A simple and flexible npm library that creates various type of Random Numbers.
Some random NodeJS helper functions for shell execution
A Pulumi package to safely use randomness in Pulumi programs.
Isomorphic Library for Random Bytes
Tokenized zip support
CSV and object generation implementing the Node.js `stream.Readable` API
Generate random numbers from various distributions.
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@ton/crypto)
TypeScript definitions for d3-random
Fastest random ID and random string generation for Node.js
RFC9562 UUIDs
URL and cookie safe UIDs
Use the random function in CSS
An alias package for `crypto.randomBytes` in Node.js and/or browsers
Fastest UUIDv4 with good RNG
Node.js Streams, a user-land copy of the stream library from Node.js
Generate a cryptographically strong random string
A Cryptographically Secure Pseudo-Random Number Generator for NodeJS
Random utility functions for ethers.
JavaScript library of crypto standards.
get colors in your node.js console
JWT Library for Node.js
A small implementation of `crypto.getRandomValues` for React Native. This is useful to polyfill for libraries like [uuid](https://www.npmjs.com/package/uuid) that depend on it.
Provides functions for detecting if the host environment supports the WebCrypto API
You dont need to use nodejs or go, just install this plugin. It will crash your application at random
This is an empty gem specifying a list of dependencies for RSence Additionally, you may want to install these gems also, even though they are tested for and auto-installation in tried: - sqlite3 - rmagick You must install a Javascript runtime engine separately, because RubyGems isn't smart enough to allow conditional dependencies. The V8-based NodeJS is recommended: http://nodejs.org/ If you are on OS X, you already have Apple's JavaScriptCore installed, which is fine. Previously, RSence depended on therubyracer, but it was found to be the the culprit for crashing the Ruby VM and the cause of some other random memory corruption issues, so it's not recommended until its maintainers have sorted it out. You may however proceed to use it on your own risk, if the speed gains are worth the instability. More info: http://rsence.org/