Semantic Release task for Start
Modern and scalable routing for React applications
Starts server, waits for URL, then runs test command; when the tests end, shuts down server
Easily start and stop an X Virtual Frame Buffer from your node apps.
A node cli to control Firefox
OpenFeature SDK for JavaScript
The most popular front-end framework for developing responsive, mobile first projects on the web.
Node.js Streams, a user-land copy of the stream library from Node.js
A Karma plugin - adapter for Jasmine testing framework.
A react component toolset for managing animations
Node.js releases data
Utility to wait for a TCP port to open.
Commitizen customizable adapter following the conventional-changelog format.
Multi-channel AI gateway with extensible messaging integrations
JS/TS development environment configuration and dependencies for @substrate projects.
Type-safe, structured communication between worker threads and parent processes via TypeScript meta-programming.
Automated semver compliant package publishing
A lightweight and lazy implementation of JSONMatch made for JavaScript
semantic-release plugin to publish a GitHub release and comment on released Pull Requests/Issues
Agora WebRTC SDK for JavaScript
A test dapp for multichain api
Get the name of a Windows version from the release number: `5.1.2600` → `XP`
The buf CLI is a tool for working with Protocol Buffers.
errors with more than just a message
RakeRoll: Roll out your release versions with ease, RakeRoll will version and tag a release then create an updated changelog of the git commits (picking only those starting with a *)
AgilityJS as a gem. Check out http://agilityjs.com/ for more information!
Bueller provides a command to create new gem project directories. Code to help you start testing is generated according to the testing framework you choose. Bueller also provides handy tools for versioning and releasing your gem to github and rubygems.
We have deprecated the legacy Oso open source library. We have plans for the next open source release and we're looking forward to getting feedback from the community leading up to that point (please reach out to us in the Slack #help channel). In the meantime, if you're happy using the Oso open source library now, nothing needs to change – i.e., we are not end-of-lifing (EOL) the library and we'll continue to provide support and critical bug fixes. More context: [here](https://www.osohq.com/docs/oss/getting-started/deprecation.html).
A corundum is a synthetic gemstone - including synthetic rubies. Ergo: a tool for synthesizing gems. Corundum starts with the outlook that gemspecs are relatively easy to work with, and that the opinion of the RubyGems team is that they should be treated as a configuration file, not a code file. Furthermore, Rake is a powerful, easy to use tool, and does admit the use of Ruby code to get the job done. The hard part about publishing gems is getting them into a state you'll be proud of. There's dozens of fiddly steps to putting together a gem fit for public consumption, and it's very easy to get some of them wrong. Corundum is a collection of Rake tasklibs, therefore, that will perform the entire process of releasing gems, including QA steps up front through packaging and releasing the gem
Write reactive web applications using familiar Ruby syntax and patterns. ⚠️ WARNING: This gem has been renamed to 'ruwi' starting from v0.10.0. Please migrate to the 'ruwi' gem. See https://github.com/t0yohei/ruby-wasm-ui/releases/tag/v0.10.0 for migration details.
Apache Arrow is a cross-language development platform for in-memory data. You can use Apache Arrow to process large data effectively in Python and other languages such as R. Apache Arrow is the future of data processing. Apache Arrow 1.0, the first major version, was released at 2020-07-24. It's a good time to know Apache Arrow and start using it.
abstract_feature_branch is a Ruby gem that provides a unique variation on the Branch by Abstraction Pattern by Paul Hammant and the Feature Toggles Pattern by Martin Fowler to enhance team productivity and improve software fault tolerance. It provides the ability to wrap blocks of code with an abstract feature branch name, and then specify in a configuration file which features to be switched on or off. The goal is to build out upcoming features in the same source code repository branch (i.e. Continuous Integration and Trunk-Based Development), regardless of whether all are completed by the next release date or not, thus increasing team productivity by preventing integration delays. Developers then disable in-progress features until they are ready to be switched on in production, yet enable them locally and in staging environments for in-progress testing. This gives developers the added benefit of being able to switch a feature off after release should big problems arise for a high risk feature. abstract_feature_branch additionally supports Domain Driven Design's pattern of Bounded Contexts by allowing developers to configure context-specific feature files if needed. abstract_feature_branch is one of the simplest and most minimalistic "Feature Flags" Ruby gems out there as it enables you to get started very quickly by simply leveraging YAML files without having to set up a data store if you do not need it (albeit, you also have the option to use Redis as a very fast in-memory data store).
