Shared debug workspace pipeline for investigating Meticulous diffs and replays
Fork of pretty-format with support for ESM
Tap plugin that adds a heaping pile of assertion methods. Pretty much all of the "test" methods other than `t.pass`, `t.fail`, and [snapshot methods](https://tapjs.github.io/tapjs/modules/_tapjs_snapshot.html) come from this plugin.
react-wastage-monitor, but shows pretty diffs when props changed but HTML did not.
No description provided.
See nodejs errors with less clutter
Reporter for node:test that supports colorful diffs etc
Prettifier for Pino log lines
Stringify any JavaScript value.
Opinionated HTML formatter focused towards making HTML diffs readable.
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.
Convert milliseconds to a human readable string: `1337000000` → `15d 11h 23m 20s`
for adding, subtracting, and indexing discontinuous ranges of numbers
Convert bytes to a human readable string: 1337 → 1.34 kB
<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>
Fast Diff to colorized HTML
TypeScript definitions for pretty-hrtime
process.hrtime() to words
Clean up error stack traces
[![npm version][npm-v-src]][npm-v-href] [![npm downloads][npm-d-src]][npm-d-href] [![status][github-actions-src]][github-actions-href]
Some tweaks for beautifying HTML with js-beautify according to my preferences.
Beautiful code for your MD/MDX docs.
A simple ruby module to enable conventiently colored diffs in your minitest suite.
Transform diff text to pretty html.
Uses the unix diff utility to create pretty html diffs from two files or two strings.
Compare two JSON objects with pretty diffs
A pretty, html-formatted git diff
Purdytest extends minitest with pretty colors. Simply require minitest, then require purdytest, and you have colorific output on your terminal! For colorized diff output, make sure you have `colordiff` installed.