An inline style parser.
InlineCode Tool for Editor.js
Run-time Autoprefixer for JavaScript style objects
Process execution for humans
TypeScript Interface for Ethereum
Strict TypeScript types for Ethereum ABIs
A webpack plugin for converting external script files to inline script block. Requires 'html-webpack-plugin' to work.
High-performance library for inlining CSS into HTML 'style' attributes
Ethereum Standard Library
ESLint rules and configuration of LWC modules used in Salesforce
Use logical overflow properties and values in CSS
Extract and inline critical css with emotion for server side rendering.
High-performance library for inlining CSS into HTML 'style' attributes
Adds source mappings and base64 encodes them, so they can be inlined in your generated file.
mjml-head-style
Embed javascript and css source inline when using the webpack dev server or middleware
Use logical overscroll behavior properties and values in CSS
High-performance library for inlining CSS into HTML 'style' attributes
Disable ESLint plugins using file patterns and inline comments
Inline editor implementation for CKEditor 5.
Inlines img, script and link tags into the same file.
A Base64 loader for Webpack
Temporarily substitute tokens in the given `string` with placeholders, then put them back after transforming the string.
nyc configuration that works with typescript
Effortlessly embed config modules and access with any compatible types
Procedual macros for inline-config
Generate Table of Contents from Markdown files
Compose configurations for any class.
Zero-config internationalization for ActiveRecord models using JSON columns. No JOINs, no N+1 queries, just fast inline translations. Supports SQLite, PostgreSQL, and MySQL.
Descriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
Descriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like: Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for 'nested' p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
Descriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
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