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Learn-NEAR-Hispano_NCD2--GrantaNear
README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts main.spec.ts as_types.d.ts index.ts models Proyecto.ts tsconfig.json neardev dev-account.env package.json
# GrantaNear :handshake: GrantaNear es un smart contract de Near protocol, el cual permite que los developers de el ecosistema Near puedan dar a conocer sus proyectos a fin de estar entre los mas votados para que lleguen a ser fondeados para el desarollo de estos. Este smart contract permite: - Añadir un proyecto usando el metodo crearProyecto. - Chequear la lista de proyectos con el metodo listarProyectos. - Verificar informacion de un proyecto con el metodo obtenerProyecto. - Votar a favor de un proyecto con el metodo votarProyecto. - Eliminar un proyecto creado con el metodo eliminarProyecto. # Instalación :mechanic: Para la instalación local de este projecto: ## Pre - requisitos - Asegúrese de haber instalado Node.js ≥ 12 (recomendamos usar nvm). - Asegúrese de haber instalado yarn: npm install -g yarn. - Instalar dependencias: yarn install. - Crear un test near account NEAR test account. - Instalar el NEAR CLI globally: near-cli es una interfaz de linea de comando (CLI) para interacturar con NEAR blockchain. # Configurar NEAR CLI :technologist: Configura tu near-cli para autorizar tu cuenta de prueba creada recientemente: ```html near login ``` # Clonar el repositorio :palms_up_together: ```html git clone https://github.com/jgmercedes/GrantaNear.git ``` ```html cd GrantaNear ``` # Build del proyecto y despliegue en development mode. :rocket: Instalar las dependencias necesarias con npm. ```html npm install ``` Hacer el build y deployment en development mode. ```html yarn devdeploy ``` # Comandos :construction: ## Comando para crear un proyecto: ```html near call <tu contrato desplegado> crearProyecto "{ \"titulo\": \"string\", \"descripcion\": \"string\", \"fondos\": number }" --account-id <tu cuenta testnet> ``` ## Comando para conseguir informacion de un proyecto: ```html near call <tu contrato desplegado> obtenerProyecto "{\"id\": number}" --account-id <tu cuenta testnet> ``` ## Comando para conseguir la lista de proyectos: ```html near view <tu contrato desplegado> listarProyectos "{}" ``` ## Comando para votar por un proyecto: ```html near call <tu contrato desplegado> votarProyecto "{\"id\": number}" --account-id <tu cuenta testnet> ``` ## Comando para eliminar un proyecto: ```html near call <tu contrato desplegado> eliminarProyecto "{\"id\": number}" --account-id <tu cuenta testnet> ``` # Video en loom: ```html https://www.loom.com/share/f602dbfb6b4048e5aeb143e546dc3194 ``` # :framed_picture: Explora el codigo: GrantaNear smart contract file system. ```bash ├── assembly │ ├── __tests__ │ │ ├── as-pect.d.ts # As-pect unidad de pruebas - headers for type hints │ │ └── main.spec.ts # Test para el contrato │ ├── as_types.d.ts # AssemblyScript - headers for type hint │ ├── index.ts # Contains the smart contract code │ ├── models.ts # Contiene modelos accesibles al contrato │ │ └── Proyecto.ts # Contiene el modelo Proyecto. │ └── tsconfig.json # Archivo de configuracion de Typescript ├── neardev │ ├── dev-account # En este archivo se guarda la cuenta de contrato inteligente de implementación provisional │ └── dev-account.env # En este archivo, la cuenta se guarda como una variable de entorno ├── out │ └── main.wasm # Código de contrato inteligente compilado que se usa para el deploy ├── as-pect.config.js # Configuracion de as-pect (AssemblyScript unit testing) ├── asconfig.json # Configuracion del Assemblyscript compiler ├── package-lock.json # Manifesto lock version del proyecto ├── package.json # Manifesto de Node.js (scripts and dependencies) ├── README.md # Este archivo └── yarn.lock # Manifesto yarn lock version ``` # Gracias por visitar nuestro proyecto. :clap: Aqui les dejamos nuestro diseño - [UI/UX](https://www.canva.com/design/DAEri4aolfc/qkat_oy0bIIARVNcpDhthg/view?website#1). ## License MIT License Copyright (c) [2021] Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
fac3m4n_wishPortalDapp
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regex-syntax-bcaa825332c5ba50 lib-regex-syntax.json ryu-52a388757c15c1a6 run-build-script-build-script-build.json ryu-a7a81e23b9bcb06b lib-ryu.json serde-6d59abfee35ae43b run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde-ebe94b1241f5047e lib-serde.json serde_json-1da7a0c73c632567 lib-serde_json.json serde_json-c3b71e6248b2b8a1 run-build-script-build-script-build.json sha2-bdebeba22d9faa70 lib-sha2.json sha3-4cf15448deb657a1 lib-sha3.json typenum-4976863587ad7c9e run-build-script-build-script-main.json typenum-eee99a2ed0f1494e lib-typenum.json wee_alloc-1aec1ccd611d0139 run-build-script-build-script-build.json wee_alloc-6b415af9b59e77f3 lib-wee_alloc.json build num-bigint-a699a4a251dccc5e out radix_bases.rs typenum-4976863587ad7c9e out consts.rs op.rs tests.rs wee_alloc-1aec1ccd611d0139 out wee_alloc_static_array_backend_size_bytes.txt release .fingerprint ahash-3f602f2bb35305d5 lib-ahash.json aho-corasick-030629cb0b324655 lib-aho_corasick.json base64-0266aaf2a36d6a95 lib-base64.json 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lib-num-rational.json num-traits-86239f847f33ab60 run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-bfe3d12501cd1372 lib-num-traits.json opaque-debug-1b7ea0b07f1afb39 lib-opaque-debug.json opaque-debug-b6d439c6e3e9edbe lib-opaque-debug.json regex-a02f2db97851bb94 lib-regex.json regex-syntax-4657cf0405a3df43 lib-regex-syntax.json ryu-1337630bb096e090 run-build-script-build-script-build.json ryu-fcfc9347cfc122e6 lib-ryu.json serde-312623b7805249cb lib-serde.json serde-e2a1baf64aac9a1e run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-dff9c9af4bee57f6 lib-serde_json.json serde_json-e5c223ce15e2bb43 run-build-script-build-script-build.json sha2-6c431d0402a066fd lib-sha2.json sha3-35f260f3db24565d lib-sha3.json typenum-43dbc46d2082a107 run-build-script-build-script-main.json typenum-52b05cf60c51c8aa lib-typenum.json wee_alloc-034861dc56ef4c30 run-build-script-build-script-build.json wee_alloc-deb6b3e0ff371f74 lib-wee_alloc.json build num-bigint-dc825d0acebfdbcf out radix_bases.rs typenum-43dbc46d2082a107 out consts.rs op.rs tests.rs wee_alloc-034861dc56ef4c30 out wee_alloc_static_array_backend_size_bytes.txt | |","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1038,"byte_end":1133,"line_start":22,"line_end":22,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode` | Returns a new `String` | Always |","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1134,"byte_end":1229,"line_start":23,"line_end":23,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode_config` | Returns a new `String` | Always |","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1230,"byte_end":1325,"line_start":24,"line_end":24,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode_config_buf` | Appends to provided `String` | Only if `String` needs to grow |","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1326,"byte_end":1421,"line_start":25,"line_end":25,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode_config_slice` | Writes to provided `&[u8]` | Never |","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1422,"byte_end":1517,"line_start":26,"line_end":26,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1518,"byte_end":1521,"line_start":27,"line_end":27,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" All of the encoding functions that take a `Config` will pad as per the config.","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1522,"byte_end":1604,"line_start":28,"line_end":28,"column_start":1,"column_end":83}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1605,"byte_end":1608,"line_start":29,"line_end":29,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" # Decoding","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1609,"byte_end":1623,"line_start":30,"line_end":30,"column_start":1,"column_end":15}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1624,"byte_end":1627,"line_start":31,"line_end":31,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" Just as for encoding, there are different decoding functions available.","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1628,"byte_end":1703,"line_start":32,"line_end":32,"column_start":1,"column_end":76}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1704,"byte_end":1707,"line_start":33,"line_end":33,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" | Function | Output | Allocates |","span":{"file_name":" home kerim .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1708,"byte_end":1804,"line_start":34,"line_end":34,"column_start":1,"column_end":97}},{"value":" | package.json src App.js __mocks__ fileMock.js assets logo-black.svg logo-white.svg components CreateWish.js ListWishes.js config.js global.css index.html index.js jest.init.js main.test.js utils.js wallet login index.html
wishDapp Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html Wish Portal Dapp ================== This [React] app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Install dependencies: `yarn install` 3. Run the local development server: `yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `yarn run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `yarn install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: yarn install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `wishDapp.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `wishDapp.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account wishDapp.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'wishDapp.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [React]: https://reactjs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages
amirsaranBIH_nearkick
.github workflows integrate.yml README.md client README.md package.json public index.html manifest.json robots.txt src App.css App.js App.test.js components About About.css About.js Dashboard Dashboard.css Dashboard.js components CreateProject CreateProject.css CreateProject.js EditProject EditProject.css EditProject.js Header Header.css Header.js Home Home.css Home.js Project Project.css Project.js Projects Projects.css Projects.js config.js index.css index.js logo.svg reportWebVitals.js setupTests.js store loading-context.js wallet-context.js wallet.js contract Cargo.toml src lib.rs create_contract_env.sh package.json
# nearkick Decentralized kickstarter app using NEAR Protocol. # How to build and deploy for development - `npm run deploy:contract:dev` in root directory to build and deploy contract - `cd client` -> `npm install` -> `npm start` to install and start React development server # Getting Started with Create React App This project was bootstrapped with [Create React App](https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app). ## Available Scripts In the project directory, you can run: ### `npm start` Runs the app in the development mode.\ Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) to view it in your browser. The page will reload when you make changes.\ You may also see any lint errors in the console. ### `npm test` Launches the test runner in the interactive watch mode.\ See the section about [running tests](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/running-tests) for more information. ### `npm run build` Builds the app for production to the `build` folder.\ It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance. The build is minified and the filenames include the hashes.\ Your app is ready to be deployed! See the section about [deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) for more information. ### `npm run eject` **Note: this is a one-way operation. Once you `eject`, you can't go back!** If you aren't satisfied with the build tool and configuration choices, you can `eject` at any time. This command will remove the single build dependency from your project. Instead, it will copy all the configuration files and the transitive dependencies (webpack, Babel, ESLint, etc) right into your project so you have full control over them. All of the commands except `eject` will still work, but they will point to the copied scripts so you can tweak them. At this point you're on your own. You don't have to ever use `eject`. The curated feature set is suitable for small and middle deployments, and you shouldn't feel obligated to use this feature. However we understand that this tool wouldn't be useful if you couldn't customize it when you are ready for it. ## Learn More You can learn more in the [Create React App documentation](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/getting-started). To learn React, check out the [React documentation](https://reactjs.org/). ### Code Splitting This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting) ### Analyzing the Bundle Size This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size) ### Making a Progressive Web App This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app) ### Advanced Configuration This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration) ### Deployment This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) ### `npm run build` fails to minify This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify)
near-ndc_widget-specs
README.md spec-template.md | specs NDC Dashboard.md NDC-academy.md NDC-gateway.md NDC-voting-UI.md community-sbt.md kudos.md near-docs.md nominate.md regional_communities.md track-my-bounty.md | |
# widget-specs ## DEPRECATED ⚠️ **Content moved to [near-ndc/gwg](https://github.com/near-ndc/widget-specs)** ⚠️ NDC and the Governance Working Group will be using this repository to create specs for new widgets for [near.social](https://near.social/) through a collaborative approach. We are soliciting input to these specs from whole community. The intent is to get lots of up front and early input on projects that we then intend to issue an RFP for building. Discuss specs in [NDC Tools Telegram](https://t.me/c/1708163325/2318). Contribute to the specs via standard GitHub pull requests to the main branch. Templates are provided as recommendation. If you have better suggestions on how to structure your spec then feel free to do so. To start out, we have seeded the repo with five blank templates for the next five widgets we'd like to build. - An NDC Gateway to track and manage work in the three "houses" of NDC (Ozzy is currently building the product book for this) - Community SBT, which can be described as v2 of the OG SBT within i-am-human - NEAR Docs, which will be the next iteration of the prototypes already on near.social - Track My Bounty, a widget to apply for bounties and track progress towards payout across  all grassroots - Port NDC Academy to near.social Which other ones should we add and start drafting specs for? Feel free to create on, fork a template, or message @KazanderDad or @blaze0x1 to propose it. New to technical specs? Here are some resources to help you effectively create and leverage these documents: - [A Practical Guide To Writing Technical Specs](https://stackoverflow.blog/2020/04/06/a-practical-guide-to-writing-technical-specs/) [Code of Conduct](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1sqpyXXT0p799o6Tt-T43MGmAjBF--lqi4Do8G-wDVOk/edit?usp=sharing).
lawcia_near-hello-world-smart-contract-frontend
README.md package.json public index.html manifest.json robots.txt src App.css greeting Greeting.css home Home.css index.css login Login.css near config.ts react-app-env.d.ts reportWebVitals.ts setupTests.ts user User.css utils logger.ts tsconfig.json
# Getting Started with Create React App This project was bootstrapped with [Create React App](https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app). ## Available Scripts In the project directory, you can run: ### `yarn start` Runs the app in the development mode.\ Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) to view it in the browser. The page will reload if you make edits.\ You will also see any lint errors in the console. ### `yarn test` Launches the test runner in the interactive watch mode.\ See the section about [running tests](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/running-tests) for more information. ### `yarn build` Builds the app for production to the `build` folder.\ It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance. The build is minified and the filenames include the hashes.\ Your app is ready to be deployed! See the section about [deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) for more information. ### `yarn eject` **Note: this is a one-way operation. Once you `eject`, you can’t go back!** If you aren’t satisfied with the build tool and configuration choices, you can `eject` at any time. This command will remove the single build dependency from your project. Instead, it will copy all the configuration files and the transitive dependencies (webpack, Babel, ESLint, etc) right into your project so you have full control over them. All of the commands except `eject` will still work, but they will point to the copied scripts so you can tweak them. At this point you’re on your own. You don’t have to ever use `eject`. The curated feature set is suitable for small and middle deployments, and you shouldn’t feel obligated to use this feature. However we understand that this tool wouldn’t be useful if you couldn’t customize it when you are ready for it. ## Learn More You can learn more in the [Create React App documentation](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/getting-started). To learn React, check out the [React documentation](https://reactjs.org/).
nearprotocol_ready-layer-one-hackathon
README.md
# NEAR hackathon at Ready Layer One Hackathon page: https://gitcoin.co/hackathon/rl1 Ready Layer One: https://readylayer.one
phamr39_tk_contract
Cargo.toml package.json src constants.rs game.rs lib.rs utils.rs test_cmd.sh
esaminu_console-donation-template-dfg213
.github scripts runfe.sh workflows deploy-to-console.yml readme.yml tests.yml .gitpod.yml README.md contract README.md build.sh deploy.sh package-lock.json package.json src contract.ts model.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json integration-tests package-lock.json package.json src main.ava.ts package-lock.json package.json
# Donation 💸 [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/⋈%20Examples-Basics-green)](https://docs.near.org/tutorials/welcome) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/Gitpod-Ready-orange)](https://gitpod.io/#/https://github.com/near-examples/donation-js) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/Contract-js-yellow)](https://docs.near.org/develop/contracts/anatomy) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/Frontend-JS-yellow)](https://docs.near.org/develop/integrate/frontend) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/endpoint.svg?url=https%3A%2F%2Factions-badge.atrox.dev%2Fnear-examples%2Fdonation-js%2Fbadge&style=flat&label=Tests)](https://actions-badge.atrox.dev/near-examples/donation-js/goto) Our Donation example enables to forward money to an account while keeping track of it. It is one of the simplest examples on making a contract receive and send money. ![](https://docs.near.org/assets/images/donation-7cf65e5e131274fd1ae9aa34bc465bb8.png) # What This Example Shows 1. How to receive and transfer $NEAR on a contract. 2. How to divide a project into multiple modules. 3. How to handle the storage costs. 4. How to handle transaction results. 5. How to use a `Map`. <br /> # Quickstart Clone this repository locally or [**open it in gitpod**](https://gitpod.io/#/github.com/near-examples/donation-js). Then follow these steps: ### 1. Install Dependencies ```bash npm install ``` ### 2. Test the Contract Deploy your contract in a sandbox and simulate interactions from users. ```bash npm test ``` ### 3. Deploy the Contract Build the contract and deploy it in a testnet account ```bash npm run deploy ``` --- # Learn More 1. Learn more about the contract through its [README](./contract/README.md). 2. Check [**our documentation**](https://docs.near.org/develop/welcome). # Donation Contract The smart contract exposes methods to handle donating $NEAR to a `beneficiary`. ```ts @call donate() { // Get who is calling the method and how much $NEAR they attached let donor = near.predecessorAccountId(); let donationAmount: bigint = near.attachedDeposit() as bigint; let donatedSoFar = this.donations.get(donor) === null? BigInt(0) : BigInt(this.donations.get(donor) as string) let toTransfer = donationAmount; // This is the user's first donation, lets register it, which increases storage if(donatedSoFar == BigInt(0)) { assert(donationAmount > STORAGE_COST, `Attach at least ${STORAGE_COST} yoctoNEAR`); // Subtract the storage cost to the amount to transfer toTransfer -= STORAGE_COST } // Persist in storage the amount donated so far donatedSoFar += donationAmount this.donations.set(donor, donatedSoFar.toString()) // Send the money to the beneficiary const promise = near.promiseBatchCreate(this.beneficiary) near.promiseBatchActionTransfer(promise, toTransfer) // Return the total amount donated so far return donatedSoFar.toString() } ``` <br /> # Quickstart 1. Make sure you have installed [node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/) >= 16. 2. Install the [`NEAR CLI`](https://github.com/near/near-cli#setup) <br /> ## 1. Build and Deploy the Contract You can automatically compile and deploy the contract in the NEAR testnet by running: ```bash npm run deploy ``` Once finished, check the `neardev/dev-account` file to find the address in which the contract was deployed: ```bash cat ./neardev/dev-account # e.g. dev-1659899566943-21539992274727 ``` The contract will be automatically initialized with a default `beneficiary`. To initialize the contract yourself do: ```bash # Use near-cli to initialize contract (optional) near call <dev-account> init '{"beneficiary":"<account>"}' --accountId <dev-account> ``` <br /> ## 2. Get Beneficiary `beneficiary` is a read-only method (`view` method) that returns the beneficiary of the donations. `View` methods can be called for **free** by anyone, even people **without a NEAR account**! ```bash near view <dev-account> beneficiary ``` <br /> ## 3. Get Number of Donations `donate` forwards any attached money to the `beneficiary` while keeping track of it. `donate` is a payable method for which can only be invoked using a NEAR account. The account needs to attach money and pay GAS for the transaction. ```bash # Use near-cli to donate 1 NEAR near call <dev-account> donate --amount 1 --accountId <account> ``` **Tip:** If you would like to `donate` using your own account, first login into NEAR using: ```bash # Use near-cli to login your NEAR account near login ``` and then use the logged account to sign the transaction: `--accountId <your-account>`.
LoboVH_unicheck
.env README.md config-overrides.js index.d.ts package.json postcss.config.js public index.html manifest.json robots.txt src Redux Blockchain Binance auction.js createNFT.js marketPlace.js Ethereum auction.js createNFT.js marketPlace.js Polygon auction.js createNFT.js marketPlace.js Tron auction.js createNFT.js marketplace.js contracts.ts mewConfig.js Profile actions.ts reducers.ts Store.ts constants.ts rootReducer.ts assets react-icons AddWallet.svg AiFillDelete.svg AiFillEye.svg AiOutlineEdit.svg AiOutlineMenuUnfold.svg AiOutlineRise.svg AiOutlineShoppingCart.svg BiChevronDown.svg BiChevronUp.svg BiEdit.svg BiFoodMenu.svg BiWalletAlt.svg BsArrowLeft.svg BsCartPlus.svg BsCloudUpload.svg BsFillGrid3X2GapFill.svg BsFillHandbagFill.svg BsFillShareFill.svg BsFillTagFill.svg BsFillTagsFill.svg BsGrid1X2Fill.svg BsTag.svg BsWallet2.svg CgArrowsExchangeAlt.svg CgArrowsExchangeV.svg CgClose.svg CgWebsite.svg FaDiscord.svg FaEthereum.svg FaFacebook.svg FaInstagram.svg FaRegEnvelope.svg FaTwitter.svg FiCopy.svg HiMenuAlt2.svg HiOutlineMenuAlt3.svg HiPencilAlt.svg IoIosRocket.svg IoMdPricetag.svg MdOutlineSell.svg RiArrowDropUpLine.svg RiPriceTag2Fill.svg RsAuctionFill.svg Search.svg Share.svg SiBinance.svg VscCloudDownload.svg svgs 01.svg 02.svg 03.svg CC_Logo.svg advanceIcon.svg anchor.svg arrowLeft.svg arrowRight.svg bellIcon.svg bg1.svg bg2.svg bg3.svg bg4.svg bg5.svg bg6.svg bg7.svg bg8.svg blueEllipse.svg checkedBox.svg chevronDown.svg chevronDownBlue.svg chevronLeft.svg chevronRight.svg circles.svg coinbase.svg cross.svg dollar.svg dollarSign.svg emptyImg.svg ethereum.svg facebook.svg filter.svg flag.svg frame.svg gmailFooter.svg google.svg helpIcon.svg instagramFooter.svg invalid.svg likes.svg list.svg listing.svg looper.svg looperRoadMap.svg looperRoadMap2.svg mediumFooter.svg message-sent.svg metamask.svg mpAdd.svg mpCreate.svg mpList.svg mpWallet.svg myetherwallet.svg nearLogo.svg phantomLogo.svg profileActivity.svg profileCollected.svg profileCreated.svg profileFacebook.svg profileFavourited.svg profileIcon.svg profileInstagram.svg profileTwitter.svg questionIcon.svg roadmap.svg searchCollection.svg searchIcon.svg share.svg shareBlogFacebook.svg shareBlogInstagram.svg shareBlogTwitter.svg shop.svg shoppingCart.svg solution.svg star.svg starIcon.svg statsIcon.svg sunIcon.svg tagIcon.svg telegramFooter.svg transfer.svg tron-link.svg twitter.svg twitterFooter.svg unlock.svg uploadFile.svg uploadImage.svg userIcon.svg verified.svg views.svg walletIcon.svg walletconnect.svg components Wallet WalletAdd.css pay-now.css modals Loading FullLoading.js loading.css config.js index.js models Advance.ts Analytics.ts Appearance.ts General.ts MyAccount.ts Seo.ts SocialLink.ts Store.ts pages Marketplace MarketPlaceAuctions getTime.js react-app-env.d.ts services api supplier.ts utils constants.ts helpers.ts sol_mint_nft.json utils.ts tailwind.config.js tsconfig.json
# Getting Started with Create React App This project was bootstrapped with [Create React App](https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app). ## Available Scripts In the project directory, you can run: ### `npm start` Runs the app in the development mode.\ Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) to view it in your browser. The page will reload when you make changes.\ You may also see any lint errors in the console. ### `npm test` Launches the test runner in the interactive watch mode.\ See the section about [running tests](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/running-tests) for more information. ### `npm run build` Builds the app for production to the `build` folder.\ It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance. The build is minified and the filenames include the hashes.\ Your app is ready to be deployed! See the section about [deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) for more information. ### `npm run eject` **Note: this is a one-way operation. Once you `eject`, you can't go back!** If you aren't satisfied with the build tool and configuration choices, you can `eject` at any time. This command will remove the single build dependency from your project. Instead, it will copy all the configuration files and the transitive dependencies (webpack, Babel, ESLint, etc) right into your project so you have full control over them. All of the commands except `eject` will still work, but they will point to the copied scripts so you can tweak them. At this point you're on your own. You don't have to ever use `eject`. The curated feature set is suitable for small and middle deployments, and you shouldn't feel obligated to use this feature. However we understand that this tool wouldn't be useful if you couldn't customize it when you are ready for it. ## Learn More You can learn more in the [Create React App documentation](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/getting-started). To learn React, check out the [React documentation](https://reactjs.org/). ### Code Splitting This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting) ### Analyzing the Bundle Size This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size) ### Making a Progressive Web App This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app) ### Advanced Configuration This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration) ### Deployment This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) ### `npm run build` fails to minify This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify)
nearprotocol_owc_website
_config.yml _includes actions.html lazytube.html _layouts benefits.html default.html home.html new.html program.html assets icons acceleration.svg alive.svg builders.svg community.svg connections.svg connects.svg events.svg explorers.svg funds.svg ideas.svg ideation.svg knowledge.svg knowledgebase.svg lead.svg mentors.svg ops.svg start.svg support.svg validation.svg img ow-logo.svg owc-logo.svg play.svg stage-arrow.svg owc.js style.css style.min.css benefits.md gulpfile.js index.md new.md package-lock.json package.json program.md readme.md tailwind.config.js
nearprotocol_wasm-mock-vm
.appveyor.yml .github nodejs.yml workflows nodejs.yml .gitpod.yml .travis.yml Cargo.toml README.md as-pect.config.js assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts contract.spec.ts model.ts runtime.spec.ts util.ts as_types.d.ts contract.ts entry.ts index.ts outcome.ts tsconfig.json context.json imports.js package.json pkg wasm_mock_vm.d.ts wasm_mock_vm.js wasm_mock_vm_bg.d.ts wasm_mock_vm_bg.js setup.sh src lib.rs mock memory.rs mod.rs runner.rs vm_logic.rs utils.rs test.sh tests runWasm.js test.js utils.js
# nearcore's VMlogic compiled to WebAssembly Near smart contracts have access to a runtime API to interact with the host. Nearcore is written in Rust, which means it can be compiled into WebAsssembly. By compiling the core VM logic, a mock version of the runtime can be used to test smart contracts without the overhead of running a local node or using the testnet. Currently rust smart contracts are unit tested by compiling the contract alongside the runtime since they are both in the same language. This solution shares the same memory at runtime, where as in the actual VM there is a separation between the host memory and the contract's memory. This project uses `wasm-bindgen`, to create javascript bindings for the generated WebAssembly, which then can used along side the [`as-pect`](https://github.com/jtenner/as-pect) to write unit tests in AssemblyScript. # Setup ## Node Version Since the runtime uses `u64`, it requires the use of the node flag ` --experimental-wasm-bigint`, which is included by default in `imports.js` of this project, however, this still requires a version of node >= v12.0.0. ## Installation In a blank Near AssemblyScript project you need to install the following dependencies: ``` npm install --save-dev wasm-mock-vm @as-pect/cli ``` Next set up `as-pect` with its init command. ``` npx asc --init ``` This creates a `__tests__` folder and a `as-pect.config.js` file in the root of your project. Replace the contents of the `as-pect.config.js` with ``` module.exports = require("wasm-mock-vm/imports"); ``` This will configure mock Near VM and `as-pect`. ## Setting up Types To ensure that the types added by the runtime library are detected by your IDE include a type declaration file in your root `assembly` folder, e.g. `assembly/types.d.ts` with the following line: ```ts /// <reference types="near-runtime-ts/assembly/as_types" /> ``` # Example Usage In `assembly/contract.ts`: ```ts //@nearfile export class Contract { constructor(public name: string) {} } ``` and `assembly/__tests__/contract.spec.ts` ```ts import { storage } from "near-runtime-ts"; import { Contract } from "../contract"; describe("Contract", () => { it("should be able to be stored and retrieved", () => { const contract = new Contract("unique name!"); storage.set("contract", contract); const otherContract = storage.get<Contract>("contract"); expect(otherContract.name).toBe(contract.name, "contracts should have the same name"); expect(otherContract.name).not.toBe("", "retrieved contract's name should not be the empty string"); }); }); ``` # API By default the context used by the VM is a local `context.json` file. It first looks in the project's `assembly/__test__` folder, then the project's root folder, and finally will read the default file in this project's root. Each runtime API call by default updates the state of the VM. So in the example above any tests run after it will have "contract" in the storage. To prevent this there is an API to save and restore the state. `as-pect` has special functions to run before and after tests, e.g. `beforeAll/beforeEach`. ```ts import { storage } from "near-runtime-ts"; import { Contract } from "../contract"; import { VM } from "wasm-mock-vm"; describe("Contract", () => { beforeEach(() => { VM.saveState(); }); afterEach(() => { VM.restoreState(); }); it("should be able to be stored and retrieved", () => { const contract = new Contract("unique name!"); storage.set("contract", contract); const otherContract = storage.get<Contract>("contract"); expect(contract.name).toBe(otherContract.name, "contracts should have the same name"); expect(contract.name).toBe("", "contracts should have the same name"); }); it("state should not contain updates of previous test", () => { expect(storage.contain("contract")).toBe(false, "contract shouldn't exist is original storage"); }); }); ``` The state also includes the registers that the runtime uses to store values in the host memory.
andreykobal_amber-frontend-release-2
.gitpod.yml README.md babel.config.js contract Cargo.toml README.md compile.js src lib.rs target .rustc_info.json debug .fingerprint Inflector-43feca6693eacde7 lib-inflector.json autocfg-ce7784e1ec7b4471 lib-autocfg.json borsh-derive-c66a001f715b61bd lib-borsh-derive.json borsh-derive-internal-47300e99565762f7 lib-borsh-derive-internal.json borsh-schema-derive-internal-e125f8abee8d6d3c lib-borsh-schema-derive-internal.json byteorder-a5b2ef220fa4aa58 build-script-build-script-build.json convert_case-3e34b674a3055f51 lib-convert_case.json derive_more-90da512afdf29cec lib-derive_more.json generic-array-8f9750ce6db71cdf build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-4715147519423b9f lib-hashbrown.json hashbrown-e6dbeeaf60ba0149 run-build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-fe3d052080e72922 build-script-build-script-build.json indexmap-12cdf0c04991d5b2 run-build-script-build-script-build.json indexmap-771e05f56e911434 build-script-build-script-build.json indexmap-9188af7f2fbde06c lib-indexmap.json itoa-d6019665920166ca lib-itoa.json memchr-0c2655dece3a5c2a build-script-build-script-build.json near-rpc-error-core-ddae6533e865161d lib-near-rpc-error-core.json near-rpc-error-macro-4cf3bd44b1c8af0d lib-near-rpc-error-macro.json near-sdk-core-a0c8311b5dfc4cfd lib-near-sdk-core.json near-sdk-macros-798e2fb2a8a5154c lib-near-sdk-macros.json num-bigint-a8b27e1851a47dae build-script-build-script-build.json num-integer-3ff85b8c0139205c build-script-build-script-build.json num-rational-6afe7dccf089b23c build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-6b7105063d8405e8 build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro-crate-cbe39f16c93ce811 lib-proc-macro-crate.json proc-macro2-6a03fdc1a66cb69b lib-proc-macro2.json proc-macro2-8777eb9a9ba47919 build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro2-a0a7a6f5ec265d63 run-build-script-build-script-build.json quote-f9022bfb03d8dff3 lib-quote.json ryu-b114b7bf20bd588d build-script-build-script-build.json ryu-b4079b41f3134326 run-build-script-build-script-build.json ryu-f9bb3c7becb97891 lib-ryu.json serde-717545a8fde9d017 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde-a72186585efe8ed1 build-script-build-script-build.json serde-ebe4278c3a11133a lib-serde.json serde_derive-09f2f95028200222 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_derive-86ed526aec1da329 lib-serde_derive.json serde_derive-cf88a84d678ee2e4 build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-ba2eea35140cff06 lib-serde_json.json serde_json-d85ef4522161f5a6 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-ed3733fd9def1067 build-script-build-script-build.json syn-287957610e19250e run-build-script-build-script-build.json syn-331a484e788aa9c3 build-script-build-script-build.json syn-d65eb9871f6bf639 lib-syn.json toml-9cf6199398334e8d lib-toml.json typenum-a15a19a45c376e99 build-script-build-script-main.json unicode-xid-2d77b7eadf50c62e lib-unicode-xid.json version_check-413790463c361025 lib-version_check.json wee_alloc-e24e3f3e55a205fe build-script-build-script-build.json release .fingerprint Inflector-971d12571cd74ccc lib-inflector.json autocfg-6c90b200fc23a9fc lib-autocfg.json borsh-derive-dd622f9b282b0769 lib-borsh-derive.json borsh-derive-internal-de23273ba7fb2032 lib-borsh-derive-internal.json borsh-schema-derive-internal-5b061598c67a252e lib-borsh-schema-derive-internal.json byteorder-7df47cfeb4932ccb build-script-build-script-build.json convert_case-0b0e2598baee41bb lib-convert_case.json derive_more-f14f429f7df56c3d lib-derive_more.json generic-array-ff847ced35daa5ac build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-1331270c5cb619a7 run-build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-56c096e6265afdec build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-786da5887c47dddf lib-hashbrown.json indexmap-37915a07ad376331 run-build-script-build-script-build.json indexmap-38fc82d153d2ce3b lib-indexmap.json indexmap-eb9a185c88da4a36 build-script-build-script-build.json itoa-b4085ecfc311edf9 lib-itoa.json memchr-ed355b9280ab2042 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holy-cube-amber Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html holy-cube-amber ================== This [React] app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Install dependencies: `yarn install` 3. Run the local development server: `yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `yarn run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `yarn install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: yarn install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `holy-cube-amber.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `holy-cube-amber.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account holy-cube-amber.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'holy-cube-amber.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [React]: https://reactjs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages
noemk2_single_cross_contract
README.md contracts local README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts index.spec.ts as_types.d.ts index.ts tsconfig.json package.json remote README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts index.spec.ts index.ts package.json
Hola mundo en near con AssemblyScript ================== Introducción a holamundo en near (assemblyScript) ================== un holamundo en near protocol, este contrato te perminte: 1. print "Hello world" 2. print "Hello " + $USER 👨‍💻 Instalación en local =========== Para correr este proyecto en local debes seguir los siguientes pasos: Paso 1: Pre - Requisitos ------------------------------ 1. Asegúrese de haber instalado [Node.js] ≥ 12 ((recomendamos usar [nvm]) 2. Asegúrese de haber instalado yarn: `npm install -g yarn` 3. Instalar dependencias: `yarn install` 4. Crear un test near account [NEAR test account] 5. Instalar el NEAR CLI globally: [near-cli] es una interfaz de linea de comando (CLI) para interacturar con NEAR blockchain yarn install --global near-cli Step 2: Configura tu NEAR CLI ------------------------------- Configura tu near-cli para autorizar su cuenta de prueba creada recientemente: near login Step 3: Clonar Repositorio ------------------------------- Este comando nos permite clonar el repositorio de nuestro proyecto ```bash git clone https://github.com/noemk2/holamundo_as.git ``` Una vez que hayas descargado el repositorio, asegurate de ejecutar los comandos dentro del repositorio descargado. Puedes hacerlo con ```bash cd holamundo_as/ ``` Step 4: Realiza el BUILD para implementación de desarrollo de contrato inteligente ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Instale el gestor de dependencia de Node.js dentro del repositorio ```bash npm install ``` Cree el código de contrato inteligente e implemente el servidor de desarrollo local: ```bash yarn deploy:dev ``` Cree la variable local $CONTRACT_NAME (permite guardar tu contrato temporal en una variable facil de recordar) ```bash source ./neardev/dev-account.env ``` Consulte` package.json` para obtener una lista completa de `scripts` que puede ejecutar con` yarn`). Este script le devuelve un contrato inteligente provisional implementado (guárdelo para usarlo más tarde) ¡Felicitaciones, ahora tendrá un entorno de desarrollo local ejecutándose en NEAR TestNet! ✏️ Comando view : request estatico ----------------------------------------------- Permite imprimir "Hello world" Para Linux: ```bash near view $CONTRACT_NAME hello_world --account-id <username>.testnet ``` ✏️ Comando call : request dinamico -------------------------------------------- Permite imprimir "Hello " + username.testnet Para Linux : ```bash near call $CONTRACT_NAME hello --account-id <username>.testnet ``` 🤖 Test ================== Las pruebas son parte del desarrollo, luego, para ejecutar las pruebas en el contrato inteligente , debe ejecutar el siguiente comando: yarn test ============================================== [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [NEAR test account]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/basics/create-account#creating-a-testnet-account [nvm]: https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm [UX/UI]: https://www.figma.com/proto/GqP5EF5zRZRvAv3HoaSsuN/uniwap?node-id=39%3A2300&scaling=min-zoom&page-id=0%3A1&starting-point-node-id=39%3A2300&hide-ui=1 [UX/UI]: https://www.figma.com/proto/0dZLC0WI1eVsfjeKu3T8J8/Garant%C3%ADzame?node-id=2%3A8&scaling=scale-down-width&page-id=0%3A1&starting-point-node-id=2%3A8 Hola mundo en near con AssemblyScript ================== Introducción a holamundo en near (assemblyScript) ================== un holamundo en near protocol, este contrato te perminte: 1. print "Hello world" 2. print "Hello " + $USER 👨‍💻 Instalación en local =========== Para correr este proyecto en local debes seguir los siguientes pasos: Paso 1: Pre - Requisitos ------------------------------ 1. Asegúrese de haber instalado [Node.js] ≥ 12 ((recomendamos usar [nvm]) 2. Asegúrese de haber instalado yarn: `npm install -g yarn` 3. Instalar dependencias: `yarn install` 4. Crear un test near account [NEAR test account] 5. Instalar el NEAR CLI globally: [near-cli] es una interfaz de linea de comando (CLI) para interacturar con NEAR blockchain yarn install --global near-cli Step 2: Configura tu NEAR CLI ------------------------------- Configura tu near-cli para autorizar su cuenta de prueba creada recientemente: near login Step 3: Clonar Repositorio ------------------------------- Este comando nos permite clonar el repositorio de nuestro proyecto ```bash git clone https://github.com/noemk2/holamundo_as.git ``` Una vez que hayas descargado el repositorio, asegurate de ejecutar los comandos dentro del repositorio descargado. Puedes hacerlo con ```bash cd holamundo_as/ ``` Step 4: Realiza el BUILD para implementación de desarrollo de contrato inteligente ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Instale el gestor de dependencia de Node.js dentro del repositorio ```bash npm install ``` Cree el código de contrato inteligente e implemente el servidor de desarrollo local: ```bash yarn deploy:dev ``` Cree la variable local $CONTRACT_NAME (permite guardar tu contrato temporal en una variable facil de recordar) ```bash source ./neardev/dev-account.env ``` Consulte` package.json` para obtener una lista completa de `scripts` que puede ejecutar con` yarn`). Este script le devuelve un contrato inteligente provisional implementado (guárdelo para usarlo más tarde) ¡Felicitaciones, ahora tendrá un entorno de desarrollo local ejecutándose en NEAR TestNet! ✏️ Comando view : request estatico ----------------------------------------------- Permite imprimir "Hello world" Para Linux: ```bash near view $CONTRACT_NAME hello_world --account-id <username>.testnet ``` ✏️ Comando call : request dinamico -------------------------------------------- Permite imprimir "Hello " + username.testnet Para Linux : ```bash near call $CONTRACT_NAME hello --account-id <username>.testnet ``` 🤖 Test ================== Las pruebas son parte del desarrollo, luego, para ejecutar las pruebas en el contrato inteligente , debe ejecutar el siguiente comando: yarn test ============================================== [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [NEAR test account]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/basics/create-account#creating-a-testnet-account [nvm]: https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm [UX/UI]: https://www.figma.com/proto/GqP5EF5zRZRvAv3HoaSsuN/uniwap?node-id=39%3A2300&scaling=min-zoom&page-id=0%3A1&starting-point-node-id=39%3A2300&hide-ui=1 [UX/UI]: https://www.figma.com/proto/0dZLC0WI1eVsfjeKu3T8J8/Garant%C3%ADzame?node-id=2%3A8&scaling=scale-down-width&page-id=0%3A1&starting-point-node-id=2%3A8 Single cross-contract en near con AssemblyScript ================== Introducción a Single cross-contract en near (assemblyScript) ================== un Single cross-contract en near protocol, este contrato te perminte: 1. print "Hello world" 2. print "Hello " + $USER 👨‍💻 Instalación en local =========== Para correr este proyecto en local debes seguir los siguientes pasos: Paso 1: Pre - Requisitos ------------------------------ 1. Asegúrese de haber instalado [Node.js] ≥ 12 ((recomendamos usar [nvm]) 2. Asegúrese de haber instalado yarn: `npm install -g yarn` 3. Instalar dependencias: `yarn install` 4. Crear un test near account [NEAR test account] 5. Instalar el NEAR CLI globally: [near-cli] es una interfaz de linea de comando (CLI) para interacturar con NEAR blockchain yarn install --global near-cli Step 2: Configura tu NEAR CLI ------------------------------- Configura tu near-cli para autorizar su cuenta de prueba creada recientemente: near login Step 3: Clonar Repositorio ------------------------------- Este comando nos permite clonar el repositorio de nuestro proyecto ```bash git clone https://github.com/noemk2/holamundo_as.git ``` Una vez que hayas descargado el repositorio, asegurate de ejecutar los comandos dentro del repositorio descargado. Puedes hacerlo con ```bash cd holamundo_as/ ``` Step 4: Realiza el BUILD para implementación de desarrollo de contrato inteligente ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Instale el gestor de dependencia de Node.js dentro del repositorio ```bash npm install ``` Cree el código de contrato inteligente e implemente el servidor de desarrollo local: ```bash yarn deploy:dev ``` Cree la variable local $CONTRACT_NAME (permite guardar tu contrato temporal en una variable facil de recordar) ```bash source ./neardev/dev-account.env ``` Consulte` package.json` para obtener una lista completa de `scripts` que puede ejecutar con` yarn`). Este script le devuelve un contrato inteligente provisional implementado (guárdelo para usarlo más tarde) ¡Felicitaciones, ahora tendrá un entorno de desarrollo local ejecutándose en NEAR TestNet! ✏️ Comando view : request estatico ----------------------------------------------- Permite imprimir "Hello world" Para Linux: ```bash near view $CONTRACT_NAME hello_world --account-id <username>.testnet ``` ✏️ Comando call : request dinamico -------------------------------------------- Permite imprimir "Hello " + username.testnet Para Linux : ```bash near call $CONTRACT_NAME hello --account-id <username>.testnet ``` 🤖 Test ================== Las pruebas son parte del desarrollo, luego, para ejecutar las pruebas en el contrato inteligente , debe ejecutar el siguiente comando: yarn test ============================================== [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [NEAR test account]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/basics/create-account#creating-a-testnet-account [nvm]: https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm [UX/UI]: https://www.figma.com/proto/GqP5EF5zRZRvAv3HoaSsuN/uniwap?node-id=39%3A2300&scaling=min-zoom&page-id=0%3A1&starting-point-node-id=39%3A2300&hide-ui=1 [UX/UI]: https://www.figma.com/proto/0dZLC0WI1eVsfjeKu3T8J8/Garant%C3%ADzame?node-id=2%3A8&scaling=scale-down-width&page-id=0%3A1&starting-point-node-id=2%3A8
marcialarturo_NFT-Giftcards
README.md migrations 1_initial_migration.js 2_deploy.js package.json public index.html manifest.json robots.txt serve.json src APIKEYS.js App.css abis Address.json AggregatorV3Interface.json BirthdayCard.json Context.json ERC165.json EnumerableMap.json EnumerableSet.json IERC165.json IERC721.json IERC721Enumerable.json IERC721Metadata.json IERC721Receiver.json LinkTokenInterface.json Migrations.json Random.json SafeMath.json SafeMathChainlink.json Strings.json VRFConsumerBase.json VRFRequestIDBase.json components home pet-details PetDetails.css pixelMaker CreatePet.css CreatePet.js PixelMaker.css PixelMaker.js index.css index.js truffle-config.js
## NFT Gift Cards <i>NFT Gift Cards is a platform that helps you collect, create, trade, and sell your paper cards and turn them into digital assets. No more birthday cards ending up in the trash. </i> ## Project Live Demo - Preview: - Website demo [https://nft-birthday-cards.netlify.app](https://nft-giftcards.netlify.app/#/) --- ![Main Page](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/metaversemoon/NFT-cards/main/collection.png) <br> <br> ### Project Full details: NFT Gift Cards is a platform that helps you collect, create, trade, and sell your paper cards and turn them into digital assets. No more birthday cards ending up in the trash. **NFT Gift Cards** is a platform that helps you collect, create, trade, and sell your paper cards and turn them into digital assets. No more birthday cards ending up in the trash. - This dApp has a marketplace for artists to sell their NFT gift cards designs and templates. - Users would be able to design or buy a template and use our friendly editor to design/customize their designs and publish them on our marketplace platform. - Users would be able to send and receive NFT Giftcards using their wallets. Find meaningful birthday cards for family and friends, spread kindness, and save them through a decentralized and transparent way using NEAR blockchain technology to document your life from start to finish. ![Editor Page](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/4metaverse/NFT-Giftcards/main/Editor.png) <br> <br> NFT Gift Cards is an app that helps you digitalize your memories forever. Join us to create, trade, and sell your Birthday Cards. NFT Gift Card is a platform that helps you protect your important memories, moments, and wishes. No more Gift cards ending up in the trash. With NFT Gift Cards you can collect Gift Cards, create, trade, and sell them. This dapp will have a marketplace for artists to sell NFT Gift cards template. Users will be able to upload and design their own or buy a template. Find meaningful Gift cards for family and friends, spread kindness, and save them through a decentralized and transparent way using blockchain technology to document your life from start to finish. ![Home Page](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/4metaverse/NFT-Giftcards/main/Home.png) <br> <br> ![Marketplace Page](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/4metaverse/NFT-Giftcards/main/Marketplace.png) <br> <br> ## How does it work? It's a simple process, just come up with a design/idea, start designing, and invite others to sign the Gift card. Share the NFT Gift Card with that special someone: Share your awesome idea, design, thoughtful message, or good wishes with your loved ones. Register your NFT Gift Card Each NFT Gift Card is represented as an NFT that holds your valuable work and ideas. Find contributors, family, and friends. Invite people, family, friends, and even coworkers to sign up for the Gift card. Anyone can see the NFT Gift card, but only members who are invited can access the NFT. Sell your Designs and get fund it List your NFT template and offer potential deals for users to buy your design. ### Future In the future we would like to implement: NFT Card Templates and other types of cards such us Christmas, anniversaries and more ### Why Did I use IPFS? I wanted to use IPFS to design a simple and fun app where everyone can collaborate, learn about NFTs and experience them directly. ### How it's made? NFT gift cards application makes use of the following software: - Polygon Network: the network we deployed the app for faster and chepear transactions. - NFTStorage: the data is stored on NFTStorage IPFS, the generated hash (CID) will be used to view the details and to retrieve the NFT. - ​​ NFTPort for multi-chain NFT minting, and data transparency such as distributing rewards and minting the NFT. * Solidity: Solidity was used for the smart contract together with OpenZeppelin ERC721 for faster development of the smart contract * Truffle: for local blockchain development * Frontend: React Js for the frontend, Material-UI, and Web3 to connect to the blockchain. # Getting Started ### `yarn start` ### `yarn build` Builds the app for production to the `build` folder.\ It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance.
