Project

Reverse Dependencies for hoe

The projects listed here declare hoe as a runtime or development dependency

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No release in over 3 years
The author was too lazy to write a description
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This rubygem does not have a description or summary.
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Takes a Mac OS X application name that uses Sparkle for auto-updates, and returns information about that application's Sparkle RSS feed or the latest download URL for that Application.
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No release in over 3 years
Tiny graphs.
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# Sparrow is a really fast lightweight queue written in Ruby that speaks memcached. # That means you can use Sparrow with any memcached client library (Ruby or otherwise). # # Basic tests shows that Sparrow processes messages at a rate of 850-900 per second. # The load Sparrow can cope with increases exponentially as you add to the cluster. # Sparrow also takes advantage of eventmachine, which uses a non-blocking io, offering great performance. # # Sparrow is a in-memory queue but will persist the data to disk when receiving a term signal. # # Sparrow comes with built in support for daemonization and clustering. # Also included are example libraries and clients. For example: # # require 'memcache' # m = MemCache.new('127.0.0.1:11212') # m['queue_name'] = '1' # Publish to queue # m['queue_name'] #=> 1 Pull next msg from queue # m['queue_name'] #=> nil # m.delete('queue_name) # Delete queue # # # or using the included client: # # class MyQueue < MQ3::Queue # def on_message # logger.info "Received msg with args: #{args.inspect}" # end # end # # MyQueue.servers = [ # MQ3::Protocols::Memcache.new({:host => '127.0.0.1', :port => 11212, :weight => 1}) # ] # MyQueue.publish('test msg') # MyQueue.run # # Messages are deleted as soon as they're read and the order you add messages to the queue probably won't # be the same order when they're removed. # # Additional memcached commands that are supported are: # flush_all # Deletes all queues # version # quit # The memcached commands 'add', and 'replace' just call 'set'. # # Call sparrow with --help for usage options # # The daemonization won't work on Windows. # # Check out the code: # svn checkout http://sparrow.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ sparrow # # Sparrow was inspired by Twitter's Starling
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Repository is gone
No release in over 3 years
Super cool PDF templates using iText's PdfStamper. == CAVEAT: Anything super cool must have a caveat. You have to use JRuby or RJB. Plus you can only use Adobe LiveCycle Designer to create the templates. == EXAMPLE: pdf = PDF::Stamper.new("my_template.pdf") pdf.text :first_name, "Jason" pdf.text :last_name, "Yates" pdf.image :photo, "photo.jpg" pdf.save_as "my_output.pdf"
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Convert your tests to test/spec specs. See http://opensource.thinkrelevance.com/wiki/spec-converter for details.
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Specrun is designed as a simple script that will iterate through your rpsec tests, run each test and then generate a pretty browseable rdoc like format to view the results in.
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Run UI RSpec examples with screenshot reports
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No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
Fast thumbnail Image generator.
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Sphincter uses Dmytro Shteflyuk's sphinx Ruby API and automatic configuration to make totally rad ActiveRecord searching. Well, you still have to tell Sphincter what models you want to search. It doesn't read your mind.
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A Ruby interface to the OpenX XML-RPC API.
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Scarily easy spidering
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CUI-based CHM viewer.
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Bundle the C library.
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A ruby implementation of the parsing algorithm in HTML5.
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Grab and eval Ruby code via HTTP. You don't care about security, right? This gem is Dr. Nic's fault. We were looking for an easy way to run Ruby code that was publicly available on a web server, and though we've all written something to do this a time or two, we couldn't find a convenient gem. I hacked up a quick example: ruby -rubygems -ropen-uri -e \ 'eval open("http://gist.github.com/raw/473222/snippet.rb").read' \ jbarnette dr-nic-magic-awesome ...but why use a simple Ruby one-liner when we can go overboard and package it as a gem? While we're at it, why not add a tiny bit of extra sugar for Gists? This is not an original idea. It's been done a ton of times before, but this one is ours. Don't use it for anything real or it'll melt your face.
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OAuth Core Ruby implementation
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The project is in a healthy, maintained state
sportdb-helpers - parsers & readers and more for structs incl. countries, leagues, clubs, grounds, et al
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Repository is gone
No release in over 3 years
sportdb-keys - sport.db addon for well known keys (e.g. EURO, EN, etc.) and model finder shortcuts, etc.
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