LEAN Format - A minimal, human-readable data interchange format (meta package)
LEAN (Lightweight Efficient Adaptive Notation) - A minimal, human-readable data interchange format
Attach virtuals to the results of mongoose queries when using `.lean()`
Attach defaults to the results of mongoose queries when using `.lean()`
Apply getters to the results of mongoose queries when using `.lean()`
React Native Network Info API for iOS & Android
Renders highlighted Prism output using React
A lean Promises and Async lib for ES6/ES7
minimal QR code generation
React Native Clipboard API for macOS, iOS, Android, and Windows
Fork of pretty-format with support for ESM
Lean Incremental Merkle tree implementation in TypeScript.
React Native Picker for iOS, Android, macOS, and Windows
Format numbers for human consumption.
React Native wrapper for Android and iOS ViewPager
React Native Camera Roll for iOS & Android
Immutable hash maps implemented as hash array papped tries
ESLint Plugin to make sure your imports only import the bits you need
LeanCTX — the Context OS for AI coding agents. One local binary that compresses, remembers, routes, and verifies every token between your code and the model. No Rust required.
Lean Incremental Merkle tree implementation in TypeScript.
Pi Coding Agent extension (CLI-first) — routes bash/read/grep/find/ls through lean-ctx CLI for strong token savings. Optional MCP bridge can register advanced tools.
React Native MaskedView component
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/util-format-url) [](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sd
Stringify any JavaScript value.
A lean money library that stores amounts as integer subunits (cents) to avoid floating-point errors. Supports arithmetic with banker's rounding, fair allocation, multi-currency formatting, and type-safe currency conversion.
The Programming Exercise Markup Language (PEML) is intended to be a simple, easy format for CS and IT instructors of all kinds (college, community college, high school, whatever) to describe programming assignments and activities. We want it to be so easy (and obvious) to use that instructors won't see it as a technological or notational barrier to expressing their assignments. We intend for this format to be something that authors of automated grading tools can adopt, so they can provide a very easy, low-energy onboarding path for existing instructors to get programming activities into such tools. As a result, this notation leans heavily on supporting authors and streamlining common cases, even if this may require more work on the part of tool developers--the goal is to make it super easy for authors of programming activities, not to fit into a specific auto-grader or simplify tasks for tool writers. For more details, see the PEML website.