Cyclist is an efficient cyclic list implemention.
Beautiful and accessible drag and drop for lists with React
A simple module that allows you to print or get 'Hello World' in any language
node-simple-lru-cache =====================
base library for oclif CLIs
Some utilities for JSON pointers described by RFC 6901
Command-line interface for all things Cloudflare Workers
Pure Javascript YAML loader and dumper, ported from PyYAML
```ts @Controller("/api") class HelloController { @Get("/hello") async hello(ctx) { ctx.body = "hello world!"; } } ```
Loads environment variables from .env file
E2B SDK that give agents cloud environments
A trie implementation that maps keys to objects for rapid retrieval by phrases. Most common use will be for typeahead searches.
Awaitable hook system
Sign and unsign cookies
Conversion of JavaScript primitives to and from Buffer with binary order matching natural primitive order
get colors in your node.js console
A JavaScript implementation of many web standards
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Entity parser for XML, HTML, External entites with security and NCR control
An implementation of the Double Ratchet cryptographic ratchet
Utilities for steganography
Stack traces as an array of stack frames with source maps support.
ANSI escape codes for styling strings in the terminal
In-memory file-system with Node's fs API.
Type `hey_there` to get a friendly hello from a stick person.
This is a ruby gem for getting templates for programming languages inspired by the hello-world project
Says, hello world, I am gonna make it a bit smart to say Hola on certain occations
A simple hello world gem - let's get started!
A "hello world!" gem. Get the namskara gem source code from GitHub - https://github.com/sharat-developer/namskara
Hello! This is a game. Run the studio_game.rb file to start the game. Type in a number of rounds to get started. Type 'quit' to end the game. Enjoy!
One extends standard I18n so that you could store your translations in a Comma-Separated Value files (CSV) in a key-value manner, where the key is a word or a phrase or even a poem if you wish. No limits here (except be aware to escape symbols so the CSV format is kept). And the value is the same text as the key but translated to a language, specified by a file name you are using (for example, you could write one line to a sp.csv file: `"hello!","hola!"` and use `t 'hello!'` with a spanish locale to get the "hola!" text).
Germinate is a tool for writing about code. With Germinate, the source code IS the article. For example, given the following source code: # #!/usr/bin/env ruby # :BRACKET_CODE: <pre>, </pre> # :PROCESS: ruby, "ruby %f" # :SAMPLE: hello def hello(who) puts "Hello, #{who}" end hello("World") # :TEXT: # Check out my amazing program! Here's the hello method: # :INSERT: @hello:/def/../end/ # And here's the output: # :INSERT: @hello|ruby When we run the <tt>germ format</tt> command the following output is generated: Check out my amazing program! Here's the hello method: <pre> def hello(who) puts "Hello, #{who}" end </pre> And here's the output: <pre> Hello, World </pre> To get a better idea of how this works, please take a look at link:examples/basic.rb, or run: germ generate > basic.rb To generate an example article to play with. Germinate is particularly useful for writing articles, such as blog posts, which contain code excerpts. Instead of forcing you to keep a source code file and an article document in sync throughout the editing process, the Germinate motto is "The source code IS the article". Specially marked comment sections in your code file become the article text. Wherever you need to reference the source code in the article, use insertion directives to tell Germinate what parts of the code to excerpt. An advanced selector syntax enables you to be very specific about which lines of code you want to insert. If you also want to show the output of your code, Germinate has you covered. Special "process" directives enable you to define arbitrary commands which can be run on your code. The output of the command then becomes the excerpt text. You can define an arbitrary number of processes and have different excerpts showing the same code as processed by different commands. You can even string processes together into pipelines. Development of Germinate is graciously sponsored by Devver, purveyor of fine cloud-based services to busy Ruby developers. If you like this tool please check them out at http://devver.net.
Germinate is a tool for writing about code. With Germinate, the source code IS the article. For example, given the following source code: # #!/usr/bin/env ruby # :BRACKET_CODE: <pre>, </pre> # :PROCESS: ruby, "ruby %f" # :SAMPLE: hello def hello(who) puts "Hello, #{who}" end hello("World") # :TEXT: # Check out my amazing program! Here's the hello method: # :INSERT: @hello:/def/../end/ # And here's the output: # :INSERT: @hello|ruby When we run the <tt>germ format</tt> command the following output is generated: Check out my amazing program! Here's the hello method: <pre> def hello(who) puts "Hello, #{who}" end </pre> And here's the output: <pre> Hello, World </pre> To get a better idea of how this works, please take a look at link:examples/basic.rb, or run: germ generate > basic.rb To generate an example article to play with. Germinate is particularly useful for writing articles, such as blog posts, which contain code excerpts. Instead of forcing you to keep a source code file and an article document in sync throughout the editing process, the Germinate motto is "The source code IS the article". Specially marked comment sections in your code file become the article text. Wherever you need to reference the source code in the article, use insertion directives to tell Germinate what parts of the code to excerpt. An advanced selector syntax enables you to be very specific about which lines of code you want to insert. If you also want to show the output of your code, Germinate has you covered. Special "process" directives enable you to define arbitrary commands which can be run on your code. The output of the command then becomes the excerpt text. You can define an arbitrary number of processes and have different excerpts showing the same code as processed by different commands. You can even string processes together into pipelines. Development of Germinate is graciously sponsored by Devver, purveyor of fine cloud-based services to busy Ruby developers. If you like this tool please check them out at http://devver.net.