NEARBuilders_editor
README.md apps editor bos.config.json package.json
# editor ## Getting Started To run locally, make sure you have [bos-workspace](https://github.com/sekaiking/bos-workspace) installed. Then, run the command: ```bash bw dev ``` This will serve the widgets from `http://127.0.0.1:4040/`. Go to [everything.dev/flags](https://everything.dev) and paste this value there. Once set, see the locally served app at [editor.near/widget/app](https://everything.dev/editor.near/widget/app). ## Contributing Clone the repository, make some changes, and create a pull request. Pushes to this repository's main branch automatically deploys to _______ ## TODO - [ ] Set up github action (what account to deploy to?) - [ ] Add a left hand navigation in app
html1704_challenge-2
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num-bigint-00a18bfc5e6bcf5d lib-num-bigint.json num-bigint-dd2b12ef358ad150 run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-integer-20fc3c5b6715fc29 lib-num-integer.json num-integer-7bbca57a59f2c64d run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-rational-75a878223dda610e lib-num-rational.json num-rational-e245fb60ae5d228f run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-fc3edba68694a94a lib-num-traits.json num-traits-fceda933139e35d0 run-build-script-build-script-build.json opaque-debug-b2242681a00bd93a lib-opaque-debug.json opaque-debug-ddcd1b07edf68a37 lib-opaque-debug.json regex-4f0c6a2bc6131dcf lib-regex.json regex-syntax-9455a93df8c78607 lib-regex-syntax.json ryu-05a79e24ef72bed6 run-build-script-build-script-build.json ryu-ce46002e78d0049e lib-ryu.json serde-5e009a63aa5e09e9 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde-82b8b5f0a44b45e0 lib-serde.json serde_json-3a1344f733a9e713 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-6e0448f6309c187f lib-serde_json.json sha2-9b68277cd7b2095b lib-sha2.json sha3-555bfa621f506fdc lib-sha3.json typenum-306e31ff236dbc19 lib-typenum.json typenum-39cdaa6935864a49 run-build-script-build-script-main.json wee_alloc-73a4a3d36eaed7a5 lib-wee_alloc.json wee_alloc-eee7ea5cef997a34 run-build-script-build-script-build.json build num-bigint-dd2b12ef358ad150 out radix_bases.rs typenum-39cdaa6935864a49 out consts.rs op.rs tests.rs wee_alloc-eee7ea5cef997a34 out wee_alloc_static_array_backend_size_bytes.txt | |","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1038,"byte_end":1133,"line_start":22,"line_end":22,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode` | Returns a new `String` | Always |","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1134,"byte_end":1229,"line_start":23,"line_end":23,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode_config` | Returns a new `String` | Always |","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1230,"byte_end":1325,"line_start":24,"line_end":24,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode_config_buf` | Appends to provided `String` | Only if `String` needs to grow |","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1326,"byte_end":1421,"line_start":25,"line_end":25,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode_config_slice` | Writes to provided `&[u8]` | Never |","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1422,"byte_end":1517,"line_start":26,"line_end":26,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1518,"byte_end":1521,"line_start":27,"line_end":27,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" All of the encoding functions that take a `Config` will pad as per the config.","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1522,"byte_end":1604,"line_start":28,"line_end":28,"column_start":1,"column_end":83}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1605,"byte_end":1608,"line_start":29,"line_end":29,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" # Decoding","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1609,"byte_end":1623,"line_start":30,"line_end":30,"column_start":1,"column_end":15}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1624,"byte_end":1627,"line_start":31,"line_end":31,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" Just as for encoding, there are different decoding functions available.","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1628,"byte_end":1703,"line_start":32,"line_end":32,"column_start":1,"column_end":76}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1704,"byte_end":1707,"line_start":33,"line_end":33,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" | Function | Output | Allocates |","span":{"file_name":" Users iliashuianov .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1708,"byte_end":1804,"line_start":34,"line_end":34,"column_start":1,"column_end":97}},{"value":" | package.json src App.js Components InfoBubble.js MintingTool.js __mocks__ fileMock.js assets logo-black.svg logo-white.svg config.js global.css index.html index.js jest.init.js main.test.js utils.js wallet login index.html
my-nft Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html my-nft ================== This [React] app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Install dependencies: `yarn install` 3. Run the local development server: `yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `yarn run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `yarn install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: yarn install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `my-nft.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `my-nft.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account my-nft.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'my-nft.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [React]: https://reactjs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages
mrraymoon_market-arena
README.md contract README.md asconfig.json assembly as_types.d.ts index.ts model.ts tsconfig.json package-lock.json package.json package.json public index.html manifest.json robots.txt src App.css App.js App.test.js components Cover.js Header Header.css Header.js Loader.js Main Main.css Main.js New New.css New.js Traders Traders.css Traders.js Wallet.js index.js index.css index.js logo.svg setupTests.js utils config.js funcs.js near.js
# Market Arena Market Arena is a dapp that can help users upload their items available for sale on a market arena and other users can also come to purchase these items paying using near tokens. In addition, users can also rate a trader(only once) based on their experience so other buyers can get to know the legibility of that trader. - Project link https://mrraymoon.github.io/market-arena/ --- # Getting Started with Create React App This project was bootstrapped with [Create React App](https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app). ## Available Scripts In the project directory, you can run: ### `npm start` Runs the app in the development mode.\ Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) to view it in your browser. The page will reload when you make changes.\ You may also see any lint errors in the console. ### `npm test` Launches the test runner in the interactive watch mode.\ See the section about [running tests](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/running-tests) for more information. ### `npm run build` Builds the app for production to the `build` folder.\ It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance. The build is minified and the filenames include the hashes.\ Your app is ready to be deployed! See the section about [deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) for more information. ### `npm run eject` **Note: this is a one-way operation. Once you `eject`, you can't go back!** If you aren't satisfied with the build tool and configuration choices, you can `eject` at any time. This command will remove the single build dependency from your project. Instead, it will copy all the configuration files and the transitive dependencies (webpack, Babel, ESLint, etc) right into your project so you have full control over them. All of the commands except `eject` will still work, but they will point to the copied scripts so you can tweak them. At this point you're on your own. You don't have to ever use `eject`. The curated feature set is suitable for small and middle deployments, and you shouldn't feel obligated to use this feature. However we understand that this tool wouldn't be useful if you couldn't customize it when you are ready for it. ## Learn More You can learn more in the [Create React App documentation](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/getting-started). To learn React, check out the [React documentation](https://reactjs.org/). ### Code Splitting This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting) ### Analyzing the Bundle Size This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size) ### Making a Progressive Web App This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app) ### Advanced Configuration This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration) ### Deployment This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) ### `npm run build` fails to minify This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify) # Prerequsities Install the next tools: * `node` * `yarn` * `near-cli` Also, you'd need a code editor of choice. In this course we are going to use Visual Studio Code. ## Create project structure The next directories and files must be created to proceed with smart contracts: * assembly/ - this directory contains smart contracts source code * asconfig.json - contains most of configuration properties * assembly/tsconfig.json ### `assembly/asconfig.json` By default it's needed to add the next content to the file. By adding this, we just extend the configuration provided by `near-sdk-as`. ``` { "extends": "near-sdk-as/asconfig.json" } ``` ### `assembly/tsconfig.json` The purpose of this file is to specify compiler options and root level files that are necessary for a TypeScript project to be compiled. Also, this file implies that the directory where `tsconfig.json` is located is the root of the TypeScript project. ``` { "extends": "../node_modules/assemblyscript/std/assembly.json", "include": [ "./**/*.ts" ] } ``` ### `as_types.d.ts` This files declares that some type names must be included in the compilation. In this case, names are imported from `near-sdk-as` ``` /// <reference types="near-sdk-as/assembly/as_types" /> ``` ## Initialize project Run the next commands in a terminal window (in the project's root): ``` yarn init ``` It will create a `package.json` file where development dependencies can be added. Run the next command to add `near-sdk-as` to the project: ``` yarn add -D near-sdk-as ``` The next step is to create an entry file for the smart contract - create `index.ts` file in the `assembly` directory. The resulting project structure should be like this: ``` ├── asconfig.json ├── assembly │   ├── as_types.d.ts │   ├── index.ts │   └── tsconfig.json ├── package.json └── yarn.lock ``` # Compile, build and deployt the smart contract ## Compile & build a smart contract Before a smart contract can be deployed, it must be built as `.wasm`. To do that, the next command should be run from the project's root: ``` yarn asb ``` The output of this command is a `.wasm` file that is placed into `${PROJECT_ROOT}/build/release` directory. ## Login to an account in a shell In order to deploy a contract from via terminal, account's credentials are needed. To get the credentials, run the next command in a terminal window: ``` near login ``` It opens a wallet url in a browser where you can login to your account (or selected one of the existing accounts if you have one). As the result the session in the terminal window is authenticated and you can start deploying contracts and view/call functions. ## Deploy a smart contract To deploy a smart contract, run the next command from in a terminal window: ``` near deploy ${PATH_TO_WASM} --accountId=${ACCOUNT_NAME} ``` where: * `${ACCOUNT_NAME}` - an account name that should be used to deploy a smart contract * `${CONTRACT_NAME}` - an account name that should be used for the contract (we will use the same value as for `${ACCOUNT_NAME}`) * `${PATH_TO_WASM}` - a path to the `.wasm` file issued by the `yarn asb` command - `${PROJECT_ROOT}/build/release/some_name.wasm` ## Contract interaction There are two types of functions in `near`: * `view` functions are used to read state hence they are free. Nothing is modified/persisted when a `view` function is called. * `call` functions are used to modify state of the data stored in the blockchain.
esaminu_console-donation-template-rs-234zxc
.github scripts runfe.sh workflows deploy-to-console.yml readme.yml tests.yml .gitpod.yml README.md contract README.md build.sh deploy.sh package-lock.json package.json src contract.ts model.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json integration-tests package-lock.json package.json src main.ava.ts package-lock.json package.json
# Donation Contract The smart contract exposes methods to handle donating $NEAR to a `beneficiary`. ```ts @call donate() { // Get who is calling the method and how much $NEAR they attached let donor = near.predecessorAccountId(); let donationAmount: bigint = near.attachedDeposit() as bigint; let donatedSoFar = this.donations.get(donor) === null? BigInt(0) : BigInt(this.donations.get(donor) as string) let toTransfer = donationAmount; // This is the user's first donation, lets register it, which increases storage if(donatedSoFar == BigInt(0)) { assert(donationAmount > STORAGE_COST, `Attach at least ${STORAGE_COST} yoctoNEAR`); // Subtract the storage cost to the amount to transfer toTransfer -= STORAGE_COST } // Persist in storage the amount donated so far donatedSoFar += donationAmount this.donations.set(donor, donatedSoFar.toString()) // Send the money to the beneficiary const promise = near.promiseBatchCreate(this.beneficiary) near.promiseBatchActionTransfer(promise, toTransfer) // Return the total amount donated so far return donatedSoFar.toString() } ``` <br /> # Quickstart 1. Make sure you have installed [node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/) >= 16. 2. Install the [`NEAR CLI`](https://github.com/near/near-cli#setup) <br /> ## 1. Build and Deploy the Contract You can automatically compile and deploy the contract in the NEAR testnet by running: ```bash npm run deploy ``` Once finished, check the `neardev/dev-account` file to find the address in which the contract was deployed: ```bash cat ./neardev/dev-account # e.g. dev-1659899566943-21539992274727 ``` The contract will be automatically initialized with a default `beneficiary`. To initialize the contract yourself do: ```bash # Use near-cli to initialize contract (optional) near call <dev-account> init '{"beneficiary":"<account>"}' --accountId <dev-account> ``` <br /> ## 2. Get Beneficiary `beneficiary` is a read-only method (`view` method) that returns the beneficiary of the donations. `View` methods can be called for **free** by anyone, even people **without a NEAR account**! ```bash near view <dev-account> beneficiary ``` <br /> ## 3. Get Number of Donations `donate` forwards any attached money to the `beneficiary` while keeping track of it. `donate` is a payable method for which can only be invoked using a NEAR account. The account needs to attach money and pay GAS for the transaction. ```bash # Use near-cli to donate 1 NEAR near call <dev-account> donate --amount 1 --accountId <account> ``` **Tip:** If you would like to `donate` using your own account, first login into NEAR using: ```bash # Use near-cli to login your NEAR account near login ``` and then use the logged account to sign the transaction: `--accountId <your-account>`. # Donation 💸 [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/⋈%20Examples-Basics-green)](https://docs.near.org/tutorials/welcome) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/Gitpod-Ready-orange)](https://gitpod.io/#/https://github.com/near-examples/donation-js) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/Contract-js-yellow)](https://docs.near.org/develop/contracts/anatomy) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/Frontend-JS-yellow)](https://docs.near.org/develop/integrate/frontend) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/endpoint.svg?url=https%3A%2F%2Factions-badge.atrox.dev%2Fnear-examples%2Fdonation-js%2Fbadge&style=flat&label=Tests)](https://actions-badge.atrox.dev/near-examples/donation-js/goto) Our Donation example enables to forward money to an account while keeping track of it. It is one of the simplest examples on making a contract receive and send money. ![](https://docs.near.org/assets/images/donation-7cf65e5e131274fd1ae9aa34bc465bb8.png) # What This Example Shows 1. How to receive and transfer $NEAR on a contract. 2. How to divide a project into multiple modules. 3. How to handle the storage costs. 4. How to handle transaction results. 5. How to use a `Map`. <br /> # Quickstart Clone this repository locally or [**open it in gitpod**](https://gitpod.io/#/github.com/near-examples/donation-js). Then follow these steps: ### 1. Install Dependencies ```bash npm install ``` ### 2. Test the Contract Deploy your contract in a sandbox and simulate interactions from users. ```bash npm test ``` ### 3. Deploy the Contract Build the contract and deploy it in a testnet account ```bash npm run deploy ``` --- # Learn More 1. Learn more about the contract through its [README](./contract/README.md). 2. Check [**our documentation**](https://docs.near.org/develop/welcome).
MjolNear_simple-nft-contract
Cargo.toml README.md SUMMARY.md build.sh src lib.rs
--- description: >- MjolNear is the first Open NFT marketplace on NEAR blockchain. You can sell and buy NFTs from any other marketplace or collection. This simple guide will help you to start. --- # How to start with MjolNear? ### Which contracts are supported on MjolNear? Not every contract on NEAR blockchain is NFT contract. There are several standarts that must be implemented by the contract: [NEP-171](https://nomicon.io/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Core), [NEP-177](https://nomicon.io/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Metadata), [NEP-178](https://nomicon.io/Standards/NonFungibleToken/ApprovalManagement) and [NEP-181](https://nomicon.io/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Enumeration). If contract implements all this standarts, it will become usable and visible on MjolNear and any NFT from this contract can be sold or bought via MjolNear. ### What if I want to create my own NFT contract? It seems a bit complex on the first look but MjolNear team will provide a complex exmaple on how to create your own NFT contract that will satisfy all the requirements, described in previous section. 1. Go to our [sample repository](https://github.com/MjolNear/simple-nft-contract) on GitHub and fork it using "Fork" button in the top right corner. ![](.gitbook/assets/image.png) 2\. Clone forked repository. 3\. Now go to directory with cloned project and run in terminal: `./build.sh` . It will build the contract. 4\. Now we have to deploy the contract, initialize it and mint the first NFT. Write these commands in terminal step by step: * Set NEAR enviroment to mainnet ```shell export NEAR_ENV=mainnet ``` * Login using yout NEAR account ```shell near login // use it to login via your NEAR accountshe ``` * Create account that will be used for contract deployment (skip this step if you already have account for deployment) ```shell near create-account *your NFT contract name with suffix as masterAccount* --masterAccount *you account name* --initialBalance 6.0. ``` * Next command will initialize your contract. You must supply the owner\_id in arguments (owner is the only person who can mint NFTs on the contract, usually it is just your account) and metadata (some info about your NFT contract). \ \ NOTE: it may require about 6.0 NEAR for initial storage of the contract. ```shell near deploy --accountId *account id of future contract* --wasmFile out/main.wasm --initFunction new --initArgs '{"owner_id": "*you account name*", "contract_metadata": {"spec": "nft-1.0.0", "name": "*name of your NFT contract*", "symbol": "*symbol of your contract, usually a small word*", "icon": "*URL for icon of your contract*", "base_uri": "*base URI for decentralazed storage of contract additional metadata (for example NFT Storage)*", "reference": "*URL to JSON with more info (traits and etc.)*", "reference_hash": "*hash of reference from previous field. It will be used to build link using base_uri*"}}' ``` ### Example of arguments: ```json { "owner_id": "myaccount.near", "contract_metadata": { "spec": "nft-1.0.0", "name": "My First NFT collection!", "symbol": "LUVNFT", "icon": "https://cdn-icons-png.flaticon.com/512/1818/1818401.png", "base_uri": "https://ipfs.io/ipfs", "reference": "https://linktojson.com/myjson.json", "reference_hash": "aSBsb3ZlIG1qb2xuZWFyIHZlcnkgdmVyeSB2ZXJ5IG11Y2ghISE=" } } ``` * You contract is ready! Now you can mint any token on it using this command: ```shell near call *your contract name* nftmint '{"tokenid": "*unique id of this token*", "token_ownerid": "*owner of this token. May be you want to mint it directly to your friend!*", "token_metadata": *some token metadata*}' --depost 0.1 --gas 300000000000000 --accountId *owner_id of the contract* ``` ``` { "title": "My lovely Punk.", "description": "I really love my punk.", "media": "https://ipfs.io/ipfs/bafybeicmy2c2hpfb5so5maacqnfuxm54ohom5iaeaeeuhvrxg6j32hn6re/avatars-rfwy5mSeUytFz5Gx-8s06ZQ-t240x240.jpg", "media_hash": "bafybeicmy2c2hpfb5so5maacqnfuxm54ohom5iaeaeeuhvrxg6j32hn6re", "copies": 1, "issued_at": ..., // ISO 8601 datetime when token was issued or minted "expires_at": ..., // ISO 8601 datetime when token expires "starts_at": ..., // ISO 8601 datetime when token starts being valid "updated_at": ..., // ISO 8601 datetime when token was last updated "extra": {"traits": {"eyes": "blue"}}, // anything extra the NFT wants to store on-chain (like traits and etc.). Can be stringified JSON. "reference": "https://myjsonwithtraits.com/punk.json", // URL to an off-chain JSON file with more info. "reference_hash": "cHVuayBmb3IgbWpvbG5lYXIhIG1vbSBpIGxvdmUgeW91", // Base64-encoded sha256 hash of JSON from reference field. Required if `reference` is included. } ``` You are all set! Your NFT is on the contract! You can go to MjolNear and place it on the market. Enjoy! _**MjolNear team**_
metaversnft_NEAROGRAM-backend
README.md index.js middleware auth.js models account.js post.js topic.js mongoconnect mongoconnect.js package-lock.json package.json routes accounts accounts.js feed feed.js topics topics.js
# NEAROGRAM-backend frontend react project of nearogram # npm install To install required dependencies # npm start To start dev server
humanman_basic_rust_contract
Cargo.toml README.md build.sh deploy.sh dev-deploy.sh init-args.js src contract.rs lib.rs utils.rs
# NEAR Smart Contract Rust Template Project structure for writing smart contracts in Rust for NEAR Protocol # Dependencies - Rust 1.56 - Node.js 14 - NEAR CLI 3.1 # Authors - Jacob Lindahl <[email protected]> [@sudo_build](https://twitter.com/sudo_build)
lenchik-ponchik_svelte-near-example
README.md package.json src app.html global.d.ts svelte.config.js tsconfig.json
# create-svelte Everything you need to build a Svelte project, powered by [`create-svelte`](https://github.com/sveltejs/kit/tree/master/packages/create-svelte); ## Creating a project If you're seeing this, you've probably already done this step. Congrats! ```bash # create a new project in the current directory npm init svelte@next # create a new project in my-app npm init svelte@next my-app ``` > Note: the `@next` is temporary ## Developing Once you've created a project and installed dependencies with `npm install` (or `pnpm install` or `yarn`), start a development server: ```bash npm run dev # or start the server and open the app in a new browser tab npm run dev -- --open ``` ## Building Before creating a production version of your app, install an [adapter](https://kit.svelte.dev/docs#adapters) for your target environment. Then: ```bash npm run build ``` > You can preview the built app with `npm run preview`, regardless of whether you installed an adapter. This should _not_ be used to serve your app in production.
kdbvier_Near-FT
.gitpod.yml Cargo.toml README-Windows.md README.md build.bat build.sh ft Cargo.toml src lib.rs rustfmt.toml test-contract-defi Cargo.toml src lib.rs tests sim main.rs no_macros.rs utils.rs with_macros.rs
Fungible Token (FT) =================== Example implementation of a [Fungible Token] contract which uses [near-contract-standards] and [simulation] tests. This is a contract-only example. [Fungible Token]: https://nomicon.io/Standards/FungibleToken/Core [near-contract-standards]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs/tree/master/near-contract-standards [simulation]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs/tree/master/near-sdk-sim Prerequisites ============= If you're using Gitpod, you can skip this step. 1. Make sure Rust is installed per the prerequisites in [`near-sdk-rs`](https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites) 2. Ensure `near-cli` is installed by running `near --version`. If not installed, install with: `npm install -g near-cli` ## Building To build run: ```bash ./build.sh ``` Using this contract =================== ### Quickest deploy You can build and deploy this smart contract to a development account. [Dev Accounts](https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account#dev-accounts) are auto-generated accounts to assist in developing and testing smart contracts. Please see the [Standard deploy](#standard-deploy) section for creating a more personalized account to deploy to. ```bash near dev-deploy --wasmFile res/fungible_token.wasm --helperUrl https://near-contract-helper.onrender.com ``` Behind the scenes, this is creating an account and deploying a contract to it. On the console, notice a message like: >Done deploying to dev-1234567890123 In this instance, the account is `dev-1234567890123`. A file has been created containing a key pair to the account, located at `neardev/dev-account`. To make the next few steps easier, we're going to set an environment variable containing this development account id and use that when copy/pasting commands. Run this command to the environment variable: ```bash source neardev/dev-account.env ``` You can tell if the environment variable is set correctly if your command line prints the account name after this command: ```bash echo $CONTRACT_NAME ``` The next command will initialize the contract using the `new` method: ```bash near call $CONTRACT_NAME new '{"owner_id": "'$CONTRACT_NAME'", "total_supply": "1000000000000000", "metadata": { "spec": "ft-1.0.0", "name": "Example Token Name", "symbol": "EXLT", "decimals": 8 }}' --accountId $CONTRACT_NAME ``` To get the fungible token metadata: ```bash near view $CONTRACT_NAME ft_metadata ``` ### Standard deploy This smart contract will get deployed to your NEAR account. For this example, please create a new NEAR account. Because NEAR allows the ability to upgrade contracts on the same account, initialization functions must be cleared. If you'd like to run this example on a NEAR account that has had prior contracts deployed, please use the `near-cli` command `near delete`, and then recreate it in Wallet. To create (or recreate) an account, please follow the directions on [NEAR Wallet](https://wallet.near.org/). Switch to `mainnet`. You can skip this step to use `testnet` as a default network. export NEAR_ENV=mainnet In the project root, log in to your newly created account with `near-cli` by following the instructions after this command: near login To make this tutorial easier to copy/paste, we're going to set an environment variable for your account id. In the below command, replace `MY_ACCOUNT_NAME` with the account name you just logged in with, including the `.near`: ID=MY_ACCOUNT_NAME You can tell if the environment variable is set correctly if your command line prints the account name after this command: echo $ID Now we can deploy the compiled contract in this example to your account: near deploy --wasmFile res/fungible_token.wasm --accountId $ID FT contract should be initialized before usage. You can read more about metadata at ['nomicon.io'](https://nomicon.io/Standards/FungibleToken/Metadata.html#reference-level-explanation). Modify the parameters and create a token: near call $ID new '{"owner_id": "'$ID'", "total_supply": "1000000000000000", "metadata": { "spec": "ft-1.0.0", "name": "Example Token Name", "symbol": "EXLT", "decimals": 8 }}' --accountId $ID Get metadata: near view $ID ft_metadata Transfer Example --------------- Let's set up an account to transfer some tokens to. These account will be a sub-account of the NEAR account you logged in with. near create-account bob.$ID --masterAccount $ID --initialBalance 1 Add storage deposit for Bob's account: near call $ID storage_deposit '' --accountId bob.$ID --amount 0.00125 Check balance of Bob's account, it should be `0` for now: near view $ID ft_balance_of '{"account_id": "'bob.$ID'"}' Transfer tokens to Bob from the contract that minted these fungible tokens, exactly 1 yoctoNEAR of deposit should be attached: near call $ID ft_transfer '{"receiver_id": "'bob.$ID'", "amount": "19"}' --accountId $ID --amount 0.000000000000000000000001 Check the balance of Bob again with the command from before and it will now return `19`. ## Testing As with many Rust libraries and contracts, there are tests in the main fungible token implementation at `ft/src/lib.rs`. Additionally, this project has [simulation] tests in `tests/sim`. Simulation tests allow testing cross-contract calls, which is crucial to ensuring that the `ft_transfer_call` function works properly. These simulation tests are the reason this project has the file structure it does. Note that the root project has a `Cargo.toml` which sets it up as a workspace. `ft` and `test-contract-defi` are both small & focused contract projects, the latter only existing for simulation tests. The root project imports `near-sdk-sim` and tests interaction between these contracts. You can run all these tests with one command: ```bash cargo test ``` If you want to run only simulation tests, you can use `cargo test simulate`, since all the simulation tests include "simulate" in their names. ## Notes - The maximum balance value is limited by U128 (`2**128 - 1`). - JSON calls should pass U128 as a base-10 string. E.g. "100". - This does not include escrow functionality, as `ft_transfer_call` provides a superior approach. An escrow system can, of course, be added as a separate contract or additional functionality within this contract. ## No AssemblyScript? [near-contract-standards] is currently Rust-only. We strongly suggest using this library to create your own Fungible Token contract to ensure it works as expected. Someday NEAR core or community contributors may provide a similar library for AssemblyScript, at which point this example will be updated to include both a Rust and AssemblyScript version. ## Contributing When making changes to the files in `ft` or `test-contract-defi`, remember to use `./build.sh` to compile all contracts and copy the output to the `res` folder. If you forget this, **the simulation tests will not use the latest versions**. Note that if the `rust-toolchain` file in this repository changes, please make sure to update the `.gitpod.Dockerfile` to explicitly specify using that as default as well.
GiovaniCodes_nearToken
README.md babel.config.json frontend App.js assets css global.css img logo-black.svg logo-white.svg config.js index.html index.js near-api.js ui-components.js package-lock.json package.json src index.js
<center> <img src="frontend/assets/img/near_logo_stack_wht.png" width="120" /> </center> # NEAR-SDK-JS Quick Start > This example is designed to quickly get you writing and interacting with smart contracts on the NEAR blockchain using JavaScript! 🚀 [![Open in Gitpod](https://gitpod.io/button/open-in-gitpod.svg)](https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/near-examples/near-sdk-js-quickstart) --- ## Table of Contents - [Requirements](#requirements) - [Quick Start](#quick-start) - [Exploring the Code](#exploring-the-code) - [Smart Contract](#smart-contract) - [Front end](#front-end) - [Storage](#storage) - [Example Game](#example-game) - [Feedback](#feedback) - [Help](#help) --- ## Requirements - [Node.js & npm](https://docs.npmjs.com/downloading-and-installing-node-js-and-npm) - [near-cli](https://docs.near.org/docs/tools/near-cli) `v3.1.1` or greater ```bash npm install -g near-cli ``` ***Note:*** Already using `near-cli`? Ensure you are using `v3.1.1` or greater by running `near --version`. --- ## Quick Start 1. Install dependencies ```bash npm install ``` 2. Launch dApp! 🚀 ```bash npm run start ``` > This script performs the following: > > - Compiles smart contract located in `./src/index.js` and exports to `./build/contract.base64` > - Creates a NEAR [`dev-account`](https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account#dev-accounts) with 200 Ⓝ `testnet` tokens. > - Deploys the compiled smart contract to the `dev-account` on NEAR's [`testnet`](https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/networks#testnet) > - Launches a local front-end that is connected to the smart contract (dApp) --- ## Exploring the code ```bash . ├── frontend │   ├── App.js │   ├── assets │   ├── config.js │   ├── index.html │   ├── index.js │   └── utils.js ├── src │ └── index.js <------[ Smart Contract ] ├── babel.config.json ├── LICENSE ├── package.json └── README.md ``` ## Smart Contract > As illustrated above, the [smart contract](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smart_contract) is located in `./src/index.js`. Here you will see a few dependencies imported from `near-sdk-js` that is used for the creation of a smart contract. - `NearBindgen` - This decorator allows the JS code to be compiled to a format compatible with the `JSVM`; base64. - `NearContract` - A constructing class for creating smart contracts in the proper format. - `call` - A decorator that indicates a `change` method or a function that changes state on the blockchain. Note that change methods cost gas and must be signed. For more information see our [documentation on gas](https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/gas). - `view` - A decorator that indicates a `view` method or a function that returns values stored on the blockchain. View calls are free and an account isn't needed to execute them. ## Front end ```bash . ├── App.js <------- Core logic for the application ├── assets │   ├── css │   └── img ├── config.js <------- Contract ID & various network environment settings ├── index.html ├── index.js └── utils.js <------- Contract initialization, NEAR Wallet setup, & dApp functions ``` > A simple [React](https://reactjs.org/) front end that uses [`near-api-js`](https://github.com/near/near-api-js) to connect to the NEAR blockchain. --- ## Storage You may have noticed that sometimes you get redirected to the NEAR wallet asking for some $NEAR when changing the status message. This was to cover storage costs on the blockchain through a concept known as [storage staking](https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/storage-staking). When developing on NEAR, smart contracts must maintain enough $NEAR tokens on the account to cover data storage at a rate of 1 $NEAR per 100/kb. Using the `near-api-js`, the `attachedDeposit` parameter will allow you to attach a specified amount of $NEAR to cover the extra information you are storing. You do not need to know the _exact_ amount of $NEAR required as if you overpay, you will be refunded the difference. However, if you _do not_ attach enough $NEAR to your call to cover additional storage, the contract call will fail. ## Example Game > In this example repo there are several other branches with different completed contracts that you can use to help you learn: - `skeleton` contains the skeleton code for the coin flipping game - `coin-flip-finished` contains the finished code for the coin flipping game - `coin-flip-hub` contains the finished code for the hub contract. The actual on-chain interactions take place in the `flip_coin` and `get_points` functions defined in `frontend/utils/utils.js`. To test the fully working contract alongside the frontend, switch to the `coin-flip-finished` branch and follow the steps outlined in the [Quickstart](#quick-start) section. --- ## Feedback > Help us enhance our JavaScript SDK and participate in its development process! - Visit our [GitHub discussions](https://github.com/near/near-sdk-js/discussions) and give us your feedback! - Join one of our monthly [Developer Tools Community Meetings](http://near.ai/tooling-meetings) and give us your feedback or ask some questions! --- ## HELP > Stuck and need help? There are several ways we can assist you! - Post a question in #dev-support channel on Discord (http://near.chat). - Get live support with our Developer Relations team (http://near.org/office-hours) (Twice daily) - Build from scratch using our [JS SDK Quick Start Guide](https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/js/enclave-quickstart)) in docs.# ft_frontned_ex_near_sdk_js # nearToken # nearToken # nearToken
gandhisamay_Teen-Patti-On-The-Chain
Cargo.toml README.md build.bat scripts build.sh delete.sh deploy.sh method_calls.sh redeploy.sh test.sh start.sh teenpatti src add_player_input.rs card.rs constants.rs contract.rs deck.rs hand.rs hand_type.rs init.rs lib.rs player.rs player_actions.rs suit_type.rs tests.rs todo.txt
# Decentralized Teen Patti (NEAR Protocol) Teenpatti is an Indian origin card game. The objective of this game is to make the best 3 card hand as per the hand ranking and to maximize the pot (prize pool) before the showdown for you to win. A standard 52-card pack (without the jokers) is used in this game. ## Problem Statement Online card games like Rummy,TeenPatti are huge in India,attracting numerous masses and involving real money. But there are many problems in this sector namely :- ### Accessibility and confidentiality Businesses in the gaming industry offer crypto casino customers who use cryptocurrencies as an alternative to fiat money or a solid solution as their principal payment method. Players actively wagering on the platform can do so without providing identifying documentation. Additionally, there aren’t many restrictions on new participants entering the market with cryptocurrency. As a result, new players in the lottery system are exempted from the regulations that apply to traditional lotteries. ### Traceability By utilizing the transparency feature built into blockchain technology, participants of the DeFi lottery platforms can access open records and examine all the historical information of trades. If any cyber attack occurs, participants can use the transparency function of a DeFi lottery platform to track and analyze it. ### Making Crypto Payments feasible Participants can use their cryptos to subscribe for the use of the Defi lottery systems. Players on the DeFi lottery platform won’t have to be confined to their national borders thanks to the crypto payment system, which enables them to participate in events regulated outside their own countries. Since cryptocurrencies make payments and redemptions cheaper, utilizing DeFi lottery sites is significantly less expensive than conventional lottery platforms ## Rules of the game ### Ranking of the card hands from highest to lowest is 1) Trail (three of a kind) : 3 cards of the same rank. AAA is the best hand in the game. 2) Pure Sequence (Straight Flush): Three consecutive cards of the same suit. 3) Sequence (Straight): Three consecutive cards not all in the same suit. 4) Color (Flush): A flush of 3 cards in the same suit, with the highest card winning in the case of a draw. 5) Pair (two of a kind): A pair of 2 cards of the same rank. In case of a draw, the highest-ranking 3rd card will denote the winner. 6) High Card: When neither the dealer nor player has a pair, then the hand with the highest card wins. For more detailed rules refer [Deltin](https://www.deltin.com/games/indian-flush-teen-patti#:~:text=In%20this%20game%2C%20the%20dealer,best%20hand%20wins%20the%20round.). ## Installation To get it up and running up for your machine : 1) Set up the [prerequisites](https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites) 2) Create a [NEAR](https://wallet.near.org/) account on the testnet or the mainnet network . 3) Best practice is to create a sub account for eg. game.teenpatti.testnet and deploy your smart contract to that by using the deploy script. ![tree](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/75066364/173606222-d22c643f-063a-477a-a2ce-2f8db8c5d750.jpg) 4) Clone the project and cd into the folder. Everywhere replace,<br> `<accountId>` by your NEAR testnet account <br> `<contract-account>` by the NEAR sub-account created where the game is deployed. ## Game Play ### Start game To start the game, run the following command, after successful compilation of the files it will start by asking for player details and once the details are filled all the details will be pushed on the NEAR blockchain. ``` cargo run --bin init ``` Now to further play game follow the actions given below. ### Game State To to find information about 1) All registered players 2) Total staked tokens in the game by all players (i.e the pot) 3) Currently folded players 4) Players currently in the game **Run** ``` near view <contract-account> game_state ``` **Output** ``` View call: gaming.teen_patti2.testnet.game_state() { players: [ { account_id: 'samay200.testnet', hand: { cards: [ { card_type: 'J', suit: 'Heart', value: 11 }, { card_type: '9', suit: 'Spade', value: 9 }, { card_type: 'J', suit: 'Diamond', value: 11 } ] }, name: 'Samay', betting_amount: 80, is_folded: false, play_blind: false, balance_amount: 420 }, { account_id: 'harshrathi2511.testnet', hand: { cards: [ { card_type: '8', suit: 'Spade', value: 8 }, { card_type: 'Q', suit: 'Diamond', value: 12 }, { card_type: '10', suit: 'Heart', value: 10 } ] }, name: 'Harsh', betting_amount: 0, is_folded: true, play_blind: false, balance_amount: 500 }, { account_id: 'teen_patti2.testnet', hand: { cards: [ { card_type: '7', suit: 'Club', value: 7 }, { card_type: '9', suit: 'Club', value: 9 }, { card_type: '3', suit: 'Club', value: 3 } ] }, name: 'TeenPatti', betting_amount: 60, is_folded: false, play_blind: false, balance_amount: 580 } ], folded_players: [ { account_id: 'harshrathi2511.testnet', hand: { cards: [ { card_type: '8', suit: 'Spade', value: 8 }, { card_type: 'Q', suit: 'Diamond', value: 12 }, { card_type: '10', suit: 'Heart', value: 10 } ] }, name: 'Harsh', betting_amount: 0, is_folded: true, play_blind: false, balance_amount: 500 } ], tokens_staked: 140, unfolded_players: [ { account_id: 'samay200.testnet', hand: { cards: [ { card_type: 'J', suit: 'Heart', value: 11 }, { card_type: '9', suit: 'Spade', value: 9 }, { card_type: 'J', suit: 'Diamond', value: 11 } ] }, name: 'Samay', betting_amount: 80, is_folded: false, play_blind: false, balance_amount: 420 }, { account_id: 'teen_patti2.testnet', hand: { cards: [ { card_type: '7', suit: 'Club', value: 7 }, { card_type: '9', suit: 'Club', value: 9 }, { card_type: '3', suit: 'Club', value: 3 } ] }, name: 'TeenPatti', betting_amount: 60, is_folded: false, play_blind: false, balance_amount: 580 } ] } ``` ### Play Actions There are 3 actions that a TeenPatti registered player can be done using the NEAR CLI, namely: 1) **RAISE** - specify the raise amount,which should not be greater than the number of chips you have(i.e balance amount) in an argument provided to action to raise in the game ``` near call <contract-account> play '{ "action": "Raise{"amount": 45.0}", "account_id": <accountId> }' --accountId <accountId> ``` 2) **FOLD** - when your cards are not good enough ,its better of to fold them using the following command . ``` near call <contract-account> play '{ "action": "Fold", "account_id": <accountId> }' --accountId <accountId> ``` 3) **SHOW** - can only be called when 2 players are left in the game who have not yet folded their cards . After show the winner script runs and the winner is announced . ``` near call <contract-account> play '{ "action": "Show", "account_id": <accountId> }' --accountId <accountId> ``` ### Game Winner Whenever the winner of game is found it is declared in the logs when either one of the 2 actions are performed :- 1. Only one player is left with unfolded cards and rest of the players jave folded theirs 2. When only 2 players remain with unfolded cards and a player calls "show" , then the winner is decided upon the hierarchy of their cards All the tokens staked in the game is then transferred to the winner instantly !(under development) ## Get more info * [Rust Smart Contract Quick Start](https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/rust/intro) * [Rust SDK Book](https://www.near-sdk.io/) * [NEAR SDK Docs](https://www.near-sdk.io/) ## Contributors Made with 💖 by Web3 enthusiasts, [Samay Gandhi](https://www.github.com/gandhisamay) and [Harsh Rathi](https://github.com/harshRathi2511)
jong950715_nearExample
lib accountManager.js lookupTable.js lookupTable.json swapManager.js tokenManager.js lowLevelExample queryTxExample.js swapExample.js tokenExample.js walletExample.js package-lock.json package.json readme.md
polluterofminds_hamlet
README.md babel.config.js contract README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts main.spec.ts as_types.d.ts index.ts tsconfig.json compile.js package-lock.json package.json package.json
react-example Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [AssemblyScript] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install [Node.js] ≥ 12 Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `assembly/index.ts`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard AssemblyScript tests using [as-pect]. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/roles/developer/contracts/intro [AssemblyScript]: https://www.assemblyscript.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [as-pect]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli Hamlet This is a NEAR Protocol grant project
nategeier_yeet-base
.eslintrc.json README.md constants.ts next-env.d.ts next.config.js package-lock.json package.json pages api upload.ts postcss.config.js public vercel.svg services providers constants.ts styles globals.css tailwind.config.js tsconfig.json
--- name: Simple Login slug: simple-login description: XXX framework: Next.js useCase: XXX css: Tailwind deployUrl: xxx demoUrl: XXX --- # Simple Login XXX ## Demo https://edge-functions-ab-testing-google-optimize.vercel.app ### One-Click Deploy Deploy the example using [Vercel](https://vercel.com?utm_source=github&utm_medium=readme): [![Deploy with Vercel](https://vercel.com/button)](https://vercel.com/new/clone?repository-url=https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2FMintbase%2Fexamples%2Ftree%2Fmain%2Fsimple-login&integration-ids=oac_2vhHlLAK5ddS6mHpafn5FGic) ## Getting Started Execute [`create-next-app`](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/tree/canary/packages/create-next-app) with [npm](https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/init) or [Yarn](https://yarnpkg.com/lang/en/docs/cli/create/) to bootstrap the example: ```bash npx create-next-app --example https://github.com/vercel/examples/tree/main/edge-functions/ab-testing-google-optimize ab-testing-google-optimize # or yarn create next-app --example https://github.com/vercel/examples/tree/main/edge-functions/ab-testing-google-optimize ab-testing-google-optimize ``` [`pages/_middleware.ts`](pages/_middleware.ts) loads the experiments using a pre-defined JSON file ([lib/optimize-experiments.json](lib/optimize-experiments.json)), it currently has to be edited manually in order to add the experiments created in https://optimize.google.com. Run Next.js in development mode: ```bash npm install npm run dev # or yarn yarn dev ``` Once the page loads (http://localhost:3000) the layout will load the `optimize.js` script using your google tracking id, and the pages will register events for the current experiment and variant. To create your own experiments you'll need an account with [Google Optimize](https://optimize.google.com/optimize/home). Once that's done, copy the `.env.example` file in this directory to `.env.local` (which will be ignored by Git): ```bash cp .env.example .env.local ``` Then open `.env.local` and set the environment variables to match the ones for your Google Optimize account.
