Fire Up! is a dependency injection container designed specifically for node.js with a powerful but sleek API.
Fire up new project that scores 100% on [lighthouse](https://developers.google.com/web/tools/lighthouse/) from adaptable template using a suite of awesome tools and services.
Fire up your RxJS experience to a new level 🔥
Fire up that loud, Another round of shots
Connect to (and, if needed, fire up) a daemon with exposed asynchronous API and share or cache data across clients.
connect to sauce, fire up a static server, do some screenshot testing!
Fire up a webpack dev server with Grunt.
With node-basher you can fire up a variety of bash scripts remotely for several use cases :)
A generator made with to fire up a React application boilerplate.
A collection of scss utilities, resets and classes to fire up a new layout quickly
Real native events for cypress. Dispatched via CDP.
Cordova JavaScript: a unified JavaScript layer for the Cordova suite of projects enabling cross-platform native mobile development of applications using HTML, CSS and JavaScript.
Wrapper library for directory and file watching.
This library emulates ioredis by performing all operations in-memory.
Animated transitions for Ember applications.
Node.js module to refresh and reload your code in your browser when your code changes. No browser plugins required.
Lightweight utilities for debouncing, throttling, and more - designed for npm packages.
Angular + Firebase = ❤️
This is a cli application that will fire up a React web application that transpiles and bundles code, allowing users to view the output in a dedicated window. It provides a platform to add code descriptions, write code snippets, and immediately visualize
Headless CLI client for the Agent Client Protocol (ACP) — talk to coding agents from the command line
Fire events the same way the user does
Fire a JavaScript Event when you enter the « Up Up Bottom Bottom Left Right Left Right B A » Konami Code Sequence.
A ListView with rows that swipe open and closed.
A firebase (firestore) provider for Yjs
The FlexibleCsv gem uses the FasterCSV gem to parse user created CSV files that may not have standard headers.
CLI to drive SmokeStack test creation and maintenance based on Gerrit reviews.
Cleans up bad character encodings with liberal application of fire.
Fire up that tdd loop
Easily enable ruby-debugger for use with Pow!
fire up with 'srv' to serve current directory on port 4000 (default), 'srv 5000' on port 5000
Real Vim ninjas count every keystroke - do you? Pick a challenge on vimgolf.com, fire up Vim, and show us what you got.
Fire and Forget replaces the need to write resque tasks or delayed jobs to fire off web requests (usually notification webhooks or a anti-spam service, like defensio or akismet). A single worker reads and executes web requests from a blocking named pipe, while clients queue up them up in a non blocking manner. It uses typhoeus internally to execute the web requests for maximum speed.
The module within this gem simply listens for enqueues and finished jobs. On enqueue it'll fire up a new worker instance if none are running, on finish it'll shut down the worker if there are no more jobs.
HireFire automatically "hires" and "fires" (aka "scales") Delayed Job and Resque workers on Heroku. When there are no queue jobs, HireFire will fire (shut down) all workers. If there are queued jobs, then it'll hire (spin up) workers. The amount of workers that get hired depends on the amount of queued jobs (the ratio can be configured by you). HireFire is great for both high, mid and low traffic applications. It can save you a lot of money by only hiring workers when there are pending jobs, and then firing them again once all the jobs have been processed. It's also capable to dramatically reducing processing time by automatically hiring more workers when the queue size increases.
I don't want a single thing preventing me from starting off (even the smallest) library without a good infrastructure to support TDD and clean coding standards. I got tired of reconfiguring the same tools in basically the same way every time. With this one command you can set up a library, fire up Guard, and jump right into the TDD loop: Red, Green, Refactor.
HireFire automatically "hires" and "fires" (aka "scales") Delayed Job and Resque workers on Heroku. When there are no queue jobs, HireFire will fire (shut down) all workers. If there are queued jobs, then it'll hire (spin up) workers. The amount of workers that get hired depends on the amount of queued jobs (the ratio can be configured by you). HireFire is great for both high, mid and low traffic applications. It can save you a lot of money by only hiring workers when there are pending jobs, and then firing them again once all the jobs have been processed. It's also capable to dramatically reducing processing time by automatically hiring more workers when the queue size increases.
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