A documentation generator package designed for SHSDX OpMod developers.
a simple and highly private secure-channel protocol
Multi Protocol RPC Gateway for node.js
Secret-stack plugin to interact with room servers
A smaller version of caniuse-db, with only the essentials!
Array manipulation, ordering, searching, summarizing, etc.
This library was generated with [Angular CLI](https://github.com/angular/angular-cli) version 19.2.17.
Tool for transforming styles with JS plugins
CLI tool to update caniuse-lite to refresh target browsers from Browserslist config
Merge Tailwind CSS classes without style conflicts
The tiniest and the fastest library for terminal output formatting with ANSI colors
View docs [here](https://radix-ui.com/primitives/docs/utilities/slot).
super fast, all natural json logger
PostCSS for CSS-in-JS and styles in JS objects
A minimal fork of nanospy, with more features
2KB immutable date time library alternative to Moment.js with the same modern API
Storybook Docs: Document UI components automatically with stories and MDX
A set of utils for faster development of GraphQL tools
A set of utils for faster development of GraphQL tools
Stringify JS values
The Caps string for accessing the SSB protocol using secret handshake
An SSB plugin that shares connection invites via a Distributed Hash Table
View docs [here](https://radix-ui.com/primitives/docs/utilities/portal).
View docs [here](https://radix-ui.com/primitives/docs/utilities/visually-hidden).
Diff and patch tables
# mdtoc - Markdown Table of Contents Read Markdown files and output a table of contents. ## Installation Requirements: * [Ruby](https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/) (see [.ruby-version](./.ruby-version)) ```bash gem install mdtoc ``` ## Usage ```bash mdtoc --help Usage: mdtoc [options] files or directories... -h, --help Show this message -o, --output PATH Update a table of contents in the file at PATH -a, --[no-]append Append to the --output file if a <!-- mdtoc --> tag isn't found -c, --[no-]create Create the --output file if it does not exist ``` 1. Add a `<!-- mdtoc -->` tag to a Markdown file. ```bash echo '<!-- mdtoc -->' >> README.md ``` 2. Run `mdtoc` and specify input files or directories (eg. the "test/samples" directory) and an output file (eg. "README.md"). ```bash mdtoc -aco README.md test/samples ``` ## Example Rakefile Create a `Rakefile` with the contents below, then run [`rake`](https://github.com/ruby/rake) to: * `git pull` * `git add` any `*.md` files * Run `mdtoc` to update the generated table of contents in the ./README.md file * Git commit and push any changes ```ruby task default: %w[mdtoc] desc 'Update Markdown table of contents and push changes to the git repository' task :mdtoc do command = <<~CMD set -e if [ -n "$(git diff --name-only --diff-filter=U)" ]; then echo 'Error: conflicts exist' >&2 exit 1 fi mdtoc --append --create --output README.md docs/ git add *.md **/*.md git commit -qm 'Update TOC' || true git pull git push CMD sh command, verbose: false do |ok, status| unless ok fail "Failed with status: #{status.exitstatus}" end end end ``` See [andornaut/til](https://github.com/andornaut/til/blob/master/Rakefile) for an example. ## Development ### Setup Requirements: * [Bundler](https://bundler.io/) * [chruby](https://github.com/postmodern/chruby) (recommended) ```bash # Setup development environment bin/setup ``` ### Tasks ```bash # List rake tasks rake -T rake build # Build gem into the pkg directory rake default # Run the build, rubocop, sorbet and test tasks rake install # Build and install gem into system gems rake rubocop # Run RuboCop rake sorbet # Run the Sorbet type checker rake test # Run tests # Run mdtoc with test inputs ruby -Ilib bin/mdtoc test/samples # Run mdtoc with test inputs, and write to a newly created output file f=$(mktemp) && ruby -Ilib bin/mdtoc -aco ${f} test/samples ; cat ${f} ``` ### Publishing 1. Bump version in `lib/mdtoc/version.rb` 2. Run `bundle install` to update `Gemfile.lock` 3. Commit the changes 4. Run `rake release` to publish the gem to RubyGems, create the git tag, and push
== ICU4R - ICU Unicode bindings for Ruby ICU4R is an attempt to provide better Unicode support for Ruby, where it lacks for a long time. Current code is mostly rewritten string.c from Ruby 1.8.3. ICU4R is Ruby C-extension binding for ICU library[1] and provides following classes and functionality: * UString: - String-like class with internal UTF16 storage; - UCA rules for UString comparisons (<=>, casecmp); - encoding(codepage) conversion; \ - Unicode normalization; - transliteration, also rule-based; Bunch of locale-sensitive functions: - upcase/downcase; - string collation; \ - string search; - iterators over text line/word/char/sentence breaks; \ - message formatting (number/currency/string/time); - date and number parsing. * URegexp - unicode regular expressions. * UResourceBundle - access to resource bundles, including ICU locale data. * UCalendar - date manipulation and timezone info. * UConverter - codepage conversions API * UCollator - locale-sensitive string comparison == Install and usage > ruby extconf.rb > make && make check > make install Now, in your scripts just require 'icu4r'. To create RDoc, run > sh tools/doc.sh == Requirements To build and use ICU4R you will need GCC and ICU v3.4 libraries[2]. == Differences from Ruby String and Regexp classes === UString vs String 1. UString substring/index methods use UTF16 codeunit indexes, not code points. 2. UString supports most methods from String class. Missing methods are: capitalize, capitalize!, swapcase, swapcase! %, center, ljust, rjust chomp, chomp!, chop, chop! \ count, delete, delete!, squeeze, squeeze!, tr, tr!, tr_s, tr_s! crypt, intern, sum, unpack dump, each_byte, each_line hex, oct, to_i, to_sym reverse, reverse! succ, succ!, next, next!, upto 3. Instead of String#% method, UString#format is provided. See FORMATTING for short reference. 4. UStrings can be created via String.to_u(encoding='utf8') or global u(str,[encoding='utf8']) calls. Note that +encoding+ parameter must be value of String class. 5. There's difference between character grapheme, codepoint and codeunit. See UNICODE reports for gory details, but in short: locale dependent notion of character can be presented using more than one codepoint - base letter and combining (accents) (also possible more than one!), and each codepoint can require more than one codeunit to store (for UTF8 codeunit size is 8bit, though \ some codepoints require up to 4bytes). So, UString has normalization and locale dependent break iterators. 6. Currently UString doesn't include Enumerable module. 7. UString index/[] methods which accept URegexp, throw exception if Regexp passed. 8. UString#<=>, UString#casecmp use UCA rules. === URegexp UString uses ICU regexp library. Pattern syntax is described in [./docs/UNICODE_REGEXPS] and ICU docs. There are some differences between processing in Ruby Regexp and URegexp: 1. When UString#sub, UString#gsub are called with block, special vars ($~, $&, $1, ...) aren't set, as their values are processed through deep ruby core code. Instead, block receives UMatch object, which is essentially immutable array of matching groups: "test".u.gsub(ure("(e)(.)")) do |match| \ puts match[0] # => 'es' <--> $& puts match[1] # => 'e' \ <--> $1 puts match[2] # => 's' <--> $2 end 2. In URegexp search pattern backreferences are in form \n (\1, \2, ...), in replacement string - in form $1, $2, ... NOTE: URegexp considers char to be a digit NOT ONLY ASCII (0x0030-0x0039), but any Unicode char, which has property Decimal digit number (Nd), e.g.: a = [?$, 0x1D7D9].pack("U*").u * 2 puts a.inspect_names <U000024>DOLLAR SIGN <U01D7D9>MATHEMATICAL DOUBLE-STRUCK DIGIT ONE <U000024>DOLLAR SIGN <U01D7D9>MATHEMATICAL DOUBLE-STRUCK DIGIT ONE puts "abracadabra".u.gsub(/(b)/.U, a) abbracadabbra \ 3. One can create URegexp using global Kernel#ure function, Regexp#U, Regexp#to_u, or from UString using URegexp.new, e.g: /pattern/.U =~ "string".u 4. There are differences about Regexp and URegexp multiline matching options: t = "text\ntest" # ^,$ handling : URegexp multiline <-> Ruby default t.u =~ ure('^\w+$', URegexp::MULTILINE) => #<UMatch:0xf6f7de04 @ranges=[0..3], @cg=[\u0074\u0065\u0078\u0074]> t =~ /^\w+$/ => 0 # . matches \n : URegexp DOTALL <-> /m t.u =~ ure('.+test', URegexp::DOTALL) \ => #<UMatch:0xf6fa4d88 ... t.u =~ /.+test/m 5. UMatch.range(idx) returns range for capturing group idx. This range is in codeunits. === References 1. ICU Official Homepage http://ibm.com/software/globalization/icu/ 2. ICU downloads \ http://ibm.com/software/globalization/icu/downloads.jsp 3. ICU Home Page http://icu.sf.net 4. Unicode Home Page http://www.unicode.org ==== BUGS, DOCS, TO DO The code is slow and inefficient yet, is still highly experimental, so can have many security and memory leaks, bugs, inconsistent documentation, incomplete test suite. Use it at your own risk. Bug reports and feature requests are welcome :) === Copying This extension module is copyrighted free software by Nikolai Lugovoi. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of MIT License. Nikolai Lugovoi <meadow.nnick@gmail.com>