martyr00_NFT_near
.idea modules.xml Codebase README.md package.json src index.html main.js
Near Test
mehtaphysical_orbit-db-near-iam
package.json rollup.config.js src NEARAccessController.js NEARIdentityProvider.js index.js verify.js
NEAR-Hispano_cook-dapp
.gitpod.yml .vscode settings.json README.md babel.config.js contracts assembly-contract README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly PersistentCollections.ts __tests__ as-pect.d.ts main.spec.ts as_types.d.ts index.ts models Image.ts Ingridient.ts Recipe.ts RecipeBook.ts Review.ts ShoppingList.ts User.ts tsconfig.json utils.ts compile.js package-lock.json package.json scripts build-contract.sh clean.sh dev-deploy-contract.sh load-examples.sh test-contract.sh data cook_dapp_recipes_examples.json recipe_books_examples.json recipes_examples.json rust-contract Cargo.toml build.sh deploy.js neardev dev-account.env scripts load-examples.sh src lib.rs structs Image.rs Recipe.rs Review.rs User.rs ingredient.rs mod.rs recipe_book.rs frontend .env netlify.toml package.json public assets locales en translations.json es translations.json index.html src Contract.ts __mocks__ fileMock.js assets data categories.ts profileTabs.ts screens.ts socialMedia.ts svg LogoIcon.svg config.ts jest.init.ts main.test.js react-app-env.d.ts types index.ts utils.ts utils contractErrorHandler.ts validateTextLength.ts wallet login index.html tsconfig.json package-lock.json package.json
cookdapp Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [AssemblyScript] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install [Node.js] ≥ 12 Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `assembly/index.ts`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard AssemblyScript tests using [as-pect]. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [AssemblyScript]: https://www.assemblyscript.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [as-pect]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli # :fork_and_knife: CookDApp CookDApp’s purpose is to allow the creation, sharing, and schedule of meals through recipes. CookDApp name represents the implementation of food, recipes, and cooks in this DApp, it will allow users to create recipe books in which they will be able to store recipes, these recipes can be edited and deleted by the creator, the individual recipes and recipe books can be rated by others, this rating will be used to keep tracking of the most rated recipes, this will allow a ranking system for the most popular and delicious meals which can be selected and added to anyone’s schedule so they may try the recipe themselves. # :gear: Installation For the locally installation of this project: ## Pre-requisites - Before you compile this code, you will need to install [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/) ≥ 12 - (optional) near-shell ``` npm i -g near-shell ``` - yarn ``` npm i -g yarn ``` - Install dependencies: ``` yarn install. ``` # :page_facing_up: Cloning the repo ```html git clone https://github.com/NEAR-Hispano/cook-dapp.git ``` ```html cd cook-dapp ``` # :hammer_and_wrench: Project scripts for build and deploy Install npm dependencies ```html npm install ``` ### Run contract scripts Script for building the contract ```html sh scripts/build-contract.sh ``` Script for deploying the contract ```html sh scripts/dev-deploy-contract.sh ``` Script for cleaning the current local build of the contract ```html sh scripts/clean.sh ``` Script for testing contract ```html sh scripts/test-contract.sh ``` # :memo: Try it yourself # Assembly Contract Methods ## getUser Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> getUser "{}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## createRecipeBook Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> createRecipeBook "{"title":string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## getRecipeBook Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> getRecipeBook "{"id": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## updateRecipeBook Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> updateRecipeBook "{"id": string, "title": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## deleteRecipeBook Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> deleteRecipeBook "{"id": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## createRecipe Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> createRecipe "{"title": string, "description":string, "ingridientsList": Array["label":string, "amount":i32, "unit":string, "details":strring], "instructions":Array[string], "recipeBookID":strrig, "category":string, "chefNote":string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## getRecipe Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> getRecipe"{"id": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## updateRecipe Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> updateRecipe "{"id": string, "title": string, "description":string, "ingridientsList": Array["label":string, "amount":i32, "unit":string, "details":strring], "instructions":Array[string], "recipeBookID":strrig, "category":string, "chefNote":string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## deleteRecipe Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> updateRecipeBook "{"id": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## tipRecipe Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> tipRecipe "{"id": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## getRecipes Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> getRecipes "{}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## getTrendingRecipes Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> getTrendingRecipes "{}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## getMostTipedRecipes Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> getMostTipedRecipes "{}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## createReview Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> createReview "{"text": string, "rating":i32, "recipeID":string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## getReview Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> getReview "{"id": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## updateReview Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> updateReview "{"id": string, "text": string, "rating": i32}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## getRecipeReviews Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> getRecipeReviews "{"id": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## deleteReview Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> deleteReview "{"id": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## addGroceryListRecipe Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> addGroceryListRecipe "{"recipeID": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## updateGroceryList Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> updateRecipeBook "{"lists": Array["label": string, "ingridients": Array["label":string, "amount":i32, "unit":string, "details":string], "recipeID": string]}" --account-id <your test account> ``` ## addFavoriteRecipe Method ```html near call <your deployed contract> addFavoriteRecipe "{"recipeID": string}" --account-id <your test account> ``` # To Explore - `assembly/` contract developed in AssemblyScript - `assembly/assembly/index.ts` for the AssemblyScript contract code - `src/index.html` for the front-end HTML - `src/index.js` for the JavaScript front-end code and how to integrate contracts - `src/App.js` for the main React component - `scripts/` runable scripts for building/testing/deploying the contract # Front-End Current Mockups Here you can give a check to our Front-End design - [Figma Mockup](www.figma.com/file/919MgqK51D7Yf8j161Wwbx/CookdApp)
near_boilerplate-template-loyalty-program-with-ft
.eslintrc.yml .github ISSUE_TEMPLATE 01_BUG_REPORT.md 02_FEATURE_REQUEST.md 03_CODEBASE_IMPROVEMENT.md 04_SUPPORT_QUESTION.md config.yml PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md labels.yml workflows codeql.yml deploy-to-console.yml labels.yml lock.yml pr-labels.yml stale.yml .gitpod.yml README.md contracts Cargo.toml build.sh deploy.sh fungible-token Cargo.toml src lib.rs manager-contract Cargo.toml src lib.rs reward-factory Cargo.toml src deploy.rs lib.rs docs CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md CONTRIBUTING.md SECURITY.md frontend assets global.css logo-black.svg logo-white.svg components HeaderSection index.js Loader index.js LoyaltyPrograms index.js PageBackground index.js Sign SignInButton.js SignOutButton.js index.js WelcomeSection index.js index.html modules Customer Header index.js ProgramIsActive AccountDetails.js BuyWithCC.js BuyWithTokens.js ListOfTx.js index.js ProgramNotActive LoyaltyPrograms.js index.js Rules index.js Welcome index.js index.js Merchant Header index.js SignedIn RewardProgramDetails.js RewardProgramForm.js index.js SignedOut index.js Welcome Welcome.js index.js next.config.js package-lock.json package.json pages _app.js _document.js customer.js index.js merchant.js postcss.config.js start.sh styles globals.css tailwind.config.js tsconfig.json utils backend.js customer.js near-ft-factory.js near-ft-token.js near-interface.js utils.js wallet-selector.js integration-tests package-lock.json package.json src main.ava.ts package-lock.json package.json
<h1 align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs"> <picture> <source media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)" srcset="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/main/docs/images/pagoda_logo_light.png"> <source media="(prefers-color-scheme: light)" srcset="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/main/docs/images/pagoda_logo_dark.png"> <img alt="" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/main/docs/images/pagoda_logo_dark.png"> </picture> </a> </h1> <div align="center"> Rust Boilerplate Template <br /> <br /> <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/issues/new?assignees=&labels=bug&template=01_BUG_REPORT.md&title=bug%3A+">Report a Bug</a> · <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/issues/new?assignees=&labels=enhancement&template=02_FEATURE_REQUEST.md&title=feat%3A+">Request a Feature</a> . <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/issues/new?assignees=&labels=question&template=04_SUPPORT_QUESTION.md&title=support%3A+">Ask a Question</a> </div> <div align="center"> <br /> [![Pull Requests welcome](https://img.shields.io/badge/PRs-welcome-ff69b4.svg?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3A%22help+wanted%22) [![code with love by near](https://img.shields.io/badge/%3C%2F%3E%20with%20%E2%99%A5%20by-near-ff1414.svg?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/near) </div> <details open="open"> <summary>Table of Contents</summary> - [About](#about) - [Built With](#built-with) - [Getting Started](#getting-started) - [Prerequisites](#prerequisites) - [Installation](#installation) - [Overview](#overview) - [Contracts](#contracts) - [Frontend](#frontend) - [Backend.js](#backendjs) - [Usage](#usage) - [Roadmap](#roadmap) - [Support](#support) - [Project assistance](#project-assistance) - [Contributing](#contributing) - [Authors & contributors](#authors--contributors) - [Security](#security) </details> --- # Loyalty Program with Fungible Tokens ## About This project is created for easy-to-start as a React + Rust loyalty program with fungible tokens template in the Pagoda Gallery. It was initialized with [create-near-app]. Use this template and start to build your own gallery project! ### Built With [create-near-app] Getting Started ================== ### Prerequisites Make sure you have a [current version of Node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/) installed – we are targeting versions `16+`. Read about other [prerequisites](https://docs.near.org/develop/prerequisites) in our docs. ### Installation Install all dependencies: npm install Build your contract: npm run build Deploy your contract to TestNet with a temporary dev account: npm run deploy **Important note**: only the factory contract is and should be deployed. This is done automatically when using `npm run deploy` command. Two other contracts (ft contract and manager contract) should only be deployed by the factory contract. Overview ================ The loyalty program with the fungible token template provides a way for merchants to create a fungible token program with just a few clicks. The template consists of the following modules: * 3 smart contracts: factory contract, fungible token contract and manager contract * backend.js that serves as a web2 backend * frontend that provides the UI for the customer and the merchant ## Contracts This template features three smart contracts: * factory contract - this is the contract that is deployed by the user. The contract uses a factory pattern to deploy fungible token contract and manager contract for each merchant that logs in and creates a loyalty program with the UI. See [factory-rust](https://github.com/near-examples/factory-rust) for a simple factory pattern. * fungible token contract - this is a standard fungible token contract. Read more about the FTs [here](https://docs.near.org/develop/relevant-contracts/ft). * manager contract - this contract manages the whole loaylty program flow ## Frontend Frontend consists of two views: * merchant view - this is the view where a merchant can create a loyalty program. The merchant needs to log in first. * customer view - the view used by the customer to use the loyalty program and gain fungible tokens. This view is hidden until a merchant creates a loaylty program. The customer does not have to log in or create an account in order to use the loyalty program. ## Backend.js Backend.js is a simple web2 backend simulated on the frontend in this template. Usage ===== Start your frontend: npm run dev **Important note**: This project uses a browser local storage to store important data. Be sure to always run it in the same browser. It won't work in an incognito mode. Test your contract: npm test Exploring The App ================= The project deploys a pair of contracts for each merchant. The naming convention for those is: Manager contract: `{random id tied to a merchant}-manager.{factory address}` FT contract: `{random id tied to a merchant}-ft.{factory address}` A customer account is created as a subaccount of a manager contract: `{random string of 4 chars}.{random id tied to a merchant}-manager.{factory address}` Exploring The Code ================== 1. The smart-contract code lives in the `/contracts` folder. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/frontend` folder. `/frontend/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/frontend/pages/index.js`, this is your entrypoint to learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. There is a backend code in the `backend.js` file in the `frontend` directory. This code simulates a web2 backend. 4. Test your contract: `npm test`, this will run the tests in `integration-tests` directory. ## Security Loyalty Program with Fungible Tokens Template follows good practices of security, but 100% security cannot be assured. Loyalty Program with Fungible Tokens Template is provided **"as is"** without any **warranty**. Use at your own risk. <h1 align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs"> <picture> <source media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)" srcset="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/main/docs/images/pagoda_logo_light.png"> <source media="(prefers-color-scheme: light)" srcset="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/main/docs/images/pagoda_logo_dark.png"> <img alt="" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/main/docs/images/pagoda_logo_dark.png"> </picture> </a> </h1> <div align="center"> Rust Boilerplate Template <br /> <br /> <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/issues/new?assignees=&labels=bug&template=01_BUG_REPORT.md&title=bug%3A+">Report a Bug</a> · <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/issues/new?assignees=&labels=enhancement&template=02_FEATURE_REQUEST.md&title=feat%3A+">Request a Feature</a> . <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/issues/new?assignees=&labels=question&template=04_SUPPORT_QUESTION.md&title=support%3A+">Ask a Question</a> </div> <div align="center"> <br /> [![Pull Requests welcome](https://img.shields.io/badge/PRs-welcome-ff69b4.svg?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-rs/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3A%22help+wanted%22) [![code with love by near](https://img.shields.io/badge/%3C%2F%3E%20with%20%E2%99%A5%20by-near-ff1414.svg?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/near) </div> <details open="open"> <summary>Table of Contents</summary> - [About](#about) - [Built With](#built-with) - [Getting Started](#getting-started) - [Prerequisites](#prerequisites) - [Installation](#installation) - [Overview](#overview) - [Contracts](#contracts) - [Frontend](#frontend) - [Backend.js](#backendjs) - [Usage](#usage) - [Roadmap](#roadmap) - [Support](#support) - [Project assistance](#project-assistance) - [Contributing](#contributing) - [Authors & contributors](#authors--contributors) - [Security](#security) </details> --- # Loyalty Program with Fungible Tokens ## About This project is created for easy-to-start as a React + Rust loyalty program with fungible tokens template in the Pagoda Gallery. It was initialized with [create-near-app]. Use this template and start to build your own gallery project! ### Built With [create-near-app] Getting Started ================== ### Prerequisites Make sure you have a [current version of Node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/) installed – we are targeting versions `16+`. Read about other [prerequisites](https://docs.near.org/develop/prerequisites) in our docs. ### Installation Install all dependencies: npm install Build your contract: npm run build Deploy your contract to TestNet with a temporary dev account: npm run deploy **Important note**: only the factory contract is and should be deployed. This is done automatically when using `npm run deploy` command. Two other contracts (ft contract and manager contract) should only be deployed by the factory contract. Overview ================ The loyalty program with the fungible token template provides a way for merchants to create a fungible token program with just a few clicks. The template consists of the following modules: * 3 smart contracts: factory contract, fungible token contract and manager contract * backend.js that serves as a web2 backend * frontend that provides the UI for the customer and the merchant ## Contracts This template features three smart contracts: * factory contract - this is the contract that is deployed by the user. The contract uses a factory pattern to deploy fungible token contract and manager contract for each merchant that logs in and creates a loyalty program with the UI. See [factory-rust](https://github.com/near-examples/factory-rust) for a simple factory pattern. * fungible token contract - this is a standard fungible token contract. Read more about the FTs [here](https://docs.near.org/develop/relevant-contracts/ft). * manager contract - this contract manages the whole loaylty program flow ## Frontend Frontend consists of two views: * merchant view - this is the view where a merchant can create a loyalty program. The merchant needs to log in first. * customer view - the view used by the customer to use the loyalty program and gain fungible tokens. This view is hidden until a merchant creates a loaylty program. The customer does not have to log in or create an account in order to use the loyalty program. ## Backend.js Backend.js is a simple web2 backend simulated on the frontend in this template. Usage ===== Start your frontend: npm run dev **Important note**: This project uses a browser local storage to store important data. Be sure to always run it in the same browser. It won't work in an incognito mode. Test your contract: npm test Exploring The App ================= The project deploys a pair of contracts for each merchant. The naming convention for those is: Manager contract: `{random id tied to a merchant}-manager.{factory address}` FT contract: `{random id tied to a merchant}-ft.{factory address}` A customer account is created as a subaccount of a manager contract: `{random string of 4 chars}.{random id tied to a merchant}-manager.{factory address}` Exploring The Code ================== 1. The smart-contract code lives in the `/contracts` folder. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/frontend` folder. `/frontend/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/frontend/pages/index.js`, this is your entrypoint to learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. There is a backend code in the `backend.js` file in the `frontend` directory. This code simulates a web2 backend. 4. Test your contract: `npm test`, this will run the tests in `integration-tests` directory. ## Security Loyalty Program with Fungible Tokens Template follows good practices of security, but 100% security cannot be assured. Loyalty Program with Fungible Tokens Template is provided **"as is"** without any **warranty**. Use at your own risk.
Minting-Music_web3games-near-nft-factory
Cargo.toml build.sh src lib.rs
PotLock_bos-app
.github FUNDING.yml ISSUE_TEMPLATE bug_report.md design.md enhancement.md feature_request.md workflows continuous-integration.yml deploy-mainnet.yml .vscode settings.json README.md apps potlock bos.config.json package-lock.json package.json playwright-report index.html playwright-tests README.md storage-states admin-connected.json wallet-connected.json wallet-not-connected.json testUtils.js tests app.spec.js bosloaderenvironment.spec.js donate.spec.js pot.spec.js pots.spec.js project.spec.js util constants.js playwright.config.js
# Testing Guide This project uses [playwright](https://playwright.dev/) for end-to-end testing. Please become familiar with this documentation. ## Writing tests Tests should be written for each change or addition to the codebase. If a new feature is introduced, tests should be written to validate its functionality. If a bug is fixed, tests should be written to prevent regression. Writing tests not only safeguards against future breaks by other developers but also accelerates development by minimizing manual coding and browser interactions. When writing tests, remember to: - Test user-visible behavior - Make tests as isolated as possible - Avoid testing third-party dependencies > **[LEARN BEST PRACTICES](https://playwright.dev/docs/best-practices)** See the [cookbook](#cookbook) for help in covering scenerios. It is possible to [generate tests](https://playwright.dev/docs/codegen) via the [VS Code Extension](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-playwright.playwright). ## Running tests To run the tests, you may do so through the command line: ```cmd npm run test ``` Or through VS Code **(recommended)**, see [Getting started - VS Code](https://playwright.dev/docs/getting-started-vscode). ## Recording video You may automatically record video with your tests by setting ``` use: { video: "on" } ``` in the [playwright.config.js](../playwright.config.js). After running tests, you will find the output as a `.webm` in `./test-results`. Then, [convert to MP4](https://video.online-convert.com/convert/webm-to-mp4) and share. It is encouraged to include video in pull requests in order to demonstrate functionality and prove thorough testing. ## Cookbook ### Capturing the VM Confirmation Popup Currently, none of the tests post actual transactions to the smart contracts. Still you should try writing your tests so that they do the actual function call, but just skip the final step of sending the transaction. You can do this by capturing the transaction confirmation popup provided by the NEAR social VM. ```javascript // click button that triggers transaction await page.getByRole("button", { name: "Donate" }).nth(1).click(); const transactionObj = JSON.parse(await page.locator("div.modal-body code").innerText()); // do something with transactionObj expect(transactionObj).toMatchObject({ amount: 100, message: "", projectId: DEFAULT_PROJECT_ID, }); ``` See the test called "project with no active pot should donate direct with correct amount" in donate.spec.js for a full example. # PotLock BOS App This repository holds the front-end widgets for [PotLock](https://app.potlock.org/). This project is configured as a [bos-workspace](https://github.com/nearbuilders/bos-workspace). ## Getting started 1. Install packages ```cmd npm install ``` 2. Start dev environment ```cmd npm run dev ``` This will start a gateway at http://127.0.0.1:8080 which will render your local widgets. The entry point for this app is [potlock.near/widget/Index](http://127.0.0.1:8080/potlock.near/widget/Index). ## Testing framework This project uses [playwright](https://playwright.dev/) for end-to-end testing. These tests are located in the [playwright-tests](./playwright-tests) folder. please read the [README](./playwright-tests/README.md) to learn more about running and writing tests.
Learn-NEAR_NCD--HelpAFriend
README.md backend as-pect.config.js asconfig.json contract as_types.d.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts model.ts tsconfig.json utils.ts package.json scripts 1.dev-deploy.sh 2.use-contract.sh 3.cleanup.sh README.md frontend README.md package.json public index.html manifest.json robots.txt src App.css App.js App.test.js components Dashboard.js FriendsTable.js ProjectTable.js Wallet.js WalletLogin.js config.js index.css index.js logo.svg reportWebVitals.js setupTests.js state app.js near.js styles styles.css utils near-utils.js state.js storage.js
# HelpAFriend Smart contract on NEAR Protocol blockchain to donate to friend's or public projects ## Setting up your terminal The scripts in this folder are designed to help you demonstrate the behavior of the contract(s) in this project. It uses the following setup: ```sh # set your terminal up to have 2 windows, A and B like this: ┌─────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ A │ B │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘ ``` ### Terminal **A** *This window is used to compile, deploy and control the contract* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment export OWNER= # any account you control # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 # export OWNER=sherif.testnet ``` - Commands _helper scripts_ ```sh 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts ``` ### Terminal **B** *This window is used to render the contract account storage* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 ``` - Commands ```sh # monitor contract storage using near-account-utils # https://github.com/near-examples/near-account-utils watch -d -n 1 yarn storage $CONTRACT ``` --- ## OS Support ### Linux - The `watch` command is supported natively on Linux - To learn more about any of these shell commands take a look at [explainshell.com](https://explainshell.com) ### MacOS - Consider `brew info visionmedia-watch` (or `brew install watch`) ### Windows - Consider this article: [What is the Windows analog of the Linux watch command?](https://superuser.com/questions/191063/what-is-the-windows-analog-of-the-linuo-watch-command#191068) # Getting Started with Create React App This project was bootstrapped with [Create React App](https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app). ## Available Scripts In the project directory, you can run: ### `yarn start` Runs the app in the development mode.\ Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) to view it in the browser. The page will reload if you make edits.\ You will also see any lint errors in the console. ### `yarn test` Launches the test runner in the interactive watch mode.\ See the section about [running tests](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/running-tests) for more information. ### `yarn build` Builds the app for production to the `build` folder.\ It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance. The build is minified and the filenames include the hashes.\ Your app is ready to be deployed! See the section about [deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) for more information. ### `yarn eject` **Note: this is a one-way operation. Once you `eject`, you can’t go back!** If you aren’t satisfied with the build tool and configuration choices, you can `eject` at any time. This command will remove the single build dependency from your project. Instead, it will copy all the configuration files and the transitive dependencies (webpack, Babel, ESLint, etc) right into your project so you have full control over them. All of the commands except `eject` will still work, but they will point to the copied scripts so you can tweak them. At this point you’re on your own. You don’t have to ever use `eject`. The curated feature set is suitable for small and middle deployments, and you shouldn’t feel obligated to use this feature. However we understand that this tool wouldn’t be useful if you couldn’t customize it when you are ready for it. ## Learn More You can learn more in the [Create React App documentation](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/getting-started). To learn React, check out the [React documentation](https://reactjs.org/). ### Code Splitting This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting) ### Analyzing the Bundle Size This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size) ### Making a Progressive Web App This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app) ### Advanced Configuration This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration) ### Deployment This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) ### `yarn build` fails to minify This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify)
ezesundayeze_near-shipment
README.md check scripts in `. scripts` as-pect.config.js asconfig.json package-lock.json package.json scripts 1.dev-deploy.sh 2.use-contract.sh 3.cleanup.sh README.md src as_types.d.ts asconfig.json assembly __tests__ index.unit.spec.ts index.ts model.ts tsconfig.json utils.ts
## Setting up your terminal The scripts in this folder are designed to help you demonstrate the behavior of the contract(s) in this project. It uses the following setup: ```sh # set your terminal up to have 2 windows, A and B like this: ┌─────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ A │ B │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘ ``` ### Terminal **A** *This window is used to compile, deploy and control the contract* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment export OWNER= # any account you control # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 # export OWNER=sherif.testnet ``` - Commands _helper scripts_ ```sh 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts ``` ### Terminal **B** *This window is used to render the contract account storage* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 ``` - Commands ```sh # monitor contract storage using near-account-utils # https://github.com/near-examples/near-account-utils watch -d -n 1 yarn storage $CONTRACT ``` --- ## OS Support ### Linux - The `watch` command is supported natively on Linux - To learn more about any of these shell commands take a look at [explainshell.com](https://explainshell.com) ### MacOS - Consider `brew info visionmedia-watch` (or `brew install watch`) ### Windows - Consider this article: [What is the Windows analog of the Linux watch command?](https://superuser.com/questions/191063/what-is-the-windows-analog-of-the-linuo-watch-command#191068) # Near shipment 1. Clone repo with `git clone` 2. Install dependencies `yarn` 3. install `near-cli` globably ```bash npm install -g near-cli ``` --- check scripts in `./scripts` --- ## How it works - This smart contract can be used by a delivery company to track deliveries from the warehouse to the item's destination - at every point the item moves, the delivery agent will need to update the current location, basically by creating a shipment with the same information and only changing the `status` and `currentLoction` - in the end the status will be changed to delivered and the current location will be set to the destination.
