Reads Linux operating system identification data
Get the name of the current operating system. Example: macOS Sierra
Platform specific binary for msgpackr-extract on linux OS with x64 architecture
Platform specific binary for lmdb on linux OS with x64 architecture
Get the name of a Windows version from the release number: `5.1.2600` → `XP`
Get the name and version of a macOS release from the Darwin version
Platform specific binary for msgpackr-extract on linux OS with arm64 architecture
[Node](https://nodejs.org/) bindings to the [DuckDB C API](https://duckdb.org/docs/api/c/overview).
Get Linux release info (distribution name, version, arch, release, etc.) from 'os-release' file and from native os module. On Windows and Darwin it only returns common node os module info (platform, hostname, release and arch)
run-script-os is a tool that will let you use generic npm script commands that will pass through to os specific commands.
Filter an array of objects to a specific OS
Operating system utilities for Bare
Advanced cross-platform operating system monitoring utilities with TypeScript support
Platform specific binary for msgpackr-extract on linux OS with arm architecture
Unique machine (desktop) id (no admin privileges required).
Platform specific binary for cbor-extract on linux OS with x64 architecture
Platform specific binary for lmdb on linux OS with arm64 architecture
Filter an array of objects to a specific OS
Get Linux release info (distribution name, version, arch, release, etc.) from '/etc/os-release' file and from native os module. On Windows and Macs it returns only node os module info (platform, hostname, release and arch)
Platform specific binary for lmdb on linux OS with arm architecture
A library for manipulating IPv4 and IPv6 addresses in JavaScript.
Growl unobtrusive notifications
Compiles and stores base binaries for pkg
This repository provides native TensorFlow execution in backend JavaScript applications under the Node.js runtime, accelerated by the TensorFlow C binary under the hood. It provides the same API as [TensorFlow.js](https://js.tensorflow.org/api/latest/).
Glimmer DSL for SWT (JRuby Desktop Development Cross-Platform Native GUI Framework) is a native-GUI cross-platform desktop development library written in JRuby, an OS-threaded faster JVM version of Ruby. It includes SWT 4.30 (released on December 1, 2023). Glimmer's main innovation is a declarative Ruby DSL that enables productive and efficient authoring of professional-grade desktop applications by relying on the robust Eclipse SWT library, with the familiar native look, feel, and behavior of GUI on Mac, Windows, and Linux. Glimmer additionally innovates by having built-in data-binding support, which greatly facilitates synchronizing the GUI with domain models, thus achieving true decoupling of object oriented components and enabling developers to solve business problems (test-first) without worrying about GUI concerns, or alternatively drive development GUI-first, and then write clean business models (test-first) afterwards. Not only does Glimmer provide a large set of GUI widgets, but it also supports drawing Canvas Graphics like Shapes and Animations. To get started quickly, Glimmer offers scaffolding options for Apps, Gems, and Custom Widgets. Glimmer also includes native-executable packaging support, sorely lacking in other libraries, thus enabling the delivery of desktop apps written in Ruby as truly native DMG/PKG/APP files on the Mac, MSI/EXE files on Windows, and DEB/RPM files on Linux. Glimmer was the first Ruby gem to bring SWT (Standard Widget Toolkit) to Ruby, thanks to creator Andy Maleh, EclipseCon/EclipseWorld/RubyConf speaker. If you liked Shoes, You'll love Glimmer!
rudebug is written using Ruby-GNOME2 and Glade. It has support for local and remote debugging with ruby-debug and ruby-breakpoint. It should work fine on Windows and Linux. It has stepping stepping, a source code display, a powerful object browser and an interactive shell as well as additional integration and polish to make those components work together well. It is in an early stage and will likely remain so until I have a way of using it on Mac OS X. I don't want this to molder on my hard disk however without ever having seen a public release. With ~900 lines of actual code (excluding the glade file) it is fairly light-weight. Code quality fluctuates. Some of the code needs to be unusual because it is executed on the server and can't touch its environment, other bits could probably need some refactoring. It was developed as part of a Summer of Code 2006 project for RubyCentral Inc.
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