<div id="top"></div> <!-- *** Thanks for checking out the Best-README-Template. If you have a suggestion *** that would make this better, please fork the repo and create a pull request *** or simply open an issue with the tag "enhancement". *** Don't forget to give the project a star! *** Thanks again! Now go create something AMAZING! :D --> <!-- PROJECT SHIELDS --> <!-- *** I'm using markdown "reference style" links for readability. *** Reference links are enclosed in brackets [ ] instead of parentheses ( ). *** See the bottom of this document for the declaration of the reference variables *** for contributors-url, forks-url, etc. This is an optional, concise syntax you may use. *** https://www.markdownguide.org/basic-syntax/#reference-style-links --> [![Contributors][contributors-shield]][contributors-url] [![Forks][forks-shield]][forks-url] [![Stargazers][stars-shield]][stars-url] [![Issues][issues-shield]][issues-url] [![MIT License][license-shield]][license-url] [![LinkedIn][linkedin-shield]][linkedin-url] <!-- PROJECT LOGO --> <br /> <div align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template"> <img src="images/logo.png" alt="Logo" width="80" height="80"> </a> <h3 align="center">Best-README-Template</h3> <p align="center"> An awesome README template to jumpstart your projects! <br /> <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template"><strong>Explore the docs »</strong></a> <br /> <br /> <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template">View Demo</a> · <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/issues">Report Bug</a> · <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/issues">Request Feature</a> </p> </div> <!-- TABLE OF CONTENTS --> <details> <summary>Table of Contents</summary> <ol> <li> <a href="#about-the-project">About The Project</a> <ul> <li><a href="#built-with">Built With</a></li> </ul> </li> <li> <a href="#getting-started">Getting Started</a> <ul> <li><a href="#prerequisites">Prerequisites</a></li> <li><a href="#installation">Installation</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a href="#usage">Usage</a></li> <li><a href="#roadmap">Roadmap</a></li> <li><a href="#contributing">Contributing</a></li> <li><a href="#license">License</a></li> <li><a href="#contact">Contact</a></li> <li><a href="#acknowledgments">Acknowledgments</a></li> </ol> </details> <!-- ABOUT THE PROJECT --> ## About The Project [![Product Name Screen Shot][product-screenshot]](https://example.com) There are many great README templates available on GitHub; however, I didn't find one that really suited my needs so I created this enhanced one. I want to create a README template so amazing that it'll be the last one you ever need -- I think this is it. Here's why: * Your time should be focused on creating something amazing. A project that solves a problem and helps others * You shouldn't be doing the same tasks over and over like creating a README from scratch * You should implement DRY principles to the rest of your life :smile: Of course, no one template will serve all projects since your needs may be different. So I'll be adding more in the near future. You may also suggest changes by forking this repo and creating a pull request or opening an issue. Thanks to all the people have contributed to expanding this template! Use the `BLANK_README.md` to get started. <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> ### Built With This section should list any major frameworks/libraries used to bootstrap your project. Leave any add-ons/plugins for the acknowledgements section. Here are a few examples. * [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/) * [React.js](https://reactjs.org/) * [Vue.js](https://vuejs.org/) * [Angular](https://angular.io/) * [Svelte](https://svelte.dev/) * [Laravel](https://laravel.com) * [Bootstrap](https://getbootstrap.com) * [JQuery](https://jquery.com) <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- GETTING STARTED --> ## Getting Started This is an example of how you may give instructions on