extract project codes into an output text file
An inline CSS processor to translate CSS properties to React Native styles.
Create virtual files in ESLint for each Vue SFC block, so that you can lint them individually.
A stylelint processor for styled-components
Collective of common transformers transformers for Shiki
Batch processing in JS
The AudioWorkletProcessor which is used by the recorder-audio-worklet package.
Feature-rich document editor control with built-in support for context menu, options pane and dialogs.
Jest test results processor for generating a summary in HTML
The citeproc-js citation formatting module, in CommonJS format. This version is based on citeproc-js 1.4.63
A netty server with uiautomator2 handlers
Feature-rich document editor control with built-in support for context menu, options pane and dialogs. for React
A JavaScript XSLT Processor
OpenTelemetry Baggage Span Processor for Node.js
parse, inspect, transform, and serialize content through syntax trees
Agora RTE Extension
Remark plugin to support MDC syntax
The batch processing package for the Powertools for AWS Lambda (TypeScript) library.
Feature-rich document editor control with built-in support for context menu, options pane and dialogs. for Vue
A Sonar test reporter for Jest.
Feature-rich document editor control with built-in support for context menu, options pane and dialogs. for Angular
Accessibility testing matcher for Jest
🐊Putout processor adds ability to parse markdown files and lint JavaScript, JSX, TypeScript and JSON snippets
🐊Putout processor adds ability to parse css files
General API and utility scripts to manipulate and query ruby gems and projects after being published
Rurema is a Japanese ruby documentation project, and bitclust is a rurema document processor.
Rurema is a Japanese ruby documentation project, and bitclust is a rurema document processor. This is tools for Rubyists.
Rurema is a Japanese ruby documentation project, and bitclust is a rurema document processor. This is tools for Rurema developpers.
No web framework, no problem: Palimpsest gives any custom or legacy project a modern workflow and toolset.
This is a custom Markdown processor for Jekyll 2.0 and above. It allows you to use GitHub's HTML::Pipeline in your Jekyll projects.
A flexible, programmable static site generator for Markdown, reStructuredText, and RDoc formats. PureBuilder Simply supports both embedded and external content processors—including Kramdown, Redcarpet, Commonmarker, RDoc, Pandoc, Docutils—and enables customizable conversion workflows and CLI-based project generation.
Oftenly local dev machine is much more powerfull than the remote one (VPS, for example). Every deploy system need to recompile all the assets in packs folder (by default). If the project is large, it'll take to much time and remote machine processor load that it would be much more easier to precompile assets on local machine.
BlueCloth is a Ruby implementation of John Gruber's Markdown[http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/], a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. To quote from the project page: Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML). It borrows a naming convention and several helpings of interface from {Redcloth}[http://redcloth.org/], Why the Lucky Stiff's processor for a similar text-to-HTML conversion syntax called Textile[http://www.textism.com/tools/textile/]. BlueCloth 2 is a complete rewrite using David Parsons' Discount[http://www.pell.portland.or.us/~orc/Code/discount/] library, a C implementation of Markdown. I rewrote it using the extension for speed and accuracy; the original BlueCloth was a straight port from the Perl version that I wrote in a few days for my own use just to avoid having to shell out to Markdown.pl, and it was quite buggy and slow. I apologize to all the good people that sent me patches for it that were never released. Note that the new gem is called 'bluecloth' and the old one 'BlueCloth'. If you have both installed, you can ensure you're loading the new one with the 'gem' directive: # Load the 2.0 version gem 'bluecloth', '>= 2.0.0' # Load the 1.0 version gem 'BlueCloth' require 'bluecloth'
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