# Kaffe Framework This is a minimalistic webframework inspired by sinatra and rails. ## Basic usage The idea is to use be able to create modular applications and forward requests between them. class Blog < Kaffe::Base use Rack::CommonLogger get '/?' do "Hello From Blog" end end class Admin < Kaffe::Base get '/login' do ... Login logics ... end error 400..500 do |code, message| .. show pretty error message .. end end class MyApp < Kaffe::Base route '/blog', Blog route '/admin', Admin end run MyApp ## API overview
Ravanello is the cli for analyze keys in redis and size of it's values. Example of usage: ```bash gem install ravanello ravanello --version REDIS_URL="redis://localhost/db" ravanello analyze --rules rules.yml ``` The rules files specifies the structure of the redis keys (splitted by :) and should looks like this: ```yml rules: resque: - 'delayed' - 'resque-retry' - 'timestamps' - 'lock' - 'meta' ``` After analyzing you will get the report in console: ``` Q-ty Size Key (sample) 4 24 * (hello) 1 6 denormalized:companies:* (denormalized:companies:99585213) ```
ROS Ruby Client: rosruby ======= [ROS](http://ros.org) is Robot Operating System developed by [Willow Garage](http://www.willowgarage.com/) and open source communities. This project supports ruby ROS client. You can program robots by ruby, very easily. **Homepage**: http://otl.github.com/rosruby **Git**: http://github.com/OTL/rosruby **Author**: Takashi Ogura **Copyright**: 2012 **License**: new BSD License **Latest Version**: 0.2.0 Requirements ---------- - ruby (1.8.x/1.9.x) - ROS (electric/fuerte) - ROS requires python2.7 or more libraries Let's start --------------- Install ROS and ruby first. ROS document is [http://ros.org/wiki/ROS/Installation](http://ros.org/wiki/ROS/Installation) . You can install ruby by apt. ```bash $ sudo apt-get install ruby ``` Download rosruby into your ROS_PACKAGE_PATH. ````bash $ git clone git://github.com/OTL/rosruby.git ``` please add RUBYLIB environment variable, like below (if you are using bash). ```bash $ echo "export RUBYLIB=`rospack find rosruby`/lib" >> ~/.bashrc $ source ~/.bashrc ``` To use with precompiled electric release ----------------------- If you are using precompiled ROS distro, use the msg/srv generation script (rosruby_genmsg.py) If you are using ROS from source, it requires just recompile the msg/srv packages by rosmake rosruby. ```bash $ rosrun rosruby rosruby_genmsg.py ``` This converts msg/srv to .rb which is needed by sample programs. If you want to make other packages, add package names for args. For example, ```bash $ rosrun rosruby rosruby_genmsg.py geometry_msgs nav_msgs ``` Sample Source -------------- ## Subscriber ```ruby #!/usr/bin/env ruby require 'ros' require 'std_msgs/String' node = ROS::Node.new('/rosruby/sample_subscriber') node.subscribe('/chatter', Std_msgs::String) do |msg| puts "message come! = \'#{msg.data}\'" end while node.ok? node.spin_once sleep(1) end ``` ## Publisher ```ruby #!/usr/bin/env ruby require 'ros' require 'std_msgs/String' node = ROS::Node.new('/rosruby/sample_publisher') publisher = node.advertise('/chatter', Std_msgs::String) msg = Std_msgs::String.new i = 0 while node.ok? msg.data = "Hello, rosruby!: #{i}" publisher.publish(msg) sleep(1.0) i += 1 end ``` Note ---------------- Ruby requires 'Start with Capital letter' for class or module names. So please use **S**td_msgs::String class instead of **s**td_msgs::String. Try Publish and Subscribe ---------------------- You needs three terminal as it is often for ROS users. Then you run roscore if is not running. ```bash $ roscore ``` run publisher sample ```bash $ rosrun rosruby sample_publisher.rb ``` run subscription sample ```bash $ rosrun rosruby sample_subscriber.rb ``` you can check publication by using rostopic. ```bash $ rostopic list $ rostopic echo /chatter ``` Try Service? ---------------------- ```bash $ rosrun rosruby add_two_ints_server.rb ``` run client with args ('a' and 'b' for roscpp_tutorials/TwoInts) ```bash $ rosrun rosruby add_two_ints_client.rb 10 20 ``` and more... ---------------------- You need more tools for testing, generating documentations. ```bash $ sudo apt-get install rake gem $ sudo gem install yard redcarpet simplecov ``` do all tests ------------------------- run roscore if is not running. ```bash $ roscore ``` and run the unit tests. ```bash $ roscd rosruby $ rake test ``` documents -------------------------- you can generate API documents using yard. Document generation needs yard and redcarpet. You can install these by gem command like this. ```bash $ gem install yard redcarpet ``` Then try to generate documentds. ```bash $ rake yard ``` You can access to the generated documents from [here](http://otl.github.com/rosruby/doc/).
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