Inserts a string at the needle's end in a haystack.
Provides functions for generating ordering strings
smart-buffer is a Buffer wrapper that adds automatic read & write offset tracking, string operations, data insertions, and more.
insert implicit module globals into a module-deps stream
insert a string of css into the <head>
No description provided.
Cross-browser lib for inserting text at selection in a textarea / input
ByteStream is a library making possible to manipulates single bytes and bits on pure JavaScript
TypeScript definitions for insert-module-globals
Format for representing rich text documents and changes.
Append or Prepend a string with gulp
Tools for working with PGlite databases
TypeScript definitions for insert-text-at-cursor
Converts Quill's delta ops to HTML
Node module for inserting lines to an existing file
emotion's stylesheet
No description provided.
Swizzle a little something into your require() calls.
MermaidJS parser
Scanner and parser for JSON with comments.
after - tiny flow control
Persistent ordered mapping from strings
Diff and markup HTML with <ins> and <del> tags
GeoJSON implementation of RBush
Inserts a line into a file after a line matching a regular expression. String comparisons are case-insensitive. Works on very large files because it reads the file line by line instead of reading the entire file into memory. Can be used on the command line or in a Ruby program.
When i use rspec to do a lot of test, each time database is inserted data and truncate table, when tables grows the speed grow down too much. At first i convert the db engine from innodb to memory in db/seed.rb file. After that i write this gem to do the job for more app. Notice: Tables those contain text col can not convert to memory engine, so i convert those colums to string first. So if there are test case use too long string to insert, there would be trouble.
A jig is an ordered sequence of objects (usually strings) and named _gaps_. When rendered as a string by Jig#to_s, the objects are rendered calling #to_s on each object in order. The gaps are skipped. A new jig may be constructed from an existing jig by 'plugging' one or more of the named gaps. The new jig shares the objects and their ordering from the original jig but with the named gap replaced with the 'plug'. Gaps may be plugged by any object or sequence of objects. When a gap is plugged with another jig, the contents (including gaps) are incorporated into the new jig. Several subclasses (Jig::XML, Jig::XHTML, Jig::CSS) are defined to help in the construction of XML, XHTML, and CSS documents. This is a jig with a single gap named :alpha. Jig.new(:alpha) # => <#Jig: [:alpha]> This is a jig with two objects, 'before' and 'after' separated by a gap named :middle. j = Jig.new('before', :middle, 'after) # => #<Jig: ["before", :middle, "after"]> The plug operation derives a new jig from the old jig. j.plug(:middle, ", during, and") # => #<Jig: ["before", ", during, and ", "after"]> This operation doesn't change j. It can be used again: j.plug(:middle, " and ") # => #<Jig: ["before", " and ", "after"]> There is a destructive version of plug that modifies the jig in place: j.plug!(:middle, "filled") # => #<Jig: ["before", "filled", "after"]> j # => #<Jig: ["before", "filled", "after"]> There are a number of ways to construct a Jig and many of them insert an implicit gap into the Jig. This gap is identified as :___ and is used as the default gap for plug operations when one isn't provided:
No description provided.
No description provided.