A simple CLI tool to check if all links on a webpage (including the main page) are working or broken.
Get a stream as a string, Buffer, ArrayBuffer or array
Brace expansion as known from sh/bash
The semantic version parser used by npm.
Tiny millisecond conversion utility
A cache object that deletes the least-recently-used items.
Parse JSON with more helpful errors
Traverse JSON Schema passing each schema object to callback
A small library to print colourful messages.
Create an error from multiple errors
Human-friendly process signals
Parse milliseconds into an object
Global identifiers from different JavaScript environments
Stringify any JavaScript value.
Node.js path.parse() ponyfill
Clean up error stack traces
Check if argv has a specific flag
URL utils for humans
The Node.js bindings of the humanfs library.
Convert a dash/dot/underscore/space separated string to camelCase or PascalCase: `foo-bar` → `fooBar`
Polyfill for Metadata Reflection API
A zero-dependency alternative to cosmiconfig
Json Schema Type Builder with Static Type Resolution for TypeScript
Extract the non-magic parent path from a glob string.
Network isomorphism solver using Links Theory - determines if two networks are structurally identical
A CLI tool and reusable library for links manipulation backed by a LiNo-notation doublet storage engine.
Formal symbolic AI implementation with OpenAI-compatible APIs
AgentLink SDK Core - Platform agnostic core library
P2P file & text sharing engine — QUIC + mDNS powered by iroh
Fast, lock-free, bounded, multiple-producer, multiple-consumer, lossy, broadcast channel
The minimal, blazing-fast file sharing cli tool.
Core interpreter for the Blink Lisp dialect
Network scanner in speed of a blink
Broken link checker: crawl a URL or local file, find links, report 404 and 5xx
Headless Chromium CDP backend for buffr-engine (Phase 4 spike)
Command-line interface for CAN hardware abstraction layer
This gem uses link-grammar's dictionary and parser to determine if a sentence is grammatically correct
Immutable Linked List implemented in C-Extensions
C extension to to bring the Snappy compression library to Ruby. Google's C++ implementation (version 1.0.0) is statically linked into this extension, resulting in no runtime dependencies.
A Ruby gem for checking the links in a web site. Can either scan files or crawl pages. Multi-threaded, with red/green colored output, support for SSL, and support for following redirects. Works great with Octopress, Jekyll, or any collection of static HTML files. With 100% RSpec coverage.
This lib is a wrapper for get_ifaddrs C routine. The original routine returns a linked list that contains avaliable inet interfaces. This lib walks on list and return an hash that contains the interface names and sub-hashes with respectives ip addresses and netmasks.
The normal study of Data Structure use some language like C, Python or Java, but this gem adds normal Data Structure like Linked List, to Ruby Language..
This lib is a wrapper for get_ifaddrs C routine. The original routine returns a linked list that contains avaliable inet interfaces. This lib walks on list and return an hash that contains the interface names and sub-hashes with respectives ip addresses and netmasks.
Allows user to create tables simply by referencing a table in the database, defining headers, and changing size. Version 1.0.2 allow for cross-table recognition of headers and values needed; for example, a two-model table would show "Electronics" for "Category" instead of "2" for "category_id". Version 1.0.3 allows for method chaining, printing of table code into an external file, and default (C)RUD links.
Native implementation of Dijkstra algorithm for finding the shortest path between two vertices in a large, sparse graphs. Underlying algorithm is implemented in C using a priority queue. Edges are represented using linked lists rather than an adjacency matrix to reduce memory footprint when operating on very large graphs where the average number of edges between nodes is relatively small (e.g. < 1/10 the number of nodes). See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dijkstra's_algorithm for additional information.
==== subj3ct - The DNS for the Semantic Web This is a Ruby adapter for the subj3ct.com webservice. Subj3ct is an infrastructure technology for Web 3.0 applications. These are applications that are organised around subjects and semantics rather than documents and links. Subj3ct provides the technology and services to enable Web 3.0 applications to define and exchange subject definitions. Or in other words: Subj3ct.com is for the Semantic Web what DNS is for the internet. ==== Installing Install the gem: gem install subj3ct ==== Usage Query a specific subject - to be specific: its subject identity record - using it's identifier: Subj3ct.identifier("http://www.topicmapslab.de/publications/TMRA_2009_subj3ct_a_subject_identity_resolution_service") See the README or the github page for more examples. ==== Subj3ct vs. Subject The official name is "Subj3ct", however in this API, you can also use "Subject" which may be easier to remember or to type for normal, n0n-1337 people. It should work for the gem, for the require and for the main module. ==== Contribute! Subj3ct is a young and ambitious service. It's free, will stay free and needs your help. Contribute to this library! Create bindings for other languages! Publish your data as linked data to the web and register it with subj3ct.com. ==== Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project on http://github.bb/subj3ct * Make your feature addition or bug fix. * Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull) * Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches. ==== Copyright Copyright (c) 2010 Benjamin Bock, Topic Maps Lab. See LICENSE for details.
==== subj3ct - The DNS for the Semantic Web This is a Ruby adapter for the subj3ct.com webservice. Subj3ct is an infrastructure technology for Web 3.0 applications. These are applications that are organised around subjects and semantics rather than documents and links. Subj3ct provides the technology and services to enable Web 3.0 applications to define and exchange subject definitions. Or in other words: Subj3ct.com is for the Semantic Web what DNS is for the internet. ==== Installing Install the gem: gem install subj3ct ==== Usage Query a specific subject - to be specific: its subject identity record - using it's identifier: Subj3ct.identifier("http://www.topicmapslab.de/publications/TMRA_2009_subj3ct_a_subject_identity_resolution_service") See the README or the github page for more examples. ==== Subj3ct vs. Subject The official name is "Subj3ct", however in this API, you can also use "Subject" which may be easier to remember or to type for normal, n0n-1337 people. It should work for the gem, for the require and for the main module. ==== Contribute! Subj3ct is a young and ambitious service. It's free, will stay free and needs your help. Contribute to this library! Create bindings for other languages! Publish your data as linked data to the web and register it with subj3ct.com. ==== Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project on http://github.bb/subj3ct * Make your feature addition or bug fix. * Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull) * Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches. ==== Copyright Copyright (c) 2010 Benjamin Bock, Topic Maps Lab. See LICENSE for details.
Simple tool to resize AWS instances with EBS root.
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