Minimalist CLI and programmatic stream based interface for imaginary
Return the real and imaginary components of a single-precision complex floating-point number.
Return the real and imaginary components of a double-precision complex floating-point number.
Return the real and imaginary components of a single-precision complex floating-point number.
Return the real and imaginary components of a double-precision complex floating-point number.
Return the imaginary component of a double-precision complex floating-point number.
Return the imaginary component of a single-precision complex floating-point number.
Return the imaginary component of a single-precision complex floating-point number.
Return the imaginary component of a double-precision complex floating-point number.
gives Rollup an imaginary file system, e.g. for testing other plugins
Runs imaginary functions as LLM prompts
An imaginary GTFS data set used for testing.
Utilities for deploying imaginary functions in nextjs
A TypeScript plugin for transforming imaginary functions
A Babel plugin for transforming imaginary functions
Imaginary Programming is a way to use AI to define implementation-free functions in TypeScript. When you have installed `imaginary-dev` into your project, you can define a function like this:
Prettier config
Simple & modern imaginary client
IMAGINARY function
Compute the sum of the absolute values of the real and imaginary components of a double-precision complex floating-point number.
ESLint React configuration for JS projects based on airbnb and Prettier configs
Compute the sum of the absolute values of the real and imaginary components of a single-precision complex floating-point number.
Compute the sum of the absolute values of the real and imaginary components of a single-precision complex floating-point vector.
A web platform that allows you to invest in Twitch Streamers with imaginary points.
Fast, simple, scalable HTTP microservice for high-level image processing
Portable mixed-precision BLAS-like vector math library for x86 and ARM
surge synthesizer -- simple single frequency oscillator computation
Composable complex-number primitives for RustUse.
Exact geometric algebra from the balanced ternary axiom. Governed rewriting, self-certifying canonicalization via the Kase Optimality Theorem.
Touchstone (s2p, etc.) file parser, plotter, and more
Abstract algebraic structures for Rust
Generate random imaginary people in all your rust projects
Two's complement floating-point arithmetic library
Command-line calculator with accumulator, memory cells, multi-base arithmetic, and script file support
Classical and modern control theory for agents — stability, controllability, observability, optimal control
A backend-agnostic crate implementing the CKKS FHE scheme
Client gem for Imaginary.
Dragonfly plugin for Imaginary.
Ruby client for imaginary service
Generates random sets of numbers for an imaginary lottery.
Version 1.0.1 Update Notes: -Updated README "HOW TO RUN" -I'm not sure how to format this so it looks good on the gems website so please just see the README file. USE CASES: 1. Your friends bully you because your imaginary role playing worlds are predictable and boring. 2. You like seeing chars printed in nifty patterns. HOW TO RUN: 1. Run `super_simple_world_builder` 2. Follow the prompts EXAMPLE INPUT: Guten Tag! Welcome to Super Simple World Builder. Enter 1 to build a random world Enter 2 to build a custom world Please enter your selection (1, 2, or exit): 2 Enter the name of your world: Community-Town Enter the minimum width of the world: 15 Enter the minimum height of the world: 15 What character do you want to fill the background of your world with? (i.e. any character or single space) How many lake features do you want? 3 How many mountain features do you want? 2 How many town features do you want? 3 How many forest features do you want? 4 OUTPUT: 1. Console print out of the world map 2. A text file of the world map ACHTUNG: 1. Don't worry if the width or height entered is too small. The world will automatically enlarge to fit all features. 2. World maps look better when you enter a <space> as the character to fill the background. 3. This is a quick-and-dirty project so yolo with the specs. I added comments as a consolation prize. 4. See `feature_set.rb` to tweak the features that can be added to the world map. 5. Interestingly, menu prompts may not show up in the git bash terminal. But they do show up in Windows command prompt, so lmao. 6. Feel free to tweak the code however you like. I plan to refactor in the future to dry up some sections.
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