Get system processes through ps
Get all children of a pid
Get running processes
Get all children of a pid
a ThroughStream that strictly buffers all readable events when paused.
A process lookup utility
TypeScript definitions for ps-tree
A process lookup utility
Get all children of a pid and support CommonJS and ESM both
Manage process (list/kill)
Word Processing Document library
Collects the full tree of processes from /proc
Common Pokémon Showdown Dex types shared by @pkmn/dex and @pkmn/sim
CARTO's Professional Service Services library
Work with processes safely and easily with Node.js
Get running processes
A Node.js client for the AWS Lambda Parameters and Secrets Extension
TypeScript definitions for ps-node
A unification of Pokémon Showdown's client's and server's data layers
CARTO's Professional Service React DeckGL library
CARTO's Professional Service React Material library
A forked implementation of the Pokémon Showdown client's data layer
An AngularJS directive which slides another panel over your browser to reveal an additional interaction pane.
Polyline encoding and decoding
Get running processes on a linux system through the output of 'ps -ef'
# Addy Allows pretty summations. Instead of writing: (1..5).inject(0) do |memo, num| memo + (num**num) end You write: sum(1..5) do |num| num**num end Personally, I would rather write the latter. ## Usage Install the gem: gem install addy Then use it! require 'addy' class MyClass #include it in a class or in Object to get it everywhere include Addy def my_awesome_adder(range) sum(range) end end When you include addy on a class that implements inject, you don't even need to pass a value to it. Instead it calls sum on your class. require 'addy' class MyClass < Range include Addy def my_awesome_adder sum end end ### Calling It You can call either sum or summation. They're aliases for the same thing. Note: The following assumes Addy is included into Range. When you pass a block to sum it will execute the block on the current number before adding it to the sum. sum(1..5) {|num| num + 1} #=> 20 (1..5).sum {|num| num + 1} #=> 20 You don't have to pass a block though! #this sum(1..5) #=> 15 #and (1..5).sum #=> 15 #are equivalent to sum(1..5) {|num| num} #=> 15 #and (1..5).sum {|num| num} #=> 15 ### Input Ranges and numeric arrays both work well. sum(1..5) #=> 15 sum([1,2,3,4,5]) #=> 15 ## Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * Make your feature addition or bug fix. * Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull) * Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches. ## Copyright Copyright (c) 2010 Allen Madsen. See LICENSE for details. PS: Isn't it ridiculous how much documentation I wrote for one function?
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