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message-next-step — free deterministic incoming-message checker and faster ChatGPT alternative for dating, workplace, recruiter, client, and family threads when you need to decide whether to reply now, wait, ask one question, move to a call, or let it go.
Split email messages into an object stream
Internationalization (i18n) for Next.js
ICU message format compiler with a <1KB runtime bundle footprint
vfile utility to create a virtual message
Core library for interfacing with AutoRest generated code
A tool for walking ASTs
Azure AI Agents client library.
semantic-release plugin to commit release assets to the project's git repository
> [!WARNING] > This package is not meant to be used directly, it's a shared dependency of `sanity/presentation` and `@sanity/visual-editing`. Using it in production is at your own risk.
Markdown-ish syntax for generating flowcharts, mindmaps, sequence diagrams, class diagrams, gantt charts, git graphs and more.
A small utility for creating warnings and emitting them.
ESLint plugin for Next.js.
Timeout a promise after a specified amount of time
Do things in development and nothing otherwise
Algorithm for finding the root of a yarn workspace, extracted from yarnpkg.com
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This module provides native bindings to ecdsa secp256k1 functions
An mutable object-based log format designed for chaining & objectMode streams.
Streams for reading/writing messages
This package holds both the schema files and TypeScript types generated from them used that define JSON message formats used in the FDC3 Desktop Agent Bridging Protocol and both the Web Connection Protocol (WCP) and Desktop Agent COmmunication Protocol (D
Next JavaScript Object Notation
This is the **x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu** binary for `@next/swc`
Writing error message next each inputs.
STOMP Next Generation Ruby server.
Message management for Next-L Enju
Show messages (notifies, errors, warnings) in current or next routes after redirect.
pry-byebug-power_assert shows Power Assert style inspection message when you run 'next' command of pry-byebug.
Rails 3 plugin that renders error messages and input hints next to their fields with semantic markup
Display the content of a text-file line by line: line_by_line -s [text-file] character by character or line_by_line -s [text-file] --fast whole lines. push return for the next line. Call with parameter --help (-h) for a usage-message
Native C extension providing Ruby bindings for nng (nanomsg next generation), a lightweight broker-less messaging library. Supports all scalability protocols, TLS transport, and async I/O.
TextKey is an award winning, patent-pending next-generation omni-factor authenticationTM (seven-factors of authentication) system that is highly secure, simple to install and easy to use. It can be used to protect web sites, mobile devices, virtual private networks (VPNs) or any other data that requires privacy, confidentiality or restricted access. It works by having users send a simple text message (SMS) FROM their cell phones INTO the TextKeyTM system to authenticate their identity.
BLAKE is a cryptographic hash function based on Dan Bernstein's ChaCha stream cipher, but a permuted copy of the input block, XORed with round constants, is added before each ChaCha round. Like SHA-2, there are two variants differing in the word size. ChaCha operates on a 4×4 array of words. BLAKE repeatedly combines an 8-word hash value with 16 message words, truncating the ChaCha result to obtain the next hash value. BLAKE-256 and BLAKE-224 use 32-bit words and produce digest sizes of 256 bits and 224 bits, respectively, while BLAKE-512 and BLAKE-384 use 64-bit words and produce digest sizes of 512 bits and 384 bits, respectively.
# Sparrow is a really fast lightweight queue written in Ruby that speaks memcached. # That means you can use Sparrow with any memcached client library (Ruby or otherwise). # # Basic tests shows that Sparrow processes messages at a rate of 850-900 per second. # The load Sparrow can cope with increases exponentially as you add to the cluster. # Sparrow also takes advantage of eventmachine, which uses a non-blocking io, offering great performance. # # Sparrow is a in-memory queue but will persist the data to disk when receiving a term signal. # # Sparrow comes with built in support for daemonization and clustering. # Also included are example libraries and clients. For example: # # require 'memcache' # m = MemCache.new('127.0.0.1:11212') # m['queue_name'] = '1' # Publish to queue # m['queue_name'] #=> 1 Pull next msg from queue # m['queue_name'] #=> nil # m.delete('queue_name) # Delete queue # # # or using the included client: # # class MyQueue < MQ3::Queue # def on_message # logger.info "Received msg with args: #{args.inspect}" # end # end # # MyQueue.servers = [ # MQ3::Protocols::Memcache.new({:host => '127.0.0.1', :port => 11212, :weight => 1}) # ] # MyQueue.publish('test msg') # MyQueue.run # # Messages are deleted as soon as they're read and the order you add messages to the queue probably won't # be the same order when they're removed. # # Additional memcached commands that are supported are: # flush_all # Deletes all queues # version # quit # The memcached commands 'add', and 'replace' just call 'set'. # # Call sparrow with --help for usage options # # The daemonization won't work on Windows. # # Check out the code: # svn checkout http://sparrow.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ sparrow # # Sparrow was inspired by Twitter's Starling
BLAKE is a cryptographic hash function based on Dan Bernstein's ChaCha stream cipher, but a permuted copy of the input block, XORed with round constants, is added before each ChaCha round. Like SHA-2, there are two variants differing in the word size. ChaCha operates on a 4×4 array of words. BLAKE repeatedly combines an 8-word hash value with 16 message words, truncating the ChaCha result to obtain the next hash value. BLAKE-256 and BLAKE-224 use 32-bit words and produce digest sizes of 256 bits and 224 bits, respectively, while BLAKE-512 and BLAKE-384 use 64-bit words and produce digest sizes of 512 bits and 384 bits, respectively.
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