Now template for Release
An efficient queue capable of managing thousands of concurrent animations.
Dedicated types library for ramda
utils for daybrush
mutex lock for javascript
Node.js Streams, a user-land copy of the stream library from Node.js
Microsoft Application Insights Core Javascript SDK
JavaScript APG, an ABNF Parser Generator
Typescript transformer to unlock automatic mock creation for interfaces and classes
Library for fetching Country, its States and Cities
Microsoft Application Insights Common JavaScript Library
Node.js releases data
A browser polyfill for W3C EventSource (http://www.w3.org/TR/eventsource/)
A npm package wrapper for OpenAPI Generator (https://github.com/OpenAPITools/openapi-generator), generates which API client libraries (SDK generation), server stubs, documentation and configuration automatically given an OpenAPI Spec (v2, v3)
A generic context menu
Installs the protocol buffer compiler "protoc" for you.
A robust & optimized `String.fromCodePoint` polyfill, based on the ECMAScript 6 specification.
A CLI utility to add SOTA and POTA references to an existing ADIF file
The most complete library for Bar, Line, Area, Pie, Donut, Stacked Bar, Population Pyramid, Radar, Bubble and SCatter charts in React Native. Allows 2D, 3D, gradient, animations and live data updates.
Automated semver compliant package publishing
React Native Appsflyer plugin
Analyze the exported API for a TypeScript library and generate reviews, documentation, and .d.ts rollups
semantic-release plugin to publish a GitHub release and comment on released Pull Requests/Issues
Amazon Connect Streams Library
A drop in replacement for Ruby's memcache-client.Now with a stable jruby-memcached-release jar.
This alpha release of Bookkeeper is intended for community feedback; please be advised that it will undergo significant changes between now and its 1.0 release.
rpairtree is deprecated; please use pairtree instead, which is now being maintained. rpairtree 0.3.0 and pairtree 0.3.0 are identical. There will be no further releases of rpairtree.
This is an update to the old `gem mirror` command. It uses net/http/persistent and threads to grab the mirror set a little faster than the original. Eventually it will replace `gem mirror` completely. Right now the API is not completely stable (it will change several times before release), however, I will maintain stability in master.
The mime-types library provides a library and registry for information about MIME content type definitions. It can be used to determine defined filename extensions for MIME types, or to use filename extensions to look up the likely MIME type definitions. Version 3.0 is a major release that requires Ruby 2.0 compatibility and removes deprecated functions. The columnar registry format introduced in 2.6 has been made the primary format; the registry data has been extracted from this library and put into [mime-types-data][data]. Additionally, mime-types is now licensed exclusively under the MIT licence and there is a code of conduct in effect. There are a number of other smaller changes described in the History file.
We have deprecated the legacy Oso open source library. We have plans for the next open source release and we're looking forward to getting feedback from the community leading up to that point (please reach out to us in the Slack #help channel). In the meantime, if you're happy using the Oso open source library now, nothing needs to change – i.e., we are not end-of-lifing (EOL) the library and we'll continue to provide support and critical bug fixes. More context: [here](https://www.osohq.com/docs/oss/getting-started/deprecation.html).
