Torrent name metadata parser
Convert a names of sql schemes from camelcase to snake case.
Pure-rust DNS protocol parser library. This does not support network, only raw protocol parser.
Reasoning and tool-calling parsers for OpenAI-compatible inference output.
DNS protocol parser
A library for decoding, classifying, normalizing, and re-emitting mangled, decorated, and runtime symbol names across a wide spread of compiler, platform, and language ecosystems.
Release-name parser ported from Sonarr v4.0.17.2952
Perl qualified-name parsing, splitting, and validation helpers
Simple set of extensions privided for torrent-name-parser
DNS name parsing with public suffix lookup
Tag Path — parse, lint, and search tag-based identifiers across languages
DSN (Data Source Name) parser
Parses particular kinds of strings. For now, it only handles parsing people names.
human_name_parser is intended to split names into their component parts.
========================================================= Name Parse Copyright (c) 2009 The Rubyists (Jayson Vaughn, Tj Vanderpoel, Michael Fellinger, Kevin Berry) Distributed under the terms of the MIT License. ========================================================== About ----- A ruby library for turning arbitrary name strings such as "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk" into a standardized object usable as parsed = NameParse::Parser.new("Dr Helen Hunt") puts "%s %s" % [parsed.first, parsed.last] Requirements ------------ - ruby (>= 1.8) Usage ----- Example of using on a list: bougyman@zero:~/git_checkouts/name_parse$ irb -r lib/name_parse irb(main):001:0> list = ["Jayson Vaughn", "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk"] => ["Jayson Vaughn", "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk"] irb(main):002:0> list.map { |n| p = NameParse[n]; [p.first, p.last] } => [["Jayson", "Vaughn"], ["Helen", "Hunt"], ["James", "Kirk"]] Support ------- Home page at http://github.com/bougyman/name_parse #rubyists on FreeNode
========================================================= Name Parse Copyright (c) 2009 The Rubyists (Jayson Vaughn, Tj Vanderpoel, Michael Fellinger, Kevin Berry) Distributed under the terms of the MIT License. ========================================================== About ----- A ruby library for turning arbitrary name strings such as "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk" into a standardized object usable as parsed = NameParse::Parser.new("Dr Helen Hunt") puts "%s %s" % [parsed.first, parsed.last] Requirements ------------ - ruby (>= 1.8) Usage ----- Example of using on a list: bougyman@zero:~/git_checkouts/name_parse$ irb -r lib/name_parse irb(main):001:0> list = ["Jayson Vaughn", "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk"] => ["Jayson Vaughn", "Dr Helen Hunt", "Mr James T. Kirk"] irb(main):002:0> list.map { |n| p = NameParse[n]; [p.first, p.last] } => [["Jayson", "Vaughn"], ["Helen", "Hunt"], ["James", "Kirk"]] Support ------- Home page at http://github.com/bougyman/name_parse #rubyists on FreeNode
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.