The closest framework to vanilla JS — signals, components, islands, SSR
What Framework CLI - Dev server, build, and deployment tools
What Framework - The closest framework to vanilla JS
What Framework - SSR, islands architecture, static generation
Scaffold a new What Framework project
What Framework - File-based & programmatic router with View Transitions
JSX compiler for What Framework - transforms JSX to optimized DOM operations
Dev tools for What Framework — signal inspector, component tree, effect graph
MCP server bridging AI agents to live What Framework app state via WebSocket
ESLint rules for What Framework — catch signal bugs, enforce patterns
React compatibility layer for What Framework — use React packages with signals under the hood
Optional text engine for What Framework, powered by @chenglou/pretext
BDD/TDD assertion library for node.js and the browser. Test framework agnostic.
An AI web browsing framework focused on simplicity and extensibility.
Remove unused css selectors
hast utility to transform to preact, react, solid, svelte, vue, etc
Micro-generator framework that makes it easy for an entire team to create files with a level of uniformity
<p align="center"> <img height="100" width="100" alt="LlamaIndex logo" src="https://ts.llamaindex.ai/square.svg" /> </p> <h1 align="center">LlamaIndex.TS</h1> <h3 align="center"> Data framework for your LLM application. </h3>
Simple JavaScript testing framework for browsers and node.js
A Graph Visualization Framework in JavaScript
A tool for respawning node binaries when special flags are present.
Tools for writing MCP clients and servers without pain
A Graph Visualization Framework in JavaScript
This is the vanilla JS core script that embeds Cal Link
An exercise: Untangle the collusion of Rails idioms from my Ruby knowledge, while trying to understand some Rails design decisions. See http://github.com/screamingmuse/rory for more info.
Logging middleware for the Grape framework, similar to what Rails offers
MonkeysPaw is a micro web framework that grants your wishes through AI prompts, but as with any wish-granting entity, the clarity of your request determines what you receive. Craft your prompts with care, lest your website manifest in unexpected ways.
Permitters are an object-oriented way of defining what request parameters are permitted. using Strong Parameters. It is to Strong Parameters what ActiveModel::Serializers are to as_json/to_json, but supports CanCan and similar authorization frameworks.
This analyzes a url and tries to guess what software it uses (like server software, CMS, framework, programming language).
Snooper is a lightweight test automation tool, it monitors files and folders while you work and re-runs your tests when you change something. Snooper doesn't care what language you're using or what framework you are testing with, it's all configureable.
This is merely a port of the javascript parts of Wappalyzer extension for Firefox and Chrome. It analyzes a url and tries to guess what software it uses (like server software, CMS, framework, programming language).
StoryTeller is an observation framework that allows teams to create meaningful stories to help them understand what's going on in your production environment.
Services help keep your business logic clean, but what helps keep your services clean? Civil provides a framework for writing services that all have a standardized structure, inputs and outputs.
Shearwater is a tiny framework for managing migrations in an everything-agnostic way. It provides a pluggable backend architecture for storing which migrations have been run, and doesn't make any assumptions about what you want to do with your migrations. Shearwater doesn't depend on any ORMs or frameworks.
Diffrent is a very simple way to do ActiveRecord version diffing. It provides a convenient interface to two other libraries (Diffy and Vestal Versions), combining their functionality. It makes no assumption about what web framework you're using - it can be used in Sinatra, Padrino, Rails, or with no framework at all.
The slack web api is good, but very raw. What you need is a great ruby framework to abstract away all that. This is it! This framework allows you to write bots easily by providing methods that are easy to call. Behind the scenes, the framework is negotiating your real time stream, converting channel names and user names to and from IDs so you can use the names instead, and parsing/classifying the real time messages into useful types that you can hook into. Don't write your bot without this.
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