Easily format the time from node.js `process.hrtime`. Works with timescales ranging from weeks to nanoseconds.
TypeScript definitions for pretty-time
Pretty time zone: `+2` or `-9:30`
Representing seconds in pretty time format
Pretty time zone: `+2` or `-9:30`
Convert decimal time to pretty time string and vise versa
Prettifier for Pino log lines
Fork of pretty-format with support for ESM
<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>
Convert milliseconds to a human readable string: `1337000000` → `15d 11h 23m 20s`
pretty time-series line graphs
See nodejs errors with less clutter
Pretty time zone: `+2` or `-9:30`.优化时区
Stringify any JavaScript value.
Cache-control header utility that parses human readable time strings into seconds.
The best of both `JSON.stringify(obj)` and `JSON.stringify(obj, null, indent)`.
Get Pretty Quick
Incremental parser
for adding, subtracting, and indexing discontinuous ranges of numbers
Convert bytes to a human readable string: 1337 → 1.34 kB
process.hrtime() to words
TypeScript definitions for pretty-hrtime
[![npm version][npm-v-src]][npm-v-href] [![npm downloads][npm-d-src]][npm-d-href] [![status][github-actions-src]][github-actions-href]
Prettifies NDJSON (Newline Delimited JSON) logs, like `bunyan -o short` but actually pretty.
Serializes time to pretty time string and vica-versa
Jitterbug provides on-demand text header images using the font of your choice. On its first request, Jitterbug creates the requested header graphic. Then, and on subsequent requests, it returns an html image tag pointing to the header graphic file.
Display relative date/times in words and show the absolute time on mouseover.
An Elasticsearch client library
Jitimage provides on-demand text header images using the font of your choice. On its first request, Jitimage creates the requested header graphic. Then, and on subsequent requests, it returns an html image tag pointing to the header graphic file.
This thing is pretty old. There are much better ways of debugging in a complex application. But, you know, I keep returning to this little method time after time. I guess that marks me as a geezer.
A simple ruby gem that provides a pretty web interface to track apache server status in real time.
Makes pretty, high-res backgrounds from the real-time photos of Earth by Himawari8, or is intended for similar personal usage. Please see the readme for more!
When using GHUnit from the command line to run your tests, it gets pretty verbose. So you're spending time combing through the results. Time you could have been spending on ready hackernews; so let's change that.
(***moved to the gem 'vaccine-spotter'***) This gem will notify you when COVID-19 vaccine appointments are available matching certain criteria (a list of zip codes, type of vaccine, etc). It currently pretty much just wraps the very beta API from the absolutely wonderful vaccinespotter.org, though I hope to add my own website scraping soon too so as to improve response times.
zenprofiler helps answer WHAT is being called the most. spy_on helps answer WHERE those calls are being made. ZenProfiler provides a faster version of the standard library ruby profiler. It is otherwise pretty much the same as before. spy_on provides a clean way to redefine a bottleneck method so you can account for and aggregate all the calls to it. % ruby -Ilib bin/zenprofile misc/factorial.rb 50000 Total time = 3.056884 Total time = 2.390000 total self self total % time seconds seconds calls ms/call ms/call name 50.70 1.64 1.64 50000 0.03 0.05 Integer#downto 19.63 2.27 0.63 200000 0.00 0.00 Fixnum#* 14.19 2.73 0.46 50000 0.01 0.05 Factorial#factorial 9.93 3.05 0.32 1 320.36 3047.10 Range#each 5.54 3.23 0.18 2 89.40 178.79 ZenProfiler#start_hook Once you know that Integer#downto takes 50% of the entire run, you can use spy_on to find it. (See misc/factorial.rb for the actual code): % SPY=1 ruby -Ilib misc/factorial.rb 50000 Spying on Integer#downto Integer.downto 50000: total 50000: ./misc/factorial.rb:6:in `factorial' via ./misc/factorial.rb:6:in `factorial'
The Blogger module provides services related to Blogger, and only blogger. The GData gem is great, but it provides a much lower-level interface to Google's Blogger API. With the Blogger gem, you have full access to the Blogger API, with easy to use classes, and it integrates with 6 different markup/markdown gems! What's more, you won't have to muck around with XML. Sure, XML is easy. But why waste time messing around with it? With just 3 or 4 lines of Blogger.gem code, you'll be able to take a markdown-formatted string and post it as a blog post, with categories, and comments. You can also search through all of your comments, old posts, and pretty much anything you can do at the blogger.com website, you can do with this gem.
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