Definition of standard log levels
A wrapper around initialising Winston with Application-Log Standard levels, colours, and specific formats.
A micropackage formerly known as `application-log-winston-interface`: a wrapper around initialising Winston with Application-Log Standard levels, colours, and specific formats.
A JavaScript implementation of the Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm
A logger for just about everything.
a JSON logging library for node.js services
a JSON logging library for node.js services
Exposes a list of quality levels available for the source.
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A helper utility for logging of WebdriverIO packages
Multi-tier cache module for Node.js. Redis, Upstash, CloudfareKV, File, in-memory and others drivers
A family of specs for interoperable TypeScript
A simple logging module
Rules Engine expressed in simple json
Amplitude Session Replay plugin for React Native
The official runtime utils for Standard Schema
Framework-independent loaders for compressed and super compressed (basis) textures
Browser-friendly inheritance fully compatible with standard node.js inherits()
A modern logging library for Node.js and modern browsers that provides log level mapping to the console
A simple logger to console or file
debug module using logfmt format
Core logic for the cascade-select widget implemented as a state machine
The most simple logger imaginable
The i-level Style gem loads all standard CSS, Javascript and Images that are used in the standard layout of i-level Rails applications
Colorizes the output of the usual standard library logger, depending on the logger level: require 'logger/colors'
TypeProf performs a type analysis of non-annotated Ruby code. It abstractly executes input Ruby code in a level of types instead of values, gathers what types are passed to and returned by methods, and prints the analysis result in RBS format, a standard type description format for Ruby 3.0.
LittleLogFriend sets your standard logger to the format: "DATE TIME [ LEVEL ] PID : MESSAGE"
Standard OOP abstract entities for proper SOLID implementation on class declaration level
Provides higher level data structures in Ruby using standard Redis commands. Also provides basic object mapping for pre-existing types.
A wrapper class around the standard Ruby logger that adds a simply logging level control and the ability to log certain messages to syslog. It also adds a puts method so that the logger can be used instead of stdout etc. Output can be coloured depending on the logging level.
Concatenative can be used to program in Ruby using a concatenative syntax through ordinary arrays. Because of its high-level implementation, it is not nearly as fast as standard Ruby code.
The International Standard Industrial Classification (ISIC) is a United Nations system for classifying economic data. The classification is based in four hierarchical levels: sections, divisions, groups and classes. This gem allows to classify an entity based on its ISIC code.
Adds some simple formatting to the standard Rails BufferedLogger class. This solution aims to be something between the default logging which is missing information such as timestamps, process IDs and severity levels and a full logging solution like log4r
API client for qrcodefyi.com. Look up QR code types, versions, encoding modes, error correction levels, and standards. Zero dependencies.
This library performs diffs of CSV data, or any table-like source. Unlike a standard diff that compares line by line, and is sensitive to the ordering of records, CSV-Diff identifies common lines by key field(s), and then compares the contents of the fields in each line. Data may be supplied in the form of CSV files, or as an array of arrays. The diff process provides a fine level of control over what to diff, and can optionally ignore certain types of changes (e.g. changes in position). CSV-Diff is particularly well suited to data in parent-child format. Parent- child data does not lend itself well to standard text diffs, as small changes in the organisation of the tree at an upper level can lead to big movements in the position of descendant records. By instead matching records by key, CSV-Diff avoids this issue, while still being able to detect changes in sibling order. This gem implements the core diff algorithm, and handles the loading and diffing of CSV files (or Arrays of Arrays). It also supports converting data in XML format into tabular form, so that it can then be processed like any other CSV or table-like source. It returns a CSVDiff object containing the details of differences in object form. This is useful for projects that need diff capability, but want to handle the reporting or actioning of differences themselves. For a pre-built diff reporting capability, see the csv-diff-report gem, which provides a command-line tool for generating diff reports in HTML, Excel, or text formats.
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