Consistent, accessible, importable breakpoints
Takes a grid of values (GeoJSON format) and a set of threshold ranges. It outputs polygons that group areas within those ranges, effectively creating filled contour isobands.
Encodings that map abstract data to visual representation.
remark plugin to add break support, without needing spaces
Generate contour lines from a grid of data.
mdast utility to support hard breaks without needing spaces or escapes
Check if the character represented by a given Unicode code point is fullwidth
A function to parse floating point hexadecimal strings as defined by the WebAssembly specification
a point geometry with transforms
WordPress's automatic paragraph functions `autop` and `removep`.
remark-lint rule to warn when too many spaces are used to create a hard break
Read/write IEEE754 floating point numbers from/to a Buffer or array-like object
OpenTelemetry semantic conventions
A point in polygon based on the paper Optimal Reliable Point-in-Polygon Test and Differential Coding Boolean Operations on Polygons
Estimate points on a bezier curve or a set of connexted bezier curves
Find the position of grapheme cluster breaks in a string
Provides fast access to unicode character properties
determine if a point is inside a polygon with a ray intersection counting algorithm
Fill a polygon with lines
A CSS reset for TypeScript, improving types for common JavaScript API's
Finds the nearest point on a line to a given point
helpers for rocambole AST line break manipulation
visx point
Checks if a point is inside an area, like a city boundary.
Create Microsoft Word (.docx) files.
A minimal implementation of integration testing within RSpec. Allows you to build sequential specs, each with a description, but where state is maintained between tests and before/after actions are only triggered at the beginning and end of the entire sequence. Cool things you can do with this: * Build multi-step user stories in plain RSpec syntax. Locate the point of failure quickly, and break up large integrations into sensible steps * Speed up groups of related tests by running your factories only once before the whole group.
= Ungulate According to Wikipedia, this can mean "hoofed animal". Camels have hooves. This is a gem for uploading and processing images using an Amazon Web Services stack. It comes with a few goodies: * ungulate_server.rb - simple queue runner that expects a YAML-encoded job description for RMagick * Ungulate::FileUpload - a model for e.g. Rails that does some cryptography stuff - example to follow * A view helper for Rails: "ungulate_upload_form_for" == Installation gem install ungulate == Documentation http://wiki.github.com/camelpunch/ungulate/ == Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * 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 Camel Punch Limited. See LICENSE for details.
= sinatra-mongo Extends Sinatra with an extension method for dealing with monogodb using the ruby driver. Install it with gem: $ gem install sinatra-mongo Now we can use it an example application. require 'sinatra' require 'sinatra/mongo' # Specify the database to use. Defaults to mongo://localhost:27017/default, # so you will almost definitely want to change this. # # Alternatively, you can specify the MONGO_URL as an environment variable set :mongo, 'mongo://localhost:27017/sinatra-mongo-example' # At this point, you can access the Mongo::Database object using the 'mongo' helper: puts mongo["testCollection"].insert {"name" => "MongoDB", "type" => "database", "count" => 1, "info" => {"x" => 203, "y" => '102'}} get '/' do mongo["testCollection"].find_one end If you need to use authentication, you can specify this in the mongo uri: set :mongo, 'mongo://myuser:mypass@localhost:27017/sinatra-mongo-example' == Mongo Reference * http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Ruby+Tutorial == Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * 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) 2009 Joshua Nichols. See LICENSE for details.
= rails_vcstatus_logger It adds current state of version control to the log when you start the server. * Currently only supports git Adds current version hash and result of `git diff` The idea is that you can be sure about what source was running when you look in the log. I recently had a situation where i wasn't sure when a change was put up on the live server. Please add support for your vc system and send me a pull request! Just add this to enivorment.rb config.gem 'bjornblomqvist-rails_vcstatus_logger', :lib => 'rails_vcstatus_logger', :source => 'http://gems.github.com' == Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * 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) 2009 Bjorn Blomqvist. See LICENSE for details.
