Project
Reverse Dependencies for redcarpet
The projects listed here declare redcarpet as a runtime or development dependency
0.0
Eventually is an event library built to loosely mirror the NodeJS EventEmitter API.
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Activity
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The Raft engine
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An AIMGP (Automatic Induction of Machine code by Genetic Programming) engine
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0.0
A Rails engine for handling error pages.
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Activity
0.0
CMS engine to deliver multiple sites. Based on Mongoid.
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0.0
A very simple and boring blogging engine for Rails.
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Releases
Activity
0.0
Eyemask makes it easy to create rich, engaging, living documentation that everyone can use.
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0.0
Ruby based client gem for interacting with the EngineYard Instance Provisioning API
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Activity
0.0
A Rails egnine to use with Faalis which provides page CRUD functionality base on markdown.
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0.0
# Fancy Logger
An easily customizable logger with style.
## Install
### Bundler: `gem 'fancy_logger'`
### RubyGems: `gem install fancy_logger`
## Usage
Simply use as if you were using the normal Ruby `Logger` class:
```ruby
require 'fancy_logger'
logger = FancyLogger.new(STDOUT)
logger.info "Hello"
```
### Config
The `config` instance method allows you to modify the configuration of the Logger within a DSL.
Continuing with our last example:
```ruby
logger.config do
timestamp_format "%c"
styles do
info do
foreground :yellow
blink true
end
end
end
logger.debug 'Look here!'
logger.info 'Doing things...'
logger.warn 'Watch out!'
logger.error 'Bad'
logger.fatal 'VERY bad'
logger.unknown 'Weird unknown stuff'
```
#### Output
![][output_example]
### Config
```ruby
# The format of the timestamp in the log. Follows the strftime standards.
timestamp_format "%F %r"
# On the first logged message, FancyLogger will prepend a help message
# containing a list of all the severities (debug, info, warn, etc) styled
# according to your config as reference.
# You can disable this by setting the below option to false.
show_help_message true
# Under styles, you have a configuration for each severity.
# Each severity has a configuration with the following valid options:
# Key: foreground
# Value:
# :default, :black, :red, :green, :yellow, :blue, :magenta, :cyan, :white
#
# Key: background
# Value:
# :default, :black, :red, :green, :yellow, :blue, :magenta, :cyan, :white
#
# Key: reset
# Value: true or false
#
# Key: bright
# Value: true or false
#
# Key: italic
# Value: true or false
#
# Key: underline
# Value: true or false
#
# Key:
# blink
# Value: true or false
#
# Key: inverse
# Value: true or false
#
# Key: hide
# Value: true or false
styles do
debug do
foreground :black
background :cyan
end
info do
foreground :default
background :default
end
warn do
foreground :yellow
background :default
blink true
end
error do
foreground :red
background :default
end
fatal do
foreground :black
background :red
bold true
underline true
end
unknown do
foreground :black
background :white
underline true
end
end
```
## Contributing
* Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet
* Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it
* Fork the project
* Start or switch to a testing/unstable/feature/bugfix branch
* Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution
* Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
* Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, VERSION or gemspec.
## Copyright
Copyright © 2012 Ryan Scott Lewis <ryan@rynet.us>.
The MIT License (MIT) - See LICENSE for further details.
[output_example]: http://oi44.tinypic.com/sfwlkp.jpg
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0.0
A Simple FAQ Markup Language
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Activity
0.0
Faraday Cage allows you to use Faraday for making requests to your REST APIs in integration testing, minus the boilerplate code and crufty parsing and encoding of requests and responses.
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0.0
Use Fastlane to give credit where it's rightfully due
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0.0
Polidea's fastlane action
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Activity
0.0
FatTable is a gem that treats tables as a data type. It provides methods for
constructing tables from a variety of sources, building them row-by-row,
extracting rows, columns, and cells, and performing aggregate operations on
columns. It also provides as set of SQL-esque methods for manipulating table
objects: select for filtering by columns or for creating new columns, where
for filtering by rows, order_by for sorting rows, distinct for eliminating
duplicate rows, group_by for aggregating multiple rows into single rows and
applying column aggregate methods to ungrouped columns, a collection of join
methods for combining tables, and more.
Furthermore, FatTable provides methods for formatting tables and producing
output that targets various output media: text, ANSI terminals, ruby data
structures, LaTeX tables, Emacs org-mode tables, and more. The formatting
methods can specify cell formatting in a way that is uniform across all the
output methods and can also decorate the output with any number of footers,
including group footers. FatTable applies formatting directives to the extent
they makes sense for the output medium and treats other formatting directives as
no-ops.
FatTable can be used to perform operations on data that are naturally best
conceived of as tables, which in my experience is quite often. It can also serve
as a foundation for providing reporting functions where flexibility about the
output medium can be quite useful. Finally FatTable can be used within Emacs
org-mode files in code blocks targeting the Ruby language. Org mode tables are
presented to a ruby code block as an array of arrays, so FatTable can read
them in with its .from_aoa constructor. A FatTable table can output as an
array of arrays with its .to_aoa output function and will be rendered in an
org-mode buffer as an org-table, ready for processing by other code blocks.
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Activity
0.0
favicon.ico generator in Ruby without imagemagick
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0.0
Mounts a Fedora Commons repository as a FUSE filesystem
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Activity
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Generate values for FFI enums directly
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Activity
0.0
yet another fft realization
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Activity
0.0
Rails 3 engine to track used files elsewhere your models
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Activity