setting up your project locally. To get a local copy up and running follow these simple example steps. ### Prerequisites This is an example of how to list things you need to use the software and how to install them. * npm ```sh npm install npm@latest -g ``` ### Installation _Below is an example of how you can instruct your audience on installing and setting up your app. This template doesn't rely on any external dependencies or services._ 1. Get a free API Key at [https://example.com](https://example.com) 2. Clone the repo ```sh git clone https://github.com/your_username_/Project-Name.git ``` 3. Install NPM packages ```sh npm install ``` 4. Enter your API in `config.js` ```js const API_KEY = 'ENTER YOUR API'; ``` <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- USAGE EXAMPLES --> ## Usage Use this space to show useful examples of how a project can be used. Additional screenshots, code examples and demos work well in this space. You may also link to more resources. _For more examples, please refer to the [Documentation](https://example.com)_ <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- ROADMAP --> ## Roadmap - [x] Add Changelog - [x] Add back to top links - [ ] Add Additional Templates w/ Examples - [ ] Add "components" document to easily copy & paste sections of the readme - [ ] Multi-language Support - [ ] Chinese - [ ] Spanish See the [open issues](https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/issues) for a full list of proposed features (and known issues). <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- CONTRIBUTING --> ## Contributing Contributions are what make the open source community such an amazing place to learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make are **greatly appreciated**. If you have a suggestion that would make this better, please fork the repo and create a pull request. You can also simply open an issue with the tag "enhancement". Don't forget to give the project a star! Thanks again! 1. Fork the Project 2. Create your Feature Branch (`git checkout -b feature/AmazingFeature`) 3. Commit your Changes (`git commit -m 'Add some AmazingFeature'`) 4. Push to the Branch (`git push origin feature/AmazingFeature`) 5. Open a Pull Request <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- LICENSE --> ## License Distributed under the MIT License. See `LICENSE.txt` for more information. <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- CONTACT --> ## Contact Your Name - [@your_twitter](https://twitter.com/your_username) - email@example.com Project Link: [https://github.com/your_username/repo_name](https://github.com/your_username/repo_name) <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS --> ## Acknowledgments Use this space to list resources you find helpful and would like to give credit to. I've included a few of my favorites to kick things off! * [Choose an Open Source License](https://choosealicense.com) * [GitHub Emoji Cheat Sheet](https://www.webpagefx.com/tools/emoji-cheat-sheet) * [Malven's Flexbox Cheatsheet](https://flexbox.malven.co/) * [Malven's Grid Cheatsheet](https://grid.malven.co/) * [Img Shields](https://shields.io) * [GitHub Pages](https://pages.github.com) * [Font Awesome](https://fontawesome.com) * [React Icons](https://react-icons.github.io/react-icons/search) <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- MARKDOWN LINKS & IMAGES --> <!-- https://www.markdownguide.org/basic-syntax/#reference-style-links --> [contributors-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/contributors/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [contributors-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/graphs/contributors [forks-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/forks/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [forks-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/network/members [stars-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/stars/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [stars-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/stargazers [issues-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/issues/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [issues-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/issues [license-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/license/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [license-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/blob/master/LICENSE.txt [linkedin-shield]: https://img.shields.io/badge/-LinkedIn-black.svg?style=for-the-badge&logo=linkedin&colorB=555 [linkedin-url]: https://linkedin.com/in/othneildrew [product-screenshot]: images/screenshot.png
