A JavaScript library for escaping CSS strings and identifiers while generating the shortest possible ASCII-only output.
For ruby and ruby on rails
Ruby SemVer in TypeScript.
Convention over configuration for using Vite in Ruby apps
Like ruby's abbrev module, but in js
Ruby grammar for tree-sitter
prettier plugin for the Ruby programming language
WebSocket framework for Ruby on Rails.
bootstrap-sass is a Sass-powered version of Bootstrap 3, ready to drop right into your Sass powered applications.
JavaScript client for graphql-ruby
Convention over configuration for using Vite in Rails apps
realistic password strength estimation
A library for textually searching arrays and hashes of objects by property (or multiple properties). Designed specifically for autocomplete.
A Stimulus Wrapper for Flatpickr library
A library for textually searching arrays and hashes of objects by property (or multiple properties). Designed specifically for autocomplete.
A comprehensive dataset of airports, countries, and regions in JSON format, including , with a script to generate data from CSV sources.
Provide I18n to your React Native application
A comprehensive TypeScript library providing easy retrieval of airport data based on IATA, ICAO, city codes, country codes, and continents. Includes LLM tool definitions for AI integration.
Prism Ruby parser
A JSON Object containing Countries and their associated States/Provinces and cities.
A pure JavaScript implementation of Sass.
## Installation
Ruby on Rails unobtrusive scripting adapter
Subresource Integrity hashes for the Vite.js manifest.
Get countries by continent, or find the continents for a country given ISO 3166-1 alpha-2, alpha-3 and numeric codes
A lightweight Ruby client for the Ip2Geo cloud service. Get accurate geolocation data for IP addresses including continent, country, city, timezone, ASN, and more.
ZenTest provides 4 different tools: zentest, unit_diff, autotest, and multiruby. zentest scans your target and unit-test code and writes your missing code based on simple naming rules, enabling XP at a much quicker pace. zentest only works with Ruby and Minitest or Test::Unit. There is enough evidence to show that this is still proving useful to users, so it stays. unit_diff is a command-line filter to diff expected results from actual results and allow you to quickly see exactly what is wrong. Do note that minitest 2.2+ provides an enhanced assert_equal obviating the need for unit_diff autotest is a continous testing facility meant to be used during development. As soon as you save a file, autotest will run the corresponding dependent tests. multiruby runs anything you want on multiple versions of ruby. Great for compatibility checking! Use multiruby_setup to manage your installed versions. *NOTE:* The next major release of zentest will not include autotest (use minitest-autotest instead) and multiruby will use rbenv / ruby-build for version management.
Trackdown is a Ruby gem that allows you to geolocate IP addresses easily. It works out of the box with Cloudflare headers if your Rails app is behind it; or you can also use MaxMind databases (BYOK). The gem offers a clean API for Rails applications to fetch country, city, emoji flag, region, continent, postal code, latitude, longitude and other GeoIP information for any IP address. Supports Cloudflare headers, and MaxMind GeoLite2 databases (offline capable).
ZenTest provides 4 different tools: zentest, unit_diff, autotest, and multiruby. ZenTest scans your target and unit-test code and writes your missing code based on simple naming rules, enabling XP at a much quicker pace. ZenTest only works with Ruby and Test::Unit. Nobody uses this tool anymore but it is the package namesake, so it stays. unit_diff is a command-line filter to diff expected results from actual results and allow you to quickly see exactly what is wrong. autotest is a continous testing facility meant to be used during development. As soon as you save a file, autotest will run the corresponding dependent tests. multiruby runs anything you want on multiple versions of ruby. Great for compatibility checking! Use multiruby_setup to manage your installed versions.
ZenTest provides 4 different tools and 1 library: zentest, unit_diff, autotest, multiruby, and Test::Rails. ZenTest scans your target and unit-test code and writes your missing code based on simple naming rules, enabling XP at a much quicker pace. ZenTest only works with Ruby and Test::Unit. unit_diff is a command-line filter to diff expected results from actual results and allow you to quickly see exactly what is wrong. autotest is a continous testing facility meant to be used during development. As soon as you save a file, autotest will run the corresponding dependent tests. multiruby runs anything you want on multiple versions of ruby. Great for compatibility checking! Use multiruby_setup to manage your installed versions. Test::Rails helps you build industrial-strength Rails code.
ZenTest provides 4 different tools: zentest, unit_diff, autotest, and multiruby. ZenTest scans your target and unit-test code and writes your missing code based on simple naming rules, enabling XP at a much quicker pace. ZenTest only works with Ruby and Test::Unit. Nobody uses this tool anymore but it is the package namesake, so it stays. unit_diff is a command-line filter to diff expected results from actual results and allow you to quickly see exactly what is wrong. Do note that minitest 2.2+ provides an enhanced assert_equal obviating the need for unit_diff autotest is a continous testing facility meant to be used during development. As soon as you save a file, autotest will run the corresponding dependent tests. multiruby runs anything you want on multiple versions of ruby. Great for compatibility checking! Use multiruby_setup to manage your installed versions.
ZenTest provides 4 different tools: zentest, unit_diff, autotest, and multiruby. ZenTest scans your target and unit-test code and writes your missing code based on simple naming rules, enabling XP at a much quicker pace. ZenTest only works with Ruby and Test::Unit. Nobody uses this tool anymore but it is the package namesake, so it stays. unit_diff is a command-line filter to diff expected results from actual results and allow you to quickly see exactly what is wrong. Do note that minitest 2.2+ provides an enhanced assert_equal obviating the need for unit_diff autotest is a continous testing facility meant to be used during development. As soon as you save a file, autotest will run the corresponding dependent tests. multiruby runs anything you want on multiple versions of ruby. Great for compatibility checking! Use multiruby_setup to manage your installed versions.
YPetri is a DSL (domain-specific language) for modelling of dynamical systems. It is biologically inspired, but concerns of biology and chemistry have been purposely separated away from it. YPetri caters solely to the two main concerns of modelling, model specification and simulation, and it excels in the first one. Dynamical systems are described under a Petri net paradigm. YPetri implements a universal Petri net abstraction that integrates discrete/continous, timed/timeless and stoichiometric/nonstoichiometric dichotomies of the extended Petri nets, and allows efficient specification of any kind of dynamical system. Like Petri nets themselves, YPetri was inspired by problems from the domain of chemistry (biochemical pathway modelling), but is not specific to it. Other gems, YChem and YCell are planned to cater to the concerns specific to chemistry and cell biochemistry. A lower-level extension of YPetri is currently under development under the name YNelson. Its usage is practically identical to YPetri, so any YPetri user can now consider using YNelson instead. YNelson covers additional concerns: it allows relations among nodes and parameters to be specified under a zz structure paradigm (developed by Ted Nelson) and it is also aimed towards providing a higher level of abstraction in Petri net specification by providing commands that create more than one Petri net node per command. YPetri documentation is avalable online, but due to formatting issues, you may prefer to generate the documentation on your own by running rdoc in the gem directory. As for the user manuals, there are currently 3 documents applicable for both YPetri and YNelson, whose master copies are stored in the YNelson source directory: 1. Introduction to YNelson and YPetri (hands-on tutorial), 2. Object model of YNelson and YPetri, 3. Introduction to Ruby for YNelson users. These manuals are written to allow beginners, including those unfamiliar with Ruby, to start working with YPetri and/or YNelson. For an example of how YPetri can be used to model complex dynamical systems, see the eukaryotic cell cycle model which I released as "cell_cycle" gem.