A export and inport excel funciton.
Port of jQuery.extend for node.js and the browser
Extend an object with the properties of additional objects. node.js/javascript util.
Read `.xlsx` files in a web browser or in Node.js
Adds a static `extend` method to a class, to simplify inheritance. Extends the static properties, prototype properties, and descriptors from a `Parent` constructor onto `Child` constructors.
Essential Javascript 2 Excel Export Library
Kendo UI for Angular Excel Export component
extend an object
Write simple `*.xlsx` files in a browser or Node.js
An Excel-like React component to create beautiful spreadsheets.
Recursive object extending
extend like a boss
React Excel export helps you export and save data to Excel files and customize or filter the output. KendoReact Excel Export package
excel-builder-vanilla types
JSS plugin that enables mixing in styles.
Themes for stylized Vega and Vega-Lite visualizations.
Simple data set export to Excel xlsx file
Support for `import <defer|source>` phase syntax in Acorn
SpreadJS Excel Import Export
A CSS Modules transform to extract export statements from local-scope classes
minimal implementation of a PassThrough stream
Convert Excel date in integer format into JS date. Dates are stored as numbers in Excel and count the number of days since January 0, 1900 (1900 standard, for mac it is 1904, which means January 0, 1904 is the start date). Times are handled internally as
Tokenize Excel formulas
An MCP server that reads and writes spreadsheet data to MS Excel file
Extend Rails capabilities of importing and exporting excel files thanks to Spreadsheet gem
LXL (Like Excel) is a mini-language that mimics Microsoft Excel formulas. Easily extended with new constants and functions.
Extend Rails capabilities of importing and exporting excel, pdf and other extension
Extend `csv` stdlib to generate CSV file for Microsft Excel
Extend Zebra Datepicker with translations and localisation based on the excellent rails-i18n and zebra-datepicker-rails gems
Extends RubyXL adding handling of excel tables and other conversion utilies
Hot Potato is an open source real-time processing framework written in Ruby. Originally designed to process the Twitter firehose at 3,000+ tweets per second, it has been extended to support any type of streaming data as input or output to the framework. The framework excels with applications such as, social media analysis, log processing, fraud prevention, spam detection, instant messaging, and many others that include the processing of streaming data.
xively-rb-connector is a ruby gem that provides an interface to Xively (https://xively.com). It extends Sam Mulube's excellent xively-rb (https://github.com/xively/xively-rb) gem. The xively-rb-connector gem adds convenience functions such as find_by_id lookup functions, datastream compression (only saves datapoints when value changes), a datapoint recording buffer, etc. Xively (https://xively.com/whats_xively) is a public cloud specifically built for the "Internet of Things". With their platform, developers can connect physical devices, that produce one or more datastreams, to a managed data store. The device's details and datastreams are accessible via key-based access to any service or application that has access to the web. Xively provides a fantastic development portal and prototyping accounts are free.
YPetri is a DSL (domain-specific language) for modelling of dynamical systems. It is biologically inspired, but concerns of biology and chemistry have been purposely separated away from it. YPetri caters solely to the two main concerns of modelling, model specification and simulation, and it excels in the first one. Dynamical systems are described under a Petri net paradigm. YPetri implements a universal Petri net abstraction that integrates discrete/continous, timed/timeless and stoichiometric/nonstoichiometric dichotomies of the extended Petri nets, and allows efficient specification of any kind of dynamical system. Like Petri nets themselves, YPetri was inspired by problems from the domain of chemistry (biochemical pathway modelling), but is not specific to it. Other gems, YChem and YCell are planned to cater to the concerns specific to chemistry and cell biochemistry. A lower-level extension of YPetri is currently under development under the name YNelson. Its usage is practically identical to YPetri, so any YPetri user can now consider using YNelson instead. YNelson covers additional concerns: it allows relations among nodes and parameters to be specified under a zz structure paradigm (developed by Ted Nelson) and it is also aimed towards providing a higher level of abstraction in Petri net specification by providing commands that create more than one Petri net node per command. YPetri documentation is avalable online, but due to formatting issues, you may prefer to generate the documentation on your own by running rdoc in the gem directory. As for the user manuals, there are currently 3 documents applicable for both YPetri and YNelson, whose master copies are stored in the YNelson source directory: 1. Introduction to YNelson and YPetri (hands-on tutorial), 2. Object model of YNelson and YPetri, 3. Introduction to Ruby for YNelson users. These manuals are written to allow beginners, including those unfamiliar with Ruby, to start working with YPetri and/or YNelson. For an example of how YPetri can be used to model complex dynamical systems, see the eukaryotic cell cycle model which I released as "cell_cycle" gem.
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