An extensible JSON stringify replacer with default support for error objects, sets, and maps.
Tiny JavaScript tokenizer.
Deterministic and safely JSON.stringify to quickly serialize JavaScript objects
JSON without touching any globals
Safely and quickly serialize JavaScript objects
Stringify and write JSON to a file atomically
smart-buffer is a Buffer wrapper that adds automatic read & write offset tracking, string operations, data insertions, and more.
Run 🐊Putout plugins
Library to escape Unicode characters
The best of both `JSON.stringify(obj)` and `JSON.stringify(obj, null, indent)`.
Utility library for handling `Buffer` object serialization and deserialization with JSON, offering base64 representations
a canonical json implementation
TypeScript definitions for streaming-json-stringify
Minimizer plugin for webpack
Replaces strings in a stream.
The Nx Devkit is used to customize Nx for different technologies and use cases. It contains many utility functions for reading and writing files, updating configuration, working with Abstract Syntax Trees(ASTs), and more. Learn more about [extending Nx by
Updates link URLs using a replacer function.
TypeScript definitions for json-stable-stringify-without-jsonify
CLI for generating code and running commands
The core Nx plugin contains the core functionality of Nx like the project graph, nx commands and task orchestration.
The Nx Devkit is used to customize Nx for different technologies and use cases. It contains many utility functions for reading and writing files, updating configuration, working with Abstract Syntax Trees(ASTs), and more. Learn more about [extending Nx by
Use JSON paths to replace values in TOML.
Replace image URLs with markdown it
The JS plugin for Nx contains executors and generators that provide the best experience for developing JavaScript and TypeScript projects.
A fast and very smart autolinking library that acts as a drop-in replacement for Rails `auto_link`
replace alert js native for a beautiful and smart simple alert
A fast and very smart autolinking library that acts as a drop-in replacement for Rails `auto_link` This is now a significant departure from the base gem.
A smart and fast Version Control System for LINUX Developers to replace GIT and its Complexity. Use "console help" command for help.
Hm is a library for clean, idiomatic and chainable processing of complicated Ruby structures, typically unpacked from JSON. It provides smart dig and bury, keys replacement, nested transformations and more.
Crops images based on entropy: leaving the most interesting part intact. Don't expect this to be a replacement for human cropping, it is an algorythm and not an extremely smart one at that :). Best results achieved in combination with scaling: the cropping is then only used to square the image, cutting off the least interesting part. The trimming simply chops off te edge that is least interesting, and continues doing so, untill it reached the requested size.
SwifterEnum transforms Rails enums from simple values into powerful objects with methods, computed properties, and type safety. Your enums become smart: payment_status.can_refund?, subscription.price, status.icon - all while maintaining 100% Rails enum compatibility. Drop-in replacement that eliminates scattered helper methods and case statements throughout your codebase.
This project aims to replace the builtin git-http-backend CGI handler distributed with C Git with a Rack application. By default, Grack uses calls to git on the system to implement Smart HTTP. Since the git-http-backend is really just a simple wrapper for the upload-pack and receive-pack processes with the '--stateless-rpc' option, this does not actually re-implement very much. However, it is possible to use a different backend by specifying a different Adapter.
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.