Learn-NEAR-Hispano_NCD2--NEARVolunteer
.eslintrc.yml .gitpod.yml .travis.yml README-ES.md README-Gitpod.md README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts certificates.spec.ts event.spec.ts as_types.d.ts main.ts model.ts tsconfig.json babel.config.js package.json src App.js config.js index.html index.js tests integration Certificate-integration.test.js Event-integration.test.js ui App-ui.test.js
**NEAR Volunteer** NEAR Volunteer is a dApp that allows people to collect certificates every time they volunteer. Volunteer events are created by hosts, who determine the period in which the certificate can be claimed. Volunteers who have certificates can receive rewards and invitations. Also these volunteers are the only ones who will be able to rate the event and generate suggestions. In addition, volunteers can build a reputation for their level of participation. The process can be improved, if you will create a reputation mechanism, and only those volunteers with a reputation level (number of certificates) can generate events, thus avoiding unnecessary imitations or events being created. Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you have Node.js ≥ 12 installed (https://nodejs.org), then use it to install [yarn]: `npm install --global yarn` (or just `npm i -g yarn`) 2. Run the local development server: `yarn && yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Running `yarn dev` will tell you the URL you can visit in your browser to see the app. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The backend code lives in the `/assembly` folder. This code gets deployed to the NEAR blockchain when you run `yarn deploy:contract`. This sort of code-that-runs-on-a-blockchain is called a "smart contract" – [learn more about NEAR smart contracts][smart contract docs]. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. [/src/index.html](/src/index.html) is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and backend. The backend code gets tested with the [asp] command for running the backend AssemblyScript tests, and [jest] for running frontend tests. You can run both of these at once with `yarn test`. Both contract and client-side code will auto-reload as you change source files. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contracts get deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli -------------------------- You need near-cli installed globally. Here's how: npm install --global near-cli This will give you the `near` [CLI] tool. Ensure that it's installed with: near --version Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Visit [NEAR Wallet] and make a new account. You'll be deploying these smart contracts to this new account. Now authorize NEAR CLI for this new account, and follow the instructions it gives you: near login Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'your-account-here!' Step 3: change remote URL if you cloned this repo ------------------------- Unless you forked this repository you will need to change the remote URL to a repo that you have commit access to. This will allow auto deployment to Github Pages from the command line. 1) go to GitHub and create a new repository for this project 2) open your terminal and in the root of this project enter the following: $ `git remote set-url origin https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/YOUR_REPOSITORY.git` Step 4: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contracts to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Step 5: 📑 Exploring the NEAR Volunteer smart contract methods! --------------- ### Command to add an event: near view aysel.testnet getAllEvents ### Command to get all the events: near call <id_of_your_smart_contract> addEvent '{"text":"path of your certificate","code":"code","dateStart":"XXXX-XX-XX","dateEnd":"XXXX-XX-XX"}' --account-id <your_account.testnet> Example: near call aysel.testnet addEvent '{"text":"http://www.relal.org.co/images/Redes_RELAL/Voluntariado/Logo-Voluntariado.jpg","code":"123234","dateStart":"2021-10-02","dateEnd":"2021-10-04"}' --account-id aysel.testnet ### Command to add a certificate: near view aysel.testnet getAllCertificates ### Command to get all the certificates: near call <id_of_your_smart_contract> addCertificate '{"text":"path of your certificate"}' --account-id <your_account.testnet> Example: near call aysel.testnet addCertificate '{"text":"123234"}' --account-id aysel.testnet Step 6: 📑 Exploring the NEAR Volunteer tests! --------------- ### Smart contract tests yarn asp ### Integration & UI tests yarn jest ### All tests npm run test Step 7: 📑 Exploring the NEAR Volunteer on live! --------------- Login in your near wallet, create events and claim your certificates https://near-volunteer.vercel.app/ Add more ideas in the mockup figma, that'll be great to have more ideas https://www.figma.com/file/gnhw58NXOAVfYnl7sg13zr/NEAR-Volunteer?node-id=0%3A1 Explanation: https://www.loom.com/share/2fe1fdce64d74a55ba42c4766231e2bc [NEAR]: https://nearprotocol.com/ [yarn]: https://yarnpkg.com/ [AssemblyScript]: https://docs.assemblyscript.org/ [React]: https://reactjs.org [smart contract docs]: https://docs.nearprotocol.com/docs/roles/developer/contracts/assemblyscript [asp]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.nearprotocol.com/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.nearprotocol.com [near-cli]: https://github.com/nearprotocol/near-cli [CLI]: https://www.w3schools.com/whatis/whatis_cli.asp [create-near-app]: https://github.com/nearprotocol/create-near-app [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages
Peersyst_opensource.ripple.com
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md README.md components index.ts docs clawback clawback-of-issued-currency.md clawback.md evm-sidechain bootstrap-a-local-environment.md bridge-client.md bridge-door-interface.md bridge-door-safety-mechanisms.md bridge-doors.md bridges-intro.md build-and-run-witness-servers.md configure-the-bridge-client.md connect-metamask-to-xrpl-evm-sidechain.md create-a-bridge.md deploy-a-bridge.md evm-cli.md evm-sidechain-validator-security.md execute-bridge-operations.md get-started-evm-sidechain.md intro-to-evm-sidechain.md join-evm-sidechain-devnet.md manage-the-validator-node.md set-up-an-evm-sidechain.md start-the-bridge-client.md stress-test-the-bridge.md stress-test-the-evm-sidechain.md witness-server-configuration.md witness-servers.md xrpl-evm-sidechain-faq.md img amm-single-asset-deposit-formula.svg backgrounds calculator-green.svg calculator-purple.svg community-magenta.svg community-purple.svg cta-calculator-green.svg cta-community-green.svg cta-community-purple.svg cta-foundation-magenta.svg cta-foundation-orange.svg cta-home-green.svg cta-home-magenta.svg cta-home-purple.svg cta-xrp-overview-green-2.svg cta-xrp-overview-green.svg cta-xrp-overview-magenta.svg cta-xrp-overview-orange.svg cta-xrpl-overview-green.svg cta-xrpl-overview-orange.svg events-orange.svg faq-bg.svg foundation-magenta.svg foundation-orange.svg history-orange.svg history-purple.svg home-green.svg home-purple.svg impact-green.svg impact-magenta.svg impact-orange.svg use-cases-orange.svg xrp-overview-blue.svg xrpl-overview-orange.svg xrpl-overview-purple.svg graphics table-border.svg logos bitcoin.svg ethereum.svg facebook.svg github.svg linkedin.svg mastercard.svg paper-currency.svg stack-overflow.svg twitch.svg twitter-link.svg twitter.svg visa.svg xrp-mark.svg xrp.svg index.md xls-30d-amm amm-uc.md automated-market-makers.md code-samples create-amm README.md js connect.js create-amm.js package-lock.json package.json ledger-object-types accountroot.md amm.md public-api-methods amm_info.md ledger_entry.md transaction-result-codes index.md transaction-types ammbid.md ammcreate.md ammdelete.md ammdeposit.md ammvote.md ammwithdraw.md tutorials create-an-automated-market-maker.md xls-38d-cross-chain-bridge cross-chain-bridges.md cross-chain-bridging-legal-faqs.md ledger-object-types bridge.md xchainownedclaimid.md xchainownedcreateaccountclaimid.md parallel-networks-list.md snippets _xchainbridge-serialization.md transaction-types xchainaccountcreatecommit.md xchainaddaccountcreateattestation.md xchainaddclaimattestation.md xchainclaim.md xchaincommit.md xchaincreatebridge.md xchaincreateclaimid.md xchainmodifybridge.md tutorials set-up-iou-iou-bridge.md set-up-xrp-xrp-bridge.md submit-cross-chain-transaction.md witness-server.md xrpl-interoperability.md xrpl-sidechains.md images book-management.svg external-link-dark.svg externalLink.svg found-or-private.svg launch-fast.svg logo.svg pen-to-square-solid.svg ripple-logo.svg ripple-open-source-logo.svg package.json snippets _amm-disclaimer.md _clawback-disclaimer.md _evm-sidechain-disclaimer.md _xchain-bridges-disclaimer.md static fonts.css robots.txt style.css This configures the footer theme.ts
# Create AMM Code samples for the **Create an Automated Market Maker** tutorial, showing how to make set up a new AMM. # Open Source Projects The [Open Source Projects site](https://opensource.ripple.com) provides information on open source projects that Ripple engineers are working on, including in-progress documentation for features that are in development. ## License Shield: [![CC BY 4.0][cc-by-shield]][cc-by] This work is licensed under a [Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License][cc-by]. [![CC BY 4.0][cc-by-image]][cc-by] [cc-by]: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ [cc-by-image]: https://i.creativecommons.org/l/by/4.0/88x31.png [cc-by-shield]: https://img.shields.io/badge/License-CC%20BY%204.0-lightgrey.svg
GeauxWeisbeck4_mintbase-core
.cargo config.toml Cargo.toml factory Cargo.toml src lib.rs constants smart contract contract interface modules impls on external types logging functions misc helper Cargo.toml src lib.rs mintbase-deps Cargo.toml src common.rs common payouts mod.rs payout.rs royalty.rs splits.rs safe_fraction.rs sale_args.rs store_init_args.rs store_metadata.rs time.rs token_key.rs token_listing.rs token_metadata.rs token_offer.rs constants.rs interfaces.rs lib.rs logging.rs token.rs token composeable_stats.rs loan.rs owner.rs utils.rs nft core interface re-exports for consistent dependencies various types general event according to standard log types NEPs market events NFT event error (deprecated?) run.sh rustfmt.toml store Cargo.toml src approvals.rs burning.rs core.rs enumeration.rs lib.rs metadata.rs minting.rs ownership.rs payout.rs standardized approval methods change methods view methods non-standardized approval methods private methods internal methods standardized core methods non-standardized core methods standardized enumeration methods non-standardized enumeration methods standardized metadata methods non-standardized metadata methods standardized payout methods non-standardized payout methods switch-cmd.sh test.sh testing __tests__ market.auction.ava.ts market.buynow.ava.ts market.core.ava.ts market.royalties.ava.ts market.splits.ava.ts misc.ava.ts nft.approvals.ava.ts nft.core.ava.ts nft.enumeration.ava.ts nft.metadata.ava.ts test-utils approvals.ts balances.ts events.ts index.ts panics.ts payouts.ts token.ts workspaces.ts package-lock.json package.json tsconfig.json create first offer withdraw offer and recreate create second offer accept offer allow the store to list tokens to the marketplace list as auction revoke auction approval list as "buy now" revoke "buy now" approval batch listing batch revoking FIXME: users should be refunded! setting royalties executing transfer with royalties executing again -> royalties are perpetual setting splits redo, splits should be reset remove minters keep minters approve batch approve revoke revoke_all authorized mint authorized transfer authorized batch_transfer authorized burn xxxx
llllllluc_learn-smart-contract-in-javascript
README.md agoric fungible-token-demo .github workflows integration-test.yml lint-test.yml README.md api deploy.js jsconfig.json package.json src handler.js lib-http.js contract deploy.js jsconfig.json package.json petnames.js src contract.js test prepare-test-env-ava.js test-contract.js package.json start.sh ui jsconfig.json package.json public conf dappConstants.js index.css index.html lib api-client.js constants.js implode.js socket.js src connect.js install-ses-lockdown.js main.js mina message-board .github workflows ci.yml README.md config.json jest.config.js package-lock.json package.json src Add.test.ts Add.ts index.ts message.test.ts message.ts tsconfig.json near hello-world hello-near .gitpod.yml README.md contract README.md babel.config.json build.sh build builder.c code.h hello_near.js methods.h deploy.sh neardev dev-account.env package-lock.json package.json src contract.ts fungible_token.ts tsconfig.json frontend App.js assets global.css logo-black.svg logo-white.svg index.html index.js near-interface.js near-wallet.js package-lock.json package.json start.sh ui-components.js integration-tests package-lock.json package.json src main.ava.ts package-lock.json package.json
# Hello NEAR Contract The smart contract exposes two methods to enable storing and retrieving a greeting in the NEAR network. ```ts @NearBindgen({}) class HelloNear { greeting: string = "Hello"; @view // This method is read-only and can be called for free get_greeting(): string { return this.greeting; } @call // This method changes the state, for which it cost gas set_greeting({ greeting }: { greeting: string }): void { // Record a log permanently to the blockchain! near.log(`Saving greeting ${greeting}`); this.greeting = greeting; } } ``` <br /> # Quickstart 1. Make sure you have installed [node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/) >= 16. 2. Install the [`NEAR CLI`](https://github.com/near/near-cli#setup) <br /> ## 1. Build and Deploy the Contract You can automatically compile and deploy the contract in the NEAR testnet by running: ```bash npm run deploy ``` Once finished, check the `neardev/dev-account` file to find the address in which the contract was deployed: ```bash cat ./neardev/dev-account # e.g. dev-1659899566943-21539992274727 ``` <br /> ## 2. Retrieve the Greeting `get_greeting` is a read-only method (aka `view` method). `View` methods can be called for **free** by anyone, even people **without a NEAR account**! ```bash # Use near-cli to get the greeting near view <dev-account> get_greeting ``` <br /> ## 3. Store a New Greeting `set_greeting` changes the contract's state, for which it is a `call` method. `Call` methods can only be invoked using a NEAR account, since the account needs to pay GAS for the transaction. ```bash # Use near-cli to set a new greeting near call <dev-account> set_greeting '{"greeting":"howdy"}' --accountId <dev-account> ``` **Tip:** If you would like to call `set_greeting` using your own account, first login into NEAR using: ```bash # Use near-cli to login your NEAR account near login ``` and then use the logged account to sign the transaction: `--accountId <your-account>`. # Mina zkApp: Message Board This template uses TypeScript. ## How to build ```sh npm run build ``` ## How to run tests ```sh npm run test npm run testw # watch mode ``` ## How to run coverage ```sh npm run coverage ``` ## License [Apache-2.0](LICENSE) # Fungible Faucet Dapp TL;DR: The Fungible Faucet Dapp sends tokens to a user's wallet when they click the "Mint Fungible Tokens" button. Install the [prerequisites](https://agoric.com/documentation/getting-started/before-using-agoric.html). Then checkout the latest `beta` release for the sdk: ```sh cd agoric-sdk git checkout beta yarn && yarn build ``` Then in a first terminal in the directory where you want to put your dapp, install the dapp: ```sh agoric init --dapp-template dapp-fungible-faucet --dapp-branch beta my-fungible-faucet cd my-fungible-faucet # Start the Agoric platform agoric install && agoric start --reset ``` In a second terminal, deploy this contract and the API server ```sh agoric deploy contract/deploy.js agoric deploy api/deploy.js ``` In a third terminal, ```sh # Navigate to the `ui` directory and start a local server cd ui && yarn start ``` Then navigate to http://127.0.0.1:3000. The Fungible Faucet Dapp is the simplest [Agoric Dapp](https://agoric.com/documentation/dapps/). It demonstrates the three important parts of a dapp and how they should be connected: 1. the browser UI (the frontend) 2. the API server (the backend) 3. the on-chain contract This dapp starts a local blockchain on your computer, and deploys a basic contract to that blockchain. It does not currently deploy or connect to the Agoric testnet. This particular dapp UI is written in vanilla JS for simplicity (as opposed to using a framework). ## Using the Dapp 1. Navigate to http://127.0.0.1:3000. 2. Enter `agoric open` in your terminal 3. A window for your wallet should open. 4. Under "Dapps" in the wallet, enable the FungibleFaucet Dapp: ![Enable Dapp](./readme-assets/enable-dapp.png) 5. Back on the Fungible Faucet page, click the "Mint Fungible Tokens" button. ![Mint Fungible Tokens](./readme-assets/mint-button.png) 6. Go back to your wallet and approve the offer stating that you want 1000 tokens. ![Mint Fungible Tokens](./readme-assets/approve-offer.png) 7. Once the offer has been approved, your wallet makes an offer to Zoe on your behalf, giving you tokens from the `mintPayments` contract. You will receive a message that the offer was successful and should see the tokens in your purses. ![Offer Completed](./readme-assets/offer-completed.png) ![Tokens Received](./readme-assets/tokens-received.png) To learn more about how to build Agoric Dapps, please see the [Dapp Guide](https://agoric.com/documentation/dapps/). See the [Dapp Deployment Guide](https://github.com/Agoric/agoric-sdk/wiki/Dapp-Deployment-Guide) for how to deploy this Dapp on a public website, such as https://fungiblefaucet.testnet.agoric.com/ # Learn-smart-contract-in-javascript See detail learning experience and thoughts for each platform in their sub directories. ## Overview and Comparison There aren't much chains supporting JS contract. In fact NEAR is the only one supporting JS in production, both Mina and Agoric are still in testnet for their JS contract. So NEAR is obviously the most mature one, even though JS is not NEAR's main smart contract language (Rust is). But in the long term, I expect the dev experience for Mina and Agoric to catch up. Today you cannot find much examples and tooling is lacking, but they both provide something new comparing to traditional smart contract (Mina enables you to build private app by zk proof, i.e. data does not need to be on chain. Agoric enables you to build "secure" js contracts). ## Conclusion If you want to use JS to write smart contract, I would just recommend you to pick another language like Rust😂. near-blank-project ================== This app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== If you haven't installed dependencies during setup: npm install Build and deploy your contract to TestNet with a temporary dev account: npm run deploy Test your contract: npm test If you have a frontend, run `npm start`. This will run a dev server. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The smart-contract code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. In blockchain apps the smart contract is the "backend" of your app. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/frontend` folder. `/frontend/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/frontend/index.js`, this is your entrypoint to learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Test your contract: `npm test`, this will run the tests in `integration-tests` directory. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `npm run deploy`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a temporary dev account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how: Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `npm install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: npm install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `near-blank-project.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `near-blank-project.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account near-blank-project.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: deploy the contract --------------------------- Use the CLI to deploy the contract to TestNet with your account ID. Replace `PATH_TO_WASM_FILE` with the `wasm` that was generated in `contract` build directory. near deploy --accountId near-blank-project.YOUR-NAME.testnet --wasmFile PATH_TO_WASM_FILE Step 3: set contract name in your frontend code ----------------------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'near-blank-project.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/concepts/basics/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages
Log-of-e_alinear-dapp
.gitpod.yml README.md babel.config.js contract Cargo.toml README.md compile.js src lib.rs target .rustc_info.json debug .fingerprint Inflector-4abb4462752984fb lib-inflector.json autocfg-491f31ad758e1582 lib-autocfg.json borsh-derive-982fdfb48f69be92 lib-borsh-derive.json borsh-derive-internal-d50c46e06158b7c9 lib-borsh-derive-internal.json borsh-schema-derive-internal-884c287726cd4214 lib-borsh-schema-derive-internal.json byteorder-4678558b19904739 build-script-build-script-build.json convert_case-6422071f72e7eeb3 lib-convert_case.json derive_more-4527320901fb28de lib-derive_more.json generic-array-c6f78d1a2dcbb951 build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-0ebaa7762b17f35a build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-625fe97f72ab7efd run-build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-97def125353ac13b lib-hashbrown.json indexmap-4381a46e87fd75a0 build-script-build-script-build.json indexmap-87b1d90a3f722fe4 run-build-script-build-script-build.json indexmap-d7eec4f9d0810f6e lib-indexmap.json itoa-18955514e94ee3df lib-itoa.json memchr-d172e178d0380546 build-script-build-script-build.json near-rpc-error-core-ddca5d56afa3e3a3 lib-near-rpc-error-core.json near-rpc-error-macro-cb50414efa6bf5ea lib-near-rpc-error-macro.json near-sdk-core-7ff3e94a18e2d77b lib-near-sdk-core.json near-sdk-macros-9c5676e0a1778150 lib-near-sdk-macros.json num-bigint-087b98528bb17d3a build-script-build-script-build.json num-integer-66202b6950780756 build-script-build-script-build.json num-rational-60a16f5bd5f3f024 build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-70c95ea006e32a74 build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro-crate-98b41315df30d3b7 lib-proc-macro-crate.json proc-macro2-2c6a23d60ccd7f4e run-build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro2-8b5af9d397ead18a build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro2-8bf22a28dd603d8c lib-proc-macro2.json quote-5bdc800257202187 lib-quote.json ryu-6e495802e0dca2f8 lib-ryu.json ryu-925eb7fa97cd33ae 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wee_alloc-56d24b26c3f4ff71 build-script-build-script-build.json wasm32-unknown-unknown debug .fingerprint ahash-8a394d8d9685b366 lib-ahash.json aho-corasick-2c979cf76cafdb66 lib-aho_corasick.json base64-16948a8d617392fc lib-base64.json block-buffer-5f6e06afa074b171 lib-block-buffer.json block-buffer-d1541a82d6a5a1e1 lib-block-buffer.json block-padding-0dbbd77a1c7db503 lib-block-padding.json borsh-0f27ab8d5ef6aaf4 lib-borsh.json bs58-a6029119cf8e19b6 lib-bs58.json byte-tools-c561556a14cd01a2 lib-byte-tools.json byteorder-95eb5b5b00f3f9ce lib-byteorder.json byteorder-9e830d1983e96d91 run-build-script-build-script-build.json cfg-if-10b30cdd8ee72c3a lib-cfg-if.json cfg-if-3273d8d291d4694c lib-cfg-if.json digest-45d6a0aaffeb1b5e lib-digest.json digest-f2348cdc1e354c37 lib-digest.json generic-array-73b59990da7689d7 lib-generic_array.json generic-array-c408dacbc967f500 lib-generic_array.json generic-array-ed444c6f70013b50 run-build-script-build-script-build.json greeter-98ace302c5fafa12 lib-greeter.json hashbrown-45893a3de91ef8c3 run-build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-6f5e7718c2ecb998 lib-hashbrown.json hashbrown-bffcb3fdbed68aa0 lib-hashbrown.json hex-2141af1744c0e16c lib-hex.json indexmap-933933baa5304885 run-build-script-build-script-build.json indexmap-eef5baf882b129c0 lib-indexmap.json itoa-40550c993f54d444 lib-itoa.json keccak-00d467683040643f lib-keccak.json lazy_static-a4c2e1c5c77171c4 lib-lazy_static.json memchr-91b522f39629515c run-build-script-build-script-build.json memchr-b6bccb00cce1faf7 lib-memchr.json memory_units-eca18f7170267cc6 lib-memory_units.json near-primitives-core-15b5c3ca2f991866 lib-near-primitives-core.json near-runtime-utils-e6e7a4aec43c0dd1 lib-near-runtime-utils.json near-sdk-945157d7caccdafa lib-near-sdk.json near-vm-errors-067f7f682ec0af31 lib-near-vm-errors.json near-vm-logic-9a86d6a06431d7e5 lib-near-vm-logic.json num-bigint-109c0ba3932b259b lib-num-bigint.json num-bigint-75e4cf1ea1a77d07 run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-integer-9efe661c0e66a9ae lib-num-integer.json num-integer-d35e1e83d940e1d3 run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-rational-54aef6de280a8e8a run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-rational-8c7d13544dfc363c lib-num-rational.json num-traits-60a7fce699e5dd4e run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-b48a6ae4330a8a0f lib-num-traits.json opaque-debug-40e71e3d1cd3d500 lib-opaque-debug.json opaque-debug-5f776447d7d37c32 lib-opaque-debug.json regex-41b75f0e91269155 lib-regex.json regex-syntax-ca89d0552bd21e03 lib-regex-syntax.json ryu-041695aba4fdaa0d run-build-script-build-script-build.json ryu-1e98f7b84b8c8254 lib-ryu.json serde-6a3c2e872d3b8eb2 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde-dd6df87d196a5a08 lib-serde.json serde_json-1dbc49333af7298e lib-serde_json.json serde_json-e9a34276aad67d26 run-build-script-build-script-build.json sha2-bb7724a88e8ebccd lib-sha2.json sha3-8ad035aa5ed4c51e lib-sha3.json typenum-332c243a6b371734 lib-typenum.json typenum-e850512b0eed675b run-build-script-build-script-main.json wee_alloc-0e4c95ab84521c02 lib-wee_alloc.json wee_alloc-da109d75bf09910e run-build-script-build-script-build.json build num-bigint-75e4cf1ea1a77d07 out radix_bases.rs typenum-e850512b0eed675b out consts.rs op.rs tests.rs wee_alloc-da109d75bf09910e out wee_alloc_static_array_backend_size_bytes.txt package.json src App.js __mocks__ fileMock.js assets logo-black.svg logo-white.svg config.js global.css index.html index.js jest.init.js main.test.js utils.js wallet login index.html
alinear-super-employee-locator ================== This [React] app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Install dependencies: `yarn install` 3. Run the local development server: `yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `yarn run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `yarn install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: yarn install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `alinear-employees-on-demand.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `alinear-employees-on-demand.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account alinear-employees-on-demand.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'alinear-employees-on-demand.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [React]: https://reactjs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages alinear-employees-on-demand Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html
ming-xi_hooh-contract
.idea encodings.xml jsLibraryMappings.xml misc.xml modules.xml vcs.xml README.md build_script deploy_local_server (docker).sh deploy_local_server.sh k8s_init_deploy.sh k8s_update_deploy.sh contract Cargo.toml src lib.rs token.rs server README.md app.js config.js ecosystem.config.js middleware near.js package.json pm2.json run.sh test account.js contract.js utils handler.js keys.js near-utils.js
### Overview What is HOOH? - [Click Here](https://www.hooh.fun/) ### Repositories This is the Smart Contract repository:[https://github.com/ming-xi/hooh-contract](https://github.com/ming-xi/hooh-contract) This is the app repository:[https://github.com/ming-xi/hooh](https://github.com/ming-xi/hooh) ### Roadmap Stage 0 - Sep 2022(Done) - create\_account let users create wallets following web 2's user habits - show\_stats inquires total amount of user accounts - show\_account inquires accounts details - show\_accounts inquires multiple accounts details - update\_accounts\_balance updates balance of $ORE in user accounts Stage I - Q1-Q2 2023(On going) - Connect wallet to login - Read NFT assets in wallets: using api from NFT marketplaces in the ecosystem to get NFT data on the mainnet # feiyu-canvas-war-connector Connector for Feiyu Canvas War ## Install ### Set Up Environment 1. Install `nvm`: follow the instruction [here](https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm#install--update-script) 2. Install `node`: run the command `nvm install --lts` 3. Install `yarn` and `pm2`: `npm install -g yarn pm2` ### Set Up Project Download repository, and install dependencies ```bash git clone https://github.com/near-x/feiyu-canvas-war-connector cd feiyu-canvas-war-connector/server yarn ``` ## Configure and Launch 1. Configure environment variables Add the environment variables in `.env` (look at `.env.example` as an example) ```env MONGODB_URI=mongodb://localhost:27017/test AES_ENC_KEY=... AES_IV=... ``` 2. Launch the server Run the command: `pm2 start`
esaminu_console-donation-template-234523
.github scripts runfe.sh workflows deploy-to-console.yml readme.yml tests.yml .gitpod.yml README.md contract README.md build.sh deploy.sh package-lock.json package.json src contract.ts model.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json integration-tests package-lock.json package.json src main.ava.ts package-lock.json package.json
# Donation Contract The smart contract exposes methods to handle donating $NEAR to a `beneficiary`. ```ts @call donate() { // Get who is calling the method and how much $NEAR they attached let donor = near.predecessorAccountId(); let donationAmount: bigint = near.attachedDeposit() as bigint; let donatedSoFar = this.donations.get(donor) === null? BigInt(0) : BigInt(this.donations.get(donor) as string) let toTransfer = donationAmount; // This is the user's first donation, lets register it, which increases storage if(donatedSoFar == BigInt(0)) { assert(donationAmount > STORAGE_COST, `Attach at least ${STORAGE_COST} yoctoNEAR`); // Subtract the storage cost to the amount to transfer toTransfer -= STORAGE_COST } // Persist in storage the amount donated so far donatedSoFar += donationAmount this.donations.set(donor, donatedSoFar.toString()) // Send the money to the beneficiary const promise = near.promiseBatchCreate(this.beneficiary) near.promiseBatchActionTransfer(promise, toTransfer) // Return the total amount donated so far return donatedSoFar.toString() } ``` <br /> # Quickstart 1. Make sure you have installed [node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/) >= 16. 2. Install the [`NEAR CLI`](https://github.com/near/near-cli#setup) <br /> ## 1. Build and Deploy the Contract You can automatically compile and deploy the contract in the NEAR testnet by running: ```bash npm run deploy ``` Once finished, check the `neardev/dev-account` file to find the address in which the contract was deployed: ```bash cat ./neardev/dev-account # e.g. dev-1659899566943-21539992274727 ``` The contract will be automatically initialized with a default `beneficiary`. To initialize the contract yourself do: ```bash # Use near-cli to initialize contract (optional) near call <dev-account> init '{"beneficiary":"<account>"}' --accountId <dev-account> ``` <br /> ## 2. Get Beneficiary `beneficiary` is a read-only method (`view` method) that returns the beneficiary of the donations. `View` methods can be called for **free** by anyone, even people **without a NEAR account**! ```bash near view <dev-account> beneficiary ``` <br /> ## 3. Get Number of Donations `donate` forwards any attached money to the `beneficiary` while keeping track of it. `donate` is a payable method for which can only be invoked using a NEAR account. The account needs to attach money and pay GAS for the transaction. ```bash # Use near-cli to donate 1 NEAR near call <dev-account> donate --amount 1 --accountId <account> ``` **Tip:** If you would like to `donate` using your own account, first login into NEAR using: ```bash # Use near-cli to login your NEAR account near login ``` and then use the logged account to sign the transaction: `--accountId <your-account>`. # Donation 💸 [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/⋈%20Examples-Basics-green)](https://docs.near.org/tutorials/welcome) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/Gitpod-Ready-orange)](https://gitpod.io/#/https://github.com/near-examples/donation-js) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/Contract-js-yellow)](https://docs.near.org/develop/contracts/anatomy) [![](https://img.shields.io/badge/Frontend-JS-yellow)](https://docs.near.org/develop/integrate/frontend) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/endpoint.svg?url=https%3A%2F%2Factions-badge.atrox.dev%2Fnear-examples%2Fdonation-js%2Fbadge&style=flat&label=Tests)](https://actions-badge.atrox.dev/near-examples/donation-js/goto) Our Donation example enables to forward money to an account while keeping track of it. It is one of the simplest examples on making a contract receive and send money. ![](https://docs.near.org/assets/images/donation-7cf65e5e131274fd1ae9aa34bc465bb8.png) # What This Example Shows 1. How to receive and transfer $NEAR on a contract. 2. How to divide a project into multiple modules. 3. How to handle the storage costs. 4. How to handle transaction results. 5. How to use a `Map`. <br /> # Quickstart Clone this repository locally or [**open it in gitpod**](https://gitpod.io/#/github.com/near-examples/donation-js). Then follow these steps: ### 1. Install Dependencies ```bash npm install ``` ### 2. Test the Contract Deploy your contract in a sandbox and simulate interactions from users. ```bash npm test ``` ### 3. Deploy the Contract Build the contract and deploy it in a testnet account ```bash npm run deploy ``` --- # Learn More 1. Learn more about the contract through its [README](./contract/README.md). 2. Check [**our documentation**](https://docs.near.org/develop/welcome).
Intoo-TV_oasis-hackathon
README.md contracts Tokenomics & Royal XP.md hooks README.md package.json src abis.js addresses.js contracts.js index.js test main.test.js migrations 1_initial_migration.js 2_ticketFactory.js package-lock.json package.json truffle-config.js
# Develop You will need a local DynamoDB instance running Follow this [tutorial](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/GettingStarted.JavaScript.html) -- You will also need to fill out the AWS keys in the `.env.develop.exampl` file and then create a copy of it and call it `.env.develop`. To run some examples, call ```zsh yarn test ``` this will babel transpile our js files and will call the functions in `test/testMain.js`. You may wish to uncomment / comment as required -- Useful commands follow If you would like to list the local tables, run ```bash aws dynamodb list-tables --endpoint-url http://localhost:8000 ``` If you would like to list the items, in the local tables, run ```zsh aws dynamodb scan --table-name UserExpBalances --endpoint-url http://localhost:8000 ``` You will need to have specified AWS env keys (check out the [.env.develop.example](./src/.env.develop.example) in src/) ## React-Native AWS-SDK See [here](https://www.npmjs.com/package/aws-sdk) To see how it works, head into the test directory. You will need to launch Ganache-cli with these parameters ``` ganache-cli --defaultBalanceEther 10000 --network-id 1337 --chain-id 1337 --deterministic ``` You will also need a node version ^12. I use nvm to manage multiple node versions at the same time. This is akin to how pyenv is used to manage different versions of Python Install yarn globally ```bash npm install -g yarn ``` First install the deps run in root ```bash yarn ``` ## Tests To run the tests you'll need both the ethereum-bridge (`yarn add -g ethereum-bridge`) and the GSN cli (`yarn add -g @opengsn/gsn`) Run them in two different terminals: To start ethereum-bridge ```bash ethereum-bridge -H localhost:8545 -a 9 --dev ``` To start GSN ```bash gsn start ``` Once GSN starts, copy the Forwarder and Paymaster addresses printed by the terminals and put them in your `.env` file. Now you are ready to run the tests ```bash yarn test ```
near_quickjs
.github ISSUE_TEMPLATE BOUNTY.yml workflows release-artifacts.yml build.sh cutils.c cutils.h examples fib.c fib_module.js hello.js hello_module.js pi_bigdecimal.js pi_bigfloat.js pi_bigint.js point.c test_fib.js test_point.js libbf.c libbf.h libregexp-opcode.h libregexp.c libregexp.h libunicode-table.h libunicode.c libunicode.h list.h qjs.c qjsc.c qjscalc.js quickjs-atom.h quickjs-libc-min.c quickjs-libc-min.h quickjs-libc.c quickjs-libc.h quickjs-opcode.h quickjs.h readme.txt release.sh repl.js run-test262.c test262_errors.txt test262o_errors.txt tests bjson.c microbench.js test_bignum.js test_bjson.js test_builtin.js test_closure.js test_language.js test_loop.js test_op_overloading.js test_qjscalc.js test_std.js test_worker.js test_worker_module.js unicode_download.sh unicode_gen.c unicode_gen_def.h
heithemkacem_nearvote-v2
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Voter.js voter_auth VoterForgetPassword.js VoterLogin.js VoterResetPassword.js voter_dashboard UpdateVoter.js VoterDashboardApp.js VoterVoteParty.js VoterVotePartys.js VoterVoteRooms.js sections @dashboard app AppCurrentVisits.js AppVoteRooms.js AppVoterData.js AppVoterVoteRooms.js AppVoters.js index.js organization UpdateOrgForm.js index.js vote-party CreateVoteParty.js index.js vote-room UpdateVoteRoomForm.js VoteRoomListHead.js VoteRoomListToolbar.js VoteRoomMoreMenu.js index.js voter UpdateVoter.js UpdateVoterForm.js VoterListHead.js VoterListToolbar.js VoterMoreMenu.js index.js authentication forget-password ForgetPassword.js index.js login LoginForm.js index.js otp-verification OtpVerification.js ResendOTPPage.js index.js register FormikStepper.js Register2FactorAuth.js RegisterForm.js RegisterVoterForm.js index.js reset-password ResetPassword.js index.js voter_authentication forget-password ForgetPassword.js index.js login VoterLoginForm.js index.js register RegisterForm.js 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functional-red-black-tree ========================= A [fully persistent](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persistent_data_structure) [red-black tree](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red%E2%80%93black_tree) written 100% in JavaScript. Works both in node.js and in the browser via [browserify](http://browserify.org/). Functional (or fully presistent) data structures allow for non-destructive updates. So if you insert an element into the tree, it returns a new tree with the inserted element rather than destructively updating the existing tree in place. Doing this requires using extra memory, and if one were naive it could cost as much as reallocating the entire tree. Instead, this data structure saves some memory by recycling references to previously allocated subtrees. This requires using only O(log(n)) additional memory per update instead of a full O(n) copy. Some advantages of this is that it is possible to apply insertions and removals to the tree while still iterating over previous versions of the tree. Functional and persistent data structures can also be useful in many geometric algorithms like point location within triangulations or ray queries, and can be used to analyze the history of executing various algorithms. This added power though comes at a cost, since it is generally a bit slower to use a functional data structure than an imperative version. However, if your application needs this behavior then you may consider using this module. # Install npm install functional-red-black-tree # Example Here is an example of some basic usage: ```javascript //Load the library var createTree = require("functional-red-black-tree") //Create a tree var t1 = createTree() //Insert some items into the tree var t2 = t1.insert(1, "foo") var t3 = t2.insert(2, "bar") //Remove something var t4 = t3.remove(1) ``` # API ```javascript var createTree = require("functional-red-black-tree") ``` ## Overview - [Tree methods](#tree-methods) - [`var tree = createTree([compare])`](#var-tree-=-createtreecompare) - [`tree.keys`](#treekeys) - [`tree.values`](#treevalues) - [`tree.length`](#treelength) - [`tree.get(key)`](#treegetkey) - [`tree.insert(key, value)`](#treeinsertkey-value) - [`tree.remove(key)`](#treeremovekey) - [`tree.find(key)`](#treefindkey) - [`tree.ge(key)`](#treegekey) - [`tree.gt(key)`](#treegtkey) - [`tree.lt(key)`](#treeltkey) - [`tree.le(key)`](#treelekey) - [`tree.at(position)`](#treeatposition) - [`tree.begin`](#treebegin) - [`tree.end`](#treeend) - [`tree.forEach(visitor(key,value)[, lo[, hi]])`](#treeforEachvisitorkeyvalue-lo-hi) - [`tree.root`](#treeroot) - [Node properties](#node-properties) - [`node.key`](#nodekey) - [`node.value`](#nodevalue) - [`node.left`](#nodeleft) - [`node.right`](#noderight) - [Iterator methods](#iterator-methods) - [`iter.key`](#iterkey) - [`iter.value`](#itervalue) - [`iter.node`](#iternode) - [`iter.tree`](#itertree) - [`iter.index`](#iterindex) - [`iter.valid`](#itervalid) - [`iter.clone()`](#iterclone) - [`iter.remove()`](#iterremove) - [`iter.update(value)`](#iterupdatevalue) - [`iter.next()`](#iternext) - [`iter.prev()`](#iterprev) - [`iter.hasNext`](#iterhasnext) - [`iter.hasPrev`](#iterhasprev) ## Tree methods ### `var tree = createTree([compare])` Creates an empty functional tree * `compare` is an optional comparison function, same semantics as array.sort() **Returns** An empty tree ordered by `compare` ### `tree.keys` A sorted array of all the keys in the tree ### `tree.values` An array array of all the values in the tree ### `tree.length` The number of items in the tree ### `tree.get(key)` Retrieves the value associated to the given key * `key` is the key of the item to look up **Returns** The value of the first node associated to `key` ### `tree.insert(key, value)` Creates a new tree with the new pair inserted. * `key` is the key of the item to insert * `value` is the value of the item to insert **Returns** A new tree with `key` and `value` inserted ### `tree.remove(key)` Removes the first item with `key` in the tree * `key` is the key of the item to remove **Returns** A new tree with the given item removed if it exists ### `tree.find(key)` Returns an iterator pointing to the first item in the tree with `key`, otherwise `null`. ### `tree.ge(key)` Find the first item in the tree whose key is `>= key` * `key` is the key to search for **Returns** An iterator at the given element. ### `tree.gt(key)` Finds the first item in the tree whose key is `> key` * `key` is the key to search for **Returns** An iterator at the given element ### `tree.lt(key)` Finds the last item in the tree whose key is `< key` * `key` is the key to search for **Returns** An iterator at the given element ### `tree.le(key)` Finds the last item in the tree whose key is `<= key` * `key` is the key to search for **Returns** An iterator at the given element ### `tree.at(position)` Finds an iterator starting at the given element * `position` is the index at which the iterator gets created **Returns** An iterator starting at position ### `tree.begin` An iterator pointing to the first element in the tree ### `tree.end` An iterator pointing to the last element in the tree ### `tree.forEach(visitor(key,value)[, lo[, hi]])` Walks a visitor function over the nodes of the tree in order. * `visitor(key,value)` is a callback that gets executed on each node. If a truthy value is returned from the visitor, then iteration is stopped. * `lo` is an optional start of the range to visit (inclusive) * `hi` is an optional end of the range to visit (non-inclusive) **Returns** The last value returned by the callback ### `tree.root` Returns the root node of the tree ## Node properties Each node of the tree has the following properties: ### `node.key` The key associated to the node ### `node.value` The value associated to the node ### `node.left` The left subtree of the node ### `node.right` The right subtree of the node ## Iterator methods ### `iter.key` The key of the item referenced by the iterator ### `iter.value` The value of the item referenced by the iterator ### `iter.node` The value of the node at the iterator's current position. `null` is iterator is node valid. ### `iter.tree` The tree associated to the iterator ### `iter.index` Returns the position of this iterator in the sequence. ### `iter.valid` Checks if the iterator is valid ### `iter.clone()` Makes a copy of the iterator ### `iter.remove()` Removes the item at the position of the iterator **Returns** A new binary search tree with `iter`'s item removed ### `iter.update(value)` Updates the value of the node in the tree at this iterator **Returns** A new binary search tree with the corresponding node updated ### `iter.next()` Advances the iterator to the next position ### `iter.prev()` Moves the iterator backward one element ### `iter.hasNext` If true, then the iterator is not at the end of the sequence ### `iter.hasPrev` If true, then the iterator is not at the beginning of the sequence # Credits (c) 2013 Mikola Lysenko. MIT License Railroad-diagram Generator ========================== This is a small js library for generating railroad diagrams (like what [JSON.org](http://json.org) uses) using SVG. Railroad diagrams are a way of visually representing a grammar in a form that is more readable than using regular expressions or BNF. I think (though I haven't given it a lot of thought yet) that if it's easy to write a context-free grammar for the language, the corresponding railroad diagram will be easy as well. There are several railroad-diagram generators out there, but none of them had the visual appeal I wanted. [Here's an example of how they look!](http://www.xanthir.com/etc/railroad-diagrams/example.html) And [here's an online generator for you to play with and get SVG code from!](http://www.xanthir.com/etc/railroad-diagrams/generator.html) The library now exists in a Python port as well! See the information further down. Details ------- To use the library, just include the js and css files, and then call the Diagram() function. Its arguments are the components of the diagram (Diagram is a special form of Sequence). An alternative to Diagram() is ComplexDiagram() which is used to describe a complex type diagram. Components are either leaves or containers. The leaves: * Terminal(text) or a bare string - represents literal text * NonTerminal(text) - represents an instruction or another production * Comment(text) - a comment * Skip() - an empty line The containers: * Sequence(children) - like simple concatenation in a regex * Choice(index, children) - like | in a regex. The index argument specifies which child is the "normal" choice and should go in the middle * Optional(child, skip) - like ? in a regex. A shorthand for `Choice(1, [Skip(), child])`. If the optional `skip` parameter has the value `"skip"`, it instead puts the Skip() in the straight-line path, for when the "normal" behavior is to omit the item. * OneOrMore(child, repeat) - like + in a regex. The 'repeat' argument is optional, and specifies something that must go between the repetitions. * ZeroOrMore(child, repeat, skip) - like * in a regex. A shorthand for `Optional(OneOrMore(child, repeat))`. The optional `skip` parameter is identical to Optional(). For convenience, each component can be called with or without `new`. If called without `new`, the container components become n-ary; that is, you can say either `new Sequence([A, B])` or just `Sequence(A,B)`. After constructing a Diagram, call `.format(...padding)` on it, specifying 0-4 padding values (just like CSS) for some additional "breathing space" around the diagram (the paddings default to 20px). The result can either be `.toString()`'d for the markup, or `.toSVG()`'d for an `<svg>` element, which can then be immediately inserted to the document. As a convenience, Diagram also has an `.addTo(element)` method, which immediately converts it to SVG and appends it to the referenced element with default paddings. `element` defaults to `document.body`. Options ------- There are a few options you can tweak, at the bottom of the file. Just tweak either until the diagram looks like what you want. You can also change the CSS file - feel free to tweak to your heart's content. Note, though, that if you change the text sizes in the CSS, you'll have to go adjust the metrics for the leaf nodes as well. * VERTICAL_SEPARATION - sets the minimum amount of vertical separation between two items. Note that the stroke width isn't counted when computing the separation; this shouldn't be relevant unless you have a very small separation or very large stroke width. * ARC_RADIUS - the radius of the arcs used in the branching containers like Choice. This has a relatively large effect on the size of non-trivial diagrams. Both tight and loose values look good, depending on what you're going for. * DIAGRAM_CLASS - the class set on the root `<svg>` element of each diagram, for use in the CSS stylesheet. * STROKE_ODD_PIXEL_LENGTH - the default stylesheet uses odd pixel lengths for 'stroke'. Due to rasterization artifacts, they look best when the item has been translated half a pixel in both directions. If you change the styling to use a stroke with even pixel lengths, you'll want to set this variable to `false`. * INTERNAL_ALIGNMENT - when some branches of a container are narrower than others, this determines how they're aligned in the extra space. Defaults to "center", but can be set to "left" or "right". Caveats ------- At this early stage, the generator is feature-complete and works as intended, but still has several TODOs: * The font-sizes are hard-coded right now, and the font handling in general is very dumb - I'm just guessing at some metrics that are probably "good enough" rather than measuring things properly. Python Port ----------- In addition to the canonical JS version, the library now exists as a Python library as well. Using it is basically identical. The config variables are globals in the file, and so may be adjusted either manually or via tweaking from inside your program. The main difference from the JS port is how you extract the string from the Diagram. You'll find a `writeSvg(writerFunc)` method on `Diagram`, which takes a callback of one argument and passes it the string form of the diagram. For example, it can be used like `Diagram(...).writeSvg(sys.stdout.write)` to write to stdout. **Note**: the callback will be called multiple times as it builds up the string, not just once with the whole thing. If you need it all at once, consider something like a `StringIO` as an easy way to collect it into a single string. License ------- This document and all associated files in the github project are licensed under [CC0](http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) ![](http://i.creativecommons.org/p/zero/1.0/80x15.png). This means you can reuse, remix, or otherwise appropriate this project for your own use **without restriction**. (The actual legal meaning can be found at the above link.) Don't ask me for permission to use any part of this project, **just use it**. I would appreciate attribution, but that is not required by the license. ### Estraverse [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse) Estraverse ([estraverse](http://github.com/estools/estraverse)) is [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) traversal functions from [esmangle project](http://github.com/estools/esmangle). ### Documentation You can find usage docs at [wiki page](https://github.com/estools/estraverse/wiki/Usage). ### Example Usage The following code will output all variables declared at the root of a file. