dynamic script loading.
Dynamic script loading for browser
Self-contained WASM bundle for building batched Aptos Move script payloads via the dynamic transaction composer.
A function for loading CSS asynchronously
OpenType font parser
Capture bug reports from your users with the Jam recording links SDK
Dynamic Module Loader
Utilities for dynamically loading code in OpenMRS
Wasm bindings and typescript types for Cedar lib
A webpack plugin for injecting <link rel='preload|prefecth'> into HtmlWebpackPlugin pages, with async chunk support
Dynamic script loading for modern browsers
A PNG decoder in JavaScript
Transform import() expressions
Custom element (web component) for the YouTube player.
http loader for dynamically loading translation files for @ngx-translate/core
Allows loading, managing and interpreting dynamic plugins
Custom element (web component) for the TikTok player.
Loading wrapper and TypeScript types for the PayPal JS SDK
Allow parsing of import()
A composition mixin for loading scripts asynchronously for React
Wrapper for the loading of Google Maps JavaScript API script in the browser
React hook to dynamically load an external script and know when its loaded
Backstage dynamic feature service
Language metadata and dynamic loading for the CodeMirror code editor
ERBook 9.2.1 Write books, manuals, and documents in eRuby http://snk.tuxfamily.org/lib/erbook/ ERBook is an extensible document processor that emits [1]any document you can imagine from [2]eRuby templates, which allow scripting and dynamic content generation. Version 9.2.1 (2009-11-18) This release fixes some bugs in, and improves the readability and load time of, generated XHTML documents. Bug fixes * Prevent search button from starting search when search box untouched. * Prevent browser from fetching base-64 embedded URI sources by qualifying their digests with the "cid" URI schema, which is used to identify the parts of a multi-part e-mail message. This cuts down on the amount of "404 - File Not Found" errors on the web server which hosts your generated XHTML documents because web browsers will not confuse these embedded "cid" digests as being relative HTTP files. Housekeeping * Increase vertical spacing between [3]References for better readability. * Embed W3C validator badges as base-64 data URIs to reduce page load time. * Split the document processing code in ERBook::Document into smaller self-documenting methods. References 1. http://snk.tuxfamily.org/lib/erbook/#HelloWorld 2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ERuby 3. http://snk.tuxfamily.org/lib/erbook/#_references
== E9Tags An extension to ActsAsTaggableOn[http://github.com/mbleigh/acts-as-taggable-on] which "improves" on custom tagging, or at least makes it more dynamic. Additionally it provides some autocomplete rack apps and the corresponding javascript. == Installation 1. E9Tags requires jquery and jquery-ui for the autocompletion and tag-adding form, be sure they're loaded in your pages where the tags form will be rendered. 2. E9Tags extends ActsAsTaggableOn and requires it. Run it's generator if you have not. 3. Run the E9Tags install script to copy over the required JS rails g e9_tags:install 4. Then make sure it is loaded, how you do that doesn't matter, e.g. <%= javascript_include_tag 'e9_tags' %> 5. Create an initializer for that sets up the taggable models and their controllers. This gives the models the tag associations and methods and prepares their controller to handle the otherwise unexpected tag params. require 'e9_tags' require 'contacts_controller' require 'contact' E9Tags.controllers << ContactsController E9Tags.models << Contact OR You can just include the modules in your classes yourself. The first way really exists for the case where the classes you wish to extend are part of another plugin/gem. # in contact.rb include E9Tags:Model # in contacts_controller.rb include E9Tags::Controller 6. Render the tags form partial in whatever model forms require it. = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f If you pass a context, it will be locked and no longer possible to change/add the contexts on the form (and as a side effect, the tags autocompletion will be restricted to that context). = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f, :context => :users Finally if you pass a 2nd arg to :context you can set a tag context to be "private" (default is false). In this case the tag context will be locked as private (typically suffixed with *), meaning that the tags will not be publicly searchable/visible. This is useful for organizational tags tags, say if you wanted to arbitrarily group records, or create a custom search based on a tag context. = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f, :context => [:users, true] NOTE: The form and javascript are intended to work out of the box, but the certainly aren't going to look pretty. If you do intend to use the forms, you'll no doubt need to style them.
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