= sinatra-mongo Extends Sinatra with an extension method for dealing with monogodb using the ruby driver. Install it with gem: $ gem install sinatra-mongo Now we can use it an example application. require 'sinatra' require 'sinatra/mongo' # Specify the database to use. Defaults to mongo://localhost:27017/default, # so you will almost definitely want to change this. # # Alternatively, you can specify the MONGO_URL as an environment variable set :mongo, 'mongo://localhost:27017/sinatra-mongo-example' # At this point, you can access the Mongo::Database object using the 'mongo' helper: puts mongo["testCollection"].insert {"name" => "MongoDB", "type" => "database", "count" => 1, "info" => {"x" => 203, "y" => '102'}} get '/' do mongo["testCollection"].find_one end If you need to use authentication, you can specify this in the mongo uri: set :mongo, 'mongo://myuser:mypass@localhost:27017/sinatra-mongo-example' == Mongo Reference * http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Ruby+Tutorial == Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * 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) 2009 Joshua Nichols. See LICENSE for details.
==== subj3ct - The DNS for the Semantic Web This is a Ruby adapter for the subj3ct.com webservice. Subj3ct is an infrastructure technology for Web 3.0 applications. These are applications that are organised around subjects and semantics rather than documents and links. Subj3ct provides the technology and services to enable Web 3.0 applications to define and exchange subject definitions. Or in other words: Subj3ct.com is for the Semantic Web what DNS is for the internet. ==== Installing Install the gem: gem install subj3ct ==== Usage Query a specific subject - to be specific: its subject identity record - using it's identifier: Subj3ct.identifier("http://www.topicmapslab.de/publications/TMRA_2009_subj3ct_a_subject_identity_resolution_service") See the README or the github page for more examples. ==== Subj3ct vs. Subject The official name is "Subj3ct", however in this API, you can also use "Subject" which may be easier to remember or to type for normal, n0n-1337 people. It should work for the gem, for the require and for the main module. ==== Contribute! Subj3ct is a young and ambitious service. It's free, will stay free and needs your help. Contribute to this library! Create bindings for other languages! Publish your data as linked data to the web and register it with subj3ct.com. ==== Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project on http://github.bb/subj3ct * 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) 2010 Benjamin Bock, Topic Maps Lab. See LICENSE for details.
==== subj3ct - The DNS for the Semantic Web This is a Ruby adapter for the subj3ct.com webservice. Subj3ct is an infrastructure technology for Web 3.0 applications. These are applications that are organised around subjects and semantics rather than documents and links. Subj3ct provides the technology and services to enable Web 3.0 applications to define and exchange subject definitions. Or in other words: Subj3ct.com is for the Semantic Web what DNS is for the internet. ==== Installing Install the gem: gem install subj3ct ==== Usage Query a specific subject - to be specific: its subject identity record - using it's identifier: Subj3ct.identifier("http://www.topicmapslab.de/publications/TMRA_2009_subj3ct_a_subject_identity_resolution_service") See the README or the github page for more examples. ==== Subj3ct vs. Subject The official name is "Subj3ct", however in this API, you can also use "Subject" which may be easier to remember or to type for normal, n0n-1337 people. It should work for the gem, for the require and for the main module. ==== Contribute! Subj3ct is a young and ambitious service. It's free, will stay free and needs your help. Contribute to this library! Create bindings for other languages! Publish your data as linked data to the web and register it with subj3ct.com. ==== Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project on http://github.bb/subj3ct * 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) 2010 Benjamin Bock, Topic Maps Lab. See LICENSE for details.
= 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.
