Get css colors from a string, including rgb, rgba, hsl, hsla, hex, named, etc.
A list of color names and its values
A CSS parser, transformer, and minifier written in Rust
CSS color - Resolve and convert CSS colors.
PostCSS plugin for CSS Modules to pass arbitrary values between your module files
Get accurate and well named css box model information about an Element 📦
A JavaScript library for escaping CSS strings and identifiers while generating the shortest possible ASCII-only output.
A list of all CSS color keywords.
PostCSS plugin to replace overflow-wrap with word-wrap or optionally retain both declarations.
get colors in your node.js console
Color helpers to ease transformation between formats, gamut, etc
Convert a kebab-cased CSS property into a camelCased DOM property.
Styles for DocSearch.
Strict TypeScript and Flow types for style based on MDN data
Forma 36 Tokens
Provides some base functions needed by a css-select adapter so that you don't have to implement the whole thing.
CSS Object Model implementation and CSS parser
A collection of functions for manipulating CSS colors, inspired by SASS.
PostCSS plugin postcss-page-break to fallback `break-` properties with `page-break-` alias
Search CSS(-like) strings
Convert CSS shorthand filters to SVG ones
The iconic font, CSS, and SVG framework
Let’s get serious about color
A micro-library for collecting stylesheet data from link and style nodes
This gem is used to help writing technical posts for wordpress. The output is copied and pasted to a post into my wordpress blog, and the code gets colored using the plugin wp-syntax, and the output can be turned into PDF with the plugin wp-mpdf. Today this gem supports source files in the following languages: * Ruby (including Rakefile and Gemfile) * Java * YAML * HTML * XML * Scala * CSS * Javascript * Bash * Batch All other files are configured as "text".
Parade is an open source presentation software that consists of a Sinatra web app that serves up markdown files in a presentation format. Parade can serve a directory or be configured to run with a simple configuration file. * Markdown backed data > This ultimately makes it easier to manage diffs when making changes, using the content in other documents, and quickly re-using portions of a presentation. * Syntax Highlighting > Using GitHub flavored markdown, code fences will automatically be syntax highlighted, making it incredibly easy to integrate code samples. * Code Execution > Slides are able to provide execution and show results for JavaScript and Coffeescript live within the browser. This allows for live demonstrations of code. * Web > Slide presentations are basically websites -- they run in your browser from your desktop. This allows for a wide range of possibilities for customization and expandability. * Basic Templating and Color Schemes > Several templates and color scheme options have been provided to help you get started. While Parade does not currently provide anything near the variety of many other presentation packages, it is well-suited for basic presentations. * Design Flexibility (pros and cons) > Unless you're skilled in CSS/Animations, you will likely have a harder time creating presentations with as much polish as other programs provide. However, this approach also makes Parade incredibly flexible if you do understand CSS/Animations.
Diff and patch tables
Diff and patch tables
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