  
Serverless plugin to delete old versions of deployed functions from AWS
Prune a pnpm-lock.yaml
Serverless plugin to delete old versions of deployed functions from AWS
Cross-language temporary (disposable/throwaway) email detection library. Covers hundreds fake email providers.
bootstrap-sass is a Sass-powered version of Bootstrap 3, ready to drop right into your Sass powered applications.
Roll out new ESLint rules in a large monorepo without cluttering up your code with "eslint-ignore-next-line"
A prune-empty-source-operations optimize-query-operation actor
Unobtrusive scripting adapter for jQuery
A framework for responsive emails
Prune unneeded files (.md, .td, etc..) from node_modules folder. Super handy for Electron and AWS Lambda.
A JavaScript library for escaping CSS strings and identifiers while generating the shortest possible ASCII-only output.
Node prune tool, prune unnecessary files from ./node_modules, such as markdown, typescript source files, and so on
Exports util functions to clean up node_modules
CLI to prune unused dependencies based on dist output
Companion package for the cocoon Ruby gem.
easily pruning unneeded files from node_modules
Rails UJS for the react-rails gem
[](https://serverless.com)
Native ES6 @mentions
Flat design for ActiveAdmin
Prune unused native prebuilds from your packaged Electron app
PostCSS plugin to remove unused variables
Responsive Theme for ActiveAdmin
Identify and remove old gems
Identify and remove old Rubygems
This gem allows similar ActiveRecord validates_* commands to be grouped together in blocks and pruned of repeated parameters. How often have you had a block of validation commands in an ActiveRecord object that are repeated, especially :id or :unless options? Does this look familiar? validates_presence_of :hair, :hair_color, :unless => :bald? validates_length_of :hair, :within => 3..15, :unless => :bald? validates_inclusion_of :hair_color, :in => HAIR_COLORS, :unless => bald? Instead, this gem will allow you to replace the above code with: validate_block :unless => :bald? do presence_of :hair, :hair_color length_of :hair, :within => 3..15 inclusion_of :hair_color, :in => HAIR_COLORS end ..which is a great way to DRY your :hair, don't you think? Basically, this gem 1) removes the requirement to have 'validates_' on the front of the commands and 2) passes the options on the validate_block command to each validation command inside the block. The syntax of the validation commands remains the same. Keeping the 'validates_*' prefix on the commands inside the block _will_ work but it is not required.
This Gem eagerly loads trees by indexing the nodes of the tree. The number of queries needed for loading a tree is N, Where N is the number of different models(ActiveRecords) in the tree. Each inner object in the tree have an index node instance that is connecting it to the root. When the root of the tree is loaded, only the objects that are in the tree are fetched(Pruning). The index nodes are created when the root element is saved and stored in the IndexNode model.
# Excel to Code [](https://travis-ci.org/tamc/excel_to_code) excel_to_c - roughly translate some Excel files into C. excel_to_ruby - roughly translate some Excel files into Ruby. This allows spreadsheets to be: 1. Embedded in other programs, such as web servers, or optimisers 2. Without depending on any Microsoft code For example, running [these commands](examples/simple/compile.sh) turns [this spreadsheet](examples/simple/simple.xlsx) into [this Ruby code](examples/simple/ruby/simple.rb) or [this C code](examples/simple/c/simple.c). # Install Requires Ruby. Install by: gem install excel_to_code # Run To just have a go: excel_to_c <excel_file_name> This will produce a file called excelspreadsheet.c For a more complex spreadsheet: excel_to_c --compile --run-tests --settable <name of input worksheet> --prune-except <name of output worksheet> <excel file name> See the full list of options: excel_to_c --help # Gotchas, limitations and bugs 0. No custom functions, no macros for generating results 1. Results are cached. So you must call reset(), then set values, then read values. 2. It must be possible to replace INDIRECT and OFFSET formula with standard references at compile time (e.g., INDIRECT("A"&"1") is fine, INDIRECT(userInput&"3") is not. 3. Doesn't implement all functions. [See which functions are implemented](docs/Which_functions_are_implemented.md). 4. Doesn't implement references that involve range unions and lists (but does implement standard ranges) 5. Sometimes gives cells as being empty, when excel would give the cell as having a numeric value of zero 6. The generated C version does not multithread and will give bad results if you try. 7. The generated code uses floating point, rather than fully precise arithmetic, so results can differ slightly. 8. The generated code uses the sprintf approach to rounding (even-odd) rather than excel's 0.5 rounds away from zero. 9. Ranges like this: Sheet1!A10:Sheet1!B20 and 3D ranges don't work. Report bugs: <https://github.com/tamc/excel_to_code/issues> # Changelog See [Changes](CHANGES.md). # License See [License](LICENSE.md) # Hacking Source code: <https://github.com/tamc/excel_to_code> Documentation: * [Installing from source](docs/installing_from_source.md) * [Structure of this project](docs/structure_of_this_project.md) * [How does the calculation work](docs/how_does_the_calculation_work.md) * [How to fix parsing errors](docs/How_to_fix_parsing_errors.md) * [How to implement a new Excel function](docs/How_to_add_a_missing_function.md) Some notes on how Excel works under the hood: * [The Excel file structure](docs/implementation/excel_file_structure.md) * [Relationships](docs/implementation/relationships.md) * [Workbooks](docs/implementation/workbook.md) * [Worksheets](docs/implementation/worksheets.md) * [Cells](docs/implementation/cell.md) * [Tables](docs/implementation/tables.md) * [Shared Strings](docs/implementation/shared_strings.md) * [Array formulae](docs/implementation/array_formulae.md)
Diff and patch tables
Diff and patch tables