Get Clean Reading Content from every web page
Blob & File implementation in Node.js, originally from node-fetch.
Add support for more integer widths to Buffer
A lightweight Node.js module to recursively read files in a directory using ES6 Promises
the complete solution for node.js command-line programs
smart-buffer is a Buffer wrapper that adds automatic read & write offset tracking, string operations, data insertions, and more.
Module for reading .pgpass
Kendo UI TreeView for Angular
LaunchDarkly Server-Side SDK for Node.js
read and write binary structures and data types
Babel transform for Flow Enums.
The Node.js bindings of the humanfs library.
Get stdin as a string or Uint8Array
Contains parsers and serializers for ASN.1 (currently BER only)
A small fast zlib stream built on [minipass](http://npm.im/minipass) and Node.js's zlib binding.
Deploy your site to a Node.js server
SWC node register
node.js library for reading and extraction of ZIP archives
Stripe API wrapper
The Node Plugin for Nx contains generators and executors to manage Node applications within an Nx workspace.
An implementation of window.fetch in Node.js using Minipass streams
Create and modify PDF files with JavaScript
Official library for using the Slack Platform's Web API
A minimal fork of nanospy, with more features
Diggr is a ruby wrapper for the Digg API. Diggr strives to remain consistent with the Digg API endpoints listed here: http://apidoc.digg.com/CompleteList. Endpoints are created in Diggr with method calls. Each node in an endpoint becomes a method call and each node which is an argument becomes an argument to the previous method. As an example, the following endpoint /user/{user name} in which the user name is "johndoe" would be created with this Diggr call: diggr.user("johndoe") To send the request to the Digg API and retrieve the results of the call, Diggr requests are terminated in one of two ways. 1. Using the fetch method. By ending your request with the fetch method, your result will be returned to you. If the request is singular, you will receive a single object as a response. If the request is plural, you will receive a collection of objects stored in an array. 2. Using any Enumerable method. In this case, it is unnecessary to use the fetch method. See the synopsis for examples of each of these types of calls. Options such as count or offset can be set using the options method and providing a hash of arguments. See synopsis for more information. Note: In an effort to remain consistent with the Digg API, some method names do not follow the ruby idiom of underscores. Although somewhat ugly, this allows a user to read the Digg API and understand the exact methods to call in Diggr to achieve their desired results.
Diggr is a ruby wrapper for the Digg API. Diggr strives to remain consistent with the Digg API endpoints listed here: http://apidoc.digg.com/CompleteList. Endpoints are created in Diggr with method calls. Each node in an endpoint becomes a method call and each node which is an argument becomes an argument to the previous method. As an example, the following endpoint /user/{user name} in which the user name is "johndoe" would be created with this Diggr call: diggr.user("johndoe") To send the request to the Digg API and retrieve the results of the call, Diggr requests are terminated in one of two ways. 1. Using the fetch method. By ending your request with the fetch method, your result will be returned to you. If the request is singular, you will receive a single object as a response. If the request is plural, you will receive a collection of objects stored in an array. 2. Using any Enumerable method. This works only on plural requests. In this case, it is unnecessary to use the fetch method. See the synopsis for examples of each of these types of calls. Options such as count or offset can be set using the options method and providing a hash of arguments. See synopsis for more information. Note: In an effort to remain consistent with the Digg API, some method names do not follow the ruby idiom of underscores. Although somewhat ugly, this allows a user to read the Digg API and understand the exact methods to call in Diggr to achieve their desired results.
Diggr is a ruby wrapper for the Digg API. Diggr strives to remain consistent with the Digg API endpoints listed here: http://apidoc.digg.com/CompleteList. Endpoints are created in Diggr with method calls. Each node in an endpoint becomes a method call and each node which is an argument becomes an argument to the previous method. As an example, the following endpoint /user/{user name} in which the user name is "johndoe" would be created with this Diggr call: diggr.user("johndoe") To send the request to the Digg API and retrieve the results of the call, Diggr requests are terminated in one of two ways. 1. Using the fetch method. By ending your request with the fetch method, your result will be returned to you. If the request is singular, you will receive a single object as a response. If the request is plural, you will receive a collection of objects stored in an array. 2. Using any Enumerable method. In this case, it is unnecessary to use the fetch method. See the synopsis for examples of each of these types of calls. Options such as count or offset can be set using the options method and providing a hash of arguments. See synopsis for more information. Note: In an effort to remain consistent with the Digg API, some method names do not follow the ruby idiom of underscores. Although somewhat ugly, this allows a user to read the Digg API and understand the exact methods to call in Diggr to achieve their desired results.
Diff and patch tables
Diff and patch tables
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.