Generate reports from YAML files using wkhtmltopdf. based on invoice-compiler
TypeScript compiler wrapper for static analysis and code manipulation.
Babel plugin for React Compiler.
CDS (Core Data Services) compiler and backends
TypeScript loader for webpack
@vue/compiler-dom
@vue/compiler-core
Runtime for React Compiler
@vue/compiler-ssr
A CJS bundled version of @angular/compiler
@intlify/message-compiler
Base reporting library for istanbul
Astro’s [Go](https://golang.org/) + WASM compiler.
ESLint plugin to display errors found by the React compiler.
Build and manage the fast-json-stringify instances for the fastify framework
Build and manage the AJV instances for the fastify framework
Lower level utilities for compiling Vue single file components
the part of vue-inbrowser-compiler-utils that contains no vue dependency
@astrojs/compiler to process synchronously.
TypeScript definitions for istanbul-lib-report
The Babel preset for Expo projects
A compiler tool for building GraphQL-driven applications.
Adds SWC as a Webpack5 compiler to Storybook
Adds babel as a Webpack5 compiler to Storybook
Report compose compiler metrics
Compile Flex in Textmate using FCSH. Advanced error reporting.
Generate custom HTML report compilation time of each Swift func
JRuby client to JasperReports API.
Ruby client to JasperReports.
Zemu is a gem which allows the user to configure a Z80-based system and then launch emulation instances of that system. These instances can be interacted with programmatically, allowing the user to inspect the contents of registers and memory, step, add breakpoints, and more. The gem requires the user to install a compatible C compiler. Currently the only compatible compiler is clang. Please report any issues on the GitHub page for the gem. This is accessible under "Homepage".
ANTLR, ANother Tool for Language Recognition, is a language tool that provides a framework for constructing recognizers, interpreters, compilers, and translators from grammatical descriptions containing actions in a variety of target languages. ANTLR provides excellent support for tree construction, tree walking, translation, error recovery, and error reporting. There are currently about 5,000 ANTLR source downloads a month.
# DECC 2050 CALCULATOR TOOL A C version and ruby wrapper for the www.decc.gov.uk 2050 energy and climate change excel calculator Further detail on the project: http://www.decc.gov.uk/2050 Canonical source: http://github.com/decc/decc_2050_model ## DEPENDENCIES 1. ruby 1.9.2 (including development headers) 2. basic c development headers This has ONLY been tested on OSX and on Ubuntu 64 bit EC2 ami. Grateful for reports from other platforms. In the util folder there is an example script that creates a new EC2 EMI, installs all the dependencies and then compiles the gem. It may be useful if you are trying to figure out the complete set of dependencies. ## INSTALLATION Note that this compiles the underlying c code, which might take 10-20 minutes or so gem install decc_2050_model ## UPDATING TO NEWER VERSIONS OF EXCEL MODEL First of all, you need to be working on the github version of the code, not the rubygem: git clone http://github.com/decc/decc_2050_model Then put the new spreadsheet in spreadsheet/model.xlsx Then, from the top directory of the gem: bundle bundle exec rake The next step is to check whether Rakefile, lib/model/_model_result.rb and lib/model/model_structure.rb need to be altered so that they pick up the correct places in the underlying excel. The final stage is to build and install the new gem: gem build model.gemspec gem install decc_2050_model-<version>.gem ... where <version> is the version number of the gem file that was created in the folder. Now follow the instructions in the twenty-fifty server directory in order to ensure that it is using this new version of the gem.
# DECC 2050 CALCULATOR TOOL A C version and ruby wrapper for the www.decc.gov.uk 2050 energy and climate change excel calculator Further detail on the project: http://www.decc.gov.uk/2050 Canonical source: http://github.com/decc/decc_2050_model ## DEPENDENCIES 1. ruby 1.9.2 (including development headers) 2. basic c development headers This has ONLY been tested on OSX and on Ubuntu 64 bit EC2 ami. Grateful for reports from other platforms. In the util folder are two example scripts than can be helpful: 1. start-high-memory-instance.sh - is the script we use to setup an aws server to compile the model. You can't use it directly, because you won't have the right keys and certificates, but it can give clues. 2. setup-2050-model-builder-script.sh - is the script we use to get all the dependencies on that aws server correct, download this code, and then compile the model. Again, it may not be quite right for you but can server as inspiration ## INSTALLATION Note that this compiles the underlying c code, which might take 10-20 minutes or so gem install decc_2050_model ## UPDATING TO NEWER VERSIONS OF EXCEL MODEL First of all, you need to be working on the github version of the code, not the rubygem: git clone http://github.com/decc/decc_2050_model Then put the new spreadsheet in spreadsheet/2050Model.xlsx Then, from the top directory of the gem: bundle bundle exec rake The next step is to check whether lib/decc_2050_model/decc_2050_model_result.rb and lib/decc_2050_model/model_structure.rb need to be altered so that they pick up the correct places in the underlying excel. The final stage is to build and install the new gem: gem build decc_2050_model.gemspec gem install decc_2050_model-<version>.gem ... where <version> is the version number of the gem file that was created in the folder. Now follow the instructions in the twenty-fifty server directory in order to ensure that it is using this new version of the gem.
