Drops undefined arguments from the end of a function call.
Remove spaces and tabs around line-breaks
Trim newlines from the start and/or end of a string
Trim the whitespace within an array of GLSL tokens
ES5 spec-compliant shim for String.prototype.trim
Remove final line feeds from a string
Trim a consecutively repeated substring: foo--bar---baz → foo-bar-baz
Spacetrim is trimming string from all 4 sides.
Similar to String#trim() but removes only newlines
Like String.trim() but you can choose granularly what to trim
A tiny library for trimming whitespace from a canvas element
Trim leading lines from a string when they are 100% whitespace or empty.
TailwindCSS leading-trim utility classes.
A trim method that behaves like jquery.trim
The Lodash method `_.trim` exported as a module.
Trim whitespace characters from the beginning and end of a string.
Functions for modifying a unified-latex AST
trims query and hash parameters off a URL
"trimMargin" like Kotlin and "stripMargin" like Scala.
Remove leading, trailing, and repeated whitespace from a string
An trim polyfill for legacy browsers.
Trim whitespace characters from the beginning and end of a string.
This directive helps to trim whitespaces of an input text value.
This method removes whitespace from the left and right end of a string.
PythonConfig is a module with classes for parsing and writing Python configuration files created by the ConfigParser classes in Python. These files are structured like this: [Section Name] key = value otherkey: othervalue [Other Section] key: value3 otherkey = value4 Leading whitespace before values are trimmed, and the key must be the at the start of the line - no leading whitespace there. You can use : or = . Multiline values are supported, as long as the second (or third, etc.) lines start with whitespace: [Section] bigstring: This is a very long string, so I'm not sure I'll be able to fit it on one line, but as long as there is one space before each line, I'm ok. Tabs work too. Also, this class supports interpolation: [Awards] output: Congratulations for winning %(prize)! prize: the lottery Will result in: config.sections["Awards"]["output"] == "Congratulations for winning the lottery!" You can also access the sections with the dot operator, but only with all-lowercase: [Awards] key:value [prizes] lottery=3.2 million config.awards["key"] #=> "value" config.prizes["lottery"] #=> "3.2 million" You can modify any values you want, though to add sections, you should use the add_section method. config.sections["prizes"]["lottery"] = "100 dollars" # someone hit the jackpot config.add_section("Candies") config.candies["green"] = "tasty" When you want to output a configuration, just call its +to_s+ method. File.open("output.ini","w") do |out| out.write config.to_s end
Diff and patch tables
Diff and patch tables
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