A simple tool, which prints a sweet boxes with text to your console
Vue-Pretty-Box is a powerful library designed specifically for VueJS 3, providing enhanced image viewing capabilities within your Vue applications. This versatile library allows you to effortlessly integrate zoom functionality for both single images and i
React-Pretty-Box is a ReactJS 18 library that enhances image viewing in web applications. It enables zoom functionality for single images or galleries, allowing users to explore visuals in greater detail. With intuitive controls like pinch-to-zoom and pan
Fork of pretty-format with support for ESM
Convert an object or array into a formatted string
See nodejs errors with less clutter
Prettifier for Pino log lines
Stringify any JavaScript value.
The best of both `JSON.stringify(obj)` and `JSON.stringify(obj, null, indent)`.
Get Pretty Quick
Easily format the time from node.js `process.hrtime`. Works with timescales ranging from weeks to nanoseconds.
for adding, subtracting, and indexing discontinuous ranges of numbers
Convert bytes to a human readable string: 1337 → 1.34 kB
Convert milliseconds to a human readable string: `1337000000` → `15d 11h 23m 20s`
process.hrtime() to words
<h1 align="center"> <img alt="" width="75" src="https://github.com/cucumber.png"/> <br> pretty-formatter </h1> <p align="center"> <b>Rich formatting of Cucumber progress and results for the terminal</b> </p>
TypeScript definitions for pretty-hrtime
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Beautiful code for your MD/MDX docs.
Clean up error stack traces
Some tweaks for beautifying HTML with js-beautify according to my preferences.
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A packing algorithm for 2D bin packing. Largely based on code and a blog post by Jake Gordon.
Pretty formatter for ESLint
A little gem for generating pretty multiline comment boxes in C/C++ templates
This plugin turns unsightly select boxes into pretty, searchable, drop down unordered list that you can style.
pry-suite is designed to set up a nice Pry ecosystem out of the box. You are given Pry with access to a suite of great plugins. This list is currently comprised of pry-byebug (or pry-debugger for Ruby 1.9.x), pry-doc, pry-docmore, pry-git, pry-highlight, pry-macro, pry-pretty-numeric, pry-rescue and pry-stack_explorer. Finally, the gist gem is also included to enable Pry's gist command.
Minienigma it's a simple to use string encrypting/decrypting machine out of the box. It uses a AES 256 CBC algorithm which makes your data pretty secure this days. In order to use it, make sure to configure it using MiniEnigma.configure(key, iv) where key and iv needs to be a combination of characters. Key must be 32 characters long. Iv must be 16 characters long. Then to encrypt just call MiniEnigma.encrypt('your insecure data here'). To decrypt MiniEnigma.decrypt('your secure data here'). PD: A nice place to get secure key and iv: http://randomkeygen.com
== E9Tags An extension to ActsAsTaggableOn[http://github.com/mbleigh/acts-as-taggable-on] which "improves" on custom tagging, or at least makes it more dynamic. Additionally it provides some autocomplete rack apps and the corresponding javascript. == Installation 1. E9Tags requires jquery and jquery-ui for the autocompletion and tag-adding form, be sure they're loaded in your pages where the tags form will be rendered. 2. E9Tags extends ActsAsTaggableOn and requires it. Run it's generator if you have not. 3. Run the E9Tags install script to copy over the required JS rails g e9_tags:install 4. Then make sure it is loaded, how you do that doesn't matter, e.g. <%= javascript_include_tag 'e9_tags' %> 5. Create an initializer for that sets up the taggable models and their controllers. This gives the models the tag associations and methods and prepares their controller to handle the otherwise unexpected tag params. require 'e9_tags' require 'contacts_controller' require 'contact' E9Tags.controllers << ContactsController E9Tags.models << Contact OR You can just include the modules in your classes yourself. The first way really exists for the case where the classes you wish to extend are part of another plugin/gem. # in contact.rb include E9Tags:Model # in contacts_controller.rb include E9Tags::Controller 6. Render the tags form partial in whatever model forms require it. = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f If you pass a context, it will be locked and no longer possible to change/add the contexts on the form (and as a side effect, the tags autocompletion will be restricted to that context). = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f, :context => :users Finally if you pass a 2nd arg to :context you can set a tag context to be "private" (default is false). In this case the tag context will be locked as private (typically suffixed with *), meaning that the tags will not be publicly searchable/visible. This is useful for organizational tags tags, say if you wanted to arbitrarily group records, or create a custom search based on a tag context. = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f, :context => [:users, true] NOTE: The form and javascript are intended to work out of the box, but the certainly aren't going to look pretty. If you do intend to use the forms, you'll no doubt need to style them.
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