Project
Reverse Dependencies for hoe
The projects listed here declare hoe as a runtime or development dependency
20.21
minitest provides a complete suite of testing facilities supporting
TDD, BDD, mocking, and benchmarking.
"I had a class with Jim Weirich on testing last week and we were
allowed to choose our testing frameworks. Kirk Haines and I were
paired up and we cracked open the code for a few test
frameworks...
I MUST say that minitest is *very* readable / understandable
compared to the 'other two' options we looked at. Nicely done and
thank you for helping us keep our mental sanity."
-- Wayne E. Seguin
minitest/test is a small and incredibly fast unit testing framework.
It provides a rich set of assertions to make your tests clean and
readable.
minitest/spec is a functionally complete spec engine. It hooks onto
minitest/test and seamlessly bridges test assertions over to spec
expectations.
minitest/benchmark is an awesome way to assert the performance of your
algorithms in a repeatable manner. Now you can assert that your newb
co-worker doesn't replace your linear algorithm with an exponential
one!
minitest/mock by Steven Baker, is a beautifully tiny mock (and stub)
object framework.
minitest/pride shows pride in testing and adds coloring to your test
output. I guess it is an example of how to write IO pipes too. :P
minitest/test is meant to have a clean implementation for language
implementors that need a minimal set of methods to bootstrap a working
test suite. For example, there is no magic involved for test-case
discovery.
"Again, I can't praise enough the idea of a testing/specing
framework that I can actually read in full in one sitting!"
-- Piotr Szotkowski
Comparing to rspec:
rspec is a testing DSL. minitest is ruby.
-- Adam Hawkins, "Bow Before MiniTest"
minitest doesn't reinvent anything that ruby already provides, like:
classes, modules, inheritance, methods. This means you only have to
learn ruby to use minitest and all of your regular OO practices like
extract-method refactorings still apply.
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19.88
Diff::LCS computes the difference between two Enumerable sequences using the
McIlroy-Hunt longest common subsequence (LCS) algorithm. It includes utilities
to create a simple HTML diff output format and a standard diff-like tool.
This is release 1.4.3, providing a simple extension that allows for
Diff::LCS::Change objects to be treated implicitly as arrays and fixes a
number of formatting issues.
Ruby versions below 2.5 are soft-deprecated, which means that older versions
are no longer part of the CI test suite. If any changes have been introduced
that break those versions, bug reports and patches will be accepted, but it
will be up to the reporter to verify any fixes prior to release. The next
major release will completely break compatibility.
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15.6
The mime-types library provides a library and registry for information about
MIME content type definitions. It can be used to determine defined filename
extensions for MIME types, or to use filename extensions to look up the likely
MIME type definitions.
Version 3.0 is a major release that requires Ruby 2.0 compatibility and removes
deprecated functions. The columnar registry format introduced in 2.6 has been
made the primary format; the registry data has been extracted from this library
and put into {mime-types-data}[https://github.com/mime-types/mime-types-data].
Additionally, mime-types is now licensed exclusively under the MIT licence and
there is a code of conduct in effect. There are a number of other smaller
changes described in the History file.
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11.57
mime-types-data provides a registry for information about MIME media type
definitions. It can be used with the Ruby mime-types library or other software
to determine defined filename extensions for MIME types, or to use filename
extensions to look up the likely MIME type definitions.
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4.58
Capybara aims to simplify the process of integration testing Rack applications,
such as Rails, Sinatra or Merb. It is inspired by and aims to replace Webrat as
a DSL for interacting with a webapplication. It is agnostic about the driver
running your tests and currently comes bundled with rack-test, Culerity,
Celerity and Selenium support built in.
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4.58
Capybara aims to simplify the process of integration testing Rack applications,
such as Rails, Sinatra or Merb. It is inspired by and aims to replace Webrat as
a DSL for interacting with a webapplication. It is agnostic about the driver
running your tests and currently comes bundled with rack-test, Culerity,
Celerity and Selenium support built in.
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2.77
ruby_parser (RP) is a ruby parser written in pure ruby (utilizing
racc--which does by default use a C extension). It outputs
s-expressions which can be manipulated and converted back to ruby via
the ruby2ruby gem.
As an example:
def conditional1 arg1
return 1 if arg1 == 0
return 0
end
becomes:
s(:defn, :conditional1, s(:args, :arg1),
s(:if,
s(:call, s(:lvar, :arg1), :==, s(:lit, 0)),
s(:return, s(:lit, 1)),
nil),
s(:return, s(:lit, 0)))
Tested against 801,039 files from the latest of all rubygems (as of 2013-05):
* 1.8 parser is at 99.9739% accuracy, 3.651 sigma
* 1.9 parser is at 99.9940% accuracy, 4.013 sigma
* 2.0 parser is at 99.9939% accuracy, 4.008 sigma
* 2.6 parser is at 99.9972% accuracy, 4.191 sigma
* 3.0 parser has a 100% parse rate.