Diff and patch tables
Contentful API wrapper library exposing an ActiveRecord-like interface
# Trope **[Documentation][docs] - [Gem][gems] - [Source][source]** Prototyping language that transcompiles into pure Ruby code. 1. Build your concept in Trope. 2. Write specs. 3. Transcompile into Ruby. 4. Destroy Trope files. 5. Red, green, refactor. ## Install > NOTE: Trope is not released yet, the gem is just a placeholder. ### Bundler: `gem 'trope'` ### RubyGems: `gem install trope` ## Example Create `library.trope`: ```ruby object Book attr name <String> -!wd 'Unnamed book' attr isbn <Integer> -w attr library <Library> -w do before write { @library.books.delete(self) unless @library.nil? } after write { @library.books.push(self) unless @library.books.include?(self) } end end object Library attr books <Array> -d Array.new meth add_book do |attributes_or_book <Hash, Book>| book = attributes_or_book.is_a?(Book) ? attributes_or_book : Book.new(attributes_or_book) book.library = self @books << book end end ``` Now generate the Ruby code: ```sh $ trope compile libary.trope ``` Those 15 lines will be transcompiled into the following pure Ruby code in `library.rb`: ```ruby class Book class Error < RuntimeError; end class InvalidAttributesError < Error def to_s 'attributes must be a Hash or respond to #to_h' end end class MissingAttributeError < Error def initialize(attr_name, attr_class) @name, @class = attr_name.to_s, attr_class.to_s end def to_s "attribute '#@name' does not exist for #@class" end end class MissingNameError < Error def to_s 'name cannot be nil' end end class InvalidNameError < Error def to_s 'name must be an instance of String or respond to :to_s' end end class InvalidIsbnError < Error def to_s 'isbn must be an instance of Integer or respond to :to_i' end end class MissingLibraryError < Error def to_s 'library cannot be nil' end end class InvalidLibraryError < Error def to_s 'library must be an instance of Library' end end attr_reader *(@@_attributes = [:name, :isbn, :library]) def initialize(attributes={}) raise InvalidAttributesError unless attributes.is_a?(Hash) || attributes.respond_to?(:to_h) attributes = attributes.to_h unless attributes.is_a?(Hash) raise MissingNameError if attributes.has_key?(:name) && attributes[:name].nil? attributes[:name] = 'Unnamed book' unless attributes.has_key?(:name) attributes.each do |name, value| raise MissingAttributeError.new(name, self.class) unless @@_attributes.include?(name.to_sym) setter_method = "#{name}=" setter_method = "_#{setter_method}" unless self.class.method_defined?(setter_method) send(setter_method, value) end end def name=(value) raise MissingNameError if value.nil? raise InvalidNameError unless value.is_a?(String) || value.respond_to?(:to_s) value = value.to_i unless value.is_a?(Integer) @name = value end def isbn=(value) raise InvalidIsbnError unless value.is_a?(Integer) || value.respond_to?(:to_i) value = value.to_i unless value.is_a?(Integer) @isbn = value end def library=(value) raise InvalidLibraryError unless value.is_a?(Library) || value.nil? @library.books.delete(self) unless @library.nil? @library = value @library.books.push(self) unless @library.books.include?(self) @library end end class Library class Error < RuntimeError; end class InvalidAttributesError < Error def to_s 'attributes must be an instance of Hash or respond to #to_h' end end class MissingAttributeError < Error def initialize(attr_name, attr_class) @name, @class = attr_name.to_s, attr_class.to_s end def to_s "attribute '#@name' does not exist for #@class" end end class InvalidBooksError < Error def to_s 'books must be an instance of Array or respond to #to_a' end end attr_reader *(@@_attributes = [:books]) def initialize(attributes={}) raise InvalidAttributesError unless attributes.is_a?(Hash) || attributes.respond_to?(:to_h) attributes = attributes.to_h unless attributes.is_a?(Hash) attributes[:books] = Array.new unless attributes.has_key?(:books) attributes.each do |name, value| raise MissingAttributeError.new(name, self.class) unless @@_attributes.include?(name.to_sym) setter_method = "#{name}=" setter_method = "_#{setter_method}" unless self.class.method_defined?