Returns an iterator of the values of an Array, Iterator, Object, Map, Set, or Typed Array.
Get an iterator for any JS language value. Works robustly across all environments, all versions.
Higher order iterator library for JavaScript/TypeScript.
Iterate any JS iterator. Works robustly in all environments, all versions.
An ESnext spec-compliant iterator helpers shim/polyfill/replacement that works as far down as ES3.
Firefox 17-26 iterators throw a StopIteration object to indicate "done". This normalizes it.
Async iterator utilities for Metorial. Provides programmable async iterators for creating controlled data streams and managing async iteration flow.
Iterator abstraction based on ES6 specification
A finite state machine iterator for JavaScript
Iterate any iterable JS value. Works robustly in all environments, all versions.
Convert an argument into a valid iterator. Based on the `.makeIterator()` implementation in mout https://github.com/mout/mout.
Iterate over promises serially
Creates an async iterator for a variety of inputs in the browser and node. Supports fetch, node-fetch, and cross-fetch
Turn an abstract-leveldown iterator into a readable stream
[](http://www.typescriptlang.org/) [](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@n1ru4l/push-pull-async
An asynchronous iterator library for advanced object pipelines.
Map over an array or object of values in parallel or series, passing each through the async iterator, with optional lifecycle hooks.
Maps the values yielded by an async iterator
Framework-independent loaders for 3D graphics formats
Run multiple promise-returning & async functions with limited concurrency using native ES9
Compare, format, diff and serialize any JavaScript value
Simple iterator for flat and multi section lists
Get the default iterator or async iterator for an iterable or async iterable
Properties file reader for Node.js
A fluentd filter plugin that will be used to Iterate over the object with its index and returns the value of the given object.
A fluentd filter plugin that will be used to Iterate over the object with its index and returns the value of the given object.
This library provides several ways of describing a finite Markov Decision Process (MDP) model (see FiniteMDP::Model) and some reasonably efficient implementations of policy iteration and value iteration to solve it (see FiniteMDP::Solver).
Iterates over Debian control files. As control files can be very large this gem provides iterators for each block and each pair of key/values in the file.
Provides year, month, and day values objects for the purposes of traversal, iteration, comparison, conversion, and arithmetic.
Export data to Excel file. Iterate in a collection and map values in each row to fill Excel spreadsheet
Computes approximation within a given error_limit to the values of a root of an arbitrary function f(x) or to the value of inverse function g(y) = x. Uses Newton-Raphson or Secant methods. Requires one (Newton-Raphson) or two (Secant) estimates of the target value. Raises NoConvergenceError when it does not converge within the set error_limit, on set number of iterations.
yae provides a simple enum class (enumerated type) implementation (Yae::Enum) that can be used to abstract a set of values. It also provides methods to check values existence in the enum and to iterate over its contents.
Descriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
Descriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like: Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for 'nested' p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
Descriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
Rize is a collection of useful methods that can make it easier to work with functions, arrays and hashes in Ruby. It allows you to compose and memoize functions, elegantly iterate over multiple arrays at once, easily map over hash keys and values, and much more. Nothing is monkeypatched, so you don't have to worry about the core classes behaving differently than you expect.