Simple Handler is a lightweight and flexible utility wrapper, heavily inspired by tRPC, designed for use in my personal projects. It provides an easy way to create and manage handlers with schema validation (powered by Zod) and middleware support for adva
Crazy fast http radix based router
Provides a way to make requests
Provides a way to make requests
Routes requests to KV assets
An evented streaming XML parser in JavaScript
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/eventstream-handler-node) [](https://ww
The routing foundation of `serve`
Declarative API exposing native platform touch and gesture system to React Native
General purpose glob-based configuration matching.
OpenTelemetry instrumentation for AWS Lambda function invocations
Handler for htmlparser2 that turns pages into a dom
Namespaced global event emitter
Nexus TypeScript SDK
when you want to fire an event no matter how a process exits.
tiny modular DOM lib for ie9+
Universal Server.
The CDK Construct Library for AWS Lambda in Python
Deploy AWS Lambda functions from command line using a json or yaml config file.
Serverless plugin for setting request validation
Static file serving and directory listing
Super light and fast Extensible ES6+ events and EventEmitters for Node and the browser. Easy for any developer level, use the same exact code in node and the browser. No frills, just high speed events!
file handler extension for tiptap
TypeScript definitions for serve-handler
Lightweight OpenTelemetry instrumentation for AWS Lambda
AT Protocol Jetstream event consumer library with WebSocket streaming and compression support
Worker daemon for distributed VM operations
Jabbot is a Ruby micro-framework for creating Jabber/MUC bots, heavily inspired by Sinatra and Twibot. I modified the code of Twibot to fit my needs. The original Twibot code by Christian Johansen is located at: http://github.com/cjohansen/twibot It's as easy as definig a small message handler: message {|message, params| post message.text }
YARD-Value YARD-Value provides YARD¹ handlers for Value² objects. It’ll document whether the Value is Comparable and what attributes are used in such comparisons, its #initialize method, and its protected accessors. ¹ See http://yardoc.org/ ² See http://disu.se/software/value-1.0/ You add the documentation to the Module#Value invocation. Any ‹@param› tags are used both for the parameters to the #initialize method and for the protected accessors. This class Point # A point on a plane. # @param [Integer] x # @param [Integer] y Value :x, :y end generates documentation similar to class Point # A point on a plane. # @param [Integer] x # @param [Integer] y def initialize(x, y) end and this class Point # A point on a plane. # @param [Integer] x The x coordinate of the receiver # @param [Integer] y The y coordinate of the receiver Value :x, :y end generates documentation similar to class Point # A point on a plane. # @param [Integer] x # @param [Integer] y def initialize(x, y) protected # @return [Integer] The x coordinate of the receiver attr_reader :x # @return [Integer] The y coordinate of the receiver attr_reader :y end For comparable Values, a note is added about what attributes are used in the comparison. This class Point # A point on a plane. # @param [Integer] x # @param [Integer] y Value :x, :y, :comparable => true end is similar to class Point # A point on a plane. # @param [Integer] x # @param [Integer] y # @note Comparisons between instances are made between x and y. def initialize(x, y) end § Usage Add ‹--plugin yard-value-1.0› to your YARD command line. If you’re using Inventory-Rake-Tasks-YARD¹, add the following to your Rakefile: Inventory::Rake::Tasks::YARD.new do |t| t.options += %w'--plugin yard-value-1.0' end ¹ See http://disu.se/software/inventory-rake-tasks-yard-1.0/ § Financing Currently, most of my time is spent at my day job and in my rather busy private life. Please motivate me to spend time on this piece of software by donating some of your money to this project. Yeah, I realize that requesting money to develop software is a bit, well, capitalistic of me. But please realize that I live in a capitalistic society and I need money to have other people give me the things that I need to continue living under the rules of said society. So, if you feel that this piece of software has helped you out enough to warrant a reward, please PayPal a donation to now@disu.se¹. Thanks! Your support won’t go unnoticed! ¹ Send a donation: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_donations&business=now@disu.se&item_name=YARD-Value § Reporting Bugs Please report any bugs that you encounter to the {issue tracker}¹. ¹ See https://github.com/now/yard-value/issues § Authors Nikolai Weibull wrote the code, the tests, and this README. § Licensing YARD-Value is free software: you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the {GNU Lesser General Public License, version 3}¹ or later², as published by the {Free Software Foundation}³. ¹ See http://disu.se/licenses/lgpl-3.0/ ² See http://gnu.org/licenses/ ³ See http://fsf.org/
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