# BELGIAN 2050 CALCULATOR TOOL A C version and ruby wrapper for the Belgian 2050 calcualtor ## GOTCHAS Some versions have a special formula in 2050!B2 that the translator doesn't recognise. Just write 2050 in that cell and recompile. Some tests fail for columns AN and AM on OUTPUT. I think this is due to rounding differences between excel and C. ## DEPENDENCIES 1. ruby 1.9.2 (including development headers) 2. basic c development headers This has ONLY been tested on OSX and on Ubuntu 64 bit EC2 ami. Grateful for reports from other platforms. In the util folder there is an example script that creates a new EC2 EMI, installs all the dependencies and then compiles the gem. It may be useful if you are trying to figure out the complete set of dependencies. ## INSTALLATION Note that this compiles the underlying c code, which might take 10-20 minutes or so gem install belgium_2050_model ## UPDATING TO NEWER VERSIONS OF EXCEL MODEL First of all, you need to be working on the github version of the code, not the rubygem: git clone http://github.com/decc/belgium_2050_model Then put the new spreadsheet in spreadsheet/2050Model.xlsx Then, from the top directory of the gem: bundle bundle exec rake The next step is to check whether lib/belgium_2050_model/belgium_2050_model_result.rb and lib/belgium_2050_model/model_structure.rb need to be altered so that they pick up the correct places in the underlying excel. The final stage is to build and install the new gem: gem build belgium_2050_model.gemspec gem install belgium_2050_model-<version>.gem ... where <version> is the version number of the gem file that was created in the folder. Now follow the instructions in the twenty-fifty server directory in order to ensure that it is using this new version of the gem.
# Excel to Code [](https://travis-ci.org/tamc/excel_to_code) excel_to_c - roughly translate some Excel files into C. excel_to_ruby - roughly translate some Excel files into Ruby. This allows spreadsheets to be: 1. Embedded in other programs, such as web servers, or optimisers 2. Without depending on any Microsoft code For example, running [these commands](examples/simple/compile.sh) turns [this spreadsheet](examples/simple/simple.xlsx) into [this Ruby code](examples/simple/ruby/simple.rb) or [this C code](examples/simple/c/simple.c). # Install Requires Ruby. Install by: gem install excel_to_code # Run To just have a go: excel_to_c <excel_file_name> This will produce a file called excelspreadsheet.c For a more complex spreadsheet: excel_to_c --compile --run-tests --settable <name of input worksheet> --prune-except <name of output worksheet> <excel file name> See the full list of options: excel_to_c --help # Gotchas, limitations and bugs 0. No custom functions, no macros for generating results 1. Results are cached. So you must call reset(), then set values, then read values. 2. It must be possible to replace INDIRECT and OFFSET formula with standard references at compile time (e.g., INDIRECT("A"&"1") is fine, INDIRECT(userInput&"3") is not. 3. Doesn't implement all functions. [See which functions are implemented](docs/Which_functions_are_implemented.md). 4. Doesn't implement references that involve range unions and lists (but does implement standard ranges) 5. Sometimes gives cells as being empty, when excel would give the cell as having a numeric value of zero 6. The generated C version does not multithread and will give bad results if you try. 7. The generated code uses floating point, rather than fully precise arithmetic, so results can differ slightly. 8. The generated code uses the sprintf approach to rounding (even-odd) rather than excel's 0.5 rounds away from zero. 9. Ranges like this: Sheet1!A10:Sheet1!B20 and 3D ranges don't work. Report bugs: <https://github.com/tamc/excel_to_code/issues> # Changelog See [Changes](CHANGES.md). # License See [License](LICENSE.md) # Hacking Source code: <https://github.com/tamc/excel_to_code> Documentation: * [Installing from source](docs/installing_from_source.md) * [Structure of this project](docs/structure_of_this_project.md) * [How does the calculation work](docs/how_does_the_calculation_work.md) * [How to fix parsing errors](docs/How_to_fix_parsing_errors.md) * [How to implement a new Excel function](docs/How_to_add_a_missing_function.md) Some notes on how Excel works under the hood: * [The Excel file structure](docs/implementation/excel_file_structure.md) * [Relationships](docs/implementation/relationships.md) * [Workbooks](docs/implementation/workbook.md) * [Worksheets](docs/implementation/worksheets.md) * [Cells](docs/implementation/cell.md) * [Tables](docs/implementation/tables.md) * [Shared Strings](docs/implementation/shared_strings.md) * [Array formulae](docs/implementation/array_formulae.md)
Inventory-Rake Inventory-Rake provides Rake¹ tasks for your Inventory². This includes tasks for cleaning up our project, compiling extensions, installing dependencies, installing and uninstalling the project itself, and creating and pushing distribution files to distribution points. ¹ See http://rake.rubyforge.org/ ² See http://disu.se/software/inventory-1.0/ § Installation Install Inventory-Rake with % gem install inventory-rake § Usage Include the following code in your ‹Rakefile›, where ‹Package› is the top-level module of your project: require 'inventory-rake-3.0' load File.expand_path('../lib/package/version.rb', __FILE__) Inventory::Rake::Tasks.define