# Addy Allows pretty summations. Instead of writing: (1..5).inject(0) do |memo, num| memo + (num**num) end You write: sum(1..5) do |num| num**num end Personally, I would rather write the latter. ## Usage Install the gem: gem install addy Then use it! require 'addy' class MyClass #include it in a class or in Object to get it everywhere include Addy def my_awesome_adder(range) sum(range) end end When you include addy on a class that implements inject, you don't even need to pass a value to it. Instead it calls sum on your class. require 'addy' class MyClass < Range include Addy def my_awesome_adder sum end end ### Calling It You can call either sum or summation. They're aliases for the same thing. Note: The following assumes Addy is included into Range. When you pass a block to sum it will execute the block on the current number before adding it to the sum. sum(1..5) {|num| num + 1} #=> 20 (1..5).sum {|num| num + 1} #=> 20 You don't have to pass a block though! #this sum(1..5) #=> 15 #and (1..5).sum #=> 15 #are equivalent to sum(1..5) {|num| num} #=> 15 #and (1..5).sum {|num| num} #=> 15 ### Input Ranges and numeric arrays both work well. sum(1..5) #=> 15 sum([1,2,3,4,5]) #=> 15 ## Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * 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) 2010 Allen Madsen. See LICENSE for details. PS: Isn't it ridiculous how much documentation I wrote for one function?
CORTO - your url shortner gem ----------------------------- - Yet another url shortner? corto is a ruby gem that shorten a URL for you and store the result in a SQLite3 database. Why the world needs another url shortener? Well, true to be told I don't know the answer and I'm pretty sure this code is far away from being revolutionary. However... corto is funniest! - Usage Using corto as standalone utility is straightforward. In case you want to shorten an url you just launch the program with the url as parameter. % bin/corto http://www.armoredcode.com % corto: http://www.armoredcode.com shrunk as ji5jnu Please note that you've to supply a valid URL, since internally it's parsed and rejected anything but HTTP and HTTPS verbs. % bin/corto funnystatementhere % corto: it seems funnystatementhere is not a valid url to shrink If you want to deflate a shrunk url, you have just to specify the '-d' flag this way. % bin/corto -d ji5jnu % corto: ji5jnu deflated is http://www.armoredcode.com Super easy, isn't it? Now, go ahead and shrink the web! - API A simple corto shortening session start with class initialization, optionally telling which SQLite3 database to use and then mastering the parameter. require 'corto' ... corto = Corto.new # we're now saying the gem we want to use it's internal database stored in db/corto.db s = corto.shrink('http://www.armoredcode.com') # s now stores the shrinked url that is already added to database if not present. # If you'll pass an invalid url to shrink(), nil will be returned instead Deflating a URL is super easy as well # The deflate process is quite straightforward as well d = corto.deflate(s) # d has now the deflated url or nil if that url was not found You can also count how many urls contained into db # If you want to know how many urls you have in your database, just call the count() method. puts 'Hey, I have stored ' + corto.count() + ' urls' And finally you can purge your db # Tired of your database and time for a massive clean has come? Let's purge the db. corto.purge # corto.count == 0 now - Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * 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 © 2011 Paolo Perego. See LICENSE for details.
== ICU4R - ICU Unicode bindings for Ruby ICU4R is an attempt to provide better Unicode support for Ruby, where it lacks for a long time. Current code is mostly rewritten string.c from Ruby 1.8.3. ICU4R is Ruby C-extension binding for ICU library[1] and provides following classes and functionality: * UString: - String-like class with internal UTF16 storage; - UCA rules for UString comparisons (<=>, casecmp); - encoding(codepage) conversion; \ - Unicode normalization; - transliteration, also rule-based; Bunch of locale-sensitive functions: - upcase/downcase; - string collation; \ - string search; - iterators over text line/word/char/sentence breaks; \ - message formatting (number/currency/string/time); - date and number parsing. * URegexp - unicode regular expressions. * UResourceBundle - access to resource bundles, including ICU locale data. * UCalendar - date manipulation and timezone info. * UConverter - codepage conversions API * UCollator - locale-sensitive string comparison == Install and usage > ruby extconf.rb > make && make check > make install Now, in your scripts just require 'icu4r'. To create RDoc, run > sh tools/doc.sh == Requirements To build and use ICU4R you will need GCC and ICU v3.4 libraries[2]. == Differences from Ruby String and Regexp classes === UString vs String 1. UString substring/index methods use UTF16 codeunit indexes, not code points. 