* Tested against 2,672,412 unique ruby files across 167k gems.
* As do all the others now, basically.
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2.71
sexp_processor branches from ParseTree bringing all the generic sexp
processing tools with it. Sexp, SexpProcessor, Environment, etc... all
for your language processing pleasure.
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1.96
Annotates Rails Models, routes, and others
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1.44
Have you ever wanted to call <code>exit()</code> with an error condition, but
weren't sure what exit status to use? No? Maybe it's just me, then.
Anyway, I was reading manpages late one evening before retiring to bed in my
palatial estate in rural Oregon, and I stumbled across
<code>sysexits(3)</code>. Much to my chagrin, I couldn't find a +sysexits+ for
Ruby! Well, for the other 2 people that actually care about
<code>style(9)</code> as it applies to Ruby code, now there is one!
Sysexits is a *completely* *awesome* collection of human-readable constants for
the standard (BSDish) exit codes, used as arguments to +exit+ to
indicate a specific error condition to the parent process.
It's so fantastically fabulous that you'll want to fork it right away to avoid
being thought of as that guy that's still using Webrick for his blog. I mean,
<code>exit(1)</code> is so passé! This is like the 14-point font of Systems
Programming.
Like the C header file from which this was derived (I mean forked, naturally),
error numbers begin at <code>Sysexits::EX__BASE</code> (which is way more cool
than plain old +64+) to reduce the possibility of clashing with other exit
statuses that other programs may already return.
The codes are available in two forms: as constants which can be imported into
your own namespace via <code>include Sysexits</code>, or as
<code>Sysexits::STATUS_CODES</code>, a Hash keyed by Symbols derived from the
constant names.
Allow me to demonstrate. First, the old way:
exit( 69 )
Whaaa...? Is that a euphemism? What's going on? See how unattractive and...
well, 1970 that is? We're not changing vaccuum tubes here, people, we're
<em>building a totally-awesome future in the Cloudâ„¢!</em>
include Sysexits
exit EX_UNAVAILABLE
Okay, at least this is readable to people who have used <code>fork()</code>
more than twice, but you could do so much better!
include Sysexits
exit :unavailable
Holy Toledo! It's like we're writing Ruby, but our own made-up dialect in
which variable++ is possible! Well, okay, it's not quite that cool. But it
does look more Rubyish. And no monkeys were patched in the filming of this
episode! All the simpletons still exiting with icky _numbers_ can still
continue blithely along, none the wiser.
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1.07
Arel is a Relational Algebra for Ruby. It 1) simplifies the generation complex of SQL queries and it 2) adapts to various RDBMS systems. It is intended to be a framework framework; that is, you can build your own ORM with it, focusing on innovative object and collection modeling as opposed to database compatibility and query generation.
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1.06
Implementation of [JSON Patch][1] and [JSON Pointer][2] RFC.
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1.02
The minitar library is a pure-Ruby library that provides the ability to deal
with POSIX tar(1) archive files.
This is release 0.12. This is likely the last revision before 1.0.
minitar (previously called Archive::Tar::Minitar) is based heavily on code
originally written by Mauricio Julio Fernández Pradier for the rpa-base
project.
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1.01
Grit is a Ruby library for extracting information from a git repository in and object oriented manner.
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0.82
Flay analyzes code for structural similarities. Differences in literal
values, variable, class, method names, whitespace, programming style,
braces vs do/end, etc are all ignored. Making this totally rad.
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0.82
This module provides common interface to HMAC functionality. HMAC is a kind of "Message Authentication Code" (MAC) algorithm whose standard is documented in RFC2104. Namely, a MAC provides a way to check the integrity of information transmitted over or stored in an unreliable medium, based on a secret key.
Originally written by Daiki Ueno. Converted to a RubyGem by Geoffrey Grosenbach
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0.79
Flog reports the most tortured code in an easy to read pain
report. The higher the score, the more pain the code is in.
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0.76
Journey is a router. It routes requests.
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0.71
An implementation of RFC 2617 - Digest Access Authentication. At this time
the gem does not drop in to Net::HTTP and can be used for with other HTTP
clients.
In order to use net-http-digest_auth you'll need to perform some request
wrangling on your own. See the class documentation at Net::HTTP::DigestAuth
for an example.
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0.67
PathExpander helps pre-process command-line arguments expanding
directories into their constituent files. It further helps by
providing additional mechanisms to make specifying subsets easier
with path subtraction and allowing for command-line arguments to be
saved in a file.
NOTE: this is NOT an options processor. It is a path processor
(basically everything else besides options). It does provide a
mechanism for pre-filtering cmdline options, but not with the intent
of actually processing them in PathExpander. Use OptionParser to
deal with options either before or after passing ARGV through
PathExpander.
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