Common typings for the Stoplight ecosystem.
semantic-release plugin to commit release assets to the project's git repository
git-log-parser
Read details of the last commit including tags
Lint files staged by git
Component Story Format (CSF) utilities
Datadog CI plugin for `dora` commands
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Get all git semver tags of your repository in reverse chronological order.
Automatically install pre-commit hooks for your npm modules.
Collects Git commit info from CI or from CLI
CSpell configuration for GIT.
Detect the snapshot key to be compare with using Git hash.
Straightforward project scaffolding
git commit message lint hook
Storybook Links: Link stories together to build demos and prototypes with your UI components
Match a Unicode property or property alias to its canonical property name per the algorithm used for RegExp Unicode property escapes in ECMAScript.
The set of canonical Unicode property names supported in ECMAScript RegExp property escapes.
Unicode property alias mappings in JavaScript format for property names that are supported in ECMAScript RegExp property escapes.
Algorithm for finding the root of a yarn workspace, extracted from yarnpkg.com
Display Storybook tags as badges in the sidebar and toolbar.
Storybook Docs: Document UI components automatically with stories and MDX
Generate Beautiful Changelogs using Conventional Commits
List of conventional commit types.
Thin wrapper around git commit that adds a story id to commit messages
Generages changelog based on PivotalTracker stories and Git commits
This gem help you check which commits in your git repository belonges to unaccepted PivotalTracker's story so that you can make a decision whether you should deploy those commits or not.
Uses git commits to recognize tracker stories and generates ChangeLog.
Simple command-line tool to tag stories from Pivotal Tracker in git commits. Uses git hooks.
Looks for JIRA stories within the commits in a git repositoryand compares branches to find stories included in one branchbut not another
Deployments release notes sent via email with Git commits / Pivotal Tracker stories and Campfire notification.
= epubforge = Write your book in markdown, then do all sorts of increasingly nifty things with it using this command-line utility. == Project description == epubforge is a command-line utility for creating, tracking and managing longer (novella and book-length) writing projects. Write your text in markdown (http://whatismarkdown.com/), use the built in actions to convert your project to various ebook formats, track wordcount over the life of the project, manage a story bible, and back your project up using git. Or go further and define your own formatters/converters and actions in Ruby. Have fun! == Contributing to epubforge == * Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet. * Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it. * Fork the project. * Start a feature/bugfix branch. * Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution. * Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it. == Copyright == Copyright (c) 2013 Bryce Anderson. See LICENSE.txt for further details.