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'FunctionExpression' || node.type == 'FunctionDeclaration') return estraverse.VisitorOption.Skip; }, leave: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'VariableDeclarator') console.log(node.id.name); } }); ``` We can use `this.skip`, `this.remove` and `this.break` functions instead of using Skip, Remove and Break. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node) { this.break(); } }); ``` And estraverse provides `estraverse.replace` function. When returning node from `enter`/`leave`, current node is replaced with it. ```javascript result = estraverse.replace(tree, { enter: function (node) { // Replace it with replaced. if (node.type === 'Literal') return replaced; } }); ``` By passing `visitor.keys` mapping, we can extend estraverse traversing functionality. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Extending the existing traversing rules. keys: { // TargetNodeName: [ 'keys', 'containing', 'the', 'other', '**node**' ] TestExpression: ['argument'] } }); ``` By passing `visitor.fallback` option, we can control the behavior when encountering unknown nodes. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Iterating the child **nodes** of unknown nodes. fallback: 'iteration' }); ``` When `visitor.fallback` is a function, we can determine which keys to visit on each node. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Skip the `argument` property of each node fallback: function(node) { return Object.keys(node).filter(function(key) { return key !== 'argument'; }); } }); ``` ### License Copyright (C) 2012-2016 [Yusuke Suzuki](http://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](http://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. [Build]: http://img.shields.io/travis/litejs/natural-compare-lite.png [Coverage]: http://img.shields.io/coveralls/litejs/natural-compare-lite.png [1]: https://travis-ci.org/litejs/natural-compare-lite [2]: https://coveralls.io/r/litejs/natural-compare-lite [npm package]: https://npmjs.org/package/natural-compare-lite [GitHub repo]: https://github.com/litejs/natural-compare-lite @version 1.4.0 @date 2015-10-26 @stability 3 - Stable Natural Compare &ndash; [![Build][]][1] [![Coverage][]][2] =============== Compare strings containing a mix of letters and numbers in the way a human being would in sort order. This is described as a "natural ordering". ```text Standard sorting: Natural order sorting: img1.png img1.png img10.png img2.png img12.png img10.png img2.png img12.png ``` String.naturalCompare returns a number indicating whether a reference string comes before or after or is the same as the given string in sort order. Use it with builtin sort() function. ### Installation - In browser ```html <script src=min.natural-compare.js></script> ``` - In node.js: `npm install natural-compare-lite` ```javascript require("natural-compare-lite") ``` ### Usage ```javascript // Simple case sensitive example var a = ["z1.doc", "z10.doc", "z17.doc", "z2.doc", "z23.doc", "z3.doc"]; a.sort(String.naturalCompare); // ["z1.doc", "z2.doc", "z3.doc", "z10.doc", "z17.doc", "z23.doc"] // Use wrapper function for case insensitivity a.sort(function(a, b){ return String.naturalCompare(a.toLowerCase(), b.toLowerCase()); }) // In most cases we want to sort an array of objects var a = [ {"street":"350 5th Ave", "room":"A-1021"} , {"street":"350 5th Ave", "room":"A-21046-b"} ]; // sort by street, then by room a.sort(function(a, b){ return String.naturalCompare(a.street, b.street) || String.naturalCompare(a.room, b.room); }) // When text transformation is needed (eg toLowerCase()), // it is best for performance to keep // transformed key in that object. // There are no need to do text transformation // on each comparision when sorting. var a = [ {"make":"Audi", "model":"A6"} , {"make":"Kia", "model":"Rio"} ]; // sort by make, then by model a.map(function(car){ car.sort_key = (car.make + " " + car.model).toLowerCase(); }) a.sort(function(a, b){ return String.naturalCompare(a.sort_key, b.sort_key); }) ``` - Works well with dates in ISO format eg "Rev 2012-07-26.doc". ### Custom alphabet It is possible to configure a custom alphabet to achieve a desired order. ```javascript // Estonian alphabet String.alphabet = "ABDEFGHIJKLMNOPRSŠZŽTUVÕÄÖÜXYabdefghijklmnoprsšzžtuvõäöüxy" ["t", "z", "x", "õ"].sort(String.naturalCompare) // ["z", "t", "õ", "x"] // Russian alphabet String.alphabet = "АБВГДЕЁЖЗИЙКЛМНОПРСТУФХЦЧШЩЪЫЬЭЮЯабвгдеёжзийклмнопрстуфхцчшщъыьэюя" ["Ё", "А", "Б"].sort(String.naturalCompare) // ["А", "Б", "Ё"] ``` External links -------------- - [GitHub repo][https://github.com/litejs/natural-compare-lite] - [jsperf test](http://jsperf.com/natural-sort-2/12) Licence ------- Copyright (c) 2012-2015 Lauri Rooden &lt;[email protected]&gt; [The MIT License](http://lauri.rooden.ee/mit-license.txt) These files are compiled dot templates from dot folder. Do NOT edit them directly, edit the templates and run `npm run build` from main ajv folder. # is-extglob [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/is-extglob.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-extglob) [![NPM downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/is-extglob.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/is-extglob) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jonschlinkert/is-extglob.svg?style=flat)](https://travis-ci.org/jonschlinkert/is-extglob) > Returns true if a string has an extglob. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install --save is-extglob ``` ## Usage ```js var isExtglob = require('is-extglob'); ``` **True** ```js isExtglob('?(abc)'); isExtglob('@(abc)'); isExtglob('!(abc)'); isExtglob('*(abc)'); isExtglob('+(abc)'); ``` **False** Escaped extglobs: ```js isExtglob('\\?(abc)'); isExtglob('\\@(abc)'); isExtglob('\\!(abc)'); isExtglob('\\*(abc)'); isExtglob('\\+(abc)'); ``` Everything else... ```js isExtglob('foo.js'); isExtglob('!foo.js'); isExtglob('*.js'); isExtglob('**/abc.js'); isExtglob('abc/*.js'); isExtglob('abc/(aaa|bbb).js'); isExtglob('abc/[a-z].js'); isExtglob('abc/{a,b}.js'); isExtglob('abc/?.js'); isExtglob('abc.js'); isExtglob('abc/def/ghi.js'); ``` ## History **v2.0** Adds support for escaping. Escaped exglobs no longer return true. ## About ### Related projects * [has-glob](https://www.npmjs.com/package/has-glob): Returns `true` if an array has a glob pattern. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/has-glob "Returns `true` if an array has a glob pattern.") * [is-glob](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-glob): Returns `true` if the given string looks like a glob pattern or an extglob pattern… [more](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-glob) | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-glob "Returns `true` if the given string looks like a glob pattern or an extglob pattern. This makes it easy to create code that only uses external modules like node-glob when necessary, resulting in much faster code execution and initialization time, and a bet") * [micromatch](https://www.npmjs.com/package/micromatch): Glob matching for javascript/node.js. A drop-in replacement and faster alternative to minimatch and multimatch. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/micromatch "Glob matching for javascript/node.js. A drop-in replacement and faster alternative to minimatch and multimatch.") ### Contributing Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). ### Building docs _(This document was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme) (a [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb) generator), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in [.verb.md](.verb.md).)_ To generate the readme and API documentation with [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb): ```sh $ npm install -g verb verb-generate-readme && verb ``` ### Running tests Install dev dependencies: ```sh $ npm install -d && npm test ``` ### Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [github/jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [twitter/jonschlinkert](http://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) ### License Copyright © 2016, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT license](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-extglob/blob/master/LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), v0.1.31, on October 12, 2016._ ## assemblyscript-temporal An implementation of temporal within AssemblyScript, with an initial focus on non-timezone-aware classes and functionality. ### Why? AssemblyScript has minimal `Date` support, however, the JS Date API itself is terrible and people tend not to use it that often. As a result libraries like moment / luxon have become staple replacements. However, there is now a [relatively mature TC39 proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal) that adds greatly improved date support to JS. The goal of this project is to implement Temporal for AssemblyScript. ### Usage This library currently supports the following types: #### `PlainDateTime` A `PlainDateTime` represents a calendar date and wall-clock time that does not carry time zone information, e.g. December 7th, 1995 at 3:00 PM (in the Gregorian calendar). For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plaindatetime.html), this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. You can create a `PlainDateTime` from individual components, a string or an object literal: ```javascript datetime = new PlainDateTime(1976, 11, 18, 15, 23, 30, 123, 456, 789); datetime.year; // 2019; datetime.month; // 11; // ... datetime.nanosecond; // 789; datetime = PlainDateTime.from("1976-11-18T12:34:56"); datetime.toString(); // "1976-11-18T12:34:56" datetime = PlainDateTime.from({ year: 1966, month: 3, day: 3 }); datetime.toString(); // "1966-03-03T00:00:00" ``` There are various ways you can manipulate a date: ```javascript // use 'with' to copy a date but with various property values overriden datetime = new PlainDateTime(1976, 11, 18, 15, 23, 30, 123, 456, 789); datetime.with({ year: 2019 }).toString(); // "2019-11-18T15:23:30.123456789" // use 'add' or 'substract' to add / subtract a duration datetime = PlainDateTime.from("2020-01-12T15:00"); datetime.add({ months: 1 }).toString(); // "2020-02-12T15:00:00"); // add / subtract support Duration objects or object literals datetime.add(new Duration(1)).toString(); // "2021-01-12T15:00:00"); ``` You can compare dates and check for equality ```javascript dt1 = PlainDateTime.from("1976-11-18"); dt2 = PlainDateTime.from("2019-10-29"); PlainDateTime.compare(dt1, dt1); // 0 PlainDateTime.compare(dt1, dt2); // -1 dt1.equals(dt1); // true ``` Currently `PlainDateTime` only supports the ISO 8601 (Gregorian) calendar. #### `PlainDate` A `PlainDate` object represents a calendar date that is not associated with a particular time or time zone, e.g. August 24th, 2006. For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plaindate.html), this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. The `PlainDate` API is almost identical to `PlainDateTime`, so see above for API usage examples. #### `PlainTime` A `PlainTime` object represents a wall-clock time that is not associated with a particular date or time zone, e.g. 7:39 PM. For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plaintime.html), this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. The `PlainTime` API is almost identical to `PlainDateTime`, so see above for API usage examples. #### `PlainMonthDay` A date without a year component. This is useful to express things like "Bastille Day is on the 14th of July". For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plainmonthday.html) , this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. ```javascript const monthDay = PlainMonthDay.from({ month: 7, day: 14 }); // => 07-14 const date = monthDay.toPlainDate({ year: 2030 }); // => 2030-07-14 date.dayOfWeek; // => 7 ``` The `PlainMonthDay` API is almost identical to `PlainDateTime`, so see above for more API usage examples. #### `PlainYearMonth` A date without a day component. This is useful to express things like "the October 2020 meeting". For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plainyearmonth.html) , this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. The `PlainYearMonth` API is almost identical to `PlainDateTime`, so see above for API usage examples. #### `now` The `now` object has several methods which give information about the current time and date. ```javascript dateTime = now.plainDateTimeISO(); dateTime.toString(); // 2021-04-01T12:05:47.357 ``` ## Contributing This project is open source, MIT licensed and your contributions are very much welcomed. There is a [brief document that outlines implementation progress and priorities](./development.md). # path-parse [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/jbgutierrez/path-parse.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/jbgutierrez/path-parse) > Node.js [`path.parse(pathString)`](https://nodejs.org/api/path.html#path_path_parse_pathstring) [ponyfill](https://ponyfill.com). ## Install ``` $ npm install --save path-parse ``` ## Usage ```js var pathParse = require('path-parse'); pathParse('/home/user/dir/file.txt'); //=> { // root : "/", // dir : "/home/user/dir", // base : "file.txt", // ext : ".txt", // name : "file" // } ``` ## API See [`path.parse(pathString)`](https://nodejs.org/api/path.html#path_path_parse_pathstring) docs. ### pathParse(path) ### pathParse.posix(path) The Posix specific version. ### pathParse.win32(path) The Windows specific version. ## License MIT © [Javier Blanco](http://jbgutierrez.info) # ts-mixer [version-badge]: https://badgen.net/npm/v/ts-mixer [version-link]: https://npmjs.com/package/ts-mixer [build-badge]: https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/tannerntannern/ts-mixer/ts-mixer%20CI [build-link]: https://github.com/tannerntannern/ts-mixer/actions [ts-versions]: https://badgen.net/badge/icon/3.8,3.9,4.0,4.1,4.2?icon=typescript&label&list=| [node-versions]: https://badgen.net/badge/node/10%2C12%2C14/blue/?list=| [![npm version][version-badge]][version-link] [![github actions][build-badge]][build-link] [![TS Versions][ts-versions]][build-link] [![Node.js Versions][node-versions]][build-link] [![Minified Size](https://badgen.net/bundlephobia/min/ts-mixer)](https://bundlephobia.com/result?p=ts-mixer) [![Conventional Commits](https://badgen.net/badge/conventional%20commits/1.0.0/yellow)](https://conventionalcommits.org) ## Overview `ts-mixer` brings mixins to TypeScript. "Mixins" to `ts-mixer` are just classes, so you already know how to write them, and you can probably mix classes from your favorite library without trouble. The mixin problem is more nuanced than it appears. I've seen countless code snippets that work for certain situations, but fail in others. `ts-mixer` tries to take the best from all these solutions while accounting for the situations you might not have considered. [Quick start guide](#quick-start) ### Features * mixes plain classes * mixes classes that extend other classes * mixes classes that were mixed with `ts-mixer` * supports static properties * supports protected/private properties (the popular function-that-returns-a-class solution does not) * mixes abstract classes (with caveats [[1](#caveats)]) * mixes generic classes (with caveats [[2](#caveats)]) * supports class, method, and property decorators (with caveats [[3, 6](#caveats)]) * mostly supports the complexity presented by constructor functions (with caveats [[4](#caveats)]) * comes with an `instanceof`-like replacement (with caveats [[5, 6](#caveats)]) * [multiple mixing strategies](#settings) (ES6 proxies vs hard copy) ### Caveats 1. Mixing abstract classes requires a bit of a hack that may break in future versions of TypeScript. See [mixing abstract classes](#mixing-abstract-classes) below. 2. Mixing generic classes requires a more cumbersome notation, but it's still possible. See [mixing generic classes](#mixing-generic-classes) below. 3. Using decorators in mixed classes also requires a more cumbersome notation. See [mixing with decorators](#mixing-with-decorators) below. 4. ES6 made it impossible to use `.apply(...)` on class constructors (or any means of calling them without `new`), which makes it impossible for `ts-mixer` to pass the proper `this` to your constructors. This may or may not be an issue for your code, but there are options to work around it. See [dealing with constructors](#dealing-with-constructors) below. 5. `ts-mixer` does not support `instanceof` for mixins, but it does offer a replacement. See the [hasMixin function](#hasmixin) for more details. 6. Certain features (specifically, `@decorator` and `hasMixin`) make use of ES6 `Map`s, which means you must either use ES6+ or polyfill `Map` to use them. If you don't need these features, you should be fine without. ## Quick Start ### Installation ``` $ npm install ts-mixer ``` or if you prefer [Yarn](https://yarnpkg.com): ``` $ yarn add ts-mixer ``` ### Basic Example ```typescript import { Mixin } from 'ts-mixer'; class Foo { protected makeFoo() { return 'foo'; } } class Bar { protected makeBar() { return 'bar'; } } class FooBar extends Mixin(Foo, Bar) { public makeFooBar() { return this.makeFoo() + this.makeBar(); } } const fooBar = new FooBar(); console.log(fooBar.makeFooBar()); // "foobar" ``` ## Special Cases ### Mixing Abstract Classes Abstract classes, by definition, cannot be constructed, which means they cannot take on the type, `new(...args) => any`, and by extension, are incompatible with `ts-mixer`. BUT, you can "trick" TypeScript into giving you all the benefits of an abstract class without making it technically abstract. The trick is just some strategic `// @ts-ignore`'s: ```typescript import { Mixin } from 'ts-mixer'; // note that Foo is not marked as an abstract class class Foo { // @ts-ignore: "Abstract methods can only appear within an abstract class" public abstract makeFoo(): string; } class Bar { public makeBar() { return 'bar'; } } class FooBar extends Mixin(Foo, Bar) { // we still get all the benefits of abstract classes here, because TypeScript // will still complain if this method isn't implemented public makeFoo() { return 'foo'; } } ``` Do note that while this does work quite well, it is a bit of a hack and I can't promise that it will continue to work in future TypeScript versions. ### Mixing Generic Classes Frustratingly, it is _impossible_ for generic parameters to be referenced in base class expressions. No matter what, you will eventually run into `Base class expressions cannot reference class type parameters.` The way to get around this is to leverage [declaration merging](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/declaration-merging.html), and a slightly different mixing function from ts-mixer: `mix`. It works exactly like `Mixin`, except it's a decorator, which means it doesn't affect the type information of the class being decorated. See it in action below: ```typescript import { mix } from 'ts-mixer'; class Foo<T> { public fooMethod(input: T): T { return input; } } class Bar<T> { public barMethod(input: T): T { return input; } } interface FooBar<T1, T2> extends Foo<T1>, Bar<T2> { } @mix(Foo, Bar) class FooBar<T1, T2> { public fooBarMethod(input1: T1, input2: T2) { return [this.fooMethod(input1), this.barMethod(input2)]; } } ``` Key takeaways from this example: * `interface FooBar<T1, T2> extends Foo<T1>, Bar<T2> { }` makes sure `FooBar` has the typing we want, thanks to declaration merging * `@mix(Foo, Bar)` wires things up "on the JavaScript side", since the interface declaration has nothing to do with runtime behavior. * The reason we have to use the `mix` decorator is that the typing produced by `Mixin(Foo, Bar)` would conflict with the typing of the interface. `mix` has no effect "on the TypeScript side," thus avoiding type conflicts. ### Mixing with Decorators Popular libraries such as [class-validator](https://github.com/typestack/class-validator) and [TypeORM](https://github.com/typeorm/typeorm) use decorators to add functionality. Unfortunately, `ts-mixer` has no way of knowing what these libraries do with the decorators behind the scenes. So if you want these decorators to be "inherited" with classes you plan to mix, you first have to wrap them with a special `decorate` function exported by `ts-mixer`. Here's an example using `class-validator`: ```typescript import { IsBoolean, IsIn, validate } from 'class-validator'; import { Mixin, decorate } from 'ts-mixer'; class Disposable { @decorate(IsBoolean()) // instead of @IsBoolean() isDisposed: boolean = false; } class Statusable { @decorate(IsIn(['red', 'green'])) // instead of @IsIn(['red', 'green']) status: string = 'green'; } class ExtendedObject extends Mixin(Disposable, Statusable) {} const extendedObject = new ExtendedObject(); extendedObject.status = 'blue'; validate(extendedObject).then(errors => { console.log(errors); }); ``` ### Dealing with Constructors As mentioned in the [caveats section](#caveats), ES6 disallowed calling constructor functions without `new`. This means that the only way for `ts-mixer` to mix instance properties is to instantiate each base class separately, then copy the instance properties into a common object. The consequence of this is that constructors mixed by `ts-mixer` will _not_ receive the proper `this`. **This very well may not be an issue for you!** It only means that your constructors need to be "mostly pure" in terms of how they handle `this`. Specifically, your constructors cannot produce [side effects](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Side_effect_%28computer_science%29) involving `this`, _other than adding properties to `this`_ (the most common side effect in JavaScript constructors). If you simply cannot eliminate `this` side effects from your constructor, there is a workaround available: `ts-mixer` will automatically forward constructor parameters to a predesignated init function (`settings.initFunction`) if it's present on the class. Unlike constructors, functions can be called with an arbitrary `this`, so this predesignated init function _will_ have the proper `this`. Here's a basic example: ```typescript import { Mixin, settings } from 'ts-mixer'; settings.initFunction = 'init'; class Person { public static allPeople: Set<Person> = new Set(); protected init() { Person.allPeople.add(this); } } type PartyAffiliation = 'democrat' | 'republican'; class PoliticalParticipant { public static democrats: Set<PoliticalParticipant> = new Set(); public static republicans: Set<PoliticalParticipant> = new Set(); public party: PartyAffiliation; // note that these same args will also be passed to init function public constructor(party: PartyAffiliation) { this.party = party; } protected init(party: PartyAffiliation) { if (party === 'democrat') PoliticalParticipant.democrats.add(this); else PoliticalParticipant.republicans.add(this); } } class Voter extends Mixin(Person, PoliticalParticipant) {} const v1 = new Voter('democrat'); const v2 = new Voter('democrat'); const v3 = new Voter('republican'); const v4 = new Voter('republican'); ``` Note the above `.add(this)` statements. These would not work as expected if they were placed in the constructor instead, since `this` is not the same between the constructor and `init`, as explained above. ## Other Features ### hasMixin As mentioned above, `ts-mixer` does not support `instanceof` for mixins. While it is possible to implement [custom `instanceof` behavior](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Symbol/hasInstance), this library does not do so because it would require modifying the source classes, which is deliberately avoided. You can fill this missing functionality with `hasMixin(instance, mixinClass)` instead. See the below example: ```typescript import { Mixin, hasMixin } from 'ts-mixer'; class Foo {} class Bar {} class FooBar extends Mixin(Foo, Bar) {} const instance = new FooBar(); // doesn't work with instanceof... console.log(instance instanceof FooBar) // true console.log(instance instanceof Foo) // false console.log(instance instanceof Bar) // false // but everything works nicely with hasMixin! console.log(hasMixin(instance, FooBar)) // true console.log(hasMixin(instance, Foo)) // true console.log(hasMixin(instance, Bar)) // true ``` `hasMixin(instance, mixinClass)` will work anywhere that `instance instanceof mixinClass` works. Additionally, like `instanceof`, you get the same [type narrowing benefits](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/advanced-types.html#instanceof-type-guards): ```typescript if (hasMixin(instance, Foo)) { // inferred type of instance is "Foo" } if (hasMixin(instance, Bar)) { // inferred type of instance of "Bar" } ``` ## Settings ts-mixer has multiple strategies for mixing classes which can be configured by modifying `settings` from ts-mixer. For example: ```typescript import { settings, Mixin } from 'ts-mixer'; settings.prototypeStrategy = 'proxy'; // then use `Mixin` as normal... ``` ### `settings.prototypeStrategy` * Determines how ts-mixer will mix class prototypes together * Possible values: - `'copy'` (default) - Copies all methods from the classes being mixed into a new prototype object. (This will include all methods up the prototype chains as well.) This is the default for ES5 compatibility, but it has the downside of stale references. For example, if you mix `Foo` and `Bar` to make `FooBar`, then redefine a method on `Foo`, `FooBar` will not have the latest methods from `Foo`. If this is not a concern for you, `'copy'` is the best value for this setting. - `'proxy'` - Uses an ES6 Proxy to "soft mix" prototypes. Unlike `'copy'`, updates to the base classes _will_ be reflected in the mixed class, which may be desirable. The downside is that method access is not as performant, nor is it ES5 compatible. ### `settings.staticsStrategy` * Determines how static properties are inherited * Possible values: - `'copy'` (default) - Simply copies all properties (minus `prototype`) from the base classes/constructor functions onto the mixed class. Like `settings.prototypeStrategy = 'copy'`, this strategy also suffers from stale references, but shouldn't be a concern if you don't redefine static methods after mixing. - `'proxy'` - Similar to `settings.prototypeStrategy`, proxy's static method access to base classes. Has the same benefits/downsides. ### `settings.initFunction` * If set, `ts-mixer` will automatically call the function with this name upon construction * Possible values: - `null` (default) - disables the behavior - a string - function name to call upon construction * Read more about why you would want this in [dealing with constructors](#dealing-with-constructors) ### `settings.decoratorInheritance` * Determines how decorators are inherited from classes passed to `Mixin(...)` * Possible values: - `'deep'` (default) - Deeply inherits decorators from all given classes and their ancestors - `'direct'` - Only inherits decorators defined directly on the given classes - `'none'` - Skips decorator inheritance # Author Tanner Nielsen <[email protected]> * Website - [tannernielsen.com](http://tannernielsen.com) * Github - [tannerntannern](https://github.com/tannerntannern) ## Timezone support In order to provide support for timezones, without relying on the JavaScript host or any other time-zone aware environment, this library makes use of teh IANA Timezone Database directly: https://www.iana.org/time-zones The database files are parsed by the scripts in this folder, which emit AssemblyScript code which is used to process the various rules at runtime. # debug [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/visionmedia/debug.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/visionmedia/debug) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/visionmedia/debug/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/visionmedia/debug?branch=master) [![Slack](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/badge.svg)](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/backers/badge.svg)](#backers) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/sponsors/badge.svg)](#sponsors) <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> A tiny JavaScript debugging utility modelled after Node.js core's debugging technique. Works in Node.js and web browsers. ## Installation ```bash $ npm install debug ``` ## Usage `debug` exposes a function; simply pass this function the name of your module, and it will return a decorated version of `console.error` for you to pass debug statements to. This will allow you to toggle the debug output for different parts of your module as well as the module as a whole. Example [_app.js_](./examples/node/app.js): ```js var debug = require('debug')('http') , http = require('http') , name = 'My App'; // fake app debug('booting %o', name); http.createServer(function(req, res){ debug(req.method + ' ' + req.url); res.end('hello\n'); }).listen(3000, function(){ debug('listening'); }); // fake worker of some kind require('./worker'); ``` Example [_worker.js_](./examples/node/worker.js): ```js var a = require('debug')('worker:a') , b = require('debug')('worker:b'); function work() { a('doing lots of uninteresting work'); setTimeout(work, Math.random() * 1000); } work(); function workb() { b('doing some work'); setTimeout(workb, Math.random() * 2000); } workb(); ``` The `DEBUG` environment variable is then used to enable these based on space or comma-delimited names. Here are some examples: <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 04 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091703-a6302cdc-7c38-11e7-8304-7c0b3bc600cd.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 38 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091700-a62a6888-7c38-11e7-800b-db911291ca2b.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 25 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091701-a62ea114-7c38-11e7-826a-2692bedca740.png"> #### Windows note On Windows the environment variable is set using the `set` command. ```cmd set DEBUG=*,-not_this ``` Note that PowerShell uses different syntax to set environment variables. ```cmd $env:DEBUG = "*,-not_this" ``` Then, run the program to be debugged as usual. ## Namespace Colors Every debug instance has a color generated for it based on its namespace name. This helps when visually parsing the debug output to identify which debug instance a debug line belongs to. #### Node.js In Node.js, colors are enabled when stderr is a TTY. You also _should_ install the [`supports-color`](https://npmjs.org/supports-color) module alongside debug, otherwise debug will only use a small handful of basic colors. <img width="521" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092181-47f6a9e6-7c3a-11e7-9a14-1928d8a711cd.png"> #### Web Browser Colors are also enabled on "Web Inspectors" that understand the `%c` formatting option. These are WebKit web inspectors, Firefox ([since version 31](https://hacks.mozilla.org/2014/05/editable-box-model-multiple-selection-sublime-text-keys-much-more-firefox-developer-tools-episode-31/)) and the Firebug plugin for Firefox (any version). <img width="524" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092033-b65f9f2e-7c39-11e7-8e32-f6f0d8e865c1.png"> ## Millisecond diff When actively developing an application it can be useful to see when the time spent between one `debug()` call and the next. Suppose for example you invoke `debug()` before requesting a resource, and after as well, the "+NNNms" will show you how much time was spent between calls. <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> When stdout is not a TTY, `Date#toISOString()` is used, making it more useful for logging the debug information as shown below: <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091956-6bd78372-7c39-11e7-8c55-c948396d6edd.png"> ## Conventions If you're using this in one or more of your libraries, you _should_ use the name of your library so that developers may toggle debugging as desired without guessing names. If you have more than one debuggers you _should_ prefix them with your library name and use ":" to separate features. For example "bodyParser" from Connect would then be "connect:bodyParser". If you append a "*" to the end of your name, it will always be enabled regardless of the setting of the DEBUG environment variable. You can then use it for normal output as well as debug output. ## Wildcards The `*` character may be used as a wildcard. Suppose for example your library has debuggers named "connect:bodyParser", "connect:compress", "connect:session", instead of listing all three with `DEBUG=connect:bodyParser,connect:compress,connect:session`, you may simply do `DEBUG=connect:*`, or to run everything using this module simply use `DEBUG=*`. You can also exclude specific debuggers by prefixing them with a "-" character. For example, `DEBUG=*,-connect:*` would include all debuggers except those starting with "connect:". ## Environment Variables When running through Node.js, you can set a few environment variables that will change the behavior of the debug logging: | Name | Purpose | |-----------|-------------------------------------------------| | `DEBUG` | Enables/disables specific debugging namespaces. | | `DEBUG_HIDE_DATE` | Hide date from debug output (non-TTY). | | `DEBUG_COLORS`| Whether or not to use colors in the debug output. | | `DEBUG_DEPTH` | Object inspection depth. | | `DEBUG_SHOW_HIDDEN` | Shows hidden properties on inspected objects. | __Note:__ The environment variables beginning with `DEBUG_` end up being converted into an Options object that gets used with `%o`/`%O` formatters. See the Node.js documentation for [`util.inspect()`](https://nodejs.org/api/util.html#util_util_inspect_object_options) for the complete list. ## Formatters Debug uses [printf-style](https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Printf_format_string) formatting. Below are the officially supported formatters: | Formatter | Representation | |-----------|----------------| | `%O` | Pretty-print an Object on multiple lines. | | `%o` | Pretty-print an Object all on a single line. | | `%s` | String. | | `%d` | Number (both integer and float). | | `%j` | JSON. Replaced with the string '[Circular]' if the argument contains circular references. | | `%%` | Single percent sign ('%'). This does not consume an argument. | ### Custom formatters You can add custom formatters by extending the `debug.formatters` object. For example, if you wanted to add support for rendering a Buffer as hex with `%h`, you could do something like: ```js const createDebug = require('debug') createDebug.formatters.h = (v) => { return v.toString('hex') } // …elsewhere const debug = createDebug('foo') debug('this is hex: %h', new Buffer('hello world')) // foo this is hex: 68656c6c6f20776f726c6421 +0ms ``` ## Browser Support You can build a browser-ready script using [browserify](https://github.com/substack/node-browserify), or just use the [browserify-as-a-service](https://wzrd.in/) [build](https://wzrd.in/standalone/debug@latest), if you don't want to build it yourself. Debug's enable state is currently persisted by `localStorage`. Consider the situation shown below where you have `worker:a` and `worker:b`, and wish to debug both. You can enable this using `localStorage.debug`: ```js localStorage.debug = 'worker:*' ``` And then refresh the page. ```js a = debug('worker:a'); b = debug('worker:b'); setInterval(function(){ a('doing some work'); }, 1000); setInterval(function(){ b('doing some work'); }, 1200); ``` ## Output streams By default `debug` will log to stderr, however this can be configured per-namespace by overriding the `log` method: Example [_stdout.js_](./examples/node/stdout.js): ```js var debug = require('debug'); var error = debug('app:error'); // by default stderr is used error('goes to stderr!'); var log = debug('app:log'); // set this namespace to log via console.log log.log = console.log.bind(console); // don't forget to bind to console! log('goes to stdout'); error('still goes to stderr!'); // set all output to go via console.info // overrides all per-namespace log settings debug.log = console.info.bind(console); error('now goes to stdout via console.info'); log('still goes to stdout, but via console.info now'); ``` ## Checking whether a debug target is enabled After you've created a debug instance, you can determine whether or not it is enabled by checking the `enabled` property: ```javascript const debug = require('debug')('http'); if (debug.enabled) { // do stuff... } ``` You can also manually toggle this property to force the debug instance to be enabled or disabled. ## Authors - TJ Holowaychuk - Nathan Rajlich - Andrew Rhyne ## Backers Support us with a monthly donation and help us continue our activities. 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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. [![build status](https://app.travis-ci.com/dankogai/js-base64.svg)](https://app.travis-ci.com/github/dankogai/js-base64) # base64.js Yet another [Base64] transcoder. [Base64]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base64 ## Install ```shell $ npm install --save js-base64 ``` ## Usage ### In Browser Locally… ```html <script src="base64.js"></script> ``` … or Directly from CDN. In which case you don't even need to install. ```html <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/base64.min.js"></script> ``` This good old way loads `Base64` in the global context (`window`). Though `Base64.noConflict()` is made available, you should consider using ES6 Module to avoid tainting `window`. ### As an ES6 Module locally… ```javascript import { Base64 } from 'js-base64'; ``` ```javascript // or if you prefer no Base64 namespace import { encode, decode } from 'js-base64'; ``` or even remotely. ```html <script type="module"> // note jsdelivr.net does not automatically minify .mjs import { Base64 } from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/base64.mjs'; </script> ``` ```html <script type="module"> // or if you prefer no Base64 namespace import { encode, decode } from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/base64.mjs'; </script> ``` ### node.js (commonjs) ```javascript const {Base64} = require('js-base64'); ``` Unlike the case above, the global context is no longer modified. You can also use [esm] to `import` instead of `require`. [esm]: https://github.com/standard-things/esm ```javascript require=require('esm')(module); import {Base64} from 'js-base64'; ``` ## SYNOPSIS ```javascript let latin = 'dankogai'; let utf8 = '小飼弾' let u8s = new Uint8Array([100,97,110,107,111,103,97,105]); Base64.encode(latin); // ZGFua29nYWk= Base64.encode(latin, true)); // ZGFua29nYWk skips padding Base64.encodeURI(latin)); // ZGFua29nYWk Base64.btoa(latin); // ZGFua29nYWk= Base64.btoa(utf8); // raises exception Base64.fromUint8Array(u8s); // ZGFua29nYWk= Base64.fromUint8Array(u8s, true); // ZGFua29nYW which is URI safe Base64.encode(utf8); // 5bCP6aO85by+ Base64.encode(utf8, true) // 5bCP6aO85by- Base64.encodeURI(utf8); // 5bCP6aO85by- ``` ```javascript Base64.decode( 'ZGFua29nYWk=');// dankogai Base64.decode( 'ZGFua29nYWk'); // dankogai Base64.atob( 'ZGFua29nYWk=');// dankogai Base64.atob( '5bCP6aO85by+');// '小飼弾' which is nonsense Base64.toUint8Array('ZGFua29nYWk=');// u8s above Base64.decode( '5bCP6aO85by+');// 小飼弾 // note .decodeURI() is unnecessary since it accepts both flavors Base64.decode( '5bCP6aO85by-');// 小飼弾 ``` ```javascript Base64.isValid(0); // false: 0 is not string Base64.isValid(''); // true: a valid Base64-encoded empty byte Base64.isValid('ZA=='); // true: a valid Base64-encoded 'd' Base64.isValid('Z A='); // true: whitespaces are okay Base64.isValid('ZA'); // true: padding ='s can be omitted Base64.isValid('++'); // true: can be non URL-safe Base64.isValid('--'); // true: or URL-safe Base64.isValid('+-'); // false: can't mix both ``` ### Built-in Extensions By default `Base64` leaves built-in prototypes untouched. But you can extend them as below. ```javascript // you have to explicitly extend String.prototype Base64.extendString(); // once extended, you can do the following 'dankogai'.toBase64(); // ZGFua29nYWk= '小飼弾'.toBase64(); // 5bCP6aO85by+ '小飼弾'.toBase64(true); // 5bCP6aO85by- '小飼弾'.toBase64URI(); // 5bCP6aO85by- ab alias of .toBase64(true) '小飼弾'.toBase64URL(); // 5bCP6aO85by- an alias of .toBase64URI() 'ZGFua29nYWk='.fromBase64(); // dankogai '5bCP6aO85by+'.fromBase64(); // 小飼弾 '5bCP6aO85by-'.fromBase64(); // 小飼弾 '5bCP6aO85by-'.toUint8Array();// u8s above ``` ```javascript // you have to explicitly extend Uint8Array.prototype Base64.extendUint8Array(); // once extended, you can do the following u8s.toBase64(); // 'ZGFua29nYWk=' u8s.toBase64URI(); // 'ZGFua29nYWk' u8s.toBase64URL(); // 'ZGFua29nYWk' an alias of .toBase64URI() ``` ```javascript // extend all at once Base64.extendBuiltins() ``` ## `.decode()` vs `.atob` (and `.encode()` vs `btoa()`) Suppose you have: ``` var pngBase64 = "iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAEAAAABCAQAAAC1HAwCAAAAC0lEQVR42mNkYAAAAAYAAjCB0C8AAAAASUVORK5CYII="; ``` Which is a Base64-encoded 1x1 transparent PNG, **DO NOT USE** `Base64.decode(pngBase64)`.  Use `Base64.atob(pngBase64)` instead.  `Base64.decode()` decodes to UTF-8 string while `Base64.atob()` decodes to bytes, which is compatible to browser built-in `atob()` (Which is absent in node.js).  The same rule applies to the opposite direction. Or even better, `Base64.toUint8Array(pngBase64)`. ### If you really, really need an ES5 version You can transpiles to an ES5 that runs on IEs before 11. Do the following in your shell. ```shell $ make base64.es5.js ``` ## Brief History * Since version 3.3 it is written in TypeScript. Now `base64.mjs` is compiled from `base64.ts` then `base64.js` is generated from `base64.mjs`. * Since version 3.7 `base64.js` is ES5-compatible again (hence IE11-compabile). * Since 3.0 `js-base64` switch to ES2015 module so it is no longer compatible with legacy browsers like IE (see above) <p align="center"> <a href="https://gulpjs.com"> <img height="257" width="114" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/gulpjs/artwork/master/gulp-2x.png"> </a> </p> # glob-parent [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][npm-url] [![Azure Pipelines Build Status][azure-pipelines-image]][azure-pipelines-url] [![Travis Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![AppVeyor Build Status][appveyor-image]][appveyor-url] [![Coveralls Status][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url] [![Gitter chat][gitter-image]][gitter-url] Extract the non-magic parent path from a glob string. ## Usage ```js var globParent = require('glob-parent'); globParent('path/to/*.js'); // 'path/to' globParent('/root/path/to/*.js'); // '/root/path/to' globParent('/*.js'); // '/' globParent('*.js'); // '.' globParent('**/*.js'); // '.' globParent('path/{to,from}'); // 'path' globParent('path/!(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/?(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/+(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/*(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/@(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/**/*'); // 'path' // if provided a non-glob path, returns the nearest dir globParent('path/foo/bar.js'); // 'path/foo' globParent('path/foo/'); // 'path/foo' globParent('path/foo'); // 'path' (see issue #3 for details) ``` ## API ### `globParent(maybeGlobString, [options])` Takes a string and returns the part of the path before the glob begins. Be aware of Escaping rules and Limitations below. #### options ```js { // Disables the automatic conversion of slashes for Windows flipBackslashes: true } ``` ## Escaping The following characters have special significance in glob patterns and must be escaped if you want them to be treated as regular path characters: - `?` (question mark) unless used as a path segment alone - `*` (asterisk) - `|` (pipe) - `(` (opening parenthesis) - `)` (closing parenthesis) - `{` (opening curly brace) - `}` (closing curly brace) - `[` (opening bracket) - `]` (closing bracket) **Example** ```js globParent('foo/[bar]/') // 'foo' globParent('foo/\\[bar]/') // 'foo/[bar]' ``` ## Limitations ### Braces & Brackets This library attempts a quick and imperfect method of determining which path parts have glob magic without fully parsing/lexing the pattern. There are some advanced use cases that can trip it up, such as nested braces where the outer pair is escaped and the inner one contains a path separator. If you find yourself in the unlikely circumstance of being affected by this or need to ensure higher-fidelity glob handling in your library, it is recommended that you pre-process your input with [expand-braces] and/or [expand-brackets]. ### Windows Backslashes are not valid path separators for globs. If a path with backslashes is provided anyway, for simple cases, glob-parent will replace the path separator for you and return the non-glob parent path (now with forward-slashes, which are still valid as Windows path separators). This cannot be used in conjunction with escape characters. ```js // BAD globParent('C:\\Program Files \\(x86\\)\\*.ext') // 'C:/Program Files /(x86/)' // GOOD globParent('C:/Program Files\\(x86\\)/*.ext') // 'C:/Program Files (x86)' ``` If you are using escape characters for a pattern without path parts (i.e. relative to `cwd`), prefix with `./` to avoid confusing glob-parent. ```js // BAD globParent('foo \\[bar]') // 'foo ' globParent('foo \\[bar]*') // 'foo ' // GOOD globParent('./foo \\[bar]') // 'foo [bar]' globParent('./foo \\[bar]*') // '.' ``` ## License ISC [expand-braces]: https://github.com/jonschlinkert/expand-braces [expand-brackets]: https://github.com/jonschlinkert/expand-brackets [downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/glob-parent.svg [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/glob-parent [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/glob-parent.svg [azure-pipelines-url]: https://dev.azure.com/gulpjs/gulp/_build/latest?definitionId=2&branchName=master [azure-pipelines-image]: https://dev.azure.com/gulpjs/gulp/_apis/build/status/glob-parent?branchName=master [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/gulpjs/glob-parent [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/gulpjs/glob-parent.svg?label=travis-ci [appveyor-url]: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/gulpjs/glob-parent [appveyor-image]: https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/gulpjs/glob-parent.svg?label=appveyor [coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/r/gulpjs/glob-parent [coveralls-image]: https://img.shields.io/coveralls/gulpjs/glob-parent/master.svg [gitter-url]: https://gitter.im/gulpjs/gulp [gitter-image]: https://badges.gitter.im/gulpjs/gulp.svg # require-main-filename [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/require-main-filename.png)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/require-main-filename) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/yargs/require-main-filename/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/yargs/require-main-filename?branch=master) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/require-main-filename.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/require-main-filename) `require.main.filename` is great for figuring out the entry point for the current application. This can be combined with a module like [pkg-conf](https://www.npmjs.com/package/pkg-conf) to, _as if by magic_, load top-level configuration. Unfortunately, `require.main.filename` sometimes fails when an application is executed with an alternative process manager, e.g., [iisnode](https://github.com/tjanczuk/iisnode). `require-main-filename` is a shim that addresses this problem. ## Usage ```js var main = require('require-main-filename')() // use main as an alternative to require.main.filename. ``` ## License ISC ESQuery is a library for querying the AST output by Esprima for patterns of syntax using a CSS style selector system. Check out the demo: [demo](https://estools.github.io/esquery/) The following selectors are supported: * AST node type: `ForStatement` * [wildcard](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#universal-selector): `*` * [attribute existence](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#attribute-selectors): `[attr]` * [attribute value](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#attribute-selectors): `[attr="foo"]` or `[attr=123]` * attribute regex: `[attr=/foo.*/]` or (with flags) `[attr=/foo.*/is]` * attribute conditions: `[attr!="foo"]`, `[attr>2]`, `[attr<3]`, `[attr>=2]`, or `[attr<=3]` * nested attribute: `[attr.level2="foo"]` * field: `FunctionDeclaration > Identifier.id` * [First](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#the-first-child-pseudo) or [last](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#the-last-child-pseudo) child: `:first-child` or `:last-child` * [nth-child](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#the-nth-child-pseudo) (no ax+b support): `:nth-child(2)` * [nth-last-child](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#the-nth-last-child-pseudo) (no ax+b support): `:nth-last-child(1)` * [descendant](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#descendant-combinators): `ancestor descendant` * [child](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#child-combinators): `parent > child` * [following sibling](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#general-sibling-combinators): `node ~ sibling` * [adjacent sibling](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#adjacent-sibling-combinators): `node + adjacent` * [negation](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#negation-pseudo): `:not(ForStatement)` * [has](https://drafts.csswg.org/selectors-4/#has-pseudo): `:has(ForStatement)` * [matches-any](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#matches): `:matches([attr] > :first-child, :last-child)` * [subject indicator](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#subject): `!IfStatement > [name="foo"]` * class of AST node: `:statement`, `:expression`, `:declaration`, `:function`, or `:pattern` [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/estools/esquery.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/estools/esquery) bs58 ==== [![build status](https://travis-ci.org/cryptocoinjs/bs58.