Lexic analyser
MCP server connecting Claude Code to Lexic knowledge management
TypeScript SDK for Lexic — hot-swappable subject matter expert plugins for AI agents
Typescript version of iCure standalone API client
Typescript version of iCure standalone API client
Typescript version of iCure standalone API client
Typescript version of iCure standalone API client
Universal Unambiguous Sentences for javascript
Lexical, to- and from-string conversion routines.
Lexical, to- and from-string conversion routines.
Efficient parsing of floats from strings.
Efficient parsing of integers from strings.
Efficient formatting of floats to strings.
Efficient formatting of integers to strings.
Shared utilities for lexical creates.
Unified TUI search over local coding agent histories
Vector & lexical search engine library & multi-tenancy server
Semantic, hash-chained durable memory for long-running and multi-agent systems.
Fast float parsing conversion routines.
A simple lexer which creates over 115+ various tokens based on the rust programming language. This complete Lexer/Lexical Scanner produces tokens for a string or a file path entry.
Provides lexical scanning operations on a String.
Split text into lexical units
The RCTP configurable lexical analyser.
This gem lets you access variables from a calling method.
A lightweight and pretty lexical analyser
Library for lexical sorting in various languages.
Rexical is a lexical scanner generator that is used with Racc to generate Ruby programs. Rexical is written in Ruby.
A new editor for Action Text based on Meta's Lexical framework.
A simple lexical analyzer for Scheme
lexically-stortable string representations of BigDecimal
Get lexical context of self as array of modules
Temporally Ordered IDs. Generate universally unique identifiers (UUID) that sort lexically in time order. Torid exists to solve the problem of generating UUIDs that when ordered lexically, they are also ordered temporally. I needed a way to generate ids for events that are entering a system with the following criteria: 1. Fast ID generation 2. No central coordinating server/system 3. No local storage 4. Library code, that is multiple apps on the same machine can use the same code and they will not generate duplicate ids 5. Eventually stored in a UUID field in a database. So 128bit ids are totally fine. The IDs that Torid generates are 128bit IDs made up of 2, 64bit parts. * 64bit microsecond level UNIX timestamp * 64bit hash of the system hostname, process id and a random value.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.