Scripts toolbox for Orckestra
The AI coding CLI powered by OpenRouter.
Fork of pretty-format with support for ESM
Format numbers for human consumption.
Shared code for Orckestra applications
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/util-format-url) [](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sd
Stringify any JavaScript value.
Formatting Date objects as strings since 2013
JavaScript sprintf implementation
Use unquoted format on @font-face CSS definitions.
Self-refreshing, token-aware multi-agent orchestration over Markdown.
Solves a problem with util.format
HTTP request logger middleware for node.js
TypeScript definitions for d3-format
React component to format number in an input or as a text.
TypeScript definitions for d3-time-format
Format commitlint reports
fast-csv formatting module
Component Story Format (CSF) utilities
Date formatting and parsing
A JavaScript time formatter and parser inspired by strftime and strptime.
option parsing and help generation
An mutable object-based log format designed for chaining & objectMode streams.
Formatting of objects for should.js
Dumps records to Orc format file.
BlueCloth is a Ruby implementation of John Gruber's Markdown[http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/], a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. To quote from the project page: Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML). It borrows a naming convention and several helpings of interface from {Redcloth}[http://redcloth.org/], Why the Lucky Stiff's processor for a similar text-to-HTML conversion syntax called Textile[http://www.textism.com/tools/textile/]. BlueCloth 2 is a complete rewrite using David Parsons' Discount[http://www.pell.portland.or.us/~orc/Code/discount/] library, a C implementation of Markdown. I rewrote it using the extension for speed and accuracy; the original BlueCloth was a straight port from the Perl version that I wrote in a few days for my own use just to avoid having to shell out to Markdown.pl, and it was quite buggy and slow. I apologize to all the good people that sent me patches for it that were never released. Note that the new gem is called 'bluecloth' and the old one 'BlueCloth'. If you have both installed, you can ensure you're loading the new one with the 'gem' directive: # Load the 2.0 version gem 'bluecloth', '>= 2.0.0' # Load the 1.0 version gem 'BlueCloth' require 'bluecloth'