Client library for CARTO APIs and framework-agnostic CARTO + deck.gl applications
Matrix Widget API SDK
Analyze the exported API for a TypeScript library and generate reviews, documentation, and .d.ts rollups
React InstantSearch SSR utilities for Next.js
Mendix pluggable widgets API
Wrap a controlled react component, to allow specific prop/handler pairs to be uncontrolled
Simple React to-do list component to add, edit, delete, and mark tasks as completed.
Widgets.
A curated set of user interface interactions, effects, widgets, and themes built on top of the jQuery JavaScript Library.
Simple to use, blazing fast and thoroughly tested websocket client and server for Node.js
UI widgets for deck.gl
A suite of React components providing functionality for enterprise app workflows.
Build Live Activities with JSX in React Native
Google APIs Client Library for Node.js
A widgets library for use with CesiumJS. CesiumJS is a JavaScript library for creating 3D globes and 2D maps in a web browser without a plugin.
OAuth 2 / OpenID Connect Client API for JavaScript Runtimes
⚡ Lightning-fast search for React, by Algolia
Google APIs Authentication Client Library for Node.js
Widgets Sitecore Search SDK
GOV.UK Notify Node.js client
Cloud Storage Client Library for Node.js
This package includes the resources needed to write a Lightstreamer client.
A light-weight module that brings Fetch API to node.js
The all-batteries-included GitHub SDK for Browsers, Node.js, and Deno
Wigets Api Client Wrapper
Wigets Api Client Wrapper
Cloud Monitoring collects metrics, events, and metadata from Google Cloud, Amazon Web Services (AWS), hosted uptime probes, and application instrumentation. The Dashboards API manages arrangements of display widgets. Note that google-cloud-monitoring-dashboard-v1 is a version-specific client library. For most uses, we recommend installing the main client library google-cloud-monitoring instead. See the readme for more details.
RSence is a different and unique development model and software frameworks designed first-hand for real-time web applications. RSence consists of separate, but tigtly integrated data- and user interface frameworks. RSence could be classified as a thin server - thick client system. Applications and submobules are installed as indepenent plugin bundles into the plugins folder of a RSence environment, which in itself is a self-contained bundle. A big part of RSence itself is implemented as shared plugin bundles. The user interface framework of RSence is implemented in high-level user interface widget classes. The widget classes share a common foundation API and access the browser's native API's using an abstracted event- and element layer, which provides exceptional cross-browser compatibility. The data framework of RSence is a event-driven system, which synchronized shared values between the client and server. It's like a realtime bidirectional form-submission engine that handles data changes intelligently. On the client, changed values trigger events on user interface widgets. On the server, changed values trigger events on value responder methods of server plugin modules. It doesn't matter if the change originates on client or server, it's all synchronized and propagated automatically. The server framework is implemented as a high-level, modular data-event-driven system, which handles delegation of tasks impossible to implement using a client-only approach. Client sessions are selectively connected to other client sessions and legacy back-ends via the server by using the data framework. The client is written in Javascript and the server is written in Ruby. The client also supports CoffeeScript for custom logic. In many cases, no custom client logic is needed; the user interfaces can be defined in tree-like data models. By default, the models are parsed from YAML files, and other structured data formats are possible, including XML, JSON, databases or any custom logic capable of producing similar objects. The server can connect to custom environments and legacy backends accessible on the server, including software written in other languages.
RSence is a different and unique development model and software frameworks designed first-hand for real-time web applications. RSence consists of separate, but tigtly integrated data- and user interface frameworks. RSence could be classified as a thin server - thick client system. Applications and submobules are installed as indepenent plugin bundles into the plugins folder of a RSence environment, which in itself is a self-contained bundle. A big part of RSence itself is implemented as shared plugin bundles. The user interface framework of RSence is implemented in high-level user interface widget classes. The widget classes share a common foundation API and access the browser's native API's using an abstracted event- and element layer, which provides exceptional cross-browser compatibility. The data framework of RSence is a event-driven system, which synchronized shared values between the client and server. It's like a realtime bidirectional form-submission engine that handles data changes intelligently. On the client, changed values trigger events on user interface widgets. On the server, changed values trigger events on value responder methods of server plugin modules. It doesn't matter if the change originates on client or server, it's all synchronized and propagated automatically. The server framework is implemented as a high-level, modular data-event-driven system, which handles delegation of tasks impossible to implement using a client-only approach. Client sessions are selectively connected to other client sessions and legacy back-ends via the server by using the data framework. The client is written in Javascript and the server is written in Ruby. The client also supports CoffeeScript for custom logic. In many cases, no custom client logic is needed; the user interfaces can be defined in tree-like data models. By default, the models are parsed from YAML files, and other structured data formats are possible, including XML, JSON, databases or any custom logic capable of producing similar objects. The server can connect to custom environments and legacy backends accessible on the server, including software written in other languages.
# Chef Data Region ## Description Chef Data Region extends the `Chef::DSL::DataQuery` module's `data_bag_item` method with the ability to dynamically expand the data bag name in a configurable, environment-specific manner. ## Motivation This gem exists to address the following scenario: An organization maintains data in Chef data bag items. The data is deployed to several data center environments and is stored in data bags whose names reference the environments. The organization wants to write environment-agnostic recipes that access the data bags without explicitly referencing the data bags by their environment names. As a concrete example, imagine the organization maintains encrypted data for three deployment environments: development, staging, and production. It maintains this data in three data bags, one for each environment, with data for services named `gadget` and `widget` in items: | Environment | Bag | Item | |-------------+----------------+--------| | Development | secure-dev | gadget | | Development | secure-dev | widget | | Production | secure-prod | gadget | | Production | secure-prod | widget | | Staging | secure-staging | gadget | | Staging | secure-staging | widget | The items are encrypted with a key unique to that environment to maximize security. Now consider how a recipe would access these bags. When then recipe is running, it needs to know the data center environment in order to construct the bag name. The organization would most likely assign the enviroment name to a node attribute. In a naive implementation, each recipe would include logic that examined the attribute's value to determine which bag to load. This would obviously duplicate code. Imagine instead that the organization wants to reference the bag by the name `secure` and rely on an _abstraction_ to translate `secure` into the environment-specific bag name. This gem provides that abstraction. ## Features This gem overrides the `data_bag_item` method with configurable logic that dynamically decides which bag to load. It retains API compatibility with `Chef::DSL::DataQuery#data_bag_item`, so existing recipes that call `data_bag_item` work without modification. The gem imposes no constraints on data bag item structure. ## Configuration Assign the region name to a node attribute that varies by environment: node.default['local'][region'] = 'staging' Add the following configuration to Chef Client's `client.rb` file. * Require the gem: require 'chef/data_region' * Configure the gem with a hash that maps a bag name to an expansion pattern: Chef::DataRegion.add( 'secure', { attribute: %w(local region), pattern: 'secure-%<attribute>s' } ) ## Bag name expansion The gem expands bag names using Ruby's `format` method. _More pending..._