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/cryptocoinjs/bs58) JavaScript component to compute base 58 encoding. This encoding is typically used for crypto currencies such as Bitcoin. **Note:** If you're looking for **base 58 check** encoding, see: [https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bs58check](https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bs58check), which depends upon this library. Install ------- npm i --save bs58 API --- ### encode(input) `input` must be a [Buffer](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html) or an `Array`. It returns a `string`. **example**: ```js const bs58 = require('bs58') const bytes = Buffer.from('003c176e659bea0f29a3e9bf7880c112b1b31b4dc826268187', 'hex') const address = bs58.encode(bytes) console.log(address) // => 16UjcYNBG9GTK4uq2f7yYEbuifqCzoLMGS ``` ### decode(input) `input` must be a base 58 encoded string. Returns a [Buffer](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html). **example**: ```js const bs58 = require('bs58') const address = '16UjcYNBG9GTK4uq2f7yYEbuifqCzoLMGS' const bytes = bs58.decode(address) console.log(out.toString('hex')) // => 003c176e659bea0f29a3e9bf7880c112b1b31b4dc826268187 ``` Hack / Test ----------- Uses JavaScript standard style. Read more: [![js-standard-style](https://cdn.rawgit.com/feross/standard/master/badge.svg)](https://github.com/feross/standard) Credits ------- - [Mike Hearn](https://github.com/mikehearn) for original Java implementation - [Stefan Thomas](https://github.com/justmoon) for porting to JavaScript - [Stephan Pair](https://github.com/gasteve) for buffer improvements - [Daniel Cousens](https://github.com/dcousens) for cleanup and merging improvements from bitcoinjs-lib - [Jared Deckard](https://github.com/deckar01) for killing `bigi` as a dependency License ------- MIT # lodash.sortby v4.7.0 The [lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.sortBy` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.sortby ``` In Node.js: ```js var sortBy = require('lodash.sortby'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#sortBy) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.7.0-npm-packages/lodash.sortby) for more details. # word-wrap [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/word-wrap.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/word-wrap) [![NPM monthly downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/word-wrap.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/word-wrap) [![NPM total downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dt/word-wrap.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/word-wrap) [![Linux Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jonschlinkert/word-wrap.svg?style=flat&label=Travis)](https://travis-ci.org/jonschlinkert/word-wrap) > Wrap words to a specified length. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install --save word-wrap ``` ## Usage ```js var wrap = require('word-wrap'); wrap('Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.'); ``` Results in: ``` Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. ``` ## Options ![image](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/383994/6543728/7a381c08-c4f6-11e4-8b7d-b6ba197569c9.png) ### options.width Type: `Number` Default: `50` The width of the text before wrapping to a new line. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {width: 60}); ``` ### options.indent Type: `String` Default: `` (two spaces) The string to use at the beginning of each line. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {indent: ' '}); ``` ### options.newline Type: `String` Default: `\n` The string to use at the end of each line. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {newline: '\n\n'}); ``` ### options.escape Type: `function` Default: `function(str){return str;}` An escape function to run on each line after splitting them. **Example:** ```js var xmlescape = require('xml-escape'); wrap(str, { escape: function(string){ return xmlescape(string); } }); ``` ### options.trim Type: `Boolean` Default: `false` Trim trailing whitespace from the returned string. This option is included since `.trim()` would also strip the leading indentation from the first line. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {trim: true}); ``` ### options.cut Type: `Boolean` Default: `false` Break a word between any two letters when the word is longer than the specified width. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {cut: true}); ``` ## About ### Related projects * [common-words](https://www.npmjs.com/package/common-words): Updated list (JSON) of the 100 most common words in the English language. Useful for… [more](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/common-words) | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/common-words "Updated list (JSON) of the 100 most common words in the English language. Useful for excluding these words from arrays.") * [shuffle-words](https://www.npmjs.com/package/shuffle-words): Shuffle the words in a string and optionally the letters in each word using the… [more](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/shuffle-words) | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/shuffle-words "Shuffle the words in a string and optionally the letters in each word using the Fisher-Yates algorithm. Useful for creating test fixtures, benchmarking samples, etc.") * [unique-words](https://www.npmjs.com/package/unique-words): Return the unique words in a string or array. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/unique-words "Return the unique words in a string or array.") * [wordcount](https://www.npmjs.com/package/wordcount): Count the words in a string. Support for english, CJK and Cyrillic. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/wordcount "Count the words in a string. Support for english, CJK and Cyrillic.") ### Contributing Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). ### Contributors | **Commits** | **Contributor** | | --- | --- | | 43 | [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) | | 2 | [lordvlad](https://github.com/lordvlad) | | 2 | [hildjj](https://github.com/hildjj) | | 1 | [danilosampaio](https://github.com/danilosampaio) | | 1 | [2fd](https://github.com/2fd) | | 1 | [toddself](https://github.com/toddself) | | 1 | [wolfgang42](https://github.com/wolfgang42) | | 1 | [zachhale](https://github.com/zachhale) | ### Building docs _(This project's readme.md is generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the [.verb.md](.verb.md) readme template.)_ To generate the readme, run the following command: ```sh $ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb ``` ### Running tests Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command: ```sh $ npm install && npm test ``` ### Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [github/jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [twitter/jonschlinkert](https://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) ### License Copyright © 2017, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), v0.6.0, on June 02, 2017._ The AssemblyScript Runtime ========================== The runtime provides the functionality necessary to dynamically allocate and deallocate memory of objects, arrays and buffers, as well as collect garbage that is no longer used. The current implementation is either a Two-Color Mark & Sweep (TCMS) garbage collector that must be called manually when the execution stack is unwound or an Incremental Tri-Color Mark & Sweep (ITCMS) garbage collector that is fully automated with a shadow stack, implemented on top of a Two-Level Segregate Fit (TLSF) memory manager. It's not designed to be the fastest of its kind, but intentionally focuses on simplicity and ease of integration until we can replace it with the real deal, i.e. Wasm GC. Interface --------- ### Garbage collector / `--exportRuntime` * **__new**(size: `usize`, id: `u32` = 0): `usize`<br /> Dynamically allocates a GC object of at least the specified size and returns its address. Alignment is guaranteed to be 16 bytes to fit up to v128 values naturally. GC-allocated objects cannot be used with `__realloc` and `__free`. * **__pin**(ptr: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Pins the object pointed to by `ptr` externally so it and its directly reachable members and indirectly reachable objects do not become garbage collected. * **__unpin**(ptr: `usize`): `void`<br /> Unpins the object pointed to by `ptr` externally so it can become garbage collected. * **__collect**(): `void`<br /> Performs a full garbage collection. ### Internals * **__alloc**(size: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Dynamically allocates a chunk of memory of at least the specified size and returns its address. Alignment is guaranteed to be 16 bytes to fit up to v128 values naturally. * **__realloc**(ptr: `usize`, size: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Dynamically changes the size of a chunk of memory, possibly moving it to a new address. * **__free**(ptr: `usize`): `void`<br /> Frees a dynamically allocated chunk of memory by its address. * **__renew**(ptr: `usize`, size: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Like `__realloc`, but for `__new`ed GC objects. * **__link**(parentPtr: `usize`, childPtr: `usize`, expectMultiple: `bool`): `void`<br /> Introduces a link from a parent object to a child object, i.e. upon `parent.field = child`. * **__visit**(ptr: `usize`, cookie: `u32`): `void`<br /> Concrete visitor implementation called during traversal. Cookie can be used to indicate one of multiple operations. * **__visit_globals**(cookie: `u32`): `void`<br /> Calls `__visit` on each global that is of a managed type. * **__visit_members**(ptr: `usize`, cookie: `u32`): `void`<br /> Calls `__visit` on each member of the object pointed to by `ptr`. * **__typeinfo**(id: `u32`): `RTTIFlags`<br /> Obtains the runtime type information for objects with the specified runtime id. Runtime type information is a set of flags indicating whether a type is managed, an array or similar, and what the relevant alignments when creating an instance externally are etc. * **__instanceof**(ptr: `usize`, classId: `u32`): `bool`<br /> Tests if the object pointed to by `ptr` is an instance of the specified class id. ITCMS / `--runtime incremental` ----- The Incremental Tri-Color Mark & Sweep garbage collector maintains a separate shadow stack of managed values in the background to achieve full automation. Maintaining another stack introduces some overhead compared to the simpler Two-Color Mark & Sweep garbage collector, but makes it independent of whether the execution stack is unwound or not when it is invoked, so the garbage collector can run interleaved with the program. There are several constants one can experiment with to tweak ITCMS's automation: * `--use ASC_GC_GRANULARITY=1024`<br /> How often to interrupt. The default of 1024 means "interrupt each 1024 bytes allocated". * `--use ASC_GC_STEPFACTOR=200`<br /> How long to interrupt. The default of 200% means "run at double the speed of allocations". * `--use ASC_GC_IDLEFACTOR=200`<br /> How long to idle. The default of 200% means "wait for memory to double before kicking in again". * `--use ASC_GC_MARKCOST=1`<br /> How costly it is to mark one object. Budget per interrupt is `GRANULARITY * STEPFACTOR / 100`. * `--use ASC_GC_SWEEPCOST=10`<br /> How costly it is to sweep one object. Budget per interrupt is `GRANULARITY * STEPFACTOR / 100`. TCMS / `--runtime minimal` ---- If automation and low pause times aren't strictly necessary, using the Two-Color Mark & Sweep garbage collector instead by invoking collection manually at appropriate times when the execution stack is unwound may be more performant as it simpler and has less overhead. The execution stack is typically unwound when invoking the collector externally, at a place that is not indirectly called from Wasm. STUB / `--runtime stub` ---- The stub is a maximally minimal runtime substitute, consisting of a simple and fast bump allocator with no means of freeing up memory again, except when freeing the respective most recently allocated object on top of the bump. Useful where memory is not a concern, and/or where it is sufficient to destroy the whole module including any potential garbage after execution. See also: [Garbage collection](https://www.assemblyscript.org/garbage-collection.html) # cliui [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/cliui.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/cliui) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/yargs/cliui/badge.svg?branch=)](https://coveralls.io/r/yargs/cliui?branch=) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/cliui.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cliui) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) easily create complex multi-column command-line-interfaces. ## Example ```js var ui = require('cliui')() ui.div('Usage: $0 [command] [options]') ui.div({ text: 'Options:', padding: [2, 0, 2, 0] }) ui.div( { text: "-f, --file", width: 20, padding: [0, 4, 0, 4] }, { text: "the file to load." + chalk.green("(if this description is long it wraps).") , width: 20 }, { text: chalk.red("[required]"), align: 'right' } ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` <img width="500" src="screenshot.png"> ## Layout DSL cliui exposes a simple layout DSL: If you create a single `ui.div`, passing a string rather than an object: * `\n`: characters will be interpreted as new rows. * `\t`: characters will be interpreted as new columns. * `\s`: characters will be interpreted as padding. **as an example...** ```js var ui = require('./')({ width: 60 }) ui.div( 'Usage: node ./bin/foo.js\n' + ' <regex>\t provide a regex\n' + ' <glob>\t provide a glob\t [required]' ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` **will output:** ```shell Usage: node ./bin/foo.js <regex> provide a regex <glob> provide a glob [required] ``` ## Methods ```js cliui = require('cliui') ``` ### cliui({width: integer}) Specify the maximum width of the UI being generated. If no width is provided, cliui will try to get the current window's width and use it, and if that doesn't work, width will be set to `80`. ### cliui({wrap: boolean}) Enable or disable the wrapping of text in a column. ### cliui.div(column, column, column) Create a row with any number of columns, a column can either be a string, or an object with the following options: * **text:** some text to place in the column. * **width:** the width of a column. * **align:** alignment, `right` or `center`. * **padding:** `[top, right, bottom, left]`. * **border:** should a border be placed around the div? ### cliui.span(column, column, column) Similar to `div`, except the next row will be appended without a new line being created. ### cliui.resetOutput() Resets the UI elements of the current cliui instance, maintaining the values set for `width` and `wrap`. # axios // helpers The modules found in `helpers/` should be generic modules that are _not_ specific to the domain logic of axios. These modules could theoretically be published to npm on their own and consumed by other modules or apps. Some examples of generic modules are things like: - Browser polyfills - Managing cookies - Parsing HTTP headers # Acorn-JSX [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/acornjs/acorn-jsx.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/acornjs/acorn-jsx) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/acorn-jsx.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/acorn-jsx) This is plugin for [Acorn](http://marijnhaverbeke.nl/acorn/) - a tiny, fast JavaScript parser, written completely in JavaScript. It was created as an experimental alternative, faster [React.js JSX](http://facebook.github.io/react/docs/jsx-in-depth.html) parser. Later, it replaced the [official parser](https://github.com/facebookarchive/esprima) and these days is used by many prominent development tools. ## Transpiler Please note that this tool only parses source code to JSX AST, which is useful for various language tools and services. If you want to transpile your code to regular ES5-compliant JavaScript with source map, check out [Babel](https://babeljs.io/) and [Buble](https://buble.surge.sh/) transpilers which use `acorn-jsx` under the hood. ## Usage Requiring this module provides you with an Acorn plugin that you can use like this: ```javascript var acorn = require("acorn"); var jsx = require("acorn-jsx"); acorn.Parser.extend(jsx()).parse("my(<jsx/>, 'code');"); ``` Note that official spec doesn't support mix of XML namespaces and object-style access in tag names (#27) like in `<namespace:Object.Property />`, so it was deprecated in `[email protected]`. If you still want to opt-in to support of such constructions, you can pass the following option: ```javascript acorn.Parser.extend(jsx({ allowNamespacedObjects: true })) ``` Also, since most apps use pure React transformer, a new option was introduced that allows to prohibit namespaces completely: ```javascript acorn.Parser.extend(jsx({ allowNamespaces: false })) ``` Note that by default `allowNamespaces` is enabled for spec compliancy. ## License This plugin is issued under the [MIT license](./LICENSE). # <img src="./logo.png" alt="bn.js" width="160" height="160" /> > BigNum in pure javascript [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/indutny/bn.js.png)](http://travis-ci.org/indutny/bn.js) ## Install `npm install --save bn.js` ## Usage ```js const BN = require('bn.js'); var a = new BN('dead', 16); var b = new BN('101010', 2); var res = a.add(b); console.log(res.toString(10)); // 57047 ``` **Note**: decimals are not supported in this library. ## Notation ### Prefixes There are several prefixes to instructions that affect the way the work. Here is the list of them in the order of appearance in the function name: * `i` - perform operation in-place, storing the result in the host object (on which the method was invoked). Might be used to avoid number allocation costs * `u` - unsigned, ignore the sign of operands when performing operation, or always return positive value. Second case applies to reduction operations like `mod()`. In such cases if the result will be negative - modulo will be added to the result to make it positive ### Postfixes * `n` - the argument of the function must be a plain JavaScript Number. Decimals are not supported. * `rn` - both argument and return value of the function are plain JavaScript Numbers. Decimals are not supported. ### Examples * `a.iadd(b)` - perform addition on `a` and `b`, storing the result in `a` * `a.umod(b)` - reduce `a` modulo `b`, returning positive value * `a.iushln(13)` - shift bits of `a` left by 13 ## Instructions Prefixes/postfixes are put in parens at the of the line. `endian` - could be either `le` (little-endian) or `be` (big-endian). ### Utilities * `a.clone()` - clone number * `a.toString(base, length)` - convert to base-string and pad with zeroes * `a.toNumber()` - convert to Javascript Number (limited to 53 bits) * `a.toJSON()` - convert to JSON compatible hex string (alias of `toString(16)`) * `a.toArray(endian, length)` - convert to byte `Array`, and optionally zero pad to length, throwing if already exceeding * `a.toArrayLike(type, endian, length)` - convert to an instance of `type`, which must behave like an `Array` * `a.toBuffer(endian, length)` - convert to Node.js Buffer (if available). For compatibility with browserify and similar tools, use this instead: `a.toArrayLike(Buffer, endian, length)` * `a.bitLength()` - get number of bits occupied * `a.zeroBits()` - return number of less-significant consequent zero bits (example: `1010000` has 4 zero bits) * `a.byteLength()` - return number of bytes occupied * `a.isNeg()` - true if the number is negative * `a.isEven()` - no comments * `a.isOdd()` - no comments * `a.isZero()` - no comments * `a.cmp(b)` - compare numbers and return `-1` (a `<` b), `0` (a `==` b), or `1` (a `>` b) depending on the comparison result (`ucmp`, `cmpn`) * `a.lt(b)` - `a` less than `b` (`n`) * `a.lte(b)` - `a` less than or equals `b` (`n`) * `a.gt(b)` - `a` greater than `b` (`n`) * `a.gte(b)` - `a` greater than or equals `b` (`n`) * `a.eq(b)` - `a` equals `b` (`n`) * `a.toTwos(width)` - convert to two's complement representation, where `width` is bit width * `a.fromTwos(width)` - convert from two's complement representation, where `width` is the bit width * `BN.isBN(object)` - returns true if the supplied `object` is a BN.js instance * `BN.max(a, b)` - return `a` if `a` bigger than `b` * `BN.min(a, b)` - return `a` if `a` less than `b` ### Arithmetics * `a.neg()` - negate sign (`i`) * `a.abs()` - absolute value (`i`) * `a.add(b)` - addition (`i`, `n`, `in`) * `a.sub(b)` - subtraction (`i`, `n`, `in`) * `a.mul(b)` - multiply (`i`, `n`, `in`) * `a.sqr()` - square (`i`) * `a.pow(b)` - raise `a` to the power of `b` * `a.div(b)` - divide (`divn`, `idivn`) * `a.mod(b)` - reduct (`u`, `n`) (but no `umodn`) * `a.divmod(b)` - quotient and modulus obtained by dividing * `a.divRound(b)` - rounded division ### Bit operations * `a.or(b)` - or (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.and(b)` - and (`i`, `u`, `iu`, `andln`) (NOTE: `andln` is going to be replaced with `andn` in future) * `a.xor(b)` - xor (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.setn(b, value)` - set specified bit to `value` * `a.shln(b)` - shift left (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.shrn(b)` - shift right (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.testn(b)` - test if specified bit is set * `a.maskn(b)` - clear bits with indexes higher or equal to `b` (`i`) * `a.bincn(b)` - add `1 << b` to the number * `a.notn(w)` - not (for the width specified by `w`) (`i`) ### Reduction * `a.gcd(b)` - GCD * `a.egcd(b)` - Extended GCD results (`{ a: ..., b: ..., gcd: ... }`) * `a.invm(b)` - inverse `a` modulo `b` ## Fast reduction When doing lots of reductions using the same modulo, it might be beneficial to use some tricks: like [Montgomery multiplication][0], or using special algorithm for [Mersenne Prime][1]. ### Reduction context To enable this tricks one should create a reduction context: ```js var red = BN.red(num); ``` where `num` is just a BN instance. Or: ```js var red = BN.red(primeName); ``` Where `primeName` is either of these [Mersenne Primes][1]: * `'k256'` * `'p224'` * `'p192'` * `'p25519'` Or: ```js var red = BN.mont(num); ``` To reduce numbers with [Montgomery trick][0]. `.mont()` is generally faster than `.red(num)`, but slower than `BN.red(primeName)`. ### Converting numbers Before performing anything in reduction context - numbers should be converted to it. Usually, this means that one should: * Convert inputs to reducted ones * Operate on them in reduction context * Convert outputs back from the reduction context Here is how one may convert numbers to `red`: ```js var redA = a.toRed(red); ``` Where `red` is a reduction context created using instructions above Here is how to convert them back: ```js var a = redA.fromRed(); ``` ### Red instructions Most of the instructions from the very start of this readme have their counterparts in red context: * `a.redAdd(b)`, `a.redIAdd(b)` * `a.redSub(b)`, `a.redISub(b)` * `a.redShl(num)` * `a.redMul(b)`, `a.redIMul(b)` * `a.redSqr()`, `a.redISqr()` * `a.redSqrt()` - square root modulo reduction context's prime * `a.redInvm()` - modular inverse of the number * `a.redNeg()` * `a.redPow(b)` - modular exponentiation ### Number Size Optimized for elliptic curves that work with 256-bit numbers. There is no limitation on the size of the numbers. ## LICENSE This software is licensed under the MIT License. [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montgomery_modular_multiplication [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mersenne_prime [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![build status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Test coverage][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url] [![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/eslint/doctrine](https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg)](https://gitter.im/eslint/doctrine?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge) # Doctrine Doctrine is a [JSDoc](http://usejsdoc.org) parser that parses documentation comments from JavaScript (you need to pass in the comment, not a whole JavaScript file). ## Installation You can install Doctrine using [npm](https://npmjs.com): ``` $ npm install doctrine --save-dev ``` Doctrine can also be used in web browsers using [Browserify](http://browserify.org). ## Usage Require doctrine inside of your JavaScript: ```js var doctrine = require("doctrine"); ``` ### parse() The primary method is `parse()`, which accepts two arguments: the JSDoc comment to parse and an optional options object. The available options are: * `unwrap` - set to `true` to delete the leading `/**`, any `*` that begins a line, and the trailing `*/` from the source text. Default: `false`. * `tags` - an array of tags to return. When specified, Doctrine returns only tags in this array. For example, if `tags` is `["param"]`, then only `@param` tags will be returned. Default: `null`. * `recoverable` - set to `true` to keep parsing even when syntax errors occur. Default: `false`. * `sloppy` - set to `true` to allow optional parameters to be specified in brackets (`@param {string} [foo]`). Default: `false`. * `lineNumbers` - set to `true` to add `lineNumber` to each node, specifying the line on which the node is found in the source. Default: `false`. * `range` - set to `true` to add `range` to each node, specifying the start and end index of the node in the original comment. Default: `false`. Here's a simple example: ```js var ast = doctrine.parse( [ "/**", " * This function comment is parsed by doctrine", " * @param {{ok:String}} userName", "*/" ].join('\n'), { unwrap: true }); ``` This example returns the following AST: { "description": "This function comment is parsed by doctrine", "tags": [ { "title": "param", "description": null, "type": { "type": "RecordType", "fields": [ { "type": "FieldType", "key": "ok", "value": { "type": "NameExpression", "name": "String" } } ] }, "name": "userName" } ] } See the [demo page](http://eslint.org/doctrine/demo/) more detail. ## Team These folks keep the project moving and are resources for help: * Nicholas C. Zakas ([@nzakas](https://github.com/nzakas)) - project lead * Yusuke Suzuki ([@constellation](https://github.com/constellation)) - reviewer ## Contributing Issues and pull requests will be triaged and responded to as quickly as possible. We operate under the [ESLint Contributor Guidelines](http://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing), so please be sure to read them before contributing. If you're not sure where to dig in, check out the [issues](https://github.com/eslint/doctrine/issues). ## Frequently Asked Questions ### Can I pass a whole JavaScript file to Doctrine? No. Doctrine can only parse JSDoc comments, so you'll need to pass just the JSDoc comment to Doctrine in order to work. ### License #### doctrine Copyright JS Foundation and other contributors, https://js.foundation Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. #### esprima some of functions is derived from esprima Copyright (C) 2012, 2011 [Ariya Hidayat](http://ariya.ofilabs.com/about) (twitter: [@ariyahidayat](http://twitter.com/ariyahidayat)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. #### closure-compiler some of extensions is derived from closure-compiler Apache License Version 2.0, January 2004 http://www.apache.org/licenses/ ### Where to ask for help? Join our [Chatroom](https://gitter.im/eslint/doctrine) [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/doctrine.svg?style=flat-square [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/doctrine [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/eslint/doctrine/master.svg?style=flat-square [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/eslint/doctrine [coveralls-image]: https://img.shields.io/coveralls/eslint/doctrine/master.svg?style=flat-square [coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/r/eslint/doctrine?branch=master [downloads-image]: http://img.shields.io/npm/dm/doctrine.svg?style=flat-square [downloads-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/doctrine # which-module > Find the module object for something that was require()d [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/nexdrew/which-module.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/nexdrew/which-module) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/nexdrew/which-module/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/nexdrew/which-module?branch=master) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) Find the `module` object in `require.cache` for something that was `require()`d or `import`ed - essentially a reverse `require()` lookup. Useful for libs that want to e.g. lookup a filename for a module or submodule that it did not `require()` itself. ## Install and Usage ``` npm install --save which-module ``` ```js const whichModule = require('which-module') console.log(whichModule(require('something'))) // Module { // id: '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/index.js', // exports: [Function], // parent: ..., // filename: '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/index.js', // loaded: true, // children: [], // paths: [ '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/node_modules', // '/path/to/project/node_modules', // '/path/to/node_modules', // '/path/node_modules', // '/node_modules' ] } ``` ## API ### `whichModule(exported)` Return the [`module` object](https://nodejs.org/api/modules.html#modules_the_module_object), if any, that represents the given argument in the `require.cache`. `exported` can be anything that was previously `require()`d or `import`ed as a module, submodule, or dependency - which means `exported` is identical to the `module.exports` returned by this method. If `exported` did not come from the `exports` of a `module` in `require.cache`, then this method returns `null`. ## License ISC © Contributors # [nearley](http://nearley.js.org) ↗️ [![JS.ORG](https://img.shields.io/badge/js.org-nearley-ffb400.svg?style=flat-square)](http://js.org) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/nearley.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/js/nearley) nearley is a simple, fast and powerful parsing toolkit. It consists of: 1. [A powerful, modular DSL for describing languages](https://nearley.js.org/docs/grammar) 2. [An efficient, lightweight Earley parser](https://nearley.js.org/docs/parser) 3. [Loads of tools, editor plug-ins, and other goodies!](https://nearley.js.org/docs/tooling) nearley is a **streaming** parser with support for catching **errors** gracefully and providing _all_ parsings for **ambiguous** grammars. It is compatible with a variety of **lexers** (we recommend [moo](http://github.com/tjvr/moo)). It comes with tools for creating **tests**, **railroad diagrams** and **fuzzers** from your grammars, and has support for a variety of editors and platforms. It works in both node and the browser. Unlike most other parser generators, nearley can handle *any* grammar you can define in BNF (and more!). In particular, while most existing JS parsers such as PEGjs and Jison choke on certain grammars (e.g. [left recursive ones](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left_recursion)), nearley handles them easily and efficiently by using the [Earley parsing algorithm](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earley_parser). nearley is used by a wide variety of projects: - [artificial intelligence](https://github.com/ChalmersGU-AI-course/shrdlite-course-project) and - [computational linguistics](https://wiki.eecs.yorku.ca/course_archive/2014-15/W/6339/useful_handouts) classes at universities; - [file format parsers](https://github.com/raymond-h/node-dmi); - [data-driven markup languages](https://github.com/idyll-lang/idyll-compiler); - [compilers for real-world programming languages](https://github.com/sizigi/lp5562); - and nearley itself! The nearley compiler is bootstrapped. nearley is an npm [staff pick](https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm-collection-staff-picks). ## Documentation Please visit our website https://nearley.js.org to get started! You will find a tutorial, detailed reference documents, and links to several real-world examples to get inspired. ## Contributing Please read [this document](.github/CONTRIBUTING.md) *before* working on nearley. If you are interested in contributing but unsure where to start, take a look at the issues labeled "up for grabs" on the issue tracker, or message a maintainer (@kach or @tjvr on Github). nearley is MIT licensed. A big thanks to Nathan Dinsmore for teaching me how to Earley, Aria Stewart for helping structure nearley into a mature module, and Robin Windels for bootstrapping the grammar. Additionally, Jacob Edelman wrote an experimental JavaScript parser with nearley and contributed ideas for EBNF support. Joshua T. Corbin refactored the compiler to be much, much prettier. Bojidar Marinov implemented postprocessors-in-other-languages. Shachar Itzhaky fixed a subtle bug with nullables. ## Citing nearley If you are citing nearley in academic work, please use the following BibTeX entry. ```bibtex @misc{nearley, author = "Kartik Chandra and Tim Radvan", title = "{nearley}: a parsing toolkit for {JavaScript}", year = {2014}, doi = {10.5281/zenodo.3897993}, url = {https://github.com/kach/nearley} } ``` # fast-levenshtein - Levenshtein algorithm in Javascript [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein.png)](http://travis-ci.org/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein) [![NPM module](https://badge.fury.io/js/fast-levenshtein.png)](https://badge.fury.io/js/fast-levenshtein) [![NPM downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/fast-levenshtein.svg?maxAge=2592000)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/fast-levenshtein) [![Follow on Twitter](https://img.shields.io/twitter/url/http/shields.io.svg?style=social&label=Follow&maxAge=2592000)](https://twitter.com/hiddentao) An efficient Javascript implementation of the [Levenshtein algorithm](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levenshtein_distance) with locale-specific collator support. ## Features * Works in node.js and in the browser. * Better performance than other implementations by not needing to store the whole matrix ([more info](http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/13525/Fast-memory-efficient-Levenshtein-algorithm)). * Locale-sensitive string comparisions if needed. * Comprehensive test suite and performance benchmark. * Small: <1 KB minified and gzipped ## Installation ### node.js Install using [npm](http://npmjs.org/): ```bash $ npm install fast-levenshtein ``` ### Browser Using bower: ```bash $ bower install fast-levenshtein ``` If you are not using any module loader system then the API will then be accessible via the `window.Levenshtein` object. ## Examples **Default usage** ```javascript var levenshtein = require('fast-levenshtein'); var distance = levenshtein.get('back', 'book'); // 2 var distance = levenshtein.get('我愛你', '我叫你'); // 1 ``` **Locale-sensitive string comparisons** It supports using [Intl.Collator](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Collator) for locale-sensitive string comparisons: ```javascript var levenshtein = require('fast-levenshtein'); levenshtein.get('mikailovitch', 'Mikhaïlovitch', { useCollator: true}); // 1 ``` ## Building and Testing To build the code and run the tests: ```bash $ npm install -g grunt-cli $ npm install $ npm run build ``` ## Performance _Thanks to [Titus Wormer](https://github.com/wooorm) for [encouraging me](https://github.com/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein/issues/1) to do this._ Benchmarked against other node.js levenshtein distance modules (on Macbook Air 2012, Core i7, 8GB RAM): ```bash Running suite Implementation comparison [benchmark/speed.js]... >> levenshtein-edit-distance x 234 ops/sec ±3.02% (73 runs sampled) >> levenshtein-component x 422 ops/sec ±4.38% (83 runs sampled) >> levenshtein-deltas x 283 ops/sec ±3.83% (78 runs sampled) >> natural x 255 ops/sec ±0.76% (88 runs sampled) >> levenshtein x 180 ops/sec ±3.55% (86 runs sampled) >> fast-levenshtein x 1,792 ops/sec ±2.72% (95 runs sampled) Benchmark done. Fastest test is fast-levenshtein at 4.2x faster than levenshtein-component ``` You can run this benchmark yourself by doing: ```bash $ npm install $ npm run build $ npm run benchmark ``` ## Contributing If you wish to submit a pull request please update and/or create new tests for any changes you make and ensure the grunt build passes. See [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) for details. ## License MIT - see [LICENSE.md](https://github.com/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein/blob/master/LICENSE.md) [![NPM registry](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/as-bignum.svg?style=for-the-badge)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/as-bignum)[![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/master?style=for-the-badge)](https://travis-ci.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum)[![NPM license](https://img.shields.io/badge/license-Apache%202.0-ba68c8.svg?style=for-the-badge)](LICENSE.md) ## WebAssembly fixed length big numbers written on [AssemblyScript](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript) ### Status: Work in progress Provide wide numeric types such as `u128`, `u256`, `i128`, `i256` and fixed points and also its arithmetic operations. Namespace `safe` contain equivalents with overflow/underflow traps. All kind of types pretty useful for economical and cryptographic usages and provide deterministic behavior. ### Install > yarn add as-bignum or > npm i as-bignum ### Usage via AssemblyScript ```ts import { u128 } from "as-bignum"; declare function logF64(value: f64): void; declare function logU128(hi: u64, lo: u64): void; var a = u128.One; var b = u128.from(-32); // same as u128.from<i32>(-32) var c = new u128(0x1, -0xF); var d = u128.from(0x0123456789ABCDEF); // same as u128.from<i64>(0x0123456789ABCDEF) var e = u128.from('0x0123456789ABCDEF01234567'); var f = u128.fromString('11100010101100101', 2); // same as u128.from('0b11100010101100101') var r = d / c + (b << 5) + e; logF64(r.as<f64>()); logU128(r.hi, r.lo); ``` ### Usage via JavaScript/Typescript ```ts TODO ``` ### List of types - [x] [`u128`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/integer/u128.ts) unsigned type (tested) - [ ] [`u256`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/integer/u256.ts) unsigned type (very basic) - [ ] `i128` signed type - [ ] `i256` signed type --- - [x] [`safe.u128`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/integer/safe/u128.ts) unsigned type (tested) - [ ] `safe.u256` unsigned type - [ ] `safe.i128` signed type - [ ] `safe.i256` signed type --- - [ ] [`fp128<Q>`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/fixed/fp128.ts) generic fixed point signed type٭ (very basic for now) - [ ] `fp256<Q>` generic fixed point signed type٭ --- - [ ] `safe.fp128<Q>` generic fixed point signed type٭ - [ ] `safe.fp256<Q>` generic fixed point signed type٭ ٭ _typename_ `Q` _is a type representing count of fractional bits_ ### esutils [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/estools/esutils.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/estools/esutils) esutils ([esutils](http://github.com/estools/esutils)) is utility box for ECMAScript language tools. ### API ### ast #### ast.isExpression(node) Returns true if `node` is an Expression as defined in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [11](https://es5.github.io/#x11). #### ast.isStatement(node) Returns true if `node` is a Statement as defined in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [12](https://es5.github.io/#x12). #### ast.isIterationStatement(node) Returns true if `node` is an IterationStatement as defined in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [12.6](https://es5.github.io/#x12.6). #### ast.isSourceElement(node) Returns true if `node` is a SourceElement as defined in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [14](https://es5.github.io/#x14). #### ast.trailingStatement(node) Returns `Statement?` if `node` has trailing `Statement`. ```js if (cond) consequent; ``` When taking this `IfStatement`, returns `consequent;` statement. #### ast.isProblematicIfStatement(node) Returns true if `node` is a problematic IfStatement. If `node` is a problematic `IfStatement`, `node` cannot be represented as an one on one JavaScript code. ```js { type: 'IfStatement', consequent: { type: 'WithStatement', body: { type: 'IfStatement', consequent: {type: 'EmptyStatement'} } }, alternate: {type: 'EmptyStatement'} } ``` The above node cannot be represented as a JavaScript code, since the top level `else` alternate belongs to an inner `IfStatement`. ### code #### code.isDecimalDigit(code) Return true if provided code is decimal digit. #### code.isHexDigit(code) Return true if provided code is hexadecimal digit. #### code.isOctalDigit(code) Return true if provided code is octal digit. #### code.isWhiteSpace(code) Return true if provided code is white space. White space characters are formally defined in ECMA262. #### code.isLineTerminator(code) Return true if provided code is line terminator. Line terminator characters are formally defined in ECMA262. #### code.isIdentifierStart(code) Return true if provided code can be the first character of ECMA262 Identifier. They are formally defined in ECMA262. #### code.isIdentifierPart(code) Return true if provided code can be the trailing character of ECMA262 Identifier. They are formally defined in ECMA262. ### keyword #### keyword.isKeywordES5(id, strict) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is a Keyword or Future Reserved Word in ECMA262 edition 5.1. They are formally defined in ECMA262 sections [7.6.1.1](http://es5.github.io/#x7.6.1.1) and [7.6.1.2](http://es5.github.io/#x7.6.1.2), respectively. If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is a Keyword or Future Reserved Word under strict mode. #### keyword.isKeywordES6(id, strict) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is a Keyword or Future Reserved Word in ECMA262 edition 6. They are formally defined in ECMA262 sections [11.6.2.1](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-keywords) and [11.6.2.2](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-future-reserved-words), respectively. If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is a Keyword or Future Reserved Word under strict mode. #### keyword.isReservedWordES5(id, strict) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is a Reserved Word in ECMA262 edition 5.1. They are formally defined in ECMA262 section [7.6.1](http://es5.github.io/#x7.6.1). If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is a Reserved Word under strict mode. #### keyword.isReservedWordES6(id, strict) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is a Reserved Word in ECMA262 edition 6. They are formally defined in ECMA262 section [11.6.2](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-reserved-words). If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is a Reserved Word under strict mode. #### keyword.isRestrictedWord(id) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is one of `eval` or `arguments`. They are restricted in strict mode code throughout ECMA262 edition 5.1 and in ECMA262 edition 6 section [12.1.1](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-identifiers-static-semantics-early-errors). #### keyword.isIdentifierNameES5(id) Return true if provided identifier string is an IdentifierName as specified in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [7.6](https://es5.github.io/#x7.6). #### keyword.isIdentifierNameES6(id) Return true if provided identifier string is an IdentifierName as specified in ECMA262 edition 6 section [11.6](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-names-and-keywords). #### keyword.isIdentifierES5(id, strict) Return true if provided identifier string is an Identifier as specified in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [7.6](https://es5.github.io/#x7.6). If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is an Identifier under strict mode. #### keyword.isIdentifierES6(id, strict) Return true if provided identifier string is an Identifier as specified in ECMA262 edition 6 section [12.1](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-identifiers). If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is an Identifier under strict mode. ### License Copyright (C) 2013 [Yusuke Suzuki](http://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](http://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. # sprintf.js **sprintf.js** is a complete open source JavaScript sprintf implementation for the *browser* and *node.js*. Its prototype is simple: string sprintf(string format , [mixed arg1 [, mixed arg2 [ ,...]]]) The placeholders in the format string are marked by `%` and are followed by one or more of these elements, in this order: * An optional number followed by a `$` sign that selects which argument index to use for the value. If not specified, arguments will be placed in the same order as the placeholders in the input string. * An optional `+` sign that forces to preceed the result with a plus or minus sign on numeric values. By default, only the `-` sign is used on negative numbers. * An optional padding specifier that says what character to use for padding (if specified). Possible values are `0` or any other character precedeed by a `'` (single quote). The default is to pad with *spaces*. * An optional `-` sign, that causes sprintf to left-align the result of this placeholder. The default is to right-align the result. * An optional number, that says how many characters the result should have. If the value to be returned is shorter than this number, the result will be padded. When used with the `j` (JSON) type specifier, the padding length specifies the tab size used for indentation. * An optional precision modifier, consisting of a `.` (dot) followed by a number, that says how many digits should be displayed for floating point numbers. When used with the `g` type specifier, it specifies the number of significant digits. When used on a string, it causes the result to be truncated. * A type specifier that can be any of: * `%` — yields a literal `%` character * `b` — yields an integer as a binary number * `c` — yields an integer as the character with that ASCII value * `d` or `i` — yields an integer as a signed decimal number * `e` — yields a float using scientific notation * `u` — yields an integer as an unsigned decimal number * `f` — yields a float as is; see notes on precision above * `g` — yields a float as is; see notes on precision above * `o` — yields an integer as an octal number * `s` — yields a string as is * `x` — yields an integer as a hexadecimal number (lower-case) * `X` — yields an integer as a hexadecimal number (upper-case) * `j` — yields a JavaScript object or array as a JSON encoded string ## JavaScript `vsprintf` `vsprintf` is the same as `sprintf` except that it accepts an array of arguments, rather than a variable number of arguments: vsprintf("The first 4 letters of the english alphabet are: %s, %s, %s and %s", ["a", "b", "c", "d"]) ## Argument swapping You can also swap the arguments. That is, the order of the placeholders doesn't have to match the order of the arguments. You can do that by simply indicating in the format string which arguments the placeholders refer to: sprintf("%2$s %3$s a %1$s", "cracker", "Polly", "wants") And, of course, you can repeat the placeholders without having to increase the number of arguments. ## Named arguments Format strings may contain replacement fields rather than positional placeholders. Instead of referring to a certain argument, you can now refer to a certain key within an object. Replacement fields are surrounded by rounded parentheses - `(` and `)` - and begin with a keyword that refers to a key: var user = { name: "Dolly" } sprintf("Hello %(name)s", user) // Hello Dolly Keywords in replacement fields can be optionally followed by any number of keywords or indexes: var users = [ {name: "Dolly"}, {name: "Molly"}, {name: "Polly"} ] sprintf("Hello %(users[0].name)s, %(users[1].name)s and %(users[2].name)s", {users: users}) // Hello Dolly, Molly and Polly Note: mixing positional and named placeholders is not (yet) supported ## Computed values You can pass in a function as a dynamic value and it will be invoked (with no arguments) in order to compute the value on-the-fly. sprintf("Current timestamp: %d", Date.now) // Current timestamp: 1398005382890 sprintf("Current date and time: %s", function() { return new Date().toString() }) # AngularJS You can now use `sprintf` and `vsprintf` (also aliased as `fmt` and `vfmt` respectively) in your AngularJS projects. See `demo/`. # Installation ## Via Bower bower install sprintf ## Or as a node.js module npm install sprintf-js ### Usage var sprintf = require("sprintf-js").sprintf, vsprintf = require("sprintf-js").vsprintf sprintf("%2$s %3$s a %1$s", "cracker", "Polly", "wants") vsprintf("The first 4 letters of the english alphabet are: %s, %s, %s and %s", ["a", "b", "c", "d"]) # License **sprintf.js** is licensed under the terms of the 3-clause BSD license. Compiler frontend for node.js ============================= Usage ----- For an up to date list of available command line options, see: ``` $> asc --help ``` API --- The API accepts the same options as the CLI but also lets you override stdout and stderr and/or provide a callback. Example: ```js const asc = require("assemblyscript/cli/asc"); asc.ready.then(() => { asc.main([ "myModule.ts", "--binaryFile", "myModule.wasm", "--optimize", "--sourceMap", "--measure" ], { stdout: process.stdout, stderr: process.stderr }, function(err) { if (err) throw err; ... }); }); ``` Available command line options can also be obtained programmatically: ```js const options = require("assemblyscript/cli/asc.json"); ... ``` You can also compile a source string directly, for example in a browser environment: ```js const asc = require("assemblyscript/cli/asc"); asc.ready.then(() => { const { binary, text, stdout, stderr } = asc.compileString(`...`, { optimize: 2 }); }); ... ``` <p align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><img width="100" src="https://avatars1.githubusercontent.com/u/28916798?s=200&v=4" alt="AssemblyScript logo"></a> </p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/actions?query=workflow%3ATest"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/Test/master?label=test&logo=github" alt="Test status" /></a> <a href="https://github.com/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/actions?query=workflow%3APublish"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/Publish/master?label=publish&logo=github" alt="Publish status" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/assemblyscript"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/assemblyscript.svg?label=compiler&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm compiler version" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/@assemblyscript/loader"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/@assemblyscript/loader.svg?label=loader&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm loader version" /></a> <a href="https://discord.gg/assemblyscript"><img src="https://img.shields.io/discord/721472913886281818.svg?label=&logo=discord&logoColor=ffffff&color=7389D8&labelColor=6A7EC2" alt="Discord online" /></a> </p> <p align="justify"><strong>AssemblyScript</strong> compiles a strict variant of <a href="http://www.typescriptlang.org">TypeScript</a> (basically JavaScript with types) to <a href="http://webassembly.org">WebAssembly</a> using <a href="https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen">Binaryen</a>. It generates lean and mean WebAssembly modules while being just an <code>npm install</code> away.