It returns a source for a line of text.
Support for representing 64-bit integers in JavaScript
Callback wrapping utility
The Node.js `util.deprecate()` function with browser support
Get the command from a shebang
Use node's fs.realpath, but fall back to the JS implementation if the native one fails
PostCSS plugin for CSS Modules to pass arbitrary values between your module files
Resolve any installed ES6 compatible promise
A cross browser microtask library
An arbitrary-precision Decimal type for JavaScript.
Resolve the path of a module like `require.resolve()` but from a given path
ECMAScript AST recursive visitor
Try to guess if your terminal supports unicode
Bare simple logger for NodeJS
Give me a string and I'll tell you if it's a valid npm package license string
Run a function exactly one time
A small polyfill for Object.setprototypeof
simplified stream construction
extend like a boss
Combines a list of arrays, returning a single array with unique values, using strict equality for comparisons.
Get the shortest leading whitespace from lines in a string
Create a stream that emits events from multiple other streams
Safer Node.js Buffer API
Recursive object extending
This gem adds the HAML source line into the resulting HTML.
Rack middleware for rblineprof (github.com/tmm1/rblineprof)
Milkode is line based local source code search engine. It have command line interface and web application. It will accelerate the code reading of your life.
A tool for counting source lines of code
LINES lets you manage your posts in a clear, consistent frontend. The gracefully slender editor keeps your editing simple and lets you just splash around in your ideas. Once you're happy, just hit publish and see your text, code examples, images, and links shine.
Easily add magic comments '# frozen_string_literal: true' followed by a blank line to multiple Ruby source files
Debuggers are great! They help us troubleshoot complicated programming problems by inspecting values produced by code, line by line. They are invaluable when trying to understand what is going on in a large application composed of thousands or millions of lines of code. In day-to-day test-driven development and simple debugging though, a puts statement can be a lot quicker in revealing what is going on than halting execution completely just to inspect a single value or a few. This is certainly true when writing the simplest possible code that could possibly work, and running a test every few seconds or minutes. Problem is you need to locate puts statements in large output logs, know which file names, line numbers, classes, and methods contained the puts statements, find out what variable names are being printed, and see nicely formatted output. Enter puts_debuggerer. A guilt-free puts debugging Ruby gem FTW that prints file names, line numbers, class names, method names, and code statements; and formats output nicely courtesy of awesome_print. Partially inspired by this blog post: https://tenderlovemaking.com/2016/02/05/i-am-a-puts-debuggerer.html (Credit to Tenderlove.)
Rack middleware for rblineprof (github.com/tmm1/rblineprof)
CLI Steam client
A ruby implementation of an interactive SQL command-line for ODBC data sources
StatsCollect is a little framework gathering statistics from external sources (social networks, web sites...), stored in pluggable backends. It can be very easily extended thanks to its plugins (currently include Facebook, Myspace, Youtube, Google).
See README.md for example usage
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