[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cerebro-es-everything-plugin) [](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cerebro-es-everythin
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A webpack plugin to remove/clean your build folder(s).
Simple tools for developing Strapi plugins
Babel plugin for Vue 3 JSX
Include non-exported types in TypeDoc documentation
Stealth mode: Applies various techniques to make detection of headless puppeteer harder.
ProseMirror's rowspan/colspan tables component
Commands to interact with org shapes
A consolidated product package for building Module Federation apps with oRPC APIs.
Tailwind plugin for styling scrollbars
Webpack stats plugin
Declarative routing for React web applications
An Eleventy plugin that allows you to quickly add common web embeds to markdown posts, using only their URLs
Get an iterator for any JS language value. Works robustly across all environments, all versions.
JavaScript Standard Style JSX support - ESLint Shareable Config
Typescript tools that help with migration to the strict mode
An Eleventy plugin to automatically embed YouTube videos, using just their URLs.
A puppeteer-extra plugin to solve reCAPTCHAs and hCaptchas automatically.
ESLint plugin for enforcing newlines in ES6 import statements past a certain number of items
TypeScript interfaces for building pluggable Solana clients
webpack + node-notifier = build status system notifications
Cast aria-hidden to everything, except...
Compatibility utilities for ESLint
Everything needed to setup a new plugin on Fanforce
ruboty plugin for say yes to everything.
This gem conveniently installs all for getting started with cxx-project.
Amazingly simple IRC bot that handles everything via plugins with the exception of connecting.
A drop-in Jekyll Plugin that provides an asset pipeline for JavaScript, CSS, SASS, SCSS. Based around Sprockets (from Rails) and just as powereful it provides everything you need to manage assets in Jekyll.
TinyMCE plugin for file uploads in Rails >= 4.0. Document storage is handled manually, so works with everything.
A generator for creating Cordova plugins. Building a Cordova Plugin from scratch can be cumbersome as there is a very specific structure to follow. This creates everything for you!
Tomo is a feature-rich deployment tool that contains everything you need to deploy a basic Rails app out of the box. It has an opinionated, production-tested set of defaults, but is easily extensible via a well-documented plugin system. Unlike other Ruby-based deployment tools, tomo’s friendly command-line interface and task system do not rely on Rake.
Hammock is a Rails plugin that eliminates redundant code in a very RESTful manner. It does this in lots in lots of different places, but in one manner: it encourages specification in place of implementation. Hammock enforces RESTful resource access by abstracting actions away from the controller in favour of a clean, model-like callback system. Hammock tackles the hard and soft sides of security at once with a scoping security system on your models. Specify who can verb what resources under what conditions once, and everything else - the actual security, link generation, index filtering - just happens. Hammock inspects your routes and resources to generate a routing tree for each resource. Parent resources in a nested route are handled transparently at every point - record retrieval, creation, and linking. It makes more sense when you see how it works though. There's a screencast coming soon.
Manage your notes from the console. If you're like me, you spend most of your computing time in a terminal, you have a text-editor set up just to your liking, and you wish you could use it for everything. Naturally, when it comes time to ditch your paper note-pad, you refuse to to use the more popular gui-driven apps and want to find a way to use your editor instead. But when you start looking for a terminal-based notes framework (or plugin for your editor) you're blinded by crazy features and unwilling to learn a new tool. You've also already started keeping your notes in some text files and don't want to have to start over. Anyway, I went through the same thing and made this this lightweight tool (originally from some aliases in my bashrc) to do what I wanted it to do, which isn't a lot. But, like ruby, it has a nice interface, and it'll stay out of the way. That means you can choose where you keep your notes, how you organize them, how you track them (if you do), and what editor you use to write them. So if you already have your own notes, you can just point `peter-notes` at them and start using worlds simplest (and coolest) notes-manager. This is a cli tool, don't try to import it into some ruby source code.
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