Create a Debian package for a binary
Deb maker for Electron Forge
Node.js utilities and TypeScript definitions for `package.json` and `tsconfig.json`
Get information on local packages.
Install package programmatically.
Resolve package.json exports & imports maps
Read a package.json file
Get the package name from a folder path
Get repository user and project information from package.json file contents.
Check the engines and platform fields in package.json
Find the first directory with a package.json, recursing up, starting with the given directory. Similar to look-up but does not support globs and only searches for package.json. Async and sync.
Create manpages, insert preinst, postinst, prerm and postrm
Cross platform updater for electron applications
Package your Node.js project into an executable
vendored packages for visx
Turn any flavor of allowable package.json bin into a normalized object
Compiles and stores base binaries for pkg
Package your Node.js project into an executable
parse the closest `package.json` and get package specific configurations
shim for require.main.filename() that works in as many environments as possible
Resolve the path of a package regardless of it having an entry point
Load the local package.json from either src or dist folder
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/pkg-prebuilds) [](https://www.npmjs.com/package/pkg-prebuilds) [ is a native-GUI cross-platform desktop development library written in JRuby, an OS-threaded faster JVM version of Ruby. It includes SWT 4.30 (released on December 1, 2023). Glimmer's main innovation is a declarative Ruby DSL that enables productive and efficient authoring of professional-grade desktop applications by relying on the robust Eclipse SWT library, with the familiar native look, feel, and behavior of GUI on Mac, Windows, and Linux. Glimmer additionally innovates by having built-in data-binding support, which greatly facilitates synchronizing the GUI with domain models, thus achieving true decoupling of object oriented components and enabling developers to solve business problems (test-first) without worrying about GUI concerns, or alternatively drive development GUI-first, and then write clean business models (test-first) afterwards. Not only does Glimmer provide a large set of GUI widgets, but it also supports drawing Canvas Graphics like Shapes and Animations. To get started quickly, Glimmer offers scaffolding options for Apps, Gems, and Custom Widgets. Glimmer also includes native-executable packaging support, sorely lacking in other libraries, thus enabling the delivery of desktop apps written in Ruby as truly native DMG/PKG/APP files on the Mac, MSI/EXE files on Windows, and DEB/RPM files on Linux. Glimmer was the first Ruby gem to bring SWT (Standard Widget Toolkit) to Ruby, thanks to creator Andy Maleh, EclipseCon/EclipseWorld/RubyConf speaker. If you liked Shoes, You'll love Glimmer!
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