Indented filter utilities, including Showdown extensions / HyperPug filters' maker
Indent each line in a string
Strip leading whitespace from each line in a string
Strip redundant indentation and indent the string
Detect the indentation of code
JSON.parse with context information on error
Get the shortest leading whitespace from lines in a string
Detect the indentation of code (commonjs fork)
No description provided.
Guess the indentation of a JSON string
remark-lint rule to warn when the content of a list item has mixed indentation
List plugin for Plate
Detect the dominant newline character of a string
Left pad a string to align with the longest string in an array
The best of both `JSON.stringify(obj)` and `JSON.stringify(obj, null, indent)`.
Like read-package-json, but faster
Pad each line in a stream
remark-lint rule to check the spacing between list item bullets and content
remark-lint rule to warn when list item bullets are indented
remark-lint rule to warn when heading content is indented
General utilities for plugins to use
Stringify and write JSON to a file atomically
Utility functions for working with TypeScript's API. Successor to the wonderful tsutils. 🛠️️
webpack Validation Utils
This utilities with CLI (Command Line Interface) for normalize indentation in your source code. This gem use the 'iparser' gem as a parser engine.
CommandSet is a user interface framework. Its focus is a DSL for defining commands, much like Rake or RSpec. A default readline based terminal interpreter (complete with context sensitive tab completion, and the amenities of readline: history editing, etc) is included. It could very well be adapted to interact with CGI or a GUI - both are planned. CommandSet has a lot of very nice features. First is the domain-specific language for defining commands and sets of commands. Those sets can further be neatly composed into larger interfaces, so that useful or standard commands can be resued. Optional application modes, much like Cisco's IOS, with a little bit more flexibility. Arguments have their own sub-language, that allows them to provide interface hints (like tab completion) as well as input validation. On the output side of things, CommandSet has a very flexible output capturing mechanism, which generates a tree of data as it's generated, even capturing writes to multiple places at once (even from multiple threads) and keeping everything straight. Methods that normally write to stdout are interposed and fed into the tree, so you can hack in existing scripts with minimal adjustment. The final output can be presented to the user in a number of formats, including contextual coloring and indentation, or even progress hashes. XML is also provided, although it needs some work. Templates are on the way. While you're developing your application, you might find the record and playback utilities useful. cmdset-record will start up with your defaults for your command set, and spit out an interaction script. Then you can replay the script against the live set with cmdset-playback. Great for ad hoc testing, usability surveys and general demos.