Database to lookup http reasons from http response status code
multipart/form-data parser which supports streaming
The Preferences API provides a simple key/value persistent store for lightweight data.
The Filesystem API provides a NodeJS-like API for working with files on the device.
XMLHttpRequest emulation for node.js
Reset plugin for NGXS: Effortlessly clears, resets, or overwrites NGXS states respecting the state tree.
A combination of css reset and normalize (available in CSS, SCSS, Stylus and LESS)
Check if a file or directory exists in a given path.
Converts HTTP headers to their most common casing. (e.g. usEr-Agent -> User-Agent)
Module that helps you write generated functions in Node
> Monorepo of isomorphic utility functions
## What is it?
No description provided.
Javascript Matrix and Vector library for High Performance WebGL apps
Check the engines and platform fields in package.json
[deprecated] This package exists for legacy reasons only
Unified LLM API with automatic model discovery and provider configuration
Simple development http server with live reload capability
A Svelte component wrapper around FullCalendar
A plugin for ESLint that allows you to use project-specific rules
ECMAScript spec abstract operations.
Renders HTML into the browser's canvas.
Like `Object.keys()` but also includes symbols
A small, fast, and correct TOML parser/serializer
Little rack middleware to insert '<meta name="robots" content="noindex"></head>' into all HTTPS HTML responses for SEO reasons
Little rack middleware to insert '<link href="http://example.org/text.html" rel="canonical" />' into all HTTP HTML responses for SEO reasons
Simple HTTP/REST client for Ruby, inspired by microframework syntax for specifying actions. Forked from RestClient http://rest-client.heroku.com see README for reasons
Rails 4, much to everyone's annoyance, provides no option to generate both digest and non-digest assets. Installing this gem automatically creates both digest and non-digest assets which are useful for many reasons. See this issue for more details: https://github.com/rails/sprockets-rails/issues/49
RCP Network stands for a neural network that uses decision tree for prediction, struct_rand for generating new data, and readlines and espeak for orating dangling modifiers at random for intentional unintentional humor. This model will be expanded to other reasoning models, like generating small amounts of dictionary data from Duck Duck Go. You can write this Saasagi subroutine automatically through .prewrite. Instructions coming soon. Igrigork: https://github.com/igrigorik/decisiontree Dejan: https://github.com/dejan/espeak-ruby
Diff and patch tables
Rails 4, much to everyone's annoyance, provides no option to generate both digest and non-digest assets. Installing this gem automatically creates both digest and non-digest assets which are useful for many reasons. See this issue for more details: https://github.com/rails/sprockets-rails/issues/49
This pure Ruby library can read and write PNG images without depending on an external image library, like RMagick. It tries to be memory efficient and reasonably fast. It supports reading and writing all PNG variants that are defined in the specification, with one limitation: only 8-bit color depth is supported. It supports all transparency, interlacing and filtering options the PNG specifications allows. It can also read and write textual metadata from PNG files. Low-level read/write access to PNG chunks is also possible. This library supports simple drawing on the image canvas and simple operations like alpha composition and cropping. Finally, it can import from and export to RMagick for interoperability. Also, have a look at OilyPNG at https://github.com/wvanbergen/oily_png. OilyPNG is a drop in mixin module that implements some of the ChunkyPNG algorithms in C, which provides a massive speed boost to encoding and decoding.
Ruby bindings for Strophe 'http://code.stanziq.com/strophe/', a C library for writing XMPP clients. If all you need is a simple XMPP bot that react to message and presence notifications, you might be better off with XMPPBot, which is an implementation I wrote on top of StropheRuby. IMPORTANT : This gem is quite experimental currently... it is not ready for production! Strophe 'http://code.stanziq.com/strophe/' is a robust and well written C library that allows the developer to implement XMPP clients. I wanted to be able to use the power of this library with the ruby syntax. I didn't use SWIG to generate the bindings for 2 reasons : 1. I wanted to learn how to write a C extension for ruby 2. I didn't like how SWIG generate gazilions of lines of code My other project, XMPPBot, is an implementation of Strophe Ruby that allows the ruby developer to write a XMPP bot in a few lines of code.
Diff and patch tables
Sometimes, you might want your HTML to include a one-off image file that is just for one person. Making this file public may be undesireable for security reasons, or perhaps simply because it is not worth the overhead of multiple HTTP requests. This gem provides a utility method that takes a locally-saved image file, perhaps within your non-public tmp directory, encodes it as Base64, and returns an HTML <img> element with the correct data URL attributes. It is made possible by the RFC 2397 scheme, which is now fairly well supported in modern browsers.
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