Rails UJS for the react-rails gem
`Start a promise chain
Tries to execute a function and discards any error that occurs
Fuzzy filtering and string similarity scoring - compatible with fuzzaldrin
Generate massive amounts of fake contextual data
Super-fast alternative to Babel for when you can target modern JS runtimes
A browser based code editor
A file storage system for arangoDB databases inspired by GridFS
A 373-byte Spec-Compliant Runtime-Only Implementation of the ECMAScript Try Operator Proposal Result class
The official Elasticsearch client for Node.js
A parser for the TypeScript doc comment syntax
Convert Oniguruma patterns to native JavaScript RegExp
Gracefully handle a Promise using async/await.
NodeJS Require that let you handle module not found error without try/catch
A replacement for process.exit that ensures stdio are fully drained before exiting.
Lottie for React
Gracefully handle a Promise using async/await.
Markdown-ish syntax for generating flowcharts, mindmaps, sequence diagrams, class diagrams, gantt charts, git graphs and more.
The Agent Client Protocol (ACP) is a protocol that standardizes communication between *code editors* (interactive programs for viewing and editing source code) and *coding agents* (programs that use generative AI to autonomously modify code).
functional try-catch wrapper
Build environment checking (a la autoconf) for node.js
mjml-head-preview
Configuration generator for ember-try
This library emulates ioredis by performing all operations in-memory.
Zero-cost specialization in generic context on stable Rust
Limited safe specialization on stable Rust with builder-like pattern
Our own CSS reset picking the best ideas from several sources (Normalize 4, HTML4 Doctor...) and trying to add our own customizations (what we use as default in most of the projects we start, specially mobile settings).
Spinny is influenced by projects like Spring and Spin and tries to make your workflow more efficient. It differs from those projects in the sense that it is designed to be lighter and does not try to create special cases for certain technologies like Rails or particular test runners.
Allow a user to find things by typing just enough letters and/or numbers to make it unique. The user can enter a string of letters. Ignoring case, spaces, and special characters, if there is only one match, short_find will return the item that starts with those characters. If no item is matched, or if more than one item is matched it will give an error and allow the user to try again.
*Webby* is a fantastic little website management system. It would be called a *content management system* if it were a bigger kid. But, it's just a runt with a special knack for transforming text. And that's really all it does - manages the legwork of turning text into something else, an *ASCII Alchemist* if you will. Webby works by combining the contents of a *page* with a *layout* to produce HTML. The layout contains everything common to all the pages - HTML headers, navigation menu, footer, etc. - and the page contains just the information for that page. You can use your favorite markup language to write your pages; Webby supports quite a few. Install Webby and try it out!
*Webby* is a fantastic little website management system. It would be called a *content management system* if it were a bigger kid. But, it's just a runt with a special knack for transforming text. And that's really all it does - manages the legwork of turning text into something else, an *ASCII Alchemist* if you will. Webby works by combining the contents of a *page* with a *layout* to produce HTML. The layout contains everything common to all the pages - HTML headers, navigation menu, footer, etc. - and the page contains just the information for that page. You can use your favorite markup language to write your pages; Webby supports quite a few. Install Webby and try it out!
*Webby* is a fantastic little website management system. It would be called a *content management system* if it were a bigger kid. But, it's just a runt with a special knack for transforming text. And that's really all it does - manages the legwork of turning text into something else, an *ASCII Alchemist* if you will. Webby works by combining the contents of a *page* with a *layout* to produce HTML. The layout contains everything common to all the pages - HTML headers, navigation menu, footer, etc. - and the page contains just the information for that page. You can use your favorite markup language to write your pages; Webby supports quite a few. Install Webby and try it out!
*Webby* is a fantastic little website management system. It would be called a *content management system* if it were a bigger kid. But, it's just a runt with a special knack for transforming text. And that's really all it does - manages the legwork of turning text into something else, an *ASCII Alchemist* if you will. Webby works by combining the contents of a *page* with a *layout* to produce HTML. The layout contains everything common to all the pages - HTML headers, navigation menu, footer, etc. - and the page contains just the information for that page. You can use your favorite markup language to write your pages; Webby supports quite a few. Install Webby and try it out!
