Some utils are used for validation.
webpack Validation Utils
Vercel routing utilities
The official runtime utils for Standard Schema
utils for framework
Object schema validation
A history of deployments of the Delegation Framework
webpack Validation Utils
Utilities for running tasks on worker threads
Framework-independent loaders for 3D graphics formats
Utilities to use Zod to validate Hardhat plugins' config
Gatsby utils that help creating plugins
Angular DevKit - Core Utility Library
Collection of utility functions for Fluid
utils for JSON
General utilities for plugins to use
Utility functions for working with TypeScript's API. Successor to the wonderful tsutils. 🛠️️
A set of Typescript types and helpers to work with DatoCMS Structured Text fields.
Utils for all egg projects
Give me a string and I'll tell you if it's a valid npm package name
Type utilities for working with TypeScript + ESLint together
ESLint Plugin for Validating JSX Nesting
Various utilities related to Three.js
Utilities for working with TypeScript + ESLint together
The hashy_validator gem provides the HashyArrayValidator, a custom Active Model validator designed to validate arrays of hashes within ActiveRecord model attributes. Utilizing the HashValidator gem, on top of hash_validator gem. The gem includes a comprehensive test suite using the minitest framework.
The `password_auth` gem provides a simple and secure way to handle password authentication in Ruby applications. It offers a set of reusable components and utilities to handle user passwords, including password hashing, salting, and validation. Key Features: - Secure password storage: The gem uses industry-standard techniques, such as bcrypt hashing and salt generation, to securely store user passwords. - Password validation: It provides convenient methods to validate the strength and complexity of user passwords, ensuring they meet specific criteria. - Password encryption: Easily encrypt passwords for storage or comparison purposes, protecting sensitive user data. - Password reset functionality: Includes utilities for generating and handling password reset tokens, enabling users to securely reset their passwords. - Integration with popular frameworks: Seamlessly integrates with Ruby on Rails, Sinatra, and other Ruby frameworks, making it easy to incorporate password authentication into your application. By using the `password_auth` gem, developers can implement robust password authentication functionality in their Ruby applications with minimal effort, ensuring the security and integrity of user passwords.
CommandSet is a user interface framework. Its focus is a DSL for defining commands, much like Rake or RSpec. A default readline based terminal interpreter (complete with context sensitive tab completion, and the amenities of readline: history editing, etc) is included. It could very well be adapted to interact with CGI or a GUI - both are planned. CommandSet has a lot of very nice features. First is the domain-specific language for defining commands and sets of commands. Those sets can further be neatly composed into larger interfaces, so that useful or standard commands can be resued. Optional application modes, much like Cisco's IOS, with a little bit more flexibility. Arguments have their own sub-language, that allows them to provide interface hints (like tab completion) as well as input validation. On the output side of things, CommandSet has a very flexible output capturing mechanism, which generates a tree of data as it's generated, even capturing writes to multiple places at once (even from multiple threads) and keeping everything straight. Methods that normally write to stdout are interposed and fed into the tree, so you can hack in existing scripts with minimal adjustment. The final output can be presented to the user in a number of formats, including contextual coloring and indentation, or even progress hashes. XML is also provided, although it needs some work. Templates are on the way. While you're developing your application, you might find the record and playback utilities useful. cmdset-record will start up with your defaults for your command set, and spit out an interaction script. Then you can replay the script against the live set with cmdset-playback. Great for ad hoc testing, usability surveys and general demos.