Resolves the currently checked out branch of the git repository in the current directory.
resolve like require.resolve() on behalf of files asynchronously and synchronously
Offers a async require.resolve function. It's highly configurable.
Module Resolver Utility for textlint
Module Resolver Utility for Secretlint
Convert a dependency path into a filepath
Parse the things that can be arguments to `npm install`
Resolve the path of a module like `require.resolve()` but from a given path
Download templates and git repositories with pleasure!
Resolve nested CSS selectors
Get raw git commits out of your repository using git-log(1).
Resolve the path of a module like `require.resolve()` but from the current working directory
UnRS Resolver Node API
Resolve a nested selector in a PostCSS AST
Parse, Resolve, and Dereference JSON Schema $ref pointers
Detects the ALPN protocol
Resolve a path by walking parent directories.
Get all git semver tags of your repository in reverse chronological order.
Simple git client for conventional changelog packages.
List of Git hooks
resolve which handles browser field support in package.json
Resolve a relative path against a root path with validation
Resolve a URI relative to an optional base URI
a util for spawning git from npm CLI contexts
Ditz is a simple, light-weight distributed issue tracker designed to work with distributed version control systems like git, darcs, Mercurial, and Bazaar. It can also be used with centralized systems like SVN. Ditz maintains an issue database directory on disk, with files written in a line-based and human-editable format. This directory can be kept under version control, alongside project code. Ditz provides a simple, console-based interface for creating and updating the issue database files, and some basic static HTML generation capabilities for producing world-readable status pages (for a demo, see the ditz ditz page). Ditz includes a robust plugin system for adding commands, model fields, and modifying output. See PLUGINS.txt for documentation on the pre-shipped plugins. Ditz currently offers no central public method of bug submission. == USING DITZ There are several different ways to use Ditz: 1. Treat issue change the same as code change: include it as part of commits, and merge it with changes from other developers, resolving conflicts in the usual manner. 2. Keep the issue database in the repository but in a separate branch. Issue changes can be managed by your VCS, but is not tied directly to code commits. 3. Keep the issue database separate and not under VCS at all.
Ditz is a simple, light-weight distributed issue tracker designed to work with distributed version control systems like git, darcs, Mercurial, and Bazaar. It can also be used with centralized systems like SVN. Ditz maintains an issue database directory on disk, with files written in a line-based and human-editable format. This directory can be kept under version control, alongside project code. Ditz provides a simple, console-based interface for creating and updating the issue database files, and some basic static HTML generation capabilities for producing world-readable status pages (for a demo, see the ditz ditz page). Ditz includes a robust plugin system for adding commands, model fields, and modifying output. See PLUGINS.txt for documentation on the pre-shipped plugins. Ditz currently offers no central public method of bug submission. == USING DITZ There are several different ways to use Ditz: 1. Treat issue change the same as code change: include it as part of commits, and merge it with changes from other developers, resolving conflicts in the usual manner. 2. Keep the issue database in the repository but in a separate branch. Issue changes can be managed by your VCS, but is not tied directly to code commits. 3. Keep the issue database separate and not under VCS at all.
Ditz is a simple, light-weight distributed issue tracker designed to work with distributed version control systems like git, darcs, Mercurial, and Bazaar. It can also be used with centralized systems like SVN. Ditz maintains an issue database directory on disk, with files written in a line-based and human-editable format. This directory can be kept under version control, alongside project code. Ditz provides a simple, console-based interface for creating and updating the issue database files, and some basic static HTML generation capabilities for producing world-readable status pages (for a demo, see the ditz ditz page). Ditz includes a robust plugin system for adding commands, model fields, and modifying output. See PLUGINS.txt for documentation on the pre-shipped plugins. Ditz currently offers no central public method of bug submission. == USING DITZ There are several different ways to use Ditz: 1. Treat issue change the same as code change: include it as part of commits, and merge it with changes from other developers, resolving conflicts in the usual manner. 2. Keep the issue database in the repository but in a separate branch. Issue changes can be managed by your VCS, but is not tied directly to code commits. 3. Keep the issue database separate and not under VCS at all.