Programming language colors according to GitHub.
Various helper utilities
Microsoft Azure Functions NodeJS Framework
A tiny (118 bytes), secure URL-friendly unique string ID generator
Checks that all markdown titles have a content
Functional programming in TypeScript
Distills a series of editing steps into deleted and added ranges
userland implementation of https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/5243
Syntax tree data structure and parser interfaces for the lezer parser
Highlighting system for Lezer parse trees
node.js bindings for the Apache Thrift RPC system
Simple functional programming utility & Misc programming tool
get colors in your node.js console
Incremental parser
A beautiful, enhanced logger for Drizzle ORM that transforms your SQL queries into visually appealing, color-coded output with syntax highlighting, icons, and detailed formatting.
Fast and almost Gaussian blur by Mario Klingemann
Durable Functions library for Node.js Azure Functions
Iterator library for JavaScript and TypeScript
A list of color names and its values
Easily add ANSI colors to your text and symbols in the terminal. A faster drop-in replacement for chalk, kleur and turbocolor (without the dependencies and rendering bugs).
Cloud Development Kit for Terraform
detector of copy/paste in files
SAP Cloud Application Programming Model - Multitenancy library
Render Mermaid diagrams as beautiful SVGs or ASCII art. Ultra-fast, fully themeable, zero DOM dependencies.
The ANSI project is a superlative collection of ANSI escape code related libraries enabling ANSI colorization and stylization of console output. Byte for byte ANSI is the best ANSI code library available for the Ruby programming language.
Output a colorized version of your program's usage using a Markdown document embedded in your script, from your project's README, or anywhere else.
Enables you to make good looking terminal programs with colors and text formatting.
Draw Color Repeat is a young child programming language for drawing and coloring with repetition. DCR is a minimal subset of Logo.
OpenCV is a great library for writing Computer Vision software, However, OpenCV's HSV format is different than what you would expect! This gem trys to learn HSV color range from sample images for your OpenCV program to detect color.
A library to manipulate colors. If you have ever worked with colors before in Sass or a photo-editing program then you'll fit right in! RGB, HSV, HSL, and Hex are all supported with more on the way and you can manipulate colors' alpha, saturation, brightness, hue, etc. in an easy and intuitive way.
This very simple gem was created to simplify your life in creating your log in your programs. It simply allows you to display logs of different colors, whether for a web application like RubyOnRails or for scripts.
The Squirrel Theme is a custom Jekyll theme designed for The-Programming-Squirrel's branding. Optimized for blogging, it features a playful yet professional design with a sleek color palette, integrated typography (Montserrat, Open Sans, Playfair Display), and reusable components for easy customization.
xmltv2html is a Ruby script that generates a static HTML page from the output of XMLTV. This is different from other XMLTV -> HTML programs in that the times are on the horizontal axis and the channels on the vertical axis. The HTML output can be modified using a CSS file. The prefered method to view a show's info is via DHTML (the default). With version 0.5.3+, the attributes (fonts, colors, size) of the DHTML can be modified.
Parade is an open source presentation software that consists of a Sinatra web app that serves up markdown files in a presentation format. Parade can serve a directory or be configured to run with a simple configuration file. * Markdown backed data > This ultimately makes it easier to manage diffs when making changes, using the content in other documents, and quickly re-using portions of a presentation. * Syntax Highlighting > Using GitHub flavored markdown, code fences will automatically be syntax highlighted, making it incredibly easy to integrate code samples. * Code Execution > Slides are able to provide execution and show results for JavaScript and Coffeescript live within the browser. This allows for live demonstrations of code. * Web > Slide presentations are basically websites -- they run in your browser from your desktop. This allows for a wide range of possibilities for customization and expandability. * Basic Templating and Color Schemes > Several templates and color scheme options have been provided to help you get started. While Parade does not currently provide anything near the variety of many other presentation packages, it is well-suited for basic presentations. * Design Flexibility (pros and cons) > Unless you're skilled in CSS/Animations, you will likely have a harder time creating presentations with as much polish as other programs provide. However, this approach also makes Parade incredibly flexible if you do understand CSS/Animations.
== DESCRIPTION: This is a script for monitoring webpages that reuses other programs (w3m, diff, webdiff etc.) to do most of the actual work. By default, it works on an ASCII basis, i.e. with the output of text-based webbrowsers like w3m (or lynx, links etc.) as the output can easily be post-processed. With the help of some friends (see the section below on requirements), it can also work with HTML. E.g., if you have websec installed, you can also use its webdiff program to show colored diffs. By default, this script will use w3m to dump HTML pages and then run diff over the current page and the previous backup. Some pages are better viewed with lynx or links. Downloaded documents (HTML or ASCII) can be post-processed (e.g., filtered through some ruby block that extracts elements via hpricot and the like). Please see the configuration options below to find out how to change this globally or for a single source. === CAVEAT: The script also includes experimental support for monitoring whole websites. Basically, this script supports robots.txt directives (see requirements) but this is hardly tested and may not work in some cases. While it is okay for your own websites to ignore robots.txt, it is not for others. Please make sure that the webpages you run this program on allow such a use. Some webpages disallow the use of any automatic downloader or offline reader in their user agreements.
The jekyll-squirrel-theme is a versatile, highly customizable theme designed for The Programming Squirrel. It is crafted to provide an exceptional user experience, emphasizing content readability and accessibility while reflecting the brand's unique personality. ### Key Features: - **Custom Branding**: Incorporates The Programming Squirrel’s signature colors, typography (Montserrat, Open Sans, Playfair Display), and playful aesthetic. - **Light and Dark Modes**: Includes responsive and accessible light and dark themes with a seamless toggle feature. - **Blog-Centric Design**: Optimized for showcasing articles, tutorials, and other written content with structured layouts and beautiful typography. - **Responsive Layout**: Fully responsive and mobile-friendly, ensuring the site looks great on all devices. - **Reusable Components**: Includes pre-styled cards, buttons, forms, and other reusable UI elements for consistency across the site. - **SEO Optimized**: Built-in SEO features to enhance search engine visibility and performance. - **Developer-Friendly**: Easy-to-extend theme architecture with clear documentation and customizable options. This theme is perfect for tech enthusiasts, educators, and content creators who value clean design, functionality, and a touch of whimsy in their websites.
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