A command-line tool for explicitly managing package installations reasons.
Parser-lexer fusion generator (compiler interface)
Parser-lexer fusion generator (derivative lexer)
Parser-lexer fusion generator (parser generator)
This is a heavily modified fork of http://github.com/defunkt/colored gem, with many sensible pull requests combined. Since the authors of the original gem no longer support it, this might, perhaps, be considered a good alternative. Simple gem that adds various color methods to String class, and can be used as follows: require 'colored2' puts 'this is red'.red puts 'this is red with a yellow background'.red.on.yellow puts 'this is red with and italic'.red.italic puts 'this is green bold'.green.bold << ' and regular'.green puts 'this is really bold blue on white but reversed'.bold.blue.on.white.reversed puts 'this is regular, but '.red! << 'this is red '.yellow! << ' and yellow.'.no_color! puts ('this is regular, but '.red! do 'this is red '.yellow! do ' and yellow.'.no_color! end end)
Powerful, flexible and configurable coercion library. And nothing more.
Selenium implements the W3C WebDriver protocol to automate popular browsers. It aims to mimic the behaviour of a real user as it interacts with the application's HTML. It's primarily intended for web application testing, but any web-based task can automated.
A drop-in replacement for the prettyprint gem with more functionality.
A gem-authoring framework.
Use Fasterer to check various places in your code that could be faster.
Ruby is an excellent programming language for creating and managing custom DSLs, but how can you securely evaluate a DSL while explicitly controlling the methods exposed to the user? Our good friends instance_eval and instance_exec are great, but they expose all methods - public, protected, and private - to the user. Even worse, they expose the ability to accidentally or intentionally alter the behavior of the system! The cleanroom pattern is a safer, more convenient, Ruby-like approach for limiting the information exposed by a DSL while giving users the ability to write awesome code!
== Description CocoaTouch/iOS is a *verbose* framework. These extensions hope to make development in rubymotion more enjoyable by tacking "UI" methods onto the base classes (String, Fixnum, Float). With sugarcube, you can create a color from an integer or symbol, or create a UIFont or UIImage from a string. Some UI classes are opened up as well, like adding the `<<`` operator to a `UIView` instance, instead of `view.addSubview(subview)`, you can use the more idiomatic: `view << subview`.
Honeybadger.io unifies error tracking, performance and uptime monitoring, and logging in one powerfully simple platform. Detect, diagnose, and resolve production issues faster—so you can focus on building, not debugging.
Augments Sidekiq job classes with a push_bulk method for easier bulk pushing.
Ruby is an excellent programming language for creating and managing custom DSLs, but how can you securely evaluate a DSL while explicitly controlling the methods exposed to the user? Our good friends instance_eval and instance_exec are great, but they expose all methods - public, protected, and private - to the user. Even worse, they expose the ability to accidentally or intentionally alter the behavior of the system! The cleanroom pattern is a safer, more convenient, Ruby-like approach for limiting the information exposed by a DSL while giving users the ability to write awesome code!
This is Toggleable