My Lab 2 example
this is my lab
Use lab() and lch() color functions in CSS
Laboratory for new Material UI modules.
Plain color conversion functions
Color helpers to ease transformation between formats, gamut, etc
CSS color - Resolve and convert CSS colors.
This is my lab assignment two
this is my lab 6 package
Lucide lab is a project with icons that are nicely designed but have unknown use cases.
this is my lab
Lab components of Picasso
A CSS parser, transformer, and minifier written in Rust
Color string parser
Ionic Lab utility for developing Ionic apps, used by Ionic CLI
OLPC JSON canonicalization
A File Upload package for NestJS when using fastify
Color spaces! RGB, HSL, Cubehelix, Lab and HCL (Lch).
Validate HTML colors by 'name', 'special name', 'hex', 'rgb', 'rgba', 'hsl', 'hsla', 'hwb', 'lab' or 'lch' values
Test utility
Awesome ESLint rules for financial scenarios.
transform TypeScript for the lab testing framework
Project generator for MTZS apps with optional Docker, ESLint, Prettier, and MTZS state setup.
This is my lab assignment two
A simple plain blog.
This gem was created to generate a worksheet with some informations about Procon and off course, my first gem, so it was my lab
# holepunch [](http://badge.fury.io/rb/holepunch) [](https://travis-ci.org/undeadlabs/holepunch) Holepunch manages AWS EC2 security groups in a declarative way through a DSL. ## Requirements - Ruby 1.9.3 or newer. ## Installation ```bash gem install holepunch ``` or in your Gemfile ```ruby gem 'holepunch' ``` ## Basic Configuration You need to provide your AWS security credentials and a region. These can be provided via the command-line options, or you can use the standard AWS environment variables: ```bash export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID='...' export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY='...' export AWS_REGION='us-west-2' ``` ## The SecurityGroups file Specify your security groups in a `SecurityGroups` file in your project's root. Declare security groups that you need and the ingresses you want to expose. You can add ingresses using `tcp`, `udp`, and `ping`. For each ingress you can list allowed hosts using group names or CIDR notation. ```ruby group 'web' do desc 'Web servers' tcp 80 end group 'db' do desc 'database servers' tcp 5432, 'web' end group 'log' do desc 'log server' tcp 9999, 'web', 'db', '10.1.0.0/16' end ``` An environment can be specified which is available through the `env` variable. This allows you to have custom security groups per server environment. ```ruby group "#{env}-web" group "#{env}-db" do tcp 5432, "#{env}-web" end ``` Your application may depend on security groups defined by other services. Ensure they exist using the `depends` method. ```ruby depends 'my-other-service' group 'my-service' do udp 9999, 'my-other-service' end ``` You may specify port ranges for `tcp` and `udp` using the range operator. ```ruby group 'my-service' do udp 5000..9999, '0.0.0.0/0' end ``` You can specify ping/icmp rules with `icmp` (alias: `ping`). ```ruby group 'my-service' do ping '10.0.0.0/16' end ``` It can be useful to describe groups of security groups you plan to launch instances with by using the `service` declaration. ```ruby service "#{env}-web" do groups %W( admin #{env}-log-producer #{env}-web ) end ``` ## Usage Simply navigate to the directory containing your `SecurityGroups` file and run `holepunch`. ``` $ holepunch ``` If you need to specify an environment: ``` $ holepunch -e live ``` You can get a list of security groups for a service using the `service` subcommand. ``` $ holepunch service -e prod prod-web admin,prod-log-producer,prod-web ``` You can also get a list of all defined services. ``` $ holepunch service --list ``` ## Testing You can run the unit tests by simply running rspec. ``` $ rspec ``` By default the integration tests with EC2 are not run. You may run them with: ``` $ rspec -t integration ``` ## Authors - Ben Scott (gamepoet@gmail.com) - Pat Wyatt (pat@codeofhonor.com) ## License Copyright 2014 Undead Labs, LLC. Licensed under the MIT License: http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
==== Topic Maps for Rails (rtm-rails) RTM-Rails is the Rails-Adapter for Ruby Topic Maps. It allows simple configuration of topicmaps in config/topicmaps.yml. ==== Overview From a developer's perspective, RTM is a schema-less database management system. The Topic Maps standard (described below) on which RTM is based provides a way of creating a self-describing schema just by using it. You can use RTM as a complement data storage to ActiveRecord in your Rails apps. ==== Quickstart - existing Rails project jruby script/generate topicmaps Run the command above after installing rtm-rails. This will create * a minimal default configuration: config/topicmaps.yml and * a file with more examples and explanations config/topicmaps.example.yml * a file README.topicmaps.txt which contains more information how to use it and where to find more information * an initializer to load the topicmaps at startup * a rake task to migrate the topic maps backends in your rails application. ==== Quickstart - new Rails project For a new Rails application these are the complete initial steps: jruby -S rails my_topicmaps_app cd my_topicmaps_app jruby -S script/generate jdbc jruby -S script/generate topicmaps # The following lines are necessary because Rails does not have a template # for the H2 database and Ontopia does not support the Rails default SQLite3. sed -e "s/sqlite3/h2/" config/database.yml > config/database.yml.h2 mv config/database.yml.h2 config/database.yml # Prepare the database and then check if all is OK jruby -S rake topicmaps:migrate_backends jruby -S rake topicmaps:check ==== Usage inside the application When everything is fine, let's create our first topic: jruby -S script/console TM[:example].get!("http://example.org/my/first/topic") # and save the topic map TM[:example].commit Access the configured topic maps anywhere in your application like this: TM[:example] To retrieve all topics, you can do TM[:example].topics To retrieve a specific topic by its subject identifier: TM[:example].get("http://example.org/my/topic") Commit the changes to the database permanently: TM[:example].commit ... or abort the transaction: TM[:example].abort More information can be found on http://rtm.topicmapslab.de/ ==== Minimal configuration default: topicmaps: example: http://rtm.topicmapslab.de/example1/ The minimal configuration creates a single topic map, named :example with the locator given. This topic map will be persisted in the same database as your ActiveRecord connection if not specified otherwise. The default backend is OntopiaRDBMS (from the rtm-ontopia gem). A more complete configuration can be found in config/topicmaps.example.yml after running "jruby script/generate topicmaps". It also includes how to specifiy multiple connections to different data stores and so on. ==== Topic Maps Topic Maps is an international industry standard (ISO13250) for interchangeably representing information about the structure of information resources used to define topics, and the relationships between topics. A set of one or more interrelated documents that employs the notation defined by this International Standard is called a topic map. A topic map defines a multidimensional topic space - a space in which the locations are topics, and in which the distances between topics are measurable in terms of the number of intervening topics which must be visited in order to get from one topic to another, and the kinds of relationships that define the path from one topic to another, if any, through the intervening topics, if any. In addition, information objects can have properties, as well as values for those properties, assigned to them. The Topic Maps Data Model which is used in this implementation can be found on http://www.isotopicmaps.org/sam/sam-model/. ==== License Copyright 2009 Topic Maps Lab, University of Leipzig. Apache License, Version 2.0
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