Parse performance test results from JMeter and many more
A very fast HTML parser, generating a simplified DOM, with basic element query support.
Intl.LocaleMatcher ponyfill
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/jsdoc-type-pratt-parser) []
Easily measure performance metrics in JavaScript
A very fast HTML parser, generating a simplified DOM, with basic element query support.
A tool set for CSS: fast detailed parser (CSS → AST), walker (AST traversal), generator (AST → CSS) and lexer (validation and matching) based on specs and browser implementations
Fastest, most accurate & effecient user agent string parser, uses Browserscope's research for parsing
Fast & forgiving HTML/XML parser
Low footprint ECMAScript source code parser
Powerful and compliant CSS selector parser.
parse the test anything protocol
Javascript Redis protocol (RESP) parser
An evented streaming XML parser in JavaScript
Streaming CSV parser that aims for maximum speed as well as compatibility with the csv-spectrum test suite
walk paths fast and efficiently
Oxc Minifier Node API
parser for xcodeproj/project.pbxproj files
Parse test results from JUnit, TestNG, xUnit, cucumber and many more
A small, fast, and correct TOML parser/serializer
A utility package to parse strings
A JavaScript parser
An implementation of the WebDriver BiDi protocol for Chromium implemented as a JavaScript layer translating between BiDi and CDP, running inside a Chrome tab.
the mighty option parser used by yargs
A simple Ruby natural language parser for elapsed time. (For example, 4 hours and 30 minutes, 6 minutes 4 seconds, 3 days, etc.) Returns all results in seconds. Will return an integer unless you get tricky and need a float. (4 minutes and 13.47 seconds, for example.) The reverse can also be performed via the output method.
A simple Ruby natural language parser for elapsed time. (For example, 4 hours and 30 minutes, 6 minutes 4 seconds, 3 days, etc.) Returns all results in seconds. Will return an integer unless you get tricky and need a float. (4 minutes and 13.47 seconds, for example.) The reverse can also be performed via the output method.
A simple Ruby natural language parser for elapsed time. (For example, 4 hours and 30 minutes, 6 minutes 4 seconds, 3 days, etc.) Returns all results in seconds. Will return an integer unless you get tricky and need a float. (4 minutes and 13.47 seconds, for example.) The reverse can also be performed via the output method.
A simple Ruby natural language parser for elapsed time. (For example, 4 hours and 30 minutes, 6 minutes 4 seconds, 3 days, etc.) Returns all results in seconds. Will return an integer unless you get tricky and need a float. (4 minutes and 13.47 seconds, for example.) The reverse can also be performed via the output method.
A simple Ruby natural language parser for elapsed time. (For example, 4 hours and 30 minutes, 6 minutes 4 seconds, 3 days, etc.) Returns all results in seconds. Will return an integer unless you get tricky and need a float. (4 minutes and 13.47 seconds, for example.) The reverse can also be performed via the output method.
==== QDox - http://qdox.codehaus.org QDox is a high speed, small footprint parser for extracting class/interface/method definitions from Java source files complete with JavaDoc @tags. It is designed to be used by active code generators or documentation tools. QDox is a Java library. Therefore this RubyGem needs JRuby. ==== Quickstart Step 1: Load your Java sources. In JRuby (or +jirb+) write: require 'qdox' builder = QDox::JavaDocBuilder.new builder.add_source_tree(java.io.File.new(".") (Source: http://qdox.codehaus.org/usage.html) Step 2: Inspect the source model. src = builder.sources.first pkg = src.package puts pkg.name # e.g. "com.bla.foo" imports = src.imports # => e.g. ["java.util.List", "java.util.Set"] some_class = src.classes.first # => a QDox::Model::JavaClass # output the javadoc comment for the first method in some_class puts some_class.methods.first.comment (Source: http://qdox.codehaus.org/model.html) As you may have noticed, the Java packages used have been aliased to shorter Ruby Module names: The Java package com.thoughtworks.qdox is the Ruby module QDox etc. ==== In a Nutshell A custom built parser has been built using JFlex and BYacc/J. These have been chosen because of their proven performance and they require no external libraries at runtime. The parser skims the source files only looking for things of interest such as class/interface definitions, import statements, JavaDoc and member declarations. The parser ignores things such as actual method implementations to avoid overhead (while in method blocks, curly brace counting suffices). The end result of the parser is a very simple document model containing enough information to be useful. ==== License Apache License, Version 2.0 QDox was created by Joe Walnes, Aslak Hellesoy, Paul Hammant, Mike Williams, Mauro Talevi, Robert Scholte, and others. The RubyGem was created by Benjamin Bock.