(setter_method) send(setter_method, value) end end def add_book(attributes_or_book={}) raise InvalidAttributesError unless attributes_or_book.is_a?(Hash) || attributes_or_book.respond_to?(:to_h) || attributes_or_book.is_a?(Book) attributes_or_book = attributes_or_book.to_h unless attributes_or_book.is_a?(Hash) || attributes_or_book.is_a?(Book) book = attributes_or_book.is_a?(Book) ? attributes_or_book : Book.new(attributes_or_book) book.library = self @books << book end protected def _books=(value) raise InvalidBooksError unless value.is_a?(Array) || value.respond_to?(:to_a) value = value.to_a unless value.is_a?(Array) @books = value end end ``` Using the transcompiled Ruby code will produce the expected results: ```ruby p library = Library.new # => #<Library:0x007fc55c0ce418 @books=[]> p library.add_book name: 'Book 1', isbn: 1 # => [#<Book:0x007fc55c0cde78 @name=0, @isbn=1, @library=#<Library:0x007fc55c0ce418 @books=[...]>>] p library # => #<Library:0x007fc55c0ce418 @books=[#<Book:0x007fc55c0cde78 @name=0, @isbn=1, @library=#<Library:0x007fc55c0ce418 ...>>]> p library.books.first # => #<Book:0x007fc55c0cde78 @name=0, @isbn=1, @library=#<Library:0x007fc55c0ce418 @books=[#<Book:0x007fc55c0cde78 ...>]>> p library.books.first.isbn = nil # => nil p library.books.first.name = nil # => Book::MissingNameError: name cannot be nil p library.books.first.library = nil # => Book::MissingLibraryError: library cannot be nil p library.books.first.isbn = ['array'] # => Book::InvalidIsbnError: isbn must be an instance of Integer or respond to :to_i p library = Library.new(books: 123) # => Library::InvalidBooksError: books must be an instance of Array or respond to #to_a ``` ### Breakdown ```ruby object Book attr name <String> -!wd 'Unnamed book' end ``` This says that I have an object `Book` that has an attribute `name` (`attr name`) that must either be an instance/subclass of `String` or be able to convert to an instance of `String` using `#to_s` (`<String>`). It is a required attribute that can never be set to nil (`!`), has a writer method (`w`), and defaults to 'Unnamed book'. The minus sign (`-`) indicates a 'switch' or 'option', must like most *nix command line programs. The example could also have been written like so: ```ruby object Book attr name <String> -! -w -d 'Unnamed book' end ``` The above examples will transcompile into the following: ```ruby class Book class Error < RuntimeError; end class InvalidAttributesError < Error def to_s 'attributes must be a Hash or respond to #to_h' end end class MissingAttributeError < Error def initialize(attr_name, attr_class) @name, @class = attr_name.to_s, attr_class.to_s end def to_s "attribute '#@name' does not exist for #@class" end end class MissingNameError < Error def to_s 'name cannot be nil' end end class InvalidNameError < Error def to_s 'name must be an instance of String or respond to :to_s' end end attr_reader *(@@_attributes = [:name]) @@_required_attributes = [:name] def initialize(attributes={}) raise InvalidAttributesError unless attributes.is_a?(Hash) || attributes.respond_to?(:to_h) attributes = attributes.to_h unless attributes.is_a?(Hash) raise MissingNameError if attributes.has_key?(:name) && attributes[:name].nil? attributes[:name] = 'Unnamed book' unless attributes.has_key?(:name) attributes.each do |name, value| raise MissingAttributeError.new(name, self.class) unless @@_attributes.include?(name.to_sym) setter_method = "#{name}=" setter_method = "_#{setter_method}" unless self.class.method_defined?(setter_method) send(setter_method, value) end end def name=(value) raise MissingNameError if value.nil? raise InvalidNameError unless value.is_a?(String) || value.respond_to?(:to_s) value = value.to_i unless value.is_a?(Integer) @name = value end end ``` ## Contributing * Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet * Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it * Fork the project * Start a feature/bugfix branch * Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution * Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, VERSION, or Gemfile. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it. ## Copyright Copyright © 2012 Ryan Scott Lewis <ryan@rynet.us>. The MIT License (MIT) - See LICENSE for further details. [docs]: http://rubydoc.info/gems/trope/frames [gems]: https://rubygems.org/gems/trope [source]: https://github.com/RyanScottLewis/trope