A web interface for pass (password-store)
nft-pass web client
Microsoft Application Insights Web Snippet
A better API for making Event Source requests, with all the features of fetch()
A JavaScript implementation of many web standards
Easily read/write JSON files.
Serialize JavaScript to a superset of JSON that includes regular expressions and functions.
Lightweight debugging utility for Node.js and the browser
React wrapper to pass Web MIDI API data to components using the Context API
Send parameterized requests to GitHub's APIs with sensible defaults in browsers and Node
Descope JavaScript web SDK
Web Push library for Node.js
A better API for making Event Source requests, with all the features of fetch
This package implements the Fair Pass web component to create an ecosystem of compensated content.
Signs and prepares requests using AWS Signature Version 4
Model Context Protocol inspector
Minimal web-style fetch TypeScript typings
Schematics specific to Angular
A React component wrapper for web components.
Stringify and write JSON to a file atomically
JSON Web Token implementation (symmetric and asymmetric)
A better API for making Event Source requests, with all the features of fetch()
OAuth2 (SUSI) token creation plugin for @adobe/aio-lib-ims
Array manipulation, ordering, searching, summarizing, etc.
Returns the *Best Image* found from a passed url
Boarding Pass provides a set of tools and defaults to quickly start web project front-ends.
Rack middleware that will pretty print JSON response when pretty=1 is passed as a web parameter
Use a time-sensitive cryptographic token based on a shared secret phrase to generate an authorization token for passing traffic from one web site to another.
Margrid makes it easy to add sortable and paginated tables to your web pages. Since state is passed through the query string, browser bookmarks can be used to save different views.
Secure, lightweight Rack middleware for Amazon Simple Notification Service (SNS) endpoints. SNS messages are intercepted, parsed, verified, and then passed along to the web application via the 'sns.message' environment key. Heroic::SNS has no dependencies besides Rack (specifically, the aws-sdk gem is not needed). SNS message signatures are verified in order to reject forgeries and replay attacks.
A rack middleware library that allows for cookies to be passed through form parameters. Specifically, it merges the specified form parameters into the Cookie header of an http request. It gets around the problem of having a flash application which interacts with a web application that uses cookie based sessions.
SAML 2.0 is an XML-based protocol that uses security tokens containing assertions to pass information about a principal (usually an end user) between a SAML authority, that is, an identity provider, and a SAML consumer, that is, a service provider. SAML 2.0 enables web-based authentication and authorization scenarios including cross-domain single sign-on (SSO), which helps reduce the administrative overhead of distributing multiple authentication tokens to the user.
Pmrpc (https://github.com/izuzak/pmrpc) is an HTML5 JavaScript library for message passing, remote procedure call and publish-subscribe cross-contex communication in the browser. The library provides a simple API for exposing and calling procedures between browser windows, iframes and web workers, even between different origins. Pmrpc also provides several advanced features: callbacks similar to AJAX calls, ACL-based access control, asynchronous procedure support and fault-tolerance via retries. In case this wasn't clear, pmrpc is not a library for browser-server communication, it is a library for communication within the browser.
Synfeld is a web application framework that does practically nothing. Synfeld is little more than a small wrapper for Rack::Mount (see http://github.com/josh/rack-mount). If you want a web framework that is mostly just going to serve up json blobs, and occasionally serve up some simple content (eg. help files) and media, Synfeld makes that easy. The sample app below shows pretty much everything there is to know about synfeld, in particular: * How to define routes. * Simple rendering of erb, haml, html, json, and static files. * In the case of erb and haml, passing variables into the template is demonstrated. * A dynamic action where the status code, headers, and body are created 'manually' (/my/special/route below) * A simple way of creating format sensitive routes (/alphabet.html vs. /alphabet.json) * The erb demo link also demos the rendering of a partial (not visible in the code below, you have to look at the template file examples/public/erb_files/erb_test.erb).
Asianodds Disclaimer: This gem is not officially developed by Asianodds and does not belong in any way to the Asianodds service, nor is it supported by their development team and all rights to accept or deny bets made with this gem remain with Asianodds. This gem is a wrapper for the Asianodds Web API. In order to use this gem you need to apply for a Web API account with Asianodds (api@asianodds88.com). Please keep in mind that your regular Asianodds user (for the Web Interface) does not work for your API account and vice versa. The purpose of the gem is to preconfigure all API calls to make your life as easy as just calling one method. You won"t need to MD5 hash your password (as Asianodds requests) and the gem assumes smart preconfigs for your calls, so they will work even without passing in required parameters. Still, it has the same flexibility as the original API without limitations. With just three lines of code you will be able to start placing real-time bets with multiple bookmakers and automate your trading strategies. For more information on the usage of the gem, please visit the github page
Synfeld is a web application framework that does practically nothing. Synfeld is little more than a small wrapper for Rack::Mount (see http://github.com/josh/rack-mount). If you want a web framework that is mostly just going to serve up json blobs, and occasionally serve up some simple content (eg. help files) and media, Synfeld makes that easy. The sample app below shows pretty much everything there is to know about synfeld, in particular: * How to define routes. * Simple rendering of erb, haml, html, json, and static files. * In the case of erb and haml, passing variables into the template is demonstrated. * A dynamic action where the status code, headers, and body are created 'manually' (/my/special/route below) * A simple way of creating format sensitive routes (/alphabet.html vs. /alphabet.json) * The erb demo link also demos the rendering of a partial (not visible in the code below, you have to look at the template file examples/public/erb_files/erb_test.erb).
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