</p> <h3 align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org">About</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/introduction.html">Introduction</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/quick-start.html">Quick&nbsp;start</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/examples.html">Examples</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/development.html">Development&nbsp;instructions</a> </h3> <br> <h2 align="center">Contributors</h2> <p align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/#contributors"><img src="https://assemblyscript.org/contributors.svg" alt="Contributor logos" width="720" /></a> </p> <h2 align="center">Thanks to our sponsors!</h2> <p align="justify">Most of the core team members and most contributors do this open source work in their free time. If you use AssemblyScript for a serious task or plan to do so, and you'd like us to invest more time on it, <a href="https://opencollective.com/assemblyscript/donate" target="_blank" rel="noopener">please donate</a> to our <a href="https://opencollective.com/assemblyscript" target="_blank" rel="noopener">OpenCollective</a>. By sponsoring this project, your logo will show up below. Thank you so much for your support!</p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/#sponsors"><img src="https://assemblyscript.org/sponsors.svg" alt="Sponsor logos" width="720" /></a> </p> # rechoir [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/tkellen/js-rechoir.png)](http://travis-ci.org/tkellen/js-rechoir) > Require any supported file as a node module. [![NPM](https://nodei.co/npm/rechoir.png)](https://nodei.co/npm/rechoir/) ## What is it? This module, in conjunction with [interpret]-like objects can register any file type the npm ecosystem has a module loader for. This library is a dependency of [Liftoff]. ## API ### prepare(config, filepath, requireFrom) Look for a module loader associated with the provided file and attempt require it. If necessary, run any setup required to inject it into [require.extensions](http://nodejs.org/api/globals.html#globals_require_extensions). `config` An [interpret]-like configuration object. `filepath` A file whose type you'd like to register a module loader for. `requireFrom` An optional path to start searching for the module required to load the requested file. Defaults to the directory of `filepath`. If calling this method is successful (aka: it doesn't throw), you can now require files of the type you requested natively. An error with a `failures` property will be thrown if the module loader(s) configured for a given extension cannot be registered. If a loader is already registered, this will simply return `true`. **Note:** While rechoir will automatically load and register transpilers like `coffee-script`, you must provide a local installation. The transpilers are **not** bundled with this module. #### Usage ```js const config = require('interpret').extensions; const rechoir = require('rechoir'); rechoir.prepare(config, './test/fixtures/test.coffee'); rechoir.prepare(config, './test/fixtures/test.csv'); rechoir.prepare(config, './test/fixtures/test.toml'); console.log(require('./test/fixtures/test.coffee')); console.log(require('./test/fixtures/test.csv')); console.log(require('./test/fixtures/test.toml')); ``` [interpret]: http://github.com/tkellen/js-interpret [Liftoff]: http://github.com/tkellen/js-liftoff # Punycode.js [![Build status](https://travis-ci.org/bestiejs/punycode.js.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/bestiejs/punycode.js) [![Code coverage status](http://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/bestiejs/punycode.js.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/bestiejs/punycode.js) [![Dependency status](https://gemnasium.com/bestiejs/punycode.js.svg)](https://gemnasium.com/bestiejs/punycode.js) Punycode.js is a robust Punycode converter that fully complies to [RFC 3492](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3492) and [RFC 5891](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5891). This JavaScript library is the result of comparing, optimizing and documenting different open-source implementations of the Punycode algorithm: * [The C example code from RFC 3492](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3492#appendix-C) * [`punycode.c` by _Markus W. Scherer_ (IBM)](http://opensource.apple.com/source/ICU/ICU-400.42/icuSources/common/punycode.c) * [`punycode.c` by _Ben Noordhuis_](https://github.com/bnoordhuis/punycode/blob/master/punycode.c) * [JavaScript implementation by _some_](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/183485/can-anyone-recommend-a-good-free-javascript-for-punycode-to-unicode-conversion/301287#301287) * [`punycode.js` by _Ben Noordhuis_](https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/426298c8c1c0d5b5224ac3658c41e7c2a3fe9377/lib/punycode.js) (note: [not fully compliant](https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/2072)) This project was [bundled](https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/master/lib/punycode.js) with Node.js from [v0.6.2+](https://github.com/joyent/node/compare/975f1930b1...61e796decc) until [v7](https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/7941) (soft-deprecated). The current version supports recent versions of Node.js only. It provides a CommonJS module and an ES6 module. For the old version that offers the same functionality with broader support, including Rhino, Ringo, Narwhal, and web browsers, see [v1.4.1](https://github.com/bestiejs/punycode.js/releases/tag/v1.4.1). ## Installation Via [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```bash npm install punycode --save ``` In [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/): ```js const punycode = require('punycode'); ``` ## API ### `punycode.decode(string)` Converts a Punycode string of ASCII symbols to a string of Unicode symbols. ```js // decode domain name parts punycode.decode('maana-pta'); // 'mañana' punycode.decode('--dqo34k'); // '☃-⌘' ``` ### `punycode.encode(string)` Converts a string of Unicode symbols to a Punycode string of ASCII symbols. ```js // encode domain name parts punycode.encode('mañana'); // 'maana-pta' punycode.encode('☃-⌘'); // '--dqo34k' ``` ### `punycode.toUnicode(input)` Converts a Punycode string representing a domain name or an email address to Unicode. Only the Punycoded parts of the input will be converted, i.e. it doesn’t matter if you call it on a string that has already been converted to Unicode. ```js // decode domain names punycode.toUnicode('xn--maana-pta.com'); // → 'mañana.com' punycode.toUnicode('xn----dqo34k.com'); // → '☃-⌘.com' // decode email addresses punycode.toUnicode('джумла@xn--p-8sbkgc5ag7bhce.xn--ba-lmcq'); // → 'джумла@джpумлатест.bрфa' ``` ### `punycode.toASCII(input)` Converts a lowercased Unicode string representing a domain name or an email address to Punycode. Only the non-ASCII parts of the input will be converted, i.e. it doesn’t matter if you call it with a domain that’s already in ASCII. ```js // encode domain names punycode.toASCII('mañana.com'); // → 'xn--maana-pta.com' punycode.toASCII('☃-⌘.com'); // → 'xn----dqo34k.com' // encode email addresses punycode.toASCII('джумла@джpумлатест.bрфa'); // → 'джумла@xn--p-8sbkgc5ag7bhce.xn--ba-lmcq' ``` ### `punycode.ucs2` #### `punycode.ucs2.decode(string)` Creates an array containing the numeric code point values of each Unicode symbol in the string. While [JavaScript uses UCS-2 internally](https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/javascript-encoding), this function will convert a pair of surrogate halves (each of which UCS-2 exposes as separate characters) into a single code point, matching UTF-16. ```js punycode.ucs2.decode('abc'); // → [0x61, 0x62, 0x63] // surrogate pair for U+1D306 TETRAGRAM FOR CENTRE: punycode.ucs2.decode('\uD834\uDF06'); // → [0x1D306] ``` #### `punycode.ucs2.encode(codePoints)` Creates a string based on an array of numeric code point values. ```js punycode.ucs2.encode([0x61, 0x62, 0x63]); // → 'abc' punycode.ucs2.encode([0x1D306]); // → '\uD834\uDF06' ``` ### `punycode.version` A string representing the current Punycode.js version number. ## Author | [![twitter/mathias](https://gravatar.com/avatar/24e08a9ea84deb17ae121074d0f17125?s=70)](https://twitter.com/mathias "Follow @mathias on Twitter") | |---| | [Mathias Bynens](https://mathiasbynens.be/) | ## License Punycode.js is available under the [MIT](https://mths.be/mit) license. # ESLint Scope ESLint Scope is the [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) scope analyzer used in ESLint. It is a fork of [escope](http://github.com/estools/escope). ## Usage Install: ``` npm i eslint-scope --save ``` Example: ```js var eslintScope = require('eslint-scope'); var espree = require('espree'); var estraverse = require('estraverse'); var ast = espree.parse(code); var scopeManager = eslintScope.analyze(ast); var currentScope = scopeManager.acquire(ast); // global scope estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function(node, parent) { // do stuff if (/Function/.test(node.type)) { currentScope = scopeManager.acquire(node); // get current function scope } }, leave: function(node, parent) { if (/Function/.test(node.type)) { currentScope = currentScope.upper; // set to parent scope } // do stuff } }); ``` ## Contributing Issues and pull requests will be triaged and responded to as quickly as possible. We operate under the [ESLint Contributor Guidelines](http://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing), so please be sure to read them before contributing. If you're not sure where to dig in, check out the [issues](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-scope/issues). ## Build Commands * `npm test` - run all linting and tests * `npm run lint` - run all linting ## License ESLint Scope is licensed under a permissive BSD 2-clause license. <table><thead> <tr> <th>Linux</th> <th>OS X</th> <th>Windows</th> <th>Coverage</th> <th>Downloads</th> </tr> </thead><tbody><tr> <td colspan="2" align="center"> <a href="https://travis-ci.org/kaelzhang/node-ignore"> <img src="https://travis-ci.org/kaelzhang/node-ignore.svg?branch=master" alt="Build Status" /></a> </td> <td align="center"> <a href="https://ci.appveyor.com/project/kaelzhang/node-ignore"> <img src="https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/github/kaelzhang/node-ignore?branch=master&svg=true" alt="Windows Build Status" /></a> </td> <td align="center"> <a href="https://codecov.io/gh/kaelzhang/node-ignore"> <img src="https://codecov.io/gh/kaelzhang/node-ignore/branch/master/graph/badge.svg" alt="Coverage Status" /></a> </td> <td align="center"> <a href="https://www.npmjs.org/package/ignore"> <img src="http://img.shields.io/npm/dm/ignore.svg" alt="npm module downloads per month" /></a> </td> </tr></tbody></table> # ignore `ignore` is a manager, filter and parser which implemented in pure JavaScript according to the .gitignore [spec](http://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore). Pay attention that [`minimatch`](https://www.npmjs.org/package/minimatch) does not work in the gitignore way. To filter filenames according to .gitignore file, I recommend this module. ##### Tested on - Linux + Node: `0.8` - `7.x` - Windows + Node: `0.10` - `7.x`, node < `0.10` is not tested due to the lack of support of appveyor. Actually, `ignore` does not rely on any versions of node specially. Since `4.0.0`, ignore will no longer support `node < 6` by default, to use in node < 6, `require('ignore/legacy')`. For details, see [CHANGELOG](https://github.com/kaelzhang/node-ignore/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md). ## Table Of Main Contents - [Usage](#usage) - [`Pathname` Conventions](#pathname-conventions) - [Guide for 2.x -> 3.x](#upgrade-2x---3x) - [Guide for 3.x -> 4.x](#upgrade-3x---4x) - See Also: - [`glob-gitignore`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/glob-gitignore) matches files using patterns and filters them according to gitignore rules. ## Usage ```js import ignore from 'ignore' const ig = ignore().add(['.abc/*', '!.abc/d/']) ``` ### Filter the given paths ```js const paths = [ '.abc/a.js', // filtered out '.abc/d/e.js' // included ] ig.filter(paths) // ['.abc/d/e.js'] ig.ignores('.abc/a.js') // true ``` ### As the filter function ```js paths.filter(ig.createFilter()); // ['.abc/d/e.js'] ``` ### Win32 paths will be handled ```js ig.filter(['.abc\\a.js', '.abc\\d\\e.js']) // if the code above runs on windows, the result will be // ['.abc\\d\\e.js'] ``` ## Why another ignore? - `ignore` is a standalone module, and is much simpler so that it could easy work with other programs, unlike [isaacs](https://npmjs.org/~isaacs)'s [fstream-ignore](https://npmjs.org/package/fstream-ignore) which must work with the modules of the fstream family. - `ignore` only contains utility methods to filter paths according to the specified ignore rules, so - `ignore` never try to find out ignore rules by traversing directories or fetching from git configurations. - `ignore` don't cares about sub-modules of git projects. - Exactly according to [gitignore man page](http://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore), fixes some known matching issues of fstream-ignore, such as: - '`/*.js`' should only match '`a.js`', but not '`abc/a.js`'. - '`**/foo`' should match '`foo`' anywhere. - Prevent re-including a file if a parent directory of that file is excluded. - Handle trailing whitespaces: - `'a '`(one space) should not match `'a '`(two spaces). - `'a \ '` matches `'a '` - All test cases are verified with the result of `git check-ignore`. # Methods ## .add(pattern: string | Ignore): this ## .add(patterns: Array<string | Ignore>): this - **pattern** `String | Ignore` An ignore pattern string, or the `Ignore` instance - **patterns** `Array<String | Ignore>` Array of ignore patterns. Adds a rule or several rules to the current manager. Returns `this` Notice that a line starting with `'#'`(hash) is treated as a comment. Put a backslash (`'\'`) in front of the first hash for patterns that begin with a hash, if you want to ignore a file with a hash at the beginning of the filename. ```js ignore().add('#abc').ignores('#abc') // false ignore().add('\#abc').ignores('#abc') // true ``` `pattern` could either be a line of ignore pattern or a string of multiple ignore patterns, which means we could just `ignore().add()` the content of a ignore file: ```js ignore() .add(fs.readFileSync(filenameOfGitignore).toString()) .filter(filenames) ``` `pattern` could also be an `ignore` instance, so that we could easily inherit the rules of another `Ignore` instance. ## <strike>.addIgnoreFile(path)</strike> REMOVED in `3.x` for now. To upgrade `[email protected]` up to `3.x`, use ```js import fs from 'fs' if (fs.existsSync(filename)) { ignore().add(fs.readFileSync(filename).toString()) } ``` instead. ## .filter(paths: Array<Pathname>): Array<Pathname> ```ts type Pathname = string ``` Filters the given array of pathnames, and returns the filtered array. - **paths** `Array.<Pathname>` The array of `pathname`s to be filtered. ### `Pathname` Conventions: #### 1. `Pathname` should be a `path.relative()`d pathname `Pathname` should be a string that have been `path.join()`ed, or the return value of `path.relative()` to the current directory. ```js // WRONG ig.ignores('./abc') // WRONG, for it will never happen. // If the gitignore rule locates at the root directory, // `'/abc'` should be changed to `'abc'`. // ``` // path.relative('/', '/abc') -> 'abc' // ``` ig.ignores('/abc') // Right ig.ignores('abc') // Right ig.ignores(path.join('./abc')) // path.join('./abc') -> 'abc' ``` In other words, each `Pathname` here should be a relative path to the directory of the gitignore rules. Suppose the dir structure is: ``` /path/to/your/repo |-- a | |-- a.js | |-- .b | |-- .c |-- .DS_store ``` Then the `paths` might be like this: ```js [ 'a/a.js' '.b', '.c/.DS_store' ] ``` Usually, you could use [`glob`](http://npmjs.org/package/glob) with `option.mark = true` to fetch the structure of the current directory: ```js import glob from 'glob' glob('**', { // Adds a / character to directory matches. mark: true }, (err, files) => { if (err) { return console.error(err) } let filtered = ignore().add(patterns).filter(files) console.log(filtered) }) ``` #### 2. filenames and dirnames `node-ignore` does NO `fs.stat` during path matching, so for the example below: ```js ig.add('config/') // `ig` does NOT know if 'config' is a normal file, directory or something ig.ignores('config') // And it returns `false` ig.ignores('config/') // returns `true` ``` Specially for people who develop some library based on `node-ignore`, it is important to understand that. ## .ignores(pathname: Pathname): boolean > new in 3.2.0 Returns `Boolean` whether `pathname` should be ignored. ```js ig.ignores('.abc/a.js') // true ``` ## .createFilter() Creates a filter function which could filter an array of paths with `Array.prototype.filter`. Returns `function(path)` the filter function. ## `options.ignorecase` since 4.0.0 Similar as the `core.ignorecase` option of [git-config](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config), `node-ignore` will be case insensitive if `options.ignorecase` is set to `true` (default value), otherwise case sensitive. ```js const ig = ignore({ ignorecase: false }) ig.add('*.png') ig.ignores('*.PNG') // false ``` **** # Upgrade Guide ## Upgrade 2.x -> 3.x - All `options` of 2.x are unnecessary and removed, so just remove them. - `ignore()` instance is no longer an [`EventEmitter`](nodejs.org/api/events.html), and all events are unnecessary and removed. - `.addIgnoreFile()` is removed, see the [.addIgnoreFile](#addignorefilepath) section for details. ## Upgrade 3.x -> 4.x Since `4.0.0`, `ignore` will no longer support node < 6, to use `ignore` in node < 6: ```js var ignore = require('ignore/legacy') ``` **** # Collaborators - [@whitecolor](https://github.com/whitecolor) *Alex* - [@SamyPesse](https://github.com/SamyPesse) *Samy Pessé* - [@azproduction](https://github.com/azproduction) *Mikhail Davydov* - [@TrySound](https://github.com/TrySound) *Bogdan Chadkin* - [@JanMattner](https://github.com/JanMattner) *Jan Mattner* - [@ntwb](https://github.com/ntwb) *Stephen Edgar* - [@kasperisager](https://github.com/kasperisager) *Kasper Isager* - [@sandersn](https://github.com/sandersn) *Nathan Shively-Sanders* # axios // core The modules found in `core/` should be modules that are specific to the domain logic of axios. These modules would most likely not make sense to be consumed outside of the axios module, as their logic is too specific. Some examples of core modules are: - Dispatching requests - Managing interceptors - Handling config # json-schema-traverse Traverse JSON Schema passing each schema object to callback [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/json-schema-traverse.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/json-schema-traverse) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse?branch=master) ## Install ``` npm install json-schema-traverse ``` ## Usage ```javascript const traverse = require('json-schema-traverse'); const schema = { properties: { foo: {type: 'string'}, bar: {type: 'integer'} } }; traverse(schema, {cb}); // cb is called 3 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. {type: 'string'} // 3. {type: 'integer'} // Or: traverse(schema, {cb: {pre, post}}); // pre is called 3 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. {type: 'string'} // 3. {type: 'integer'} // // post is called 3 times with: // 1. {type: 'string'} // 2. {type: 'integer'} // 3. root schema ``` Callback function `cb` is called for each schema object (not including draft-06 boolean schemas), including the root schema, in pre-order traversal. Schema references ($ref) are not resolved, they are passed as is. Alternatively, you can pass a `{pre, post}` object as `cb`, and then `pre` will be called before traversing child elements, and `post` will be called after all child elements have been traversed. Callback is passed these parameters: - _schema_: the current schema object - _JSON pointer_: from the root schema to the current schema object - _root schema_: the schema passed to `traverse` object - _parent JSON pointer_: from the root schema to the parent schema object (see below) - _parent keyword_: the keyword inside which this schema appears (e.g. `properties`, `anyOf`, etc.) - _parent schema_: not necessarily parent object/array; in the example above the parent schema for `{type: 'string'}` is the root schema - _index/property_: index or property name in the array/object containing multiple schemas; in the example above for `{type: 'string'}` the property name is `'foo'` ## Traverse objects in all unknown keywords ```javascript const traverse = require('json-schema-traverse'); const schema = { mySchema: { minimum: 1, maximum: 2 } }; traverse(schema, {allKeys: true, cb}); // cb is called 2 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. mySchema ``` Without option `allKeys: true` callback will be called only with root schema. ## License [MIT](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/blob/master/LICENSE) # inflight Add callbacks to requests in flight to avoid async duplication ## USAGE ```javascript var inflight = require('inflight') // some request that does some stuff function req(key, callback) { // key is any random string. like a url or filename or whatever. // // will return either a falsey value, indicating that the // request for this key is already in flight, or a new callback // which when called will call all callbacks passed to inflightk // with the same key callback = inflight(key, callback) // If we got a falsey value back, then there's already a req going if (!callback) return // this is where you'd fetch the url or whatever // callback is also once()-ified, so it can safely be assigned // to multiple events etc. First call wins. setTimeout(function() { callback(null, key) }, 100) } // only assigns a single setTimeout // when it dings, all cbs get called req('foo', cb1) req('foo', cb2) req('foo', cb3) req('foo', cb4) ``` # lodash.merge v4.6.2 The [Lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.merge` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.merge ``` In Node.js: ```js var merge = require('lodash.merge'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#merge) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.6.2-npm-packages/lodash.merge) for more details. # lodash.clonedeep v4.5.0 The [lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.cloneDeep` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.clonedeep ``` In Node.js: ```js var cloneDeep = require('lodash.clonedeep'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#cloneDeep) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.5.0-npm-packages/lodash.clonedeep) for more details. ## Test Strategy - tests are copied from the [polyfill implementation](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal/tree/main/polyfill/test) - tests should be removed if they relate to features that do not make sense for TS/AS, i.e. tests that validate the shape of an object do not make sense in a language with compile-time type checking - tests that fail because a feature has not been implemented yet should be left as failures. # line-column [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/io-monad/line-column.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/io-monad/line-column) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/io-monad/line-column/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/io-monad/line-column?branch=master) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/line-column.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/js/line-column) Node module to convert efficiently index to/from line-column in a string. ## Install npm install line-column ## Usage ### lineColumn(str, options = {}) Returns a `LineColumnFinder` instance for given string `str`. #### Options | Key | Description | Default | | ------- | ----------- | ------- | | `origin` | The origin value of line number and column number | `1` | ### lineColumn(str, index) This is just a shorthand for `lineColumn(str).fromIndex(index)`. ### LineColumnFinder#fromIndex(index) Find line and column from index in the string. Parameters: - `index` - `number` Index in the string. (0-origin) Returns: - `{ line: x, col: y }` Found line number and column number. - `null` if the given index is out of range. ### LineColumnFinder#toIndex(line, column) Find index from line and column in the string. Parameters: - `line` - `number` Line number in the string. - `column` - `number` Column number in the string. or - `{ line: x, col: y }` - `Object` line and column numbers in the string.<br>A key name `column` can be used instead of `col`. or - `[ line, col ]` - `Array` line and column numbers in the string. Returns: - `number` Found index in the string. - `-1` if the given line or column is out of range. ## Example ```js var lineColumn = require("line-column"); var testString = [ "ABCDEFG\n", // line:0, index:0 "HIJKLMNOPQRSTU\n", // line:1, index:8 "VWXYZ\n", // line:2, index:23 "日本語の文字\n", // line:3, index:29 "English words" // line:4, index:36 ].join(""); // length:49 lineColumn(testString).fromIndex(3) // { line: 1, col: 4 } lineColumn(testString).fromIndex(33) // { line: 4, col: 5 } lineColumn(testString).toIndex(1, 4) // 3 lineColumn(testString).toIndex(4, 5) // 33 // Shorthand of .fromIndex (compatible with find-line-column) lineColumn(testString, 33) // { line:4, col: 5 } // Object or Array is also acceptable lineColumn(testString).toIndex({ line: 4, col: 5 }) // 33 lineColumn(testString).toIndex({ line: 4, column: 5 }) // 33 lineColumn(testString).toIndex([4, 5]) // 33 // You can cache it for the same string. It is so efficient. (See benchmark) var finder = lineColumn(testString); finder.fromIndex(33) // { line: 4, column: 5 } finder.toIndex(4, 5) // 33 // For 0-origin line and column numbers var oneOrigin = lineColumn(testString, { origin: 0 }); oneOrigin.fromIndex(33) // { line: 3, column: 4 } oneOrigin.toIndex(3, 4) // 33 ``` ## Testing npm test ## Benchmark The popular package [find-line-column](https://www.npmjs.com/package/find-line-column) provides the same "index to line-column" feature. Here is some benchmarking on `line-column` vs `find-line-column`. You can run this benchmark by `npm run benchmark`. See [benchmark/](benchmark/) for the source code. ``` long text + line-column (not cached) x 72,989 ops/sec ±0.83% (89 runs sampled) long text + line-column (cached) x 13,074,242 ops/sec ±0.32% (89 runs sampled) long text + find-line-column x 33,887 ops/sec ±0.54% (84 runs sampled) short text + line-column (not cached) x 1,636,766 ops/sec ±0.77% (82 runs sampled) short text + line-column (cached) x 21,699,686 ops/sec ±1.04% (82 runs sampled) short text + find-line-column x 382,145 ops/sec ±1.04% (85 runs sampled) ``` As you might have noticed, even not cached version of `line-column` is 2x - 4x faster than `find-line-column`, and cached version of `line-column` is remarkable 50x - 380x faster. ## Contributing 1. Fork it! 2. Create your feature branch: `git checkout -b my-new-feature` 3. Commit your changes: `git commit -am 'Add some feature'` 4. Push to the branch: `git push origin my-new-feature` 5. Submit a pull request :D ## License MIT (See LICENSE) # function-bind <!-- [![build status][travis-svg]][travis-url] [![NPM version][npm-badge-svg]][npm-url] [![Coverage Status][5]][6] [![gemnasium Dependency Status][7]][8] [![Dependency status][deps-svg]][deps-url] [![Dev Dependency status][dev-deps-svg]][dev-deps-url] --> <!-- [![browser support][11]][12] --> Implementation of function.prototype.bind ## Example I mainly do this for unit tests I run on phantomjs. PhantomJS does not have Function.prototype.bind :( ```js Function.prototype.bind = require("function-bind") ``` ## Installation `npm install function-bind` ## Contributors - Raynos ## MIT Licenced [travis-svg]: https://travis-ci.org/Raynos/function-bind.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/Raynos/function-bind [npm-badge-svg]: https://badge.fury.io/js/function-bind.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/function-bind [5]: https://coveralls.io/repos/Raynos/function-bind/badge.png [6]: https://coveralls.io/r/Raynos/function-bind [7]: https://gemnasium.com/Raynos/function-bind.png [8]: https://gemnasium.com/Raynos/function-bind [deps-svg]: https://david-dm.org/Raynos/function-bind.svg [deps-url]: https://david-dm.org/Raynos/function-bind [dev-deps-svg]: https://david-dm.org/Raynos/function-bind/dev-status.svg [dev-deps-url]: https://david-dm.org/Raynos/function-bind#info=devDependencies [11]: https://ci.testling.com/Raynos/function-bind.png [12]: https://ci.testling.com/Raynos/function-bind # URI.js URI.js is an [RFC 3986](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3986.txt) compliant, scheme extendable URI parsing/validating/resolving library for all JavaScript environments (browsers, Node.js, etc). It is also compliant with the IRI ([RFC 3987](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt)), IDNA ([RFC 5890](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5890.txt)), IPv6 Address ([RFC 5952](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5952.txt)), IPv6 Zone Identifier ([RFC 6874](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc6874.txt)) specifications. URI.js has an extensive test suite, and works in all (Node.js, web) environments. It weighs in at 6.4kb (gzipped, 17kb deflated). ## API ### Parsing URI.parse("uri://user:[email protected]:123/one/two.three?q1=a1&q2=a2#body"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "uri", // userinfo : "user:pass", // host : "example.com", // port : 123, // path : "/one/two.three", // query : "q1=a1&q2=a2", // fragment : "body" //} ### Serializing URI.serialize({scheme : "http", host : "example.com", fragment : "footer"}) === "http://example.com/#footer" ### Resolving URI.resolve("uri://a/b/c/d?q", "../../g") === "uri://a/g" ### Normalizing URI.normalize("HTTP://ABC.com:80/%7Esmith/home.html") === "http://abc.com/~smith/home.html" ### Comparison URI.equal("example://a/b/c/%7Bfoo%7D", "eXAMPLE://a/./b/../b/%63/%7bfoo%7d") === true ### IP Support //IPv4 normalization URI.normalize("//192.068.001.000") === "//192.68.1.0" //IPv6 normalization URI.normalize("//[2001:0:0DB8::0:0001]") === "//[2001:0:db8::1]" //IPv6 zone identifier support URI.parse("//[2001:db8::7%25en1]"); //returns: //{ // host : "2001:db8::7%en1" //} ### IRI Support //convert IRI to URI URI.serialize(URI.parse("http://examplé.org/rosé")) === "http://xn--exampl-gva.org/ros%C3%A9" //convert URI to IRI URI.serialize(URI.parse("http://xn--exampl-gva.org/ros%C3%A9"), {iri:true}) === "http://examplé.org/rosé" ### Options All of the above functions can accept an additional options argument that is an object that can contain one or more of the following properties: * `scheme` (string) Indicates the scheme that the URI should be treated as, overriding the URI's normal scheme parsing behavior. * `reference` (string) If set to `"suffix"`, it indicates that the URI is in the suffix format, and the validator will use the option's `scheme` property to determine the URI's scheme. * `tolerant` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the parser will relax URI resolving rules. * `absolutePath` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the serializer will not resolve a relative `path` component. * `iri` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the serializer will unescape non-ASCII characters as per [RFC 3987](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt). * `unicodeSupport` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the parser will unescape non-ASCII characters in the parsed output as per [RFC 3987](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt). * `domainHost` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the library will treat the `host` component as a domain name, and convert IDNs (International Domain Names) as per [RFC 5891](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5891.txt). ## Scheme Extendable URI.js supports inserting custom [scheme](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URI_scheme) dependent processing rules. Currently, URI.js has built in support for the following schemes: * http \[[RFC 2616](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt)\] * https \[[RFC 2818](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2818.txt)\] * ws \[[RFC 6455](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc6455.txt)\] * wss \[[RFC 6455](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc6455.txt)\] * mailto \[[RFC 6068](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc6068.txt)\] * urn \[[RFC 2141](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2141.txt)\] * urn:uuid \[[RFC 4122](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4122.txt)\] ### HTTP/HTTPS Support URI.equal("HTTP://ABC.COM:80", "http://abc.com/") === true URI.equal("https://abc.com", "HTTPS://ABC.COM:443/") === true ### WS/WSS Support URI.parse("wss://example.com/foo?bar=baz"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "wss", // host: "example.com", // resourceName: "/foo?bar=baz", // secure: true, //} URI.equal("WS://ABC.COM:80/chat#one", "ws://abc.com/chat") === true ### Mailto Support URI.parse("mailto:[email protected],[email protected]?subject=SUBSCRIBE&body=Sign%20me%20up!"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "mailto", // to : ["[email protected]", "[email protected]"], // subject : "SUBSCRIBE", // body : "Sign me up!" //} URI.serialize({ scheme : "mailto", to : ["[email protected]"], subject : "REMOVE", body : "Please remove me", headers : { cc : "[email protected]" } }) === "mailto:[email protected][email protected]&subject=REMOVE&body=Please%20remove%20me" ### URN Support URI.parse("urn:example:foo"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "urn", // nid : "example", // nss : "foo", //} #### URN UUID Support URI.parse("urn:uuid:f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "urn", // nid : "uuid", // uuid : "f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6", //} ## Usage To load in a browser, use the following tag: <script type="text/javascript" src="uri-js/dist/es5/uri.all.min.js"></script> To load in a CommonJS/Module environment, first install with npm/yarn by running on the command line: npm install uri-js # OR yarn add uri-js Then, in your code, load it using: const URI = require("uri-js"); If you are writing your code in ES6+ (ESNEXT) or TypeScript, you would load it using: import * as URI from "uri-js"; Or you can load just what you need using named exports: import { parse, serialize, resolve, resolveComponents, normalize, equal, removeDotSegments, pctEncChar, pctDecChars, escapeComponent, unescapeComponent } from "uri-js"; ## Breaking changes ### Breaking changes from 3.x URN parsing has been completely changed to better align with the specification. Scheme is now always `urn`, but has two new properties: `nid` which contains the Namspace Identifier, and `nss` which contains the Namespace Specific String. The `nss` property will be removed by higher order scheme handlers, such as the UUID URN scheme handler. The UUID of a URN can now be found in the `uuid` property. ### Breaking changes from 2.x URI validation has been removed as it was slow, exposed a vulnerabilty, and was generally not useful. ### Breaking changes from 1.x The `errors` array on parsed components is now an `error` string. # y18n [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Coverage Status][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url] [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) The bare-bones internationalization library used by yargs. Inspired by [i18n](https://www.npmjs.com/package/i18n). ## Examples _simple string translation:_ ```js var __ = require('y18n').__ console.log(__('my awesome string %s', 'foo')) ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _using tagged template literals_ ```js var __ = require('y18n').__ var str = 'foo' console.log(__`my awesome string ${str}`) ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _pluralization support:_ ```js var __n = require('y18n').__n console.log(__n('one fish %s', '%d fishes %s', 2, 'foo')) ``` output: `2 fishes foo` ## JSON Language Files The JSON language files should be stored in a `./locales` folder. File names correspond to locales, e.g., `en.json`, `pirate.json`. When strings are observed for the first time they will be added to the JSON file corresponding to the current locale. ## Methods ### require('y18n')(config) Create an instance of y18n with the config provided, options include: * `directory`: the locale directory, default `./locales`. * `updateFiles`: should newly observed strings be updated in file, default `true`. * `locale`: what locale should be used. * `fallbackToLanguage`: should fallback to a language-only file (e.g. `en.json`) be allowed if a file matching the locale does not exist (e.g. `en_US.json`), default `true`. ### y18n.\_\_(str, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string, `%s` will be replaced with `arg`s. This function can also be used as a tag for a template literal. You can use it like this: <code>__&#96;hello ${'world'}&#96;</code>. This will be equivalent to `__('hello %s', 'world')`. ### y18n.\_\_n(singularString, pluralString, count, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string with appropriate pluralization. If `%d` is provided in the string, the `count` will replace this placeholder. ### y18n.setLocale(str) Set the current locale being used. ### y18n.getLocale() What locale is currently being used? ### y18n.updateLocale(obj) Update the current locale with the key value pairs in `obj`. ## License ISC [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/yargs/y18n [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/yargs/y18n.svg [coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/github/yargs/y18n [coveralls-image]: https://img.shields.io/coveralls/yargs/y18n.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/y18n [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/y18n.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: https://github.com/feross/standard # base-x [![NPM Package](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/base-x.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/base-x) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/cryptocoinjs/base-x.svg?branch=master&style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/cryptocoinjs/base-x) [![js-standard-style](https://cdn.rawgit.com/feross/standard/master/badge.svg)](https://github.com/feross/standard) Fast base encoding / decoding of any given alphabet using bitcoin style leading zero compression. **WARNING:** This module is **NOT RFC3548** compliant, it cannot be used for base16 (hex), base32, or base64 encoding in a standards compliant manner. ## Example Base58 ``` javascript var BASE58 = '123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz' var bs58 = require('base-x')(BASE58) var decoded = bs58.decode('5Kd3NBUAdUnhyzenEwVLy9pBKxSwXvE9FMPyR4UKZvpe6E3AgLr') console.log(decoded) // => <Buffer 80 ed db dc 11 68 f1 da ea db d3 e4 4c 1e 3f 8f 5a 28 4c 20 29 f7 8a d2 6a f9 85 83 a4 99 de 5b 19> console.log(bs58.encode(decoded)) // => 5Kd3NBUAdUnhyzenEwVLy9pBKxSwXvE9FMPyR4UKZvpe6E3AgLr ``` ### Alphabets See below for a list of commonly recognized alphabets, and their respective base. Base | Alphabet ------------- | ------------- 2 | `01` 8 | `01234567` 11 | `0123456789a` 16 | `0123456789abcdef` 32 | `0123456789ABCDEFGHJKMNPQRSTVWXYZ` 32 | `ybndrfg8ejkmcpqxot1uwisza345h769` (z-base-32) 36 | `0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz` 58 | `123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz` 62 | `0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ` 64 | `ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/` 67 | `ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789-_.!~` ## How it works It encodes octet arrays by doing long divisions on all significant digits in the array, creating a representation of that number in the new base. Then for every leading zero in the input (not significant as a number) it will encode as a single leader character. This is the first in the alphabet and will decode as 8 bits. The other characters depend upon the base. For example, a base58 alphabet packs roughly 5.858 bits per character. This means the encoded string 000f (using a base16, 0-f alphabet) will actually decode to 4 bytes unlike a canonical hex encoding which uniformly packs 4 bits into each character. While unusual, this does mean that no padding is required and it works for bases like 43. ## LICENSE [MIT](LICENSE) A direct derivation of the base58 implementation from [`bitcoin/bitcoin`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/f1e2f2a85962c1664e4e55471061af0eaa798d40/src/base58.cpp), generalized for variable length alphabets. Standard library ================ Standard library components for use with `tsc` (portable) and `asc` (assembly). Base configurations (.json) and definition files (.d.ts) are relevant to `tsc` only and not used by `asc`. ## Follow Redirects Drop-in replacement for Nodes `http` and `https` that automatically follows redirects. [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/follow-redirects.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/follow-redirects) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/follow-redirects/follow-redirects/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/follow-redirects/follow-redirects?branch=master) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects.svg)](https://david-dm.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/follow-redirects.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/follow-redirects) `follow-redirects` provides [request](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback) and [get](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_get_options_callback) methods that behave identically to those found on the native [http](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback) and [https](https://nodejs.org/api/https.html#https_https_request_options_callback) modules, with the exception that they will seamlessly follow redirects. ```javascript var http = require('follow-redirects').http; var https = require('follow-redirects').https; http.get('http://bit.ly/900913', function (response) { response.on('data', function (chunk) { console.log(chunk); }); }).on('error', function (err) { console.error(err); }); ``` You can inspect the final redirected URL through the `responseUrl` property on the `response`. If no redirection happened, `responseUrl` is the original request URL. ```javascript https.request({ host: 'bitly.com', path: '/UHfDGO', }, function (response) { console.log(response.responseUrl); // 'http://duckduckgo.com/robots.txt' }); ``` ## Options ### Global options Global options are set directly on the `follow-redirects` module: ```javascript var followRedirects = require('follow-redirects'); followRedirects.maxRedirects = 10; followRedirects.maxBodyLength = 20 * 1024 * 1024; // 20 MB ``` The following global options are supported: - `maxRedirects` (default: `21`) – sets the maximum number of allowed redirects; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. - `maxBodyLength` (default: 10MB) – sets the maximum size of the request body; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. ### Per-request options Per-request options are set by passing an `options` object: ```javascript var url = require('url'); var followRedirects = require('follow-redirects'); var options = url.parse('http://bit.ly/900913'); options.maxRedirects = 10; http.request(options); ``` In addition to the [standard HTTP](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback) and [HTTPS options](https://nodejs.org/api/https.html#https_https_request_options_callback), the following per-request options are supported: - `followRedirects` (default: `true`) – whether redirects should be followed. - `maxRedirects` (default: `21`) – sets the maximum number of allowed redirects; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. - `maxBodyLength` (default: 10MB) – sets the maximum size of the request body; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. - `agents` (default: `undefined`) – sets the `agent` option per protocol, since HTTP and HTTPS use different agents. Example value: `{ http: new http.Agent(), https: new https.Agent() }` - `trackRedirects` (default: `false`) – whether to store the redirected response details into the `redirects` array on the response object. ### Advanced usage By default, `follow-redirects` will use the Node.js default implementations of [`http`](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html) and [`https`](https://nodejs.org/api/https.html). To enable features such as caching and/or intermediate request tracking, you might instead want to wrap `follow-redirects` around custom protocol implementations: ```javascript var followRedirects = require('follow-redirects').wrap({ http: require('your-custom-http'), https: require('your-custom-https'), }); ``` Such custom protocols only need an implementation of the `request` method. ## Browserify Usage Due to the way `XMLHttpRequest` works, the `browserify` versions of `http` and `https` already follow redirects. If you are *only* targeting the browser, then this library has little value for you. If you want to write cross platform code for node and the browser, `follow-redirects` provides a great solution for making the native node modules behave the same as they do in browserified builds in the browser. To avoid bundling unnecessary code you should tell browserify to swap out `follow-redirects` with the standard modules when bundling. To make this easier, you need to change how you require the modules: ```javascript var http = require('follow-redirects/http'); var https = require('follow-redirects/https'); ``` You can then replace `follow-redirects` in your browserify configuration like so: ```javascript "browser": { "follow-redirects/http" : "http", "follow-redirects/https" : "https" } ``` The `browserify-http` module has not kept pace with node development, and no long behaves identically to the native module when running in the browser. If you are experiencing problems, you may want to check out [browserify-http-2](https://www.npmjs.com/package/http-browserify-2). It is more actively maintained and attempts to address a few of the shortcomings of `browserify-http`. In that case, your browserify config should look something like this: ```javascript "browser": { "follow-redirects/http" : "browserify-http-2/http", "follow-redirects/https" : "browserify-http-2/https" } ``` ## Contributing Pull Requests are always welcome. Please [file an issue](https://github.com/follow-redirects/follow-redirects/issues) detailing your proposal before you invest your valuable time. Additional features and bug fixes should be accompanied by tests. You can run the test suite locally with a simple `npm test` command. ## Debug Logging `follow-redirects` uses the excellent [debug](https://www.npmjs.com/package/debug) for logging. To turn on logging set the environment variable `DEBUG=follow-redirects` for debug output from just this module. When running the test suite it is sometimes advantageous to set `DEBUG=*` to see output from the express server as well. ## Authors - Olivier Lalonde ([email protected]) - James Talmage ([email protected]) - [Ruben Verborgh](https://ruben.verborgh.org/) ## License [https://github.com/follow-redirects/follow-redirects/blob/master/LICENSE](MIT License) <img align="right" alt="Ajv logo" width="160" src="https://ajv.js.org/img/ajv.svg"> &nbsp; # Ajv JSON schema validator The fastest JSON validator for Node.js and browser. Supports JSON Schema draft-04/06/07/2019-09/2020-12 ([draft-04 support](https://ajv.js.org/json-schema.html#draft-04) requires ajv-draft-04 package) and JSON Type Definition [RFC8927](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc8927/). [![build](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/workflows/build/badge.svg)](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/actions?query=workflow%3Abuild) [![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/ajv.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/ajv.