A minimal set of basic helpers and utilties
mdast extension to parse and serialize generic directives (`:cite[smith04]`)
The `util.is*` functions introduced in Node v0.12.
Utilities to help with endpoint resolution
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/util-locate-window) [](https://www.npmjs.com/packag
Node.js's util module for all engines
unist utility to visit nodes
unist utility to check if a node passes a test
A parser to Amazon Resource Names
unist utility to recursively walk over nodes, with ancestral information
unist utility to serialize a node, position, or point as a human readable location
unist utility to get the position of a node
mdast utility to serialize markdown
Utility functions
mdast utility to get the plain text content of a node
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/util-user-agent-node) [](https://www.npmjs.com/
hast utility to check if a node is inter-element whitespace
mdast utility to transform to hast
mdast utility to check if a node is phrasing content
mdast extension to parse and serialize GFM task list items
mdast extension to parse and serialize GFM strikethrough
Various helper utilities
mdast utility to parse markdown
hast utility to create an element from a simple CSS selector
Ruby API for the SMS in a Box service, as well as command line utilities for interacting with SMS in a Box
Provides country & state utilities with country & state selection boxes
Vagrant Spatula uses the excellent 'spatula' gem and command-line utility to provision new base boxes with chef-solo, including getting chef-solo on the machine itself.
Simple benchmarking utilities that just work, right out of the box
ActiveMailbox provides a simple API and command line utility to work with voicemail boxes and voicemails generated by Asterisk.
* Pure Ruby library for creating desktop-like interfaces in the command line. * Flexible and easy to use utilities for focus/actions/scroll/events/cursor. * Support high level APIs similar to HTML DOM APIs like layouts, styles, box-model, cascade styles, XML/ERB, boxes, fonts, images, colors, easing, * Low level utilities can be used independently without bloating the performance * Event loop supporting set_timeout, wait_for, set_interval * Many high level widgets, utilities implemented expected in GUIs. * WIP (my first Ruby project)
Ruby Hail is fast-by-design Rack-based nano-framework. It provides generator and helper to quickly create Rack-based web-apps. You have options to make plain html-based app with basic templates. You can chain htmls and utilize ruby string interpolation. You can generate simple json API with authentication. Or you can go with SPA (single-page app). It uses Vue.js for UI because it shares fast-by-design philosophy and very similar to AngularJS 1. In all cases you have database (sqlite by default) available out of the box.
The dep_walker is small utility gem that checks dependencies for native extensions used by installed gems on Windows. If you are {RubyInstaller}[http://www.rubyinstaller.org] user and have seen message box: <em>"This application has failed to start because <name_of_dll>.dll was not found. Re-installing the application may fix this problem"</em> when you tried to use gem that has pre-built binariy extension, you've faced common problem on Windows systems - missing dependency dll. Same error might occur even if extension library was built during gem installation if all header files and libraries are available to the build tools, but runtime dependencies are not present. With dep_walker you can simply check all installed gems. Even more, if log is turned on, gem will print out information where dependency is found on the system, so you can check whether Ruby extension really uses correct version of required dll.
Sinatra with Bootstrap, Bower, jQuery, Haml, LESS and Sprockets!
Graphviz wrapper for Ruby. This can be used as a common library, a rails plugin and a command line tool. == FEATURES/PROBLEMS: GraphvizR is graphviz adapter for Ruby, and it can: * generate a graphviz dot file, * generate an image file by means of utilizing graphviz, * interprete rdot file and generate an image file, * and, generate a graph image file in rails application as a rails plugin. == SYNOPSYS: === Command Line: bin/graphviz_r sample/record.rdot === In Your Code: This ruby code: gvr = GraphvizR.new 'sample' gvr.graph [:label => 'example', :size => '1.5, 2.5'] gvr.beta [:shape => :box] gvr.alpha >> gvr.beta (gvr.beta >> gvr.delta) [:label => 'label1'] gvr.delta >> gvr.gamma gvr.to_dot replies the dot code: digraph sample { graph [label = "example", size = "1.5, 2.5"]; beta [shape = box]; alpha -> beta; beta -> delta [label = "label1"]; delta -> gamma; } To know more detail, please see test/test_graphviz_r.rb === On Rails : <b>use _render :rdot_ in controller</b> def show_graph render :rdot do graph [:size => '1.5, 2.5'] node [:shape => :record] node1 [:label => "<p_left> left|<p_center>center|<p_right> right"] node2 [:label => "left|center|right"] node1 >> node2 node1(:p_left) >> node2 node2 >> node1(:p_center) (node2 >> node1(:p_right)) [:label => 'record'] end end <b>use rdot view template</b> class RdotGenController < ApplicationController def index @label1 = "<p_left> left|<p_center>center|<p_right> right" @label2 = "left|center|right" end end # view/rdot_gen/index.rdot graph [:size => '1.5, 2.5'] node [:shape => :record] node1 [:label => @label1] node2 [:label => @label2] node1 >> node2 node1(:p_left) >> node2 node2 >> node1(:p_center) (node2 >> node1(:p_right)) [:label => 'record'] == DEPENDENCIES: * Graphviz (http://www.graphviz.org) == TODO: == INSTALL: * sudo gem install graphviz_r * if you want to use this in ruby on rails * script/plugin install http://technohippy.net/svn/repos/graphviz_r/trunk/vendor/plugins/rdot == LICENSE: (The MIT License)
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.