Generic callback function to return NotFound on no data and parse string data as JSON
Generic Callback Queue, based on promises
OpenTelemetry instrumentation for `generic-pool` resource pool for managing expensive resources
Generic interruptible "parser" mixin for Transform & Writable streams
Schematics specific to Angular
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This monorepo's version of "lodash". This package contains shared generic utilities that can be used within the ecosystem. This package should not have dependencies, and should not contain any references to the Analytics domain.
The same useRef, but with callback
Run an array of functions in parallel
Easily read/write JSON files.
Generic resource pooling for Node.JS
Helper for building generic names, similar to webpack
Make a callback- or promise-based function support both promises and callbacks.
Native file system operations for Bare
Get a random temporary file or directory path
Write files in an atomic fashion w/configurable ownership
Get and validate the raw body of a readable stream.
React hook which returns the latest callback without changing the reference
A Swiss-army-knife of a stream
Cooperative scheduler for the browser environment.
Returns a promise from a node-style callback function.
JSON Web Token implementation (symmetric and asymmetric)
List files and directories inside the specified directory
An efficient queue capable of managing thousands of concurrent animations.
Declaratively define hooks, add callbacks and run them with the options you like.
A generic eventmachine library for storing arbitrary objects in buckets with callbacks on threshold reached
A generic class for storing arbitrary objects in buckets with callbacks on threshold reached
Includes a couple of core functions such as callbacks, timestamping, typecasting and lots of generic validation routines.
virtual account generator, and payment callback parser
There are many finite state machine implementations for Ruby, and they all provide a nice DSL for declaring events, exceptions, callbacks, and all kinds of niceties in general. But if all you want is a finite state machine, look no further: this has less than 50 lines of code and provides everything a finite state machine must have, and nothing more.
RubyPython is a bridge between the Ruby and Python interpreters. It embeds a running Python interpreter in the Ruby application's process using FFI and provides a means for wrapping, converting, and calling Python objects and methods. RubyPython uses FFI to marshal the data between the Ruby and Python VMs and make Python calls. You can: * Inherit from Python classes. * Configure callbacks from Python. * Run Python generators (on Ruby 1.9.2 or later).
A Ruby gem that integrates seamlessly with Ruby on Rails to generate Excel reports using a simple DSL. Features include streaming, styling, callbacks, and Rails helpers.
TweetHose lets you easily generate a daemon that listens to the Twitter firehose. When keywords you're interested in appears, you can set up a callback. Should make it easy to create that Justin Bieber tracking app you've always wanted.
Generates attr_accessors that encrypt and decrypt attributes transparently. A fork with a kludge to handle :if/:unless Procs with attr_encrypted that uses attributes that may have not been set yet before the original attr_encrypted does its thing. This basically just resaves all the encrypted_attributes in a before_save callback.
There are many finite state machine implementations for Ruby, and they all provide a nice DSL for declaring events, exceptions, callbacks, and all kinds of niceties in general. But if all you want is a finite state machine, look no further: this is only 22 lines of code and provides everything a finite state machine must have, and nothing more.
RubyPython is a bridge between the Ruby and Python interpreters. It embeds a running Python interpreter in the Ruby application's process using FFI and provides a means for wrapping, converting, and calling Python objects and methods. RubyPython uses FFI to marshal the data between the Ruby and Python VMs and make Python calls. You can: * Inherit from Python classes. * Configure callbacks from Python. * Run Python generators (on Ruby 1.9.2 or later).
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