Placeholder release that reserves the git-ai gem name on rubygems.org. The real project — a conversational git assistant for commit messages and pull requests — will ship starting at version 0.1.0 from https://github.com/qvitta/git-ai. Please do not use this version.
Resqueue is a Redis-backed Ruby library for creating background jobs, placing those jobs on multiple queues, and processing them later. It is meant to be the continuation of Resque since it is no longer released by its maintainers. Background jobs can be any Ruby class or module that responds to perform. Your existing classes can easily be converted to background jobs or you can create new classes specifically to do work. Or, you can do both. Resque is heavily inspired by DelayedJob (which rocks) and is comprised of three parts: * A Ruby library for creating, querying, and processing jobs * A Rake task for starting a worker which processes jobs * A Sinatra app for monitoring queues, jobs, and workers.
This is the Songtradr API. Use it to retrieve deep music metadata and trigger processes like auto-tagging. You can also use the API to manage your account and musicube cloud data. **Authentication** 1. Reach out to support@songtradr.com to receive a free account or use your login data if you are already signed up. 2. To authenticate, you need to login via the POST /api/v1/user/login endpoint. 3. The endpoint responds with a jwtToken which you can use in all following API requests as a bearer token. **Rate Limiting** The current limit is 120 Requests per minute. Reach out to us via support@songtradr.com if you need to request more. **Getting Started with auto-tagging** 1. If you want to get your own files auto-tagged, use the POST /api/v1/user/file/{name}/initUpload endpoint. It responds with a presigned S3 link where you can upload your file. 2. You can check the processing status of your file via the GET /api/v1/user/file/{name}/filesStatus endpoint. 3. As soon as processing is done, you can request the generated data via the GET /api/v1/user/files endpoint. **Getting Started with search** You can either search the released music via the /public/recording endpoints or your own private uploaded music via the /user/file/ endpoints. 1. If you want to search the world's released music, a good starting point is the GET /api/v1/public/recording/search endpoint. Please find the extensive list of parameters that serve as semantic search filters. 2. If you want to search your own previously uploaded music, a good starting point is the GET GET /api/v1/user/files endpoint. It has the same extensive list of parameters that serve as semantic search filters.
ERBook 9.2.1 Write books, manuals, and documents in eRuby http://snk.tuxfamily.org/lib/erbook/ ERBook is an extensible document processor that emits [1]any document you can imagine from [2]eRuby templates, which allow scripting and dynamic content generation. Version 9.2.1 (2009-11-18) This release fixes some bugs in, and improves the readability and load time of, generated XHTML documents. Bug fixes * Prevent search button from starting search when search box untouched. * Prevent browser from fetching base-64 embedded URI sources by qualifying their digests with the "cid" URI schema, which is used to identify the parts of a multi-part e-mail message. This cuts down on the amount of "404 - File Not Found" errors on the web server which hosts your generated XHTML documents because web browsers will not confuse these embedded "cid" digests as being relative HTTP files. Housekeeping * Increase vertical spacing between [3]References for better readability. * Embed W3C validator badges as base-64 data URIs to reduce page load time. * Split the document processing code in ERBook::Document into smaller self-documenting methods. References 1. http://snk.tuxfamily.org/lib/erbook/#HelloWorld 2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ERuby 3. http://snk.tuxfamily.org/lib/erbook/#_references
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.