List recent git branches, select one for checkout. See branch commits and diffs, all formatted so fancy
A simple CLI to checkout one of your most recent branches.
A plugin to add recent searches to Algolia Autocomplete.
A customizable status line formatter for Claude Code CLI
Super-fast alternative to Babel for when you can target modern JS runtimes
convert notion pages, block and list of blocks to markdown (supports nesting)
Provides metadata and conversions from repository urls for GitHub, Bitbucket and GitLab
Automation for Apps.
FORK! of NVD3, a reusable charting library written in d3.js
decaffeinate fork of the CoffeeScript implementation
decaffeinate fork of the CoffeeScript implementation
Use a consistent, git-based build id for your Next.js app
React Native Bluetooth Low Energy library
Serverless plugin to expose git status to serverless services
JWA implementation (supports all JWS algorithms)
Get raw git commits out of your repository using git-log(1).
The citeproc-js citation formatting module, in CommonJS format. This version is based on citeproc-js 1.4.63
A Backstage plugin that integrates towards GitHub Actions
Template plugin for Fastify
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@google/genai) [](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@google/genai)
Use Remix React Router in your stories. (Formerly storybook-addon-react-router-v6)
a util for spawning git from npm CLI contexts
Simple GIT interface for node.js
A high level git url parser for common git providers.
CLI for displaying and interacting with recently checked-out git branches
Find all files that changed over the past days for a git repository. If a file is modified multiple times, it may require a re-design. Watch out for implementation changes without a corresponding test change.
This is a Git branch selection tool. It provides a way to quickly look back at your most recently checked-out branches. You can list the branches, use the selector tool to add the branch name to your clipboard, or checkout to the selected branch.
git-rails-changes will find files that have changed between branches, that are staged, or modified but not staged. It can find matching rspec tests for rails files
A utility gem to fetch recent versions from your git repos
Devloop is an automated Rspec runner for Rails app. The purpose of this tool is to provide continuous and instant feedback when working on Rails app. It runs only specs from lines modified in the recent git commits. Even if you have a large user_spec.rb file, you'll receive specs feedback in a fraction of a second on each file save.
Compiles together release notes from the current git repository, optionally fetching the most recent commit number from Hockey.
Tipster attempts to assess the risk of your most recent Git commit by applying various code heuristics that have indicated a high probability of introducing defects.
Analyze your git repository and determine subject matter experts by identifying everyone who has touched a file with preference given to recent touches
Twig is your personal Git branch assistant. It's a command-line tool for listing your most recent branches, and for remembering branch details for you, like issue tracker ids and todos. It supports subcommands, like automatically fetching statuses from your issue tracking system. It's flexible enough to fit your everyday Git workflow, and will save you a ton of time.
Continuous integration should really just be a script that captures the output of running your project update & test commands and presents recent results in a static html page. By keeping test reports in json, per-project CI configuration in 3 probably-one-line scripts, things are kept simple, quick, and super extensible. Want to use git, svn, or hg? No problem. Need to fire off results to Campfire? It's built-in. CI depends on cron.
Continuous integration should really just be a script that captures the output of running your project update & test commands and presents recent results in a static html page. By keeping test reports in json, per-project CI configuration in 3 probably-one-line scripts, things are kept simple, quick, and super extensible. Want to use git, svn, or hg? No problem. Need to fire off results to Twitter or Campfire? It's one line away. CI depends on cron.
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