Minimal CMS Rails Engine or more likelly a "static" pages manager. Pages can be created, deleted, edited and arranged into sections using a file tree like interface courtesy of jQuery tree (http://jstree.com). It attempts to be as minimal, flexible and unobtrusive as posible leaving a lot of functionality like templating languages and authentication/authorization for page creation, deletion and editing for the Rails app developer to implement. (It now works after premature release)
Short String Compression for Ruby. RSmaz is a pure-Ruby port of the Smaz short string compression algorithm by Salvatore Sanfilippo and released as a C library at: http://github.com/antirez/smaz/tree/master I've done some initial cleanup of a pure Ruby->C port, but this is not yet complete. It does pass the specs, however! Feel free to clean it up as it's a bit memory inefficient right now... :)
Short String Compression for Ruby. RSmaz is a pure-Ruby port of the Smaz short string compression algorithm by Salvatore Sanfilippo and released as a C library at: http://github.com/antirez/smaz/tree/master I've done some initial cleanup of a pure Ruby->C port, but this is not yet complete. It does pass the specs, however! Feel free to clean it up as it's a bit memory inefficient right now... :)
= The Owasp ESAPI Ruby project == Introduction The Owasp ESAPI Ruby is a port for outstanding release quality Owasp ESAPI project to the Ruby programming language. Ruby is now a famous programming language due to its Rails framework developed by David Heinemeier Hansson (http://twitter.com/dhh) that simplify the creation of a web application using a convention over configuration approach to simplify programmers' life. Despite Rails diffusion, there are a lot of Web framework out there that allow people to write web apps in Ruby (merb, sinatra, vintage) [http://accidentaltechnologist.com/ruby/10-alternative-ruby-web-frameworks/]. Owasp Esapi Ruby wants to bring all Ruby deevelopers a gem full of Secure APIs they can use whatever the framework they choose. == Why supporting only Ruby 1.9.2 and beyond? The OWASP Esapi Ruby gem will require at least version 1.9.2 of Ruby interpreter to make sure to have full advantages of the newer language APIs. In particular version 1.9.2 introduces radical changes in the following areas: === Regular expression engine (to be written) === UTF-8 support Unicode support in 1.9.2 is much better and provides better support for character set encoding/decoding * All strings have an additional chunk of info attached: Encoding * String#size takes encoding into account – returns the encoded character count * You can get the raw datasize * Indexed access is by encoded data – characters, not bytes * You can change encoding by force but it doesn’t convert the data === Dates and Time From "Programming Ruby 1.9" "As of Ruby 1.9.2, the range of dates that can be represented is no longer limited by the under- lying operating system’s time representation (so there’s no year 2038 problem). As a result, the year passed to the methods gm, local, new, mktime, and utc must now include the century—a year of 90 now represents 90 and not 1990." == Roadmap Please see ChangeLog file. == Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * Create documentation with rake yard task * Make your feature addition or bug fix. * Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull) * Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches. == Copyright Copyright (c) 2011 the OWASP Foundation. See LICENSE for details.
Diff and patch tables
YPetri is a DSL (domain-specific language) for modelling of dynamical systems. It is biologically inspired, but concerns of biology and chemistry have been purposely separated away from it. YPetri caters solely to the two main concerns of modelling, model specification and simulation, and it excels in the first one. Dynamical systems are described under a Petri net paradigm. YPetri implements a universal Petri net abstraction that integrates discrete/continous, timed/timeless and stoichiometric/nonstoichiometric dichotomies of the extended Petri nets, and allows efficient specification of any kind of dynamical system. Like Petri nets themselves, YPetri was inspired by problems from the domain of chemistry (biochemical pathway modelling), but is not specific to it. Other gems, YChem and YCell are planned to cater to the concerns specific to chemistry and cell biochemistry. A lower-level extension of YPetri is currently under development under the name YNelson. Its usage is practically identical to YPetri, so any YPetri user can now consider using YNelson instead. YNelson covers additional concerns: it allows relations among nodes and parameters to be specified under a zz structure paradigm (developed by Ted Nelson) and it is also aimed towards providing a higher level of abstraction in Petri net specification by providing commands that create more than one Petri net node per command. YPetri documentation is avalable online, but due to formatting issues, you may prefer to generate the documentation on your own by running rdoc in the gem directory. As for the user manuals, there are currently 3 documents applicable for both YPetri and YNelson, whose master copies are stored in the YNelson source directory: 1. Introduction to YNelson and YPetri (hands-on tutorial), 2. Object model of YNelson and YPetri, 3. Introduction to Ruby for YNelson users. These manuals are written to allow beginners, including those unfamiliar with Ruby, to start working with YPetri and/or YNelson. For an example of how YPetri can be used to model complex dynamical systems, see the eukaryotic cell cycle model which I released as "cell_cycle" gem.
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