*Webby* is a fantastic little website management system. It would be called a *content management system* if it were a bigger kid. But, it's just a runt with a special knack for transforming text. And that's really all it does - manages the legwork of turning text into something else, an *ASCII Alchemist* if you will. Webby works by combining the contents of a *page* with a *layout* to produce HTML. The layout contains everything common to all the pages - HTML headers, navigation menu, footer, etc. - and the page contains just the information for that page. You can use your favorite markup language to write your pages; Webby supports quite a few. Install Webby and try it out!
*Webby* is a fantastic little website management system. It would be called a *content management system* if it were a bigger kid. But, it's just a runt with a special knack for transforming text. And that's really all it does - manages the legwork of turning text into something else, an *ASCII Alchemist* if you will. Webby works by combining the contents of a *page* with a *layout* to produce HTML. The layout contains everything common to all the pages - HTML headers, navigation menu, footer, etc. - and the page contains just the information for that page. You can use your favorite markup language to write your pages; Webby supports quite a few. Install Webby and try it out!
*Webby* is a fantastic little website management system. It would be called a *content management system* if it were a bigger kid. But, it's just a runt with a special knack for transforming text. And that's really all it does - manages the legwork of turning text into something else, an *ASCII Alchemist* if you will. Webby works by combining the contents of a *page* with a *layout* to produce HTML. The layout contains everything common to all the pages - HTML headers, navigation menu, footer, etc. - and the page contains just the information for that page. You can use your favorite markup language to write your pages; Webby supports quite a few. Install Webby and try it out!
*Webby* is a fantastic little website management system. It would be called a *content management system* if it were a bigger kid. But, it's just a runt with a special knack for transforming text. And that's really all it does - manages the legwork of turning text into something else, an *ASCII Alchemist* if you will. Webby works by combining the contents of a *page* with a *layout* to produce HTML. The layout contains everything common to all the pages - HTML headers, navigation menu, footer, etc. - and the page contains just the information for that page. You can use your favorite markup language to write your pages; Webby supports quite a few. Install Webby and try it out!
# BELGIAN 2050 CALCULATOR TOOL A C version and ruby wrapper for the Belgian 2050 calcualtor ## GOTCHAS Some versions have a special formula in 2050!B2 that the translator doesn't recognise. Just write 2050 in that cell and recompile. Some tests fail for columns AN and AM on OUTPUT. I think this is due to rounding differences between excel and C. ## DEPENDENCIES 1. ruby 1.9.2 (including development headers) 2. basic c development headers This has ONLY been tested on OSX and on Ubuntu 64 bit EC2 ami. Grateful for reports from other platforms. In the util folder there is an example script that creates a new EC2 EMI, installs all the dependencies and then compiles the gem. It may be useful if you are trying to figure out the complete set of dependencies. ## INSTALLATION Note that this compiles the underlying c code, which might take 10-20 minutes or so gem install belgium_2050_model ## UPDATING TO NEWER VERSIONS OF EXCEL MODEL First of all, you need to be working on the github version of the code, not the rubygem: git clone http://github.com/decc/belgium_2050_model Then put the new spreadsheet in spreadsheet/2050Model.xlsx Then, from the top directory of the gem: bundle bundle exec rake The next step is to check whether lib/belgium_2050_model/belgium_2050_model_result.rb and lib/belgium_2050_model/model_structure.rb need to be altered so that they pick up the correct places in the underlying excel. The final stage is to build and install the new gem: gem build belgium_2050_model.gemspec gem install belgium_2050_model-<version>.gem ... where <version> is the version number of the gem file that was created in the folder. Now follow the instructions in the twenty-fifty server directory in order to ensure that it is using this new version of the gem.