Reducible tree walk for an arbitrary data structures
Reduce transform functions with PostCSS.
Reduce any JSON value by traversing depth first and visiting each node
Isomorphic map-reduce function to flatten an array into the supplied array
Reduce initial definitions to the actual initial value, where possible.
Reduce CSS calc() function to the maximum
Reduce function calls in a string, using a callback
Reduce a list of values using promises into a promise for a value
TypeScript definitions for image-blob-reduce
Reactive Extensions for modern JavaScript
Walk any kind of tree structure depth- or breadth-first. Supports promises and advanced map-reduce operations with a very small API.
Reduce custom identifiers with PostCSS.
Reduce multiple reducers into a single reducer
High quality image resizing for blobs in browsers (`pica` wrapper with some sugar)
Types for the TypeScript-ESTree AST spec
A best-practices CSS foundation
`[].reduce()` for old browsers
TypeScript definitions for lodash.reduce
Safe defaults for cssnano which require minimal configuration.
Utility for creating Universal macOS applications from two x64 and arm64 Electron applications
A lightweight toolset for writing styles in Javascript.
walk paths fast and efficiently
C# grammar for tree-sitter
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ignis-collective brings NCCL-style collective communication to Ruby: ring/tree all-reduce, and P2P / IPC (VMM) / host-staged / TCP transports, on the Ignis foundation. EXPERIMENTAL — the transports require multiple GPUs / nodes and cannot be exercised on a single GPU, so this is shipped separately from the verified single-GPU stack.
Drop Zone is a solution to the problem of restricted sales in censored markets. The proposal is for the design of a protocol and reference client that encodes the location and a brief description of a good onto The Blockchain. Those wishing to purchase the good can search for items within a user-requested radius. Sellers list a good as available within a geographic region, subject to some degree of precision, for the purpose of obfuscating their precise location. Goods are announced next to an expiration, a hashtag, and if space permits, a description. Once a buyer finds a good in a defined relative proximity, a secure communication channel is opened between the parties on the Bitcoin test network ("testnet"). Once negotiations are complete, the buyer sends payment to the seller via the address listed on the Bitcoin mainnet. This spend action establishes reputation for the buyer, and potentially for the seller. Once paid, the seller is to furnish the exact GPS coordinates of the good to the buyer (alongside a small note such as "Check in the crevice of the tree"). When the buyer successfully picks up the item at the specified location, the buyer then issues a receipt with a note by spending flake to the address of the original post. In this way, sellers receive a reputation score. The solution is akin to that of Craigslist.org or Uber, but is distributed and as such provides nearly risk-free terms to contraband sellers, and drastically reduced risk to contraband buyers.
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