Transform ES5 Functions to ES6 Classes
Utility for getting a function's name for node and the browser
utilities for primitive JavaScript types
Get a compare function for array to sort
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Compile ES2015 classes to ES5
Wrap a function without changing its name and other properties
The TON FunC smart-contract compiler
Utility method to run function either synchronously or asynchronously using the common `this.async()` style.
Distribution of WASM module and binary for func-js
TailwindCSS v4.0 compatible replacement for `tailwindcss-animate`.
A <Hyperlink /> component for react-native to make urls, fuzzy links, emails etc clickable
An implementation of the WHATWG URL Standard's URL API and parsing machinery
Rules dealing with Array functions and methods.
Compile function bind operator to ES5
A very small TypeScript library that provides tolerable Mixin functionality.
Reuse objects and functions with style
Twilio SendGrid NodeJS internal helpers
Collection of useful helper functions when trying to determine module type (CommonJS or AMD) properties of an AST node.
A small fast zlib stream built on [minipass](http://npm.im/minipass) and Node.js's zlib binding.
FaasJS's function module.
<div align="center"> <img width="200" height="200" src="https://s3.amazonaws.com/pix.iemoji.com/images/emoji/apple/ios-11/256/crayon.png"> <h1>@jimp/plugin-resize</h1> <p>Resize an image.</p> </div>
Run exported function from package.json scripts
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Write your HTML pages like Lisp code. CLI utility. Run `sept -h` for info (html (head (title "Hello world") (style ".red { color: blue }")) (body (p.red#cool-and-good "Handy classes and ids. Id must be last") ("p onclick='func()'" "Other attributes are expressed that way") (p "This is %{param}")))
# Procer **NOTE: Experimental. Use it to experience what a default `to_proc` could have been. For production code, I recommend an explicit transformation, like the one provided by the gem `jgomo3-func`**. A reasonable good default `to_proc` method for all objects. Install with: ``` gem install procer ``` When you require Procer, all objects will have a default `to_proc` method which will try to call one of the following methods, in the given order: - `call` - `[]` - `===` Many methods which receive a block, can benefit greatly from this because you can now pass an object to perform the block role. Think of the Enumerable module and all its methods. Many objects define `===`, but not `to_proc`. So they will be nicely usable in a `case/when` expression, but not in other contexts. This is the case of classes and ranges, which you can use in `case/when` expressions, but they don't define `to_proc`. Now they do define `to_proc` so they are useful in those contexts. Examples: ```ruby require 'procer' [1, 2, '3', '4', 5, 6].filter(&Numeric) # => [1, 2, 5, 6] [-10, 100, -2, 3, 20, -33].filter(&(0..50)) # => [3, 20] ``` Also, Hashes already implement `to_proc` and that is useful with Enumerator. We can use it as a transformation table with `map`: ```ruby table = { 1 => 'one', 2 => 'two', 3 => 'three' } [3, 1, 2].map(&table) # => ['three, 'one, 'two'] ``` Sadly, Arrays, even when they have the same interface as hashes as a function of indices, don't implement `to_proc` and so they can't be used in the same way. Until now. ```ruby table = ['zero', 'one', 'two'] [2, 0, 1].map(&table) # => ['two', 'zero', 'one'] ``` Alternatively, you could have used `values_at`: ```ruby table.values_at([3, 1, 2]) # In the Hash example table.values_at([2, 0, 1]) # In the Array example ``` But the map solution is more generic and `table` can be anything that implements `to_proc` and not something that necessarily implements `values_at`. Notice that if the object implements `[]` that will triumph over `===`. It was unexpected when I tried to use Integers as the object, as they implement `[]` as a way to access their binary form: ```ruby 5 # b101 [5[2], 5[1], 5[0]] # [1, 0, 1] ``` So the proc will work like that: ```ruby [2, 4, 5].map(&5) # Actual => [1, 0, 0] # I was expecting => [false, false, true] ```