2. UString supports most methods from String class. Missing methods are: capitalize, capitalize!, swapcase, swapcase! %, center, ljust, rjust chomp, chomp!, chop, chop! \ count, delete, delete!, squeeze, squeeze!, tr, tr!, tr_s, tr_s! crypt, intern, sum, unpack dump, each_byte, each_line hex, oct, to_i, to_sym reverse, reverse! succ, succ!, next, next!, upto 3. Instead of String#% method, UString#format is provided. See FORMATTING for short reference. 4. UStrings can be created via String.to_u(encoding='utf8') or global u(str,[encoding='utf8']) calls. Note that +encoding+ parameter must be value of String class. 5. There's difference between character grapheme, codepoint and codeunit. See UNICODE reports for gory details, but in short: locale dependent notion of character can be presented using more than one codepoint - base letter and combining (accents) (also possible more than one!), and each codepoint can require more than one codeunit to store (for UTF8 codeunit size is 8bit, though \ some codepoints require up to 4bytes). So, UString has normalization and locale dependent break iterators. 6. Currently UString doesn't include Enumerable module. 7. UString index/[] methods which accept URegexp, throw exception if Regexp passed. 8. UString#<=>, UString#casecmp use UCA rules. === URegexp UString uses ICU regexp library. Pattern syntax is described in [./docs/UNICODE_REGEXPS] and ICU docs. There are some differences between processing in Ruby Regexp and URegexp: 1. When UString#sub, UString#gsub are called with block, special vars ($~, $&, $1, ...) aren't set, as their values are processed through deep ruby core code. Instead, block receives UMatch object, which is essentially immutable array of matching groups: "test".u.gsub(ure("(e)(.)")) do |match| \ puts match[0] # => 'es' <--> $& puts match[1] # => 'e' \ <--> $1 puts match[2] # => 's' <--> $2 end 2. In URegexp search pattern backreferences are in form \n (\1, \2, ...), in replacement string - in form $1, $2, ... NOTE: URegexp considers char to be a digit NOT ONLY ASCII (0x0030-0x0039), but any Unicode char, which has property Decimal digit number (Nd), e.g.: a = [?$, 0x1D7D9].pack("U*").u * 2 puts a.inspect_names <U000024>DOLLAR SIGN <U01D7D9>MATHEMATICAL DOUBLE-STRUCK DIGIT ONE <U000024>DOLLAR SIGN <U01D7D9>MATHEMATICAL DOUBLE-STRUCK DIGIT ONE puts "abracadabra".u.gsub(/(b)/.U, a) abbracadabbra \ 3. One can create URegexp using global Kernel#ure function, Regexp#U, Regexp#to_u, or from UString using URegexp.new, e.g: /pattern/.U =~ "string".u 4. There are differences about Regexp and URegexp multiline matching options: t = "text\ntest" # ^,$ handling : URegexp multiline <-> Ruby default t.u =~ ure('^\w+$', URegexp::MULTILINE) => #<UMatch:0xf6f7de04 @ranges=[0..3], @cg=[\u0074\u0065\u0078\u0074]> t =~ /^\w+$/ => 0 # . matches \n : URegexp DOTALL <-> /m t.u =~ ure('.+test', URegexp::DOTALL) \ => #<UMatch:0xf6fa4d88 ... t.u =~ /.+test/m 5. UMatch.range(idx) returns range for capturing group idx. This range is in codeunits. === References 1. ICU Official Homepage http://ibm.com/software/globalization/icu/ 2. ICU downloads \ http://ibm.com/software/globalization/icu/downloads.jsp 3. ICU Home Page http://icu.sf.net 4. Unicode Home Page http://www.unicode.org ==== BUGS, DOCS, TO DO The code is slow and inefficient yet, is still highly experimental, so can have many security and memory leaks, bugs, inconsistent documentation, incomplete test suite. Use it at your own risk. Bug reports and feature requests are welcome :) === Copying This extension module is copyrighted free software by Nikolai Lugovoi. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of MIT License. Nikolai Lugovoi <meadow.nnick@gmail.com>