Package::Version Inventory::Rake::Tasks.unless_installing_dependencies do # Any additional tasks that your project’s dependencies provide end ‹Inventory::Rake::Tasks.define› does the heavy lifting. It takes our inventory and sets up the tasks mentioned above. We also do some additional customization of the gem specification. As we want to be able to use our Rakefile to install our dependencies for us, the rest of the Rakefile is inside the conditional #unless_installing_dependencies, which, as the name certainly implies, executes its block unless the task being run is the one that installs our dependencies. This becomes relevant if we want to, for example, set up Travis¹ integration. To do so, simply add before_script: - gem install inventory-rake -v '~> VERSION' --no-rdoc --no-ri - rake gem:deps:install to your ‹.travis.yml› file. This’ll make sure that Travis installs all development, runtime, and optional dependencies that you’ve listed in your inventory before running any tests. There’s more information in the {API documentation}² that you’ll likely want to read up on if anything is unclear. ¹ See http://travis-ci.org/ ² See http://disu.se/software/inventory-rake-1.0/api/Inventory/Rake/ § Tasks The tasks that are created if you use Inventory-Rake are: = check. = Check that the package meets its expectations. = mostlyclean. = Delete targets built by rake that are ofter rebuilt. = clean. = Delete targets built by rake; depends on mostlyclean. = distclean. = Delete all files not meant for distribution; depends on clean. = compile. = Compile all extensions; depends on each compile:name. = compile:name. = Compile extension /name/; depends on lib/path/so file. = lib/path/so. = Installed dynamic library of extension /name/ inside inventory path; depends on ext/name/so. = ext/name/so. = Dynamic library of extension /name/; depends on ext/name/Makefile and the source files of the extension. = ext/name/Makefile. = Makefile for extension /name/; depends on inventory path, ext/name/extconf.rb file, and ext/name/depend file. Will be created by extconf.rb, which may take options from environment variable name#upcase_EXTCONF_OPTIONS or ‹EXTCONF_OPTIONS› if defined. = clean:name. = Clean files built for extension /name/; depended upon by clean. = spec. = Create specifications; depends on gem:spec. = gem:spec. = Create gem specification; depends on gemspec. = gemspec (file). = Gem specification file; depends on Rakefile, README, and inventory path. = dist. = Create files for distribution; depends on gem:dist. = gem:dist. = Create gem for distribution; depends on inventory:check and gem file. = inventory:check. = Check that the inventory is correct by looking for files not listed in the inventory that match the pattern and for files listed in the inventory that don’t exist; depends on distclean. = gem (file). = Gem file; depends on files included in gem. = dist:check. = Check files before distribution; depends on dist and gem:dist:check. = gem:dist:check. = Check gem before distribution; depends on gem:dist. = deps:install. = Install dependencies on the local system; depends on gem:deps:install. = gem:deps:install. = Install dependencies in ruby gem directory. = deps:install:user. = Install dependencies for the current user; depends on gem:deps:install:user. = gem:deps:install:user. = Install dependencies in the user gem directory. = install. = Install distribution files on the local system; depends on gem:install. = gem:install. = Install gem in ruby gem directory; depends on gem:dist. = install:user. = Install distribution files for the current user; depends on gem:install:user. = gem:install:user. = Install gem in the user gem directory. = uninstall. = Delete all files installed on the local system. = gem:uninstall. = Uninstall gem from ruby gem directory. = uninstall:user. = Delete all files installed for current user. = gem:uninstall:user. = Uninstall gem from ruby gem directory. = push. = Push distribution files to distribution hubs. = gem:push. = Push gem to rubygems.org. § Financing Currently, most of my time is spent at my day job and in my rather busy private life. Please motivate me to spend time on this piece of software by donating some of your money to this project. Yeah, I realize that requesting money to develop software is a bit, well, capitalistic of me. But please realize that I live in a capitalistic society and I need money to have other people give me the things that I need to continue living under the rules of said society. So, if you feel that this piece of software has helped you out enough to warrant a reward, please PayPal a donation to now@disu.se¹. Thanks! Your support won’t go unnoticed! ¹ Send a donation: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_donations&business=now@disu.se&item_name=Inventory-Rake § Reporting Bugs Please report any bugs that you encounter to the {issue tracker}¹. ¹ See https://github.com/now/inventory-rake/issues § Authors Nikolai Weibull wrote the code, the tests, the manual pages, and this README. § Licensing Inventory-Rake is free software: you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the {GNU Lesser General Public License, version 3}¹ or later², as published by the {Free Software Foundation}³. ¹ See http://disu.se/licenses/lgpl-3.0/ ² See http://gnu.org/licenses/ ³ See http://fsf.org/
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