Lexes CommonJS modules, returning their named exports metadata
Lexes ES modules returning their import/export metadata
Is this specifier a node.js core module?
generate client and server use js module from contract metas
Stripe.js loading utility
Browser-friendly inheritance fully compatible with standard node.js inherits()
ECMAScript scope analyzer for ESLint
A drop-in replacement for fs, making various improvements.
check if a source string is an es6 module
Determine an app's root path from anywhere inside the app
Module Federation helper for Node
Webpack loader that adjusts source maps
The Node.js `util.deprecate()` function with browser support
Strip UTF-8 byte order mark (BOM) from a string
Universal module importer for Node.js
Check if a protocol requires a certain port number to be added to an URL.
A Vite plugin that takes the CSS and adds it to the page through the JS. For those who want a single JS file.
Tomorrow's ECMAScript modules today!
Fixes stack traces for files with source maps
A super-simple-small keyval store built on top of IndexedDB
The official Mixpanel JavaScript browser client library
Helper module for loading your native module's .node file
This library provides the functionality of PBKDF2 with the ability to use any supported hashing algorithm returned from crypto.getHashes()
Create aliases of directories and register custom module paths
JavaScript module metadata primitives for RustUse
JavaScript import metadata primitives for RustUse
Ruby ES6 Module Transpiler is a bridge to the JS ES6 Module Transpiler
== E9Tags An extension to ActsAsTaggableOn[http://github.com/mbleigh/acts-as-taggable-on] which "improves" on custom tagging, or at least makes it more dynamic. Additionally it provides some autocomplete rack apps and the corresponding javascript. == Installation 1. E9Tags requires jquery and jquery-ui for the autocompletion and tag-adding form, be sure they're loaded in your pages where the tags form will be rendered. 2. E9Tags extends ActsAsTaggableOn and requires it. Run it's generator if you have not. 3. Run the E9Tags install script to copy over the required JS rails g e9_tags:install 4. Then make sure it is loaded, how you do that doesn't matter, e.g. <%= javascript_include_tag 'e9_tags' %> 5. Create an initializer for that sets up the taggable models and their controllers. This gives the models the tag associations and methods and prepares their controller to handle the otherwise unexpected tag params. require 'e9_tags' require 'contacts_controller' require 'contact' E9Tags.controllers << ContactsController E9Tags.models << Contact OR You can just include the modules in your classes yourself. The first way really exists for the case where the classes you wish to extend are part of another plugin/gem. # in contact.rb include E9Tags:Model # in contacts_controller.rb include E9Tags::Controller 6. Render the tags form partial in whatever model forms require it. = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f If you pass a context, it will be locked and no longer possible to change/add the contexts on the form (and as a side effect, the tags autocompletion will be restricted to that context). = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f, :context => :users Finally if you pass a 2nd arg to :context you can set a tag context to be "private" (default is false). In this case the tag context will be locked as private (typically suffixed with *), meaning that the tags will not be publicly searchable/visible. This is useful for organizational tags tags, say if you wanted to arbitrarily group records, or create a custom search based on a tag context. = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f, :context => [:users, true] NOTE: The form and javascript are intended to work out of the box, but the certainly aren't going to look pretty. If you do intend to use the forms, you'll no doubt need to style them.
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