Node.Js Utility for fetching multiple HTTP resources with browser-like cache management.
Parses Cache-Control and other headers. Helps building correct HTTP caches and proxies
Next.js self-hosting simplified.
A cache object that deletes the least-recently-used items.
TypeScript definitions for http-cache-semantics
Rush plugin for generic HTTP cloud build cache
The time-based use-recency-unaware cousin of [`lru-cache`](http://npm.im/lru-cache)
Memoize/cache function results
Finds the common standard cache directory
A lightweight cache for file metadata, ideal for processes that work on a specific set of files and only need to reprocess files that have changed since the last run
walk paths fast and efficiently
Next.js cache handlers
Require hook for automatic V8 compile cache persistence
@intlify/shared
Opinionated, caching, retrying fetch client
A simple key/value storage using files to persist the data
Http utilities for Apollo Link shared across all links using http
Is this value a JS SharedArrayBuffer?
Sometimes you have to do horrible things, like use the global object to share a singleton. Abstract that away, with this!
Interface used to connect Apollo Gateway to Apollo Server
Contain async insanity so that the dark pony lord doesn't eat souls
Require hook for automatic V8 compile cache persistence
redis-backed LRU cache
A cache object that deletes the least-recently-used items.
Purge contents from shared caches easily by sending a HTTP method "PURGE".
AcornCache is a Ruby HTTP proxy caching library that is lightweight, configurable and can be easily integrated with any Rack-based web application. AcornCache allows you to improve page load times and lighten the load on your server by allowing you to implement an in-memory cache shared by every client requesting a resource on your server.
Contentful API wrapper library exposing an ActiveRecord-like interface
# 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)
Scrapetor is a Ruby HTML parsing + scraping toolkit. The parser is a native C arena DOM with structural indexes built at parse time and NEON SIMD scanners in the SAX hot loop. A streaming extraction engine compiles the schema DSL into a single forward pass — no DOM materialised, one Ruby boundary crossing per document. On builds where libcurl is available, Scrapetor::Fetcher adds an HTTP/2-capable fetch layer with per-thread connection cache, shared DNS + TLS session pool, in-process gzip / deflate / brotli / zstd decoding, iconv charset transcoding, retry + exponential backoff, ETag / Last-Modified disk cache with bulk revalidation, per-host throttle, cookie jar, basic + bearer auth, proxy, and three bulk concurrency models (parallel_fetch / multi_fetch / streaming multi_each). Scrapetor::Session ties the cookie / auth / throttle / retry policies together. Also ships robots.txt + sitemap.xml parsers, a bounded-memory streaming HTML parser, and structured-data extractors (JSON-LD, OpenGraph, Schema.org, Microdata, RDFa, Twitter Cards). The Net::HTTP-based Scrapetor.fetch is preserved as the no-libcurl fallback.
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