tiny library for text-based interactions (e.g. MUDs, text-based adventure games, etc)
the complete solution for node.js command-line programs
Infer strong typings for commander options and action handlers
A module for making CLI applications with NestJS. Decorators for running commands and separating out config parsers included. This package works on top of commander.
MCP server for terminal operations and file editing
Export commander command as a Fig spec
A testing utility for nest-commander. It builds on top of ideas from @nestjs/testing and is not tied to any test framework directly.
🛹 Modern TypeScript tools for SVG
Commander.js with integrated interactive prompts
A small collection of option validators for commander
TypeScript shim for DOMMatrix
the complete solution for node.js command-line programs
A wrapper for Commander that automatically sets the version based on your package.json
Redis web-based management tool written in node.js
Render data in text columns. Supports in-column text-wrap.
Effortlessly add intelligent autocomplete support to your Commander.js CLI app using Carapace. Supports Bash, Zsh, Fish, Nushell and more
A NestJS module that provide a cli
A TypeScript utility for building type-safe CLI commands using commander and zod.
A module to globally install libraries to prevent installing the same libraries again and again
the complete solution for node.js command-line programs
Visual multi-agent orchestrator and manager for Claude Code with 3D/2D interface
A JavaScript library to control agents enclosed in CLI commands like Anthropic Claude Code CLI
commandline option parser
Terminal Commander: local MCP-operated terminal/file signal channel with native Linux, Windows, and macOS packages.
Headless backend for arael-sketch: commands, actions, history, MCP server
Interactive 2D sketch editor with real-time constraint solving
2D constraint-based sketch solver: entities, constraints, and optimization
A command line interface for managing Sublime Text metadata.
A command line program to paste text to http://pastr.it
This RubyGem contais a nice and fun game called Knucleheads (once using the code in your computer, you can call it anything! :) ) The game runs into the command-line, using just the command 'studio_game'. You can choose the number of rounds you want to play and, when exiting, you'll receive the stats of the rounds. You can create a '.csv' file to push new player into the game. The file must have the following structure: ---NAME----|---HEALTH--- (This is just explanatory, not to put into file) Player-name,100 (The comma should appear into each string.) Well what else can I say? Just...have fun, playing and using this humble code into your robust and well-tested program. Good-bye !!!
A command to reverse pipeline text.
Build command text based on multiple filters
Expand text snippet from simple shortcuts on the command-line
God it's about every day where I think to myself, gadzooks, I keep typing *REPETITIVE_BORING_TASK* over and over. Wouldn't it be great if I had something like boom to store all these commonly-used text snippets for me? Then I realized that was a worthless idea since boom hadn't been created yet and I had no idea what that statement meant. At some point I found the code for boom in a dark alleyway and released it under my own name because I wanted to look smart.
Verbify is a *very* simple command parser for natural-esque languages intended to be used in text-based games, as long as you don't mind inaccuracy too much
This is a fork of Zach Holman's amazing boom. Explanation for the fork follows Zach's intro to boom: God it's about every day where I think to myself, gadzooks, I keep typing *REPETITIVE_BORING_TASK* over and over. Wouldn't it be great if I had something like boom to store all these commonly-used text snippets for me? Then I realized that was a worthless idea since boom hadn't been created yet and I had no idea what that statement meant. At some point I found the code for boom in a dark alleyway and released it under my own name because I wanted to look smart. Explanation for my fork: Zach didn't fancy changing boom a great deal to handle the case of remote and local boom repos. Which is fair enough I believe in simplicity. But I also believe in getting tools to do what you want them to do. So with boom, you can change your storage with a 'boom storage' command, but that's a hassle when you want to share stuff. So kaboom does what boom does plus simplifies maintaining two boom repos. What this means is that you can pipe input between remote and local boom instances. My use case is to have a redis server in our office and be able to share snippets between each other, but to also be able to have personal repos. It's basically something like distributed key-value stores. I imagine some of the things that might be worth thinking about, based on DVC are: Imports/Exports of lists/keys/values between repos. Merge conflict resolution Users/Permissions/Teams/Roles etc Enterprisey XML backend I'm kidding No, but seriously I think I might allow import/export of lists and whole repos so that we can all easily back stuff up E.g. clone the whole shared repo backup your local repo to the central one underneath a namespace
A command-line tool for coloring and styling text in the ternimal
daily-txt is command line script for creating and listing text files wth a current date filename.