Project
Reverse Dependencies for hoe
The projects listed here declare hoe as a runtime or development dependency
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Jekyll is a simple, blog aware, static site generator.
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Vlad the Deployer is pragmatic application deployment automation,
without mercy. Much like Capistrano, but with 1/10th the
complexity. Vlad integrates seamlessly with Rake, and uses familiar
and standard tools like ssh and rsync.
Impale your application on the heartless spike of the Deployer.
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Generates the stub files needed for testing with jasmine on a webos application. Runs a server to view your tests against.
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a ruby module to access a series of Hatena Boookmark API
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FIX (describe your package)
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Generate duplicate lines report
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A library for accessing train information from Deutsche Bahn in an object-oriented way
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GAT is a Ruby gem that tries to provide a script fast development framework.
Based on a YML structure, GAT allows you to write basic and advanced scripts with a whole set of tools that scripting need.
More info can be found at http://gat.rubyforge.org
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Gauntlet is a pluggable means of running code against all the latest
gems and storing off the data.
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The author was too lazy to write a description
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GChart exposes the Google Chart API via a friendly Ruby interface. It
can generate the URL for a given chart (for webpage use), or download
the generated PNG (for offline use).
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== FEATURES/PROBLEMS: To start out the API set isn't covered. The aim is to support the GData API itself, and then higher level classes for the various Google APIs. Current support: * Google Account Authentication: Handle Google ClientLogin API * Google Spreadsheet Data API Future support:
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gdata2 is a ruby wrapper for the google data apis
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Racc is a LALR(1) parser generator.
It is written in Ruby itself, and generates Ruby program.
NOTE: Ruby 1.8.x comes with Racc runtime module. You
can run your parsers generated by racc 1.4.x out of the
box.
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Geera is a command line tool for dealing with Jira tickets.
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Take a gem file that builds an extension and create a binary gem (useful for production servers without a build chain, Amazon EC2, etc).
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GemExefy is RubyGems plugin aimed to replace batch files (.bat) with
executables with the same name. This gem will work only on
RubyInstaller Ruby installation and it requires RubyInstaller DevKit.
Reason for such replaceming batch files with executable stubs is
twofold. When execution of batch file is interrupted with Ctrl-C key
combination, user is faced with the confusing question
"Terminate batch job (Y/N)?"
which is avoided after replacement.
Second reason is appearance of processes in Task manager (or Process
Explorer). In the case of batch files all processes are visible as
ruby.exe. In order to distinguish between them, program arguments must
be examined. In addition, having one process name makes it hard to
define firewall rules. Having executable versions instead of batch
files will facilitate process identification in task list as well as
defining firewall rules. Moreover it makes it possible to create
selective firewall rules for different Ruby gems. Installing Ruby
applications as Windows services should be also much easer when
executable stub is used instead of batch file.
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Activity
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FIX (describe your package)
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A fork of gem-shut-the-fuck-up that provides configurable silencing of
post-install-messages.
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Are your gems taking up too much disk space? Documentation got you down?
Comments stuck in your craw? Tests taking too much space? Fix all that by
with <tt>gem tldr</tt>.
I know that disk space is at a premium these days with an introductory netbook
or a small AWS EC2 instance containing a mere 160GB. <tt>gem tldr</tt>
removes the test directory, build artifacts like .c and .h files, comments in
your ruby source files and comments in your ruby source.
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