A Tiny FP TS Library
Let your JS API users either give you a callback or receive a promise
Minimal module to check if a file is executable.
Parse, Resolve, and Dereference JSON Schema $ref pointers
Maybe/Optional type implementation in Typescript. Main motivation for creating this library was handling `null` values in deeply nested data, coming from GraphQL APIs, but the library itself is not limited to GraphQL.
Map of named character references from HTML 4
Map of named character references
List of legacy HTML named character references that don’t need a trailing semicolon
Parse, Resolve, and Dereference JSON Schema $ref pointers
Transform stream that gunzips its input if it is gzipped and just echoes it if not
Sort-of-strong, but also loose email address validator which uses the same regex as Angular 1.
Transform stream that decompress its input if it's compressed, and echoes it if not
Fast and easy-to-use dynamic C FFI (foreign function interface) for Node.js
Parse, Resolve, and Dereference JSON Schema $ref pointers
Parse, Resolve, and Dereference JSON Schema $ref pointers
An evented streaming XML parser in JavaScript
Combine 0 or more errors into one
The default blueprint for ember-cli addons.
No description provided.
Generates and consumes source maps
Ember AST transform for the in-element helper
TypeScript definitions for gunzip-maybe
tar-stream is a streaming tar parser and generator and nothing else. It operates purely using streams which means you can easily extract/parse tarballs without ever hitting the file system.
Implementation of common algebraic types in JavaScript + Flow
Chance is a little Ruby library for expressing uncertainty in your code. Maybe you always wanted to program with probability?
This is actually just httparty, with that stupid post-install message removed. You should probably just use the real one and maybe complain at https://github.com/jnunemaker/httparty/pull/139
This is just a REALLY simple RubyGem that will return a random Mitch Hedberg quote. I decided to do this after taking a course on Ruby - I thought I could force it into being a little more complicated to test some of what I learned.... but this is about as simple as it gets. From a pure OO standpoint, there probably are some issues with this implementation, regardless of how simple it is. The Quote object probably shouldn't handle printing to the screen. But that's how I did it... maybe I'll enhance it that. Maybe make a Printable mix-in that handle outputting in different format?
No description provided.
No description provided.