Babel plugin that transforms Lingui compile-time macros into optimized runtime calls
A set of utils for faster development of GraphQL tools
Macro for generating messages in ICU MessageFormat syntax
Floating UI for the web
A simple parser and expander for GraphQL imports
A SWC Plugin for LinguiJS
unified-latex tools relating to specific CTAN packages
Retrieve the values defined with preprocessor statements in a selection of GLSL tokens
An in-place pre-processor for javascript files using C style pre-compile syntax to compose custom builds from npm-packages
Native Abstractions for Node.js: C++ header for Node 0.8 -> 26 compatibility
Decorators for property macros
Tools for manipulating unified-latex ASTs
Textwrap for javascript/nodejs. Correctly handles wide characters (宽字符) and emojis (😃). Wraps strings with option to break on words.
Ember macro helpers for making your own fancy macros!
This package contains helpers and nodes for wrapping content in marks for Lexical.
Copies compiler artifacts emitted by rustc by parsing Cargo metadata
> Markdown macros - embed program outputs in markdown
These are eslint rules to help with typed-redux-saga
Tools working with HTML-like nodes via unified-latex ASTs
A Babel Macro for the require-context plugin
Pre-evaluate code at build-time
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/react-use-draggable-scroll)
Spectrum UI components in React
256 colors, keys and mouse, input field, progress bars, screen buffer (including 32-bit composition and image loading), text buffer, and many more... Whether you just need colors and styles, build a simple interactive command line tool or a complexe termi
wrapping macro
A macro for wrapping arithmetic.
Macros for Trailblazer's operation
Persistable attributes for Rubymotion classes
A simple Ruby presenter library, for those who enjoy a strong separation of concerns. You include a module, call some class-level macro-style methods, and suddenly you're presenting for a wrapped object. No magic. If your knowledge of pattern names comes from the Rails ecosystem, you might have used the popular Draper 'decorator' library. Think of this like that one, except the term 'presenter' is a better fit.