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/ajv-validator/ajv/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/ajv-validator/ajv?branch=master) [![SimpleX](https://img.shields.io/badge/chat-on%20SimpleX-%2307b4b9)](https://simplex.chat/contact#/?v=1&smp=smp%3A%2F%2Fu2dS9sG8nMNURyZwqASV4yROM28Er0luVTx5X1CsMrU%3D%40smp4.simplex.im%2Fap4lMFzfXF8Hzmh-Vz0WNxp_1jKiOa-h%23MCowBQYDK2VuAyEAcdefddRvDfI8iAuBpztm_J3qFucj8MDZoVs_2EcMTzU%3D) [![Gitter](https://img.shields.io/gitter/room/ajv-validator/ajv.svg)](https://gitter.im/ajv-validator/ajv) [![GitHub Sponsors](https://img.shields.io/badge/$-sponsors-brightgreen)](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) ## Ajv sponsors [<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/mozilla.svg" width="45%" alt="Mozilla">](https://www.mozilla.org)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="9%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/reserved.svg" width="45%">](https://opencollective.com/ajv) [<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/microsoft.png" width="31%" alt="Microsoft">](https://opensource.microsoft.com)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/reserved.svg" width="31%">](https://opencollective.com/ajv)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/reserved.svg" width="31%">](https://opencollective.com/ajv) [<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/retool.svg" width="22.5%" alt="Retool">](https://retool.com/?utm_source=sponsor&utm_campaign=ajv)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/tidelift.svg" width="22.5%" alt="Tidelift">](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-ajv?utm_source=npm-ajv&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/simplex.svg" width="22.5%" alt="SimpleX">](https://github.com/simplex-chat/simplex-chat)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/reserved.svg" width="22.5%">](https://opencollective.com/ajv) ## Contributing More than 100 people contributed to Ajv, and we would love to have you join the development. We welcome implementing new features that will benefit many users and ideas to improve our documentation. Please review [Contributing guidelines](./CONTRIBUTING.md) and [Code components](https://ajv.js.org/components.html). ## Documentation All documentation is available on the [Ajv website](https://ajv.js.org). Some useful site links: - [Getting started](https://ajv.js.org/guide/getting-started.html) - [JSON Schema vs JSON Type Definition](https://ajv.js.org/guide/schema-language.html) - [API reference](https://ajv.js.org/api.html) - [Strict mode](https://ajv.js.org/strict-mode.html) - [Standalone validation code](https://ajv.js.org/standalone.html) - [Security considerations](https://ajv.js.org/security.html) - [Command line interface](https://ajv.js.org/packages/ajv-cli.html) - [Frequently Asked Questions](https://ajv.js.org/faq.html) ## <a name="sponsors"></a>Please [sponsor Ajv development](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) Since I asked to support Ajv development 40 people and 6 organizations contributed via GitHub and OpenCollective - this support helped receiving the MOSS grant! Your continuing support is very important - the funds will be used to develop and maintain Ajv once the next major version is released. Please sponsor Ajv via: - [GitHub sponsors page](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) (GitHub will match it) - [Ajv Open Collective️](https://opencollective.com/ajv) Thank you. #### Open Collective sponsors <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/individuals.svg?width=890"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/0/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/0/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/1/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/1/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/2/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/2/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/3/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/3/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/4/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/4/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/5/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/5/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/6/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/6/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/7/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/7/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/8/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/8/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/9/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/9/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/10/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/10/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/11/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/11/avatar.svg"></a> ## Performance Ajv generates code to turn JSON Schemas into super-fast validation functions that are efficient for v8 optimization. Currently Ajv is the fastest and the most standard compliant validator according to these benchmarks: - [json-schema-benchmark](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark) - 50% faster than the second place - [jsck benchmark](https://github.com/pandastrike/jsck#benchmarks) - 20-190% faster - [z-schema benchmark](https://rawgit.com/zaggino/z-schema/master/benchmark/results.html) - [themis benchmark](https://cdn.rawgit.com/playlyfe/themis/master/benchmark/results.html) Performance of different validators by [json-schema-benchmark](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark): [![performance](https://chart.googleapis.com/chart?chxt=x,y&cht=bhs&chco=76A4FB&chls=2.0&chbh=62,4,1&chs=600x416&chxl=-1:|ajv|@exodus&#x2F;schemasafe|is-my-json-valid|djv|@cfworker&#x2F;json-schema|jsonschema&chd=t:100,69.2,51.5,13.1,5.1,1.2)](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark/blob/master/README.md#performance) ## Features - Ajv implements JSON Schema [draft-06/07/2019-09/2020-12](http://json-schema.org/) standards (draft-04 is supported in v6): - all validation keywords (see [JSON Schema validation keywords](https://ajv.js.org/json-schema.html)) - [OpenAPI](https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/master/versions/3.0.3.md) extensions: - NEW: keyword [discriminator](https://ajv.js.org/json-schema.html#discriminator). - keyword [nullable](https://ajv.js.org/json-schema.html#nullable). - full support of remote references (remote schemas have to be added with `addSchema` or compiled to be available) - support of recursive references between schemas - correct string lengths for strings with unicode pairs - JSON Schema [formats](https://ajv.js.org/guide/formats.html) (with [ajv-formats](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-formats) plugin). - [validates schemas against meta-schema](https://ajv.js.org/api.html#api-validateschema) - NEW: supports [JSON Type Definition](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc8927/): - all keywords (see [JSON Type Definition schema forms](https://ajv.js.org/json-type-definition.html)) - meta-schema for JTD schemas - "union" keyword and user-defined keywords (can be used inside "metadata" member of the schema) - supports [browsers](https://ajv.js.org/guide/environments.html#browsers) and Node.js 10.x - current - [asynchronous loading](https://ajv.js.org/guide/managing-schemas.html#asynchronous-schema-loading) of referenced schemas during compilation - "All errors" validation mode with [option allErrors](https://ajv.js.org/options.html#allerrors) - [error messages with parameters](https://ajv.js.org/api.html#validation-errors) describing error reasons to allow error message generation - i18n error messages support with [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n) package - [removing-additional-properties](https://ajv.js.org/guide/modifying-data.html#removing-additional-properties) - [assigning defaults](https://ajv.js.org/guide/modifying-data.html#assigning-defaults) to missing properties and items - [coercing data](https://ajv.js.org/guide/modifying-data.html#coercing-data-types) to the types specified in `type` keywords - [user-defined keywords](https://ajv.js.org/guide/user-keywords.html) - additional extension keywords with [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package - [\$data reference](https://ajv.js.org/guide/combining-schemas.html#data-reference) to use values from the validated data as values for the schema keywords - [asynchronous validation](https://ajv.js.org/guide/async-validation.html) of user-defined formats and keywords ## Install To install version 8: ``` npm install ajv ``` ## <a name="usage"></a>Getting started Try it in the Node.js REPL: https://runkit.com/npm/ajv In JavaScript: ```javascript // or ESM/TypeScript import import Ajv from "ajv" // Node.js require: const Ajv = require("ajv") const ajv = new Ajv() // options can be passed, e.g. {allErrors: true} const schema = { type: "object", properties: { foo: {type: "integer"}, bar: {type: "string"} }, required: ["foo"], additionalProperties: false, } const data = { foo: 1, bar: "abc" } const validate = ajv.compile(schema) const valid = validate(data) if (!valid) console.log(validate.errors) ``` Learn how to use Ajv and see more examples in the [Guide: getting started](https://ajv.js.org/guide/getting-started.html) ## Changes history See [https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases) **Please note**: [Changes in version 8.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v8.0.0) [Version 7.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v7.0.0) [Version 6.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v6.0.0). ## Code of conduct Please review and follow the [Code of conduct](./CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). Please report any unacceptable behaviour to [email protected] - it will be reviewed by the project team. ## Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerabilities via GitHub issues. ## Open-source software support Ajv is a part of [Tidelift subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-ajv?utm_source=npm-ajv&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=readme) - it provides a centralised support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## License [MIT](./LICENSE) # tr46.js > An implementation of the [Unicode TR46 specification](http://unicode.org/reports/tr46/). ## Installation [Node.js](http://nodejs.org) `>= 6` is required. To install, type this at the command line: ```shell npm install tr46 ``` ## API ### `toASCII(domainName[, options])` Converts a string of Unicode symbols to a case-folded Punycode string of ASCII symbols. Available options: * [`checkBidi`](#checkBidi) * [`checkHyphens`](#checkHyphens) * [`checkJoiners`](#checkJoiners) * [`processingOption`](#processingOption) * [`useSTD3ASCIIRules`](#useSTD3ASCIIRules) * [`verifyDNSLength`](#verifyDNSLength) ### `toUnicode(domainName[, options])` Converts a case-folded Punycode string of ASCII symbols to a string of Unicode symbols. Available options: * [`checkBidi`](#checkBidi) * [`checkHyphens`](#checkHyphens) * [`checkJoiners`](#checkJoiners) * [`useSTD3ASCIIRules`](#useSTD3ASCIIRules) ## Options ### `checkBidi` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, any bi-directional text within the input will be checked for validation. ### `checkHyphens` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, the positions of any hyphen characters within the input will be checked for validation. ### `checkJoiners` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, any word joiner characters within the input will be checked for validation. ### `processingOption` Type: `String` Default value: `"nontransitional"` When set to `"transitional"`, symbols within the input will be validated according to the older IDNA2003 protocol. When set to `"nontransitional"`, the current IDNA2008 protocol will be used. ### `useSTD3ASCIIRules` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, input will be validated according to [STD3 Rules](http://unicode.org/reports/tr46/#STD3_Rules). ### `verifyDNSLength` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, the length of each DNS label within the input will be checked for validation. discontinuous-range =================== ``` DiscontinuousRange(1, 10).subtract(4, 6); // [ 1-3, 7-10 ] ``` [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/dtudury/discontinuous-range.png)](https://travis-ci.org/dtudury/discontinuous-range) this is a pretty simple module, but it exists to service another project so this'll be pretty lacking documentation. reading the test to see how this works may help. otherwise, here's an example that I think pretty much sums it up ###Example ``` var all_numbers = new DiscontinuousRange(1, 100); var bad_numbers = DiscontinuousRange(13).add(8).add(60,80); var good_numbers = all_numbers.clone().subtract(bad_numbers); console.log(good_numbers.toString()); //[ 1-7, 9-12, 14-59, 81-100 ] var random_good_number = good_numbers.index(Math.floor(Math.random() * good_numbers.length)); ``` ### Estraverse [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse) Estraverse ([estraverse](http://github.com/estools/estraverse)) is [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) traversal functions from [esmangle project](http://github.com/estools/esmangle). ### Documentation You can find usage docs at [wiki page](https://github.com/estools/estraverse/wiki/Usage). ### Example Usage The following code will output all variables declared at the root of a file. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'FunctionExpression' || node.type == 'FunctionDeclaration') return estraverse.VisitorOption.Skip; }, leave: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'VariableDeclarator') console.log(node.id.name); } }); ``` We can use `this.skip`, `this.remove` and `this.break` functions instead of using Skip, Remove and Break. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node) { this.break(); } }); ``` And estraverse provides `estraverse.replace` function. When returning node from `enter`/`leave`, current node is replaced with it. ```javascript result = estraverse.replace(tree, { enter: function (node) { // Replace it with replaced. if (node.type === 'Literal') return replaced; } }); ``` By passing `visitor.keys` mapping, we can extend estraverse traversing functionality. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Extending the existing traversing rules. keys: { // TargetNodeName: [ 'keys', 'containing', 'the', 'other', '**node**' ] TestExpression: ['argument'] } }); ``` By passing `visitor.fallback` option, we can control the behavior when encountering unknown nodes. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Iterating the child **nodes** of unknown nodes. fallback: 'iteration' }); ``` When `visitor.fallback` is a function, we can determine which keys to visit on each node. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Skip the `argument` property of each node fallback: function(node) { return Object.keys(node).filter(function(key) { return key !== 'argument'; }); } }); ``` ### License Copyright (C) 2012-2016 [Yusuke Suzuki](http://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](http://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. <p align="center"> <img width="250" src="/yargs-logo.png"> </p> <h1 align="center"> Yargs </h1> <p align="center"> <b >Yargs be a node.js library fer hearties tryin' ter parse optstrings</b> </p> <br> [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Coverage][coverage-image]][coverage-url] [![Conventional Commits][conventional-commits-image]][conventional-commits-url] [![Slack][slack-image]][slack-url] ## Description : Yargs helps you build interactive command line tools, by parsing arguments and generating an elegant user interface. It gives you: * commands and (grouped) options (`my-program.js serve --port=5000`). * a dynamically generated help menu based on your arguments. > <img width="400" src="/screen.png"> * bash-completion shortcuts for commands and options. * and [tons more](/docs/api.md). ## Installation Stable version: ```bash npm i yargs ``` Bleeding edge version with the most recent features: ```bash npm i yargs@next ``` ## Usage : ### Simple Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node const {argv} = require('yargs') if (argv.ships > 3 && argv.distance < 53.5) { console.log('Plunder more riffiwobbles!') } else { console.log('Retreat from the xupptumblers!') } ``` ```bash $ ./plunder.js --ships=4 --distance=22 Plunder more riffiwobbles! $ ./plunder.js --ships 12 --distance 98.7 Retreat from the xupptumblers! ``` ### Complex Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node require('yargs') // eslint-disable-line .command('serve [port]', 'start the server', (yargs) => { yargs .positional('port', { describe: 'port to bind on', default: 5000 }) }, (argv) => { if (argv.verbose) console.info(`start server on :${argv.port}`) serve(argv.port) }) .option('verbose', { alias: 'v', type: 'boolean', description: 'Run with verbose logging' }) .argv ``` Run the example above with `--help` to see the help for the application. ## TypeScript yargs has type definitions at [@types/yargs][type-definitions]. ``` npm i @types/yargs --save-dev ``` See usage examples in [docs](/docs/typescript.md). ## Webpack See usage examples of yargs with webpack in [docs](/docs/webpack.md). ## Community : Having problems? want to contribute? join our [community slack](http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com). ## Documentation : ### Table of Contents * [Yargs' API](/docs/api.md) * [Examples](/docs/examples.md) * [Parsing Tricks](/docs/tricks.md) * [Stop the Parser](/docs/tricks.md#stop) * [Negating Boolean Arguments](/docs/tricks.md#negate) * [Numbers](/docs/tricks.md#numbers) * [Arrays](/docs/tricks.md#arrays) * [Objects](/docs/tricks.md#objects) * [Quotes](/docs/tricks.md#quotes) * [Advanced Topics](/docs/advanced.md) * [Composing Your App Using Commands](/docs/advanced.md#commands) * [Building Configurable CLI Apps](/docs/advanced.md#configuration) * [Customizing Yargs' Parser](/docs/advanced.md#customizing) * [Contributing](/contributing.md) [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/yargs/yargs [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/yargs/yargs/master.svg [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: http://standardjs.com/ [conventional-commits-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg [conventional-commits-url]: https://conventionalcommits.org/ [slack-image]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com/badge.svg [slack-url]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com [type-definitions]: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/master/types/yargs [coverage-image]: https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/yargs [coverage-url]: https://github.com/yargs/yargs/blob/master/.nycrc # safe-buffer [![travis][travis-image]][travis-url] [![npm][npm-image]][npm-url] [![downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url] [![javascript style guide][standard-image]][standard-url] [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/feross/safe-buffer/master.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/feross/safe-buffer [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/safe-buffer.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/safe-buffer [downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/safe-buffer.svg [downloads-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/safe-buffer [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code_style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: https://standardjs.com #### Safer Node.js Buffer API **Use the new Node.js Buffer APIs (`Buffer.from`, `Buffer.alloc`, `Buffer.allocUnsafe`, `Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow`) in all versions of Node.js.** **Uses the built-in implementation when available.** ## install ``` npm install safe-buffer ``` ## usage The goal of this package is to provide a safe replacement for the node.js `Buffer`. It's a drop-in replacement for `Buffer`. You can use it by adding one `require` line to the top of your node.js modules: ```js var Buffer = require('safe-buffer').Buffer // Existing buffer code will continue to work without issues: new Buffer('hey', 'utf8') new Buffer([1, 2, 3], 'utf8') new Buffer(obj) new Buffer(16) // create an uninitialized buffer (potentially unsafe) // But you can use these new explicit APIs to make clear what you want: Buffer.from('hey', 'utf8') // convert from many types to a Buffer Buffer.alloc(16) // create a zero-filled buffer (safe) Buffer.allocUnsafe(16) // create an uninitialized buffer (potentially unsafe) ``` ## api ### Class Method: Buffer.from(array) <!-- YAML added: v3.0.0 --> * `array` {Array} Allocates a new `Buffer` using an `array` of octets. ```js const buf = Buffer.from([0x62,0x75,0x66,0x66,0x65,0x72]); // creates a new Buffer containing ASCII bytes // ['b','u','f','f','e','r'] ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `array` is not an `Array`. ### Class Method: Buffer.from(arrayBuffer[, byteOffset[, length]]) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `arrayBuffer` {ArrayBuffer} The `.buffer` property of a `TypedArray` or a `new ArrayBuffer()` * `byteOffset` {Number} Default: `0` * `length` {Number} Default: `arrayBuffer.length - byteOffset` When passed a reference to the `.buffer` property of a `TypedArray` instance, the newly created `Buffer` will share the same allocated memory as the TypedArray. ```js const arr = new Uint16Array(2); arr[0] = 5000; arr[1] = 4000; const buf = Buffer.from(arr.buffer); // shares the memory with arr; console.log(buf); // Prints: <Buffer 88 13 a0 0f> // changing the TypedArray changes the Buffer also arr[1] = 6000; console.log(buf); // Prints: <Buffer 88 13 70 17> ``` The optional `byteOffset` and `length` arguments specify a memory range within the `arrayBuffer` that will be shared by the `Buffer`. ```js const ab = new ArrayBuffer(10); const buf = Buffer.from(ab, 0, 2); console.log(buf.length); // Prints: 2 ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `arrayBuffer` is not an `ArrayBuffer`. ### Class Method: Buffer.from(buffer) <!-- YAML added: v3.0.0 --> * `buffer` {Buffer} Copies the passed `buffer` data onto a new `Buffer` instance. ```js const buf1 = Buffer.from('buffer'); const buf2 = Buffer.from(buf1); buf1[0] = 0x61; console.log(buf1.toString()); // 'auffer' console.log(buf2.toString()); // 'buffer' (copy is not changed) ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `buffer` is not a `Buffer`. ### Class Method: Buffer.from(str[, encoding]) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `str` {String} String to encode. * `encoding` {String} Encoding to use, Default: `'utf8'` Creates a new `Buffer` containing the given JavaScript string `str`. If provided, the `encoding` parameter identifies the character encoding. If not provided, `encoding` defaults to `'utf8'`. ```js const buf1 = Buffer.from('this is a tést'); console.log(buf1.toString()); // prints: this is a tést console.log(buf1.toString('ascii')); // prints: this is a tC)st const buf2 = Buffer.from('7468697320697320612074c3a97374', 'hex'); console.log(buf2.toString()); // prints: this is a tést ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `str` is not a string. ### Class Method: Buffer.alloc(size[, fill[, encoding]]) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `size` {Number} * `fill` {Value} Default: `undefined` * `encoding` {String} Default: `utf8` Allocates a new `Buffer` of `size` bytes. If `fill` is `undefined`, the `Buffer` will be *zero-filled*. ```js const buf = Buffer.alloc(5); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 00 00 00 00 00> ``` The `size` must be less than or equal to the value of `require('buffer').kMaxLength` (on 64-bit architectures, `kMaxLength` is `(2^31)-1`). Otherwise, a [`RangeError`][] is thrown. A zero-length Buffer will be created if a `size` less than or equal to 0 is specified. If `fill` is specified, the allocated `Buffer` will be initialized by calling `buf.fill(fill)`. See [`buf.fill()`][] for more information. ```js const buf = Buffer.alloc(5, 'a'); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 61 61 61 61 61> ``` If both `fill` and `encoding` are specified, the allocated `Buffer` will be initialized by calling `buf.fill(fill, encoding)`. For example: ```js const buf = Buffer.alloc(11, 'aGVsbG8gd29ybGQ=', 'base64'); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 68 65 6c 6c 6f 20 77 6f 72 6c 64> ``` Calling `Buffer.alloc(size)` can be significantly slower than the alternative `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` but ensures that the newly created `Buffer` instance contents will *never contain sensitive data*. A `TypeError` will be thrown if `size` is not a number. ### Class Method: Buffer.allocUnsafe(size) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `size` {Number} Allocates a new *non-zero-filled* `Buffer` of `size` bytes. The `size` must be less than or equal to the value of `require('buffer').kMaxLength` (on 64-bit architectures, `kMaxLength` is `(2^31)-1`). Otherwise, a [`RangeError`][] is thrown. A zero-length Buffer will be created if a `size` less than or equal to 0 is specified. The underlying memory for `Buffer` instances created in this way is *not initialized*. The contents of the newly created `Buffer` are unknown and *may contain sensitive data*. Use [`buf.fill(0)`][] to initialize such `Buffer` instances to zeroes. ```js const buf = Buffer.allocUnsafe(5); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 78 e0 82 02 01> // (octets will be different, every time) buf.fill(0); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 00 00 00 00 00> ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `size` is not a number. Note that the `Buffer` module pre-allocates an internal `Buffer` instance of size `Buffer.poolSize` that is used as a pool for the fast allocation of new `Buffer` instances created using `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` (and the deprecated `new Buffer(size)` constructor) only when `size` is less than or equal to `Buffer.poolSize >> 1` (floor of `Buffer.poolSize` divided by two). The default value of `Buffer.poolSize` is `8192` but can be modified. Use of this pre-allocated internal memory pool is a key difference between calling `Buffer.alloc(size, fill)` vs. `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size).fill(fill)`. Specifically, `Buffer.alloc(size, fill)` will *never* use the internal Buffer pool, while `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size).fill(fill)` *will* use the internal Buffer pool if `size` is less than or equal to half `Buffer.poolSize`. The difference is subtle but can be important when an application requires the additional performance that `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` provides. ### Class Method: Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow(size) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `size` {Number} Allocates a new *non-zero-filled* and non-pooled `Buffer` of `size` bytes. The `size` must be less than or equal to the value of `require('buffer').kMaxLength` (on 64-bit architectures, `kMaxLength` is `(2^31)-1`). Otherwise, a [`RangeError`][] is thrown. A zero-length Buffer will be created if a `size` less than or equal to 0 is specified. The underlying memory for `Buffer` instances created in this way is *not initialized*. The contents of the newly created `Buffer` are unknown and *may contain sensitive data*. Use [`buf.fill(0)`][] to initialize such `Buffer` instances to zeroes. When using `Buffer.allocUnsafe()` to allocate new `Buffer` instances, allocations under 4KB are, by default, sliced from a single pre-allocated `Buffer`. This allows applications to avoid the garbage collection overhead of creating many individually allocated Buffers. This approach improves both performance and memory usage by eliminating the need to track and cleanup as many `Persistent` objects. However, in the case where a developer may need to retain a small chunk of memory from a pool for an indeterminate amount of time, it may be appropriate to create an un-pooled Buffer instance using `Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow()` then copy out the relevant bits. ```js // need to keep around a few small chunks of memory const store = []; socket.on('readable', () => { const data = socket.read(); // allocate for retained data const sb = Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow(10); // copy the data into the new allocation data.copy(sb, 0, 0, 10); store.push(sb); }); ``` Use of `Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow()` should be used only as a last resort *after* a developer has observed undue memory retention in their applications. A `TypeError` will be thrown if `size` is not a number. ### All the Rest The rest of the `Buffer` API is exactly the same as in node.js. [See the docs](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html). ## Related links - [Node.js issue: Buffer(number) is unsafe](https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/4660) - [Node.js Enhancement Proposal: Buffer.from/Buffer.alloc/Buffer.zalloc/Buffer() soft-deprecate](https://github.com/nodejs/node-eps/pull/4) ## Why is `Buffer` unsafe? Today, the node.js `Buffer` constructor is overloaded to handle many different argument types like `String`, `Array`, `Object`, `TypedArrayView` (`Uint8Array`, etc.), `ArrayBuffer`, and also `Number`. The API is optimized for convenience: you can throw any type at it, and it will try to do what you want. Because the Buffer constructor is so powerful, you often see code like this: ```js // Convert UTF-8 strings to hex function toHex (str) { return new Buffer(str).toString('hex') } ``` ***But what happens if `toHex` is called with a `Number` argument?*** ### Remote Memory Disclosure If an attacker can make your program call the `Buffer` constructor with a `Number` argument, then they can make it allocate uninitialized memory from the node.js process. This could potentially disclose TLS private keys, user data, or database passwords. When the `Buffer` constructor is passed a `Number` argument, it returns an **UNINITIALIZED** block of memory of the specified `size`. When you create a `Buffer` like this, you **MUST** overwrite the contents before returning it to the user. From the [node.js docs](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html#buffer_new_buffer_size): > `new Buffer(size)` > > - `size` Number > > The underlying memory for `Buffer` instances created in this way is not initialized. > **The contents of a newly created `Buffer` are unknown and could contain sensitive > data.** Use `buf.fill(0)` to initialize a Buffer to zeroes. (Emphasis our own.) Whenever the programmer intended to create an uninitialized `Buffer` you often see code like this: ```js var buf = new Buffer(16) // Immediately overwrite the uninitialized buffer with data from another buffer for (var i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) { buf[i] = otherBuf[i] } ``` ### Would this ever be a problem in real code? Yes. It's surprisingly common to forget to check the type of your variables in a dynamically-typed language like JavaScript. Usually the consequences of assuming the wrong type is that your program crashes with an uncaught exception. But the failure mode for forgetting to check the type of arguments to the `Buffer` constructor is more catastrophic. Here's an example of a vulnerable service that takes a JSON payload and converts it to hex: ```js // Take a JSON payload {str: "some string"} and convert it to hex var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) { var data = '' req.setEncoding('utf8') req.on('data', function (chunk) { data += chunk }) req.on('end', function () { var body = JSON.parse(data) res.end(new Buffer(body.str).toString('hex')) }) }) server.listen(8080) ``` In this example, an http client just has to send: ```json { "str": 1000 } ``` and it will get back 1,000 bytes of uninitialized memory from the server. This is a very serious bug. It's similar in severity to the [the Heartbleed bug](http://heartbleed.com/) that allowed disclosure of OpenSSL process memory by remote attackers. ### Which real-world packages were vulnerable? #### [`bittorrent-dht`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bittorrent-dht) [Mathias Buus](https://github.com/mafintosh) and I ([Feross Aboukhadijeh](http://feross.org/)) found this issue in one of our own packages, [`bittorrent-dht`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bittorrent-dht). The bug would allow anyone on the internet to send a series of messages to a user of `bittorrent-dht` and get them to reveal 20 bytes at a time of uninitialized memory from the node.js process. Here's [the commit](https://github.com/feross/bittorrent-dht/commit/6c7da04025d5633699800a99ec3fbadf70ad35b8) that fixed it. We released a new fixed version, created a [Node Security Project disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/68), and deprecated all vulnerable versions on npm so users will get a warning to upgrade to a newer version. #### [`ws`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ws) That got us wondering if there were other vulnerable packages. Sure enough, within a short period of time, we found the same issue in [`ws`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ws), the most popular WebSocket implementation in node.js. If certain APIs were called with `Number` parameters instead of `String` or `Buffer` as expected, then uninitialized server memory would be disclosed to the remote peer. These were the vulnerable methods: ```js socket.send(number) socket.ping(number) socket.pong(number) ``` Here's a vulnerable socket server with some echo functionality: ```js server.on('connection', function (socket) { socket.on('message', function (message) { message = JSON.parse(message) if (message.type === 'echo') { socket.send(message.data) // send back the user's message } }) }) ``` `socket.send(number)` called on the server, will disclose server memory. Here's [the release](https://github.com/websockets/ws/releases/tag/1.0.1) where the issue was fixed, with a more detailed explanation. Props to [Arnout Kazemier](https://github.com/3rd-Eden) for the quick fix. Here's the [Node Security Project disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/67). ### What's the solution? It's important that node.js offers a fast way to get memory otherwise performance-critical applications would needlessly get a lot slower. But we need a better way to *signal our intent* as programmers. **When we want uninitialized memory, we should request it explicitly.** Sensitive functionality should not be packed into a developer-friendly API that loosely accepts many different types. This type of API encourages the lazy practice of passing variables in without checking the type very carefully. #### A new API: `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)` The functionality of creating buffers with uninitialized memory should be part of another API. We propose `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)`. This way, it's not part of an API that frequently gets user input of all sorts of different types passed into it. ```js var buf = Buffer.allocUnsafe(16) // careful, uninitialized memory! // Immediately overwrite the uninitialized buffer with data from another buffer for (var i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) { buf[i] = otherBuf[i] } ``` ### How do we fix node.js core? We sent [a PR to node.js core](https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/4514) (merged as `semver-major`) which defends against one case: ```js var str = 16 new Buffer(str, 'utf8') ``` In this situation, it's implied that the programmer intended the first argument to be a string, since they passed an encoding as a second argument. Today, node.js will allocate uninitialized memory in the case of `new Buffer(number, encoding)`, which is probably not what the programmer intended. But this is only a partial solution, since if the programmer does `new Buffer(variable)` (without an `encoding` parameter) there's no way to know what they intended. If `variable` is sometimes a number, then uninitialized memory will sometimes be returned. ### What's the real long-term fix? We could deprecate and remove `new Buffer(number)` and use `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)` when we need uninitialized memory. But that would break 1000s of packages. ~~We believe the best solution is to:~~ ~~1. Change `new Buffer(number)` to return safe, zeroed-out memory~~ ~~2. Create a new API for creating uninitialized Buffers. We propose: `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)`~~ #### Update We now support adding three new APIs: - `Buffer.from(value)` - convert from any type to a buffer - `Buffer.alloc(size)` - create a zero-filled buffer - `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` - create an uninitialized buffer with given size This solves the core problem that affected `ws` and `bittorrent-dht` which is `Buffer(variable)` getting tricked into taking a number argument. This way, existing code continues working and the impact on the npm ecosystem will be minimal. Over time, npm maintainers can migrate performance-critical code to use `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)` instead of `new Buffer(number)`. ### Conclusion We think there's a serious design issue with the `Buffer` API as it exists today. It promotes insecure software by putting high-risk functionality into a convenient API with friendly "developer ergonomics". This wasn't merely a theoretical exercise because we found the issue in some of the most popular npm packages. Fortunately, there's an easy fix that can be applied today. Use `safe-buffer` in place of `buffer`. ```js var Buffer = require('safe-buffer').Buffer ``` Eventually, we hope that node.js core can switch to this new, safer behavior. We believe the impact on the ecosystem would be minimal since it's not a breaking change. Well-maintained, popular packages would be updated to use `Buffer.alloc` quickly, while older, insecure packages would magically become safe from this attack vector. ## links - [Node.js PR: buffer: throw if both length and enc are passed](https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/4514) - [Node Security Project disclosure for `ws`](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/67) - [Node Security Project disclosure for`bittorrent-dht`](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/68) ## credit The original issues in `bittorrent-dht` ([disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/68)) and `ws` ([disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/67)) were discovered by [Mathias Buus](https://github.com/mafintosh) and [Feross Aboukhadijeh](http://feross.org/). Thanks to [Adam Baldwin](https://github.com/evilpacket) for helping disclose these issues and for his work running the [Node Security Project](https://nodesecurity.io/). Thanks to [John Hiesey](https://github.com/jhiesey) for proofreading this README and auditing the code. ## license MIT. Copyright (C) [Feross Aboukhadijeh](http://feross.org) # get-caller-file [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/stefanpenner/get-caller-file.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/stefanpenner/get-caller-file) [![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/ol2q94g1932cy14a/branch/master?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/embercli/get-caller-file/branch/master) This is a utility, which allows a function to figure out from which file it was invoked. It does so by inspecting v8's stack trace at the time it is invoked. Inspired by http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13227489 *note: this relies on Node/V8 specific APIs, as such other runtimes may not work* ## Installation ```bash yarn add get-caller-file ``` ## Usage Given: ```js // ./foo.js const getCallerFile = require('get-caller-file'); module.exports = function() { return getCallerFile(); // figures out who called it }; ``` ```js // index.js const foo = require('./foo'); foo() // => /full/path/to/this/file/index.js ``` ## Options: * `getCallerFile(position = 2)`: where position is stack frame whos fileName we want. # binary-install Install .tar.gz binary applications via npm ## Usage This library provides a single class `Binary` that takes a download url and some optional arguments. You **must** provide either `name` or `installDirectory` when creating your `Binary`. | option | decription | | ---------------- | --------------------------------------------- | | name | The name of your binary | | installDirectory | A path to the directory to install the binary | If an `installDirectory` is not provided, the binary will be installed at your OS specific config directory. On MacOS it defaults to `~/Library/Preferences/${name}-nodejs` After your `Binary` has been created, you can run `.install()` to install the binary, and `.run()` to run it. ### Example This is meant to be used as a library - create your `Binary` with your desired options, then call `.install()` in the `postinstall` of your `package.json`, `.run()` in the `bin` section of your `package.json`, and `.uninstall()` in the `preuninstall` section of your `package.json`. See [this example project](/example) to see how to create an npm package that installs and runs a binary using the Github releases API. JS-YAML - YAML 1.2 parser / writer for JavaScript ================================================= [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/nodeca/js-yaml.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/nodeca/js-yaml) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/js-yaml.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/js-yaml) __[Online Demo](http://nodeca.github.com/js-yaml/)__ This is an implementation of [YAML](http://yaml.org/), a human-friendly data serialization language. Started as [PyYAML](http://pyyaml.org/) port, it was completely rewritten from scratch. Now it's very fast, and supports 1.2 spec. Installation ------------ ### YAML module for node.js ``` npm install js-yaml ``` ### CLI executable If you want to inspect your YAML files from CLI, install js-yaml globally: ``` npm install -g js-yaml ``` #### Usage ``` usage: js-yaml [-h] [-v] [-c] [-t] file Positional arguments: file File with YAML document(s) Optional arguments: -h, --help Show this help message and exit. -v, --version Show program's version number and exit. -c, --compact Display errors in compact mode -t, --trace Show stack trace on error ``` ### Bundled YAML library for browsers ``` html <!-- esprima required only for !!js/function --> <script src="esprima.js"></script> <script src="js-yaml.min.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript"> var doc = jsyaml.load('greeting: hello\nname: world'); </script> ``` Browser support was done mostly for the online demo. If you find any errors - feel free to send pull requests with fixes. Also note, that IE and other old browsers needs [es5-shims](https://github.com/kriskowal/es5-shim) to operate. Notes: 1. We have no resources to support browserified version. Don't expect it to be well tested. Don't expect fast fixes if something goes wrong there. 2. `!!js/function` in browser bundle will not work by default. If you really need it - load `esprima` parser first (via amd or directly). 3. `!!bin` in browser will return `Array`, because browsers do not support node.js `Buffer` and adding Buffer shims is completely useless on practice. API --- Here we cover the most 'useful' methods. If you need advanced details (creating your own tags), see [wiki](https://github.com/nodeca/js-yaml/wiki) and [examples](https://github.com/nodeca/js-yaml/tree/master/examples) for more info. ``` javascript const yaml = require('js-yaml'); const fs = require('fs'); // Get document, or throw exception on error try { const doc = yaml.safeLoad(fs.readFileSync('/home/ixti/example.yml', 'utf8')); console.log(doc); } catch (e) { console.log(e); } ``` ### safeLoad (string [ , options ]) **Recommended loading way.** Parses `string` as single YAML document. Returns either a plain object, a string or `undefined`, or throws `YAMLException` on error. By default, does not support regexps, functions and undefined. This method is safe for untrusted data. options: - `filename` _(default: null)_ - string to be used as a file path in error/warning messages. - `onWarning` _(default: null)_ - function to call on warning messages. Loader will call this function with an instance of `YAMLException` for each warning. - `schema` _(default: `DEFAULT_SAFE_SCHEMA`)_ - specifies a schema to use. - `FAILSAFE_SCHEMA` - only strings, arrays and plain objects: http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2802346 - `JSON_SCHEMA` - all JSON-supported types: http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2803231 - `CORE_SCHEMA` - same as `JSON_SCHEMA`: http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2804923 - `DEFAULT_SAFE_SCHEMA` - all supported YAML types, without unsafe ones (`!!js/undefined`, `!!js/regexp` and `!!js/function`): http://yaml.org/type/ - `DEFAULT_FULL_SCHEMA` - all supported YAML types. - `json` _(default: false)_ - compatibility with JSON.parse behaviour. If true, then duplicate keys in a mapping will override values rather than throwing an error. NOTE: This function **does not** understand multi-document sources, it throws exception on those. NOTE: JS-YAML **does not** support schema-specific tag resolution restrictions. So, the JSON schema is not as strictly defined in the YAML specification. It allows numbers in any notation, use `Null` and `NULL` as `null`, etc. The core schema also has no such restrictions. It allows binary notation for integers. ### load (string [ , options ]) **Use with care with untrusted sources**. The same as `safeLoad()` but uses `DEFAULT_FULL_SCHEMA` by default - adds some JavaScript-specific types: `!!js/function`, `!!js/regexp` and `!!js/undefined`. For untrusted sources, you must additionally validate object structure to avoid injections: ``` javascript const untrusted_code = '"toString": !<tag:yaml.org,2002:js/function> "function (){very_evil_thing();}"'; // I'm just converting that string, what could possibly go wrong? require('js-yaml').load(untrusted_code) + '' ``` ### safeLoadAll (string [, iterator] [, options ]) Same as `safeLoad()`, but understands multi-document sources. Applies `iterator` to each document if specified, or returns array of documents. ``` javascript const yaml = require('js-yaml'); yaml.safeLoadAll(data, function (doc) { console.log(doc); }); ``` ### loadAll (string [, iterator] [ , options ]) Same as `safeLoadAll()` but uses `DEFAULT_FULL_SCHEMA` by default. ### safeDump (object [ , options ]) Serializes `object` as a YAML document. Uses `DEFAULT_SAFE_SCHEMA`, so it will throw an exception if you try to dump regexps or functions. However, you can disable exceptions by setting the `skipInvalid` option to `true`. options: - `indent` _(default: 2)_ - indentation width to use (in spaces). - `noArrayIndent` _(default: false)_ - when true, will not add an indentation level to array elements - `skipInvalid` _(default: false)_ - do not throw on invalid types (like function in the safe schema) and skip pairs and single values with such types. - `flowLevel` (default: -1) - specifies level of nesting, when to switch from block to flow style for collections. -1 means block style everwhere - `styles` - "tag" => "style" map. Each tag may have own set of styles. - `schema` _(default: `DEFAULT_SAFE_SCHEMA`)_ specifies a schema to use. - `sortKeys` _(default: `false`)_ - if `true`, sort keys when dumping YAML. If a function, use the function to sort the keys. - `lineWidth` _(default: `80`)_ - set max line width. - `noRefs` _(default: `false`)_ - if `true`, don't convert duplicate objects into references - `noCompatMode` _(default: `false`)_ - if `true` don't try to be compatible with older yaml versions. Currently: don't quote "yes", "no" and so on, as required for YAML 1.1 - `condenseFlow` _(default: `false`)_ - if `true` flow sequences will be condensed, omitting the space between `a, b`. Eg. `'[a,b]'`, and omitting the space between `key: value` and quoting the key. Eg. `'{"a":b}'` Can be useful when using yaml for pretty URL query params as spaces are %-encoded. The following table show availlable styles (e.g. "canonical", "binary"...) available for each tag (.e.g. !!null, !!int ...). Yaml output is shown on the right side after `=>` (default setting) or `->`: ``` none !!null "canonical" -> "~" "lowercase" => "null" "uppercase" -> "NULL" "camelcase" -> "Null" !!int "binary" -> "0b1", "0b101010", "0b1110001111010" "octal" -> "01", "052", "016172" "decimal" => "1", "42", "7290" "hexadecimal" -> "0x1", "0x2A", "0x1C7A" !!bool "lowercase" => "true", "false" "uppercase" -> "TRUE", "FALSE" "camelcase" -> "True", "False" !!float "lowercase" => ".nan", '.inf' "uppercase" -> ".NAN", '.INF' "camelcase" -> ".NaN", '.Inf' ``` Example: ``` javascript safeDump (object, { 'styles': { '!!null': 'canonical' // dump null as ~ }, 'sortKeys': true // sort object keys }); ``` ### dump (object [ , options ]) Same as `safeDump()` but without limits (uses `DEFAULT_FULL_SCHEMA` by default). Supported YAML types -------------------- The list of standard YAML tags and corresponding JavaScipt types. See also [YAML tag discussion](http://pyyaml.org/wiki/YAMLTagDiscussion) and [YAML types repository](http://yaml.org/type/). ``` !!null '' # null !!bool 'yes' # bool !!int '3...' # number !!float '3.14...' # number !!binary '...base64...' # buffer !!timestamp 'YYYY-...' # date !!omap [ ... ] # array of key-value pairs !!pairs [ ... ] # array or array pairs !!set { ... } # array of objects with given keys and null values !!str '...' # string !!seq [ ... ] # array !!map { ... } # object ``` **JavaScript-specific tags** ``` !!js/regexp /pattern/gim # RegExp !!js/undefined '' # Undefined !!js/function 'function () {...}' # Function ``` Caveats ------- Note, that you use arrays or objects as key in JS-YAML. JS does not allow objects or arrays as keys, and stringifies (by calling `toString()` method) them at the moment of adding them. ``` yaml --- ? [ foo, bar ] : - baz ? { foo: bar } : - baz - baz ``` ``` javascript { "foo,bar": ["baz"], "[object Object]": ["baz", "baz"] } ``` Also, reading of properties on implicit block mapping keys is not supported yet. So, the following YAML document cannot be loaded. ``` yaml &anchor foo: foo: bar *anchor: duplicate key baz: bat *anchor: duplicate key ``` js-yaml for enterprise ---------------------- Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription The maintainers of js-yaml and thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver commercial support and maintenance for the open source dependencies you use to build your applications. Save time, reduce risk, and improve code health, while paying the maintainers of the exact dependencies you use. [Learn more.](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-js-yaml?utm_source=npm-js-yaml&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo) # eslint-visitor-keys [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) Constants and utilities about visitor keys to traverse AST. ## 💿 Installation Use [npm] to install. ```bash $ npm install eslint-visitor-keys ``` ### Requirements - [Node.js] 10.0.0 or later. ## 📖 Usage ```js const evk = require("eslint-visitor-keys") ``` ### evk.KEYS > type: `{ [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Visitor keys. This keys are frozen. This is an object. Keys are the type of [ESTree] nodes. Their values are an array of property names which have child nodes. For example: ``` console.log(evk.KEYS.AssignmentExpression) // → ["left", "right"] ``` ### evk.getKeys(node) > type: `(node: object) => string[]` Get the visitor keys of a given AST node. This is similar to `Object.keys(node)` of ES Standard, but some keys are excluded: `parent`, `leadingComments`, `trailingComments`, and names which start with `_`. This will be used to traverse unknown nodes. For example: ``` const node = { type: "AssignmentExpression", left: { type: "Identifier", name: "foo" }, right: { type: "Literal", value: 0 } } console.log(evk.getKeys(node)) // → ["type", "left", "right"] ``` ### evk.unionWith(additionalKeys) > type: `(additionalKeys: object) => { [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Make the union set with `evk.KEYS` and the given keys. - The order of keys is, `additionalKeys` is at first, then `evk.KEYS` is concatenated after that. - It removes duplicated keys as keeping the first one. For example: ``` console.log(evk.unionWith({ MethodDefinition: ["decorators"] })) // → { ..., MethodDefinition: ["decorators", "key", "value"], ... } ``` ## 📰 Change log See [GitHub releases](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys/releases). ## 🍻 Contributing Welcome. See [ESLint contribution guidelines](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/). ### Development commands - `npm test` runs tests and measures code coverage. - `npm run lint` checks source codes with ESLint. - `npm run coverage` opens the code coverage report of the previous test with your default browser. - `npm run release` publishes this package to [npm] registory. [npm]: https://www.npmjs.com/ [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/ [ESTree]: https://github.com/estree/estree # emoji-regex [![Build status](https://travis-ci.org/mathiasbynens/emoji-regex.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/mathiasbynens/emoji-regex) _emoji-regex_ offers a regular expression to match all emoji symbols (including textual representations of emoji) as per the Unicode Standard. This repository contains a script that generates this regular expression based on [the data from Unicode v12](https://github.com/mathiasbynens/unicode-12.0.0). Because of this, the regular expression can easily be updated whenever new emoji are added to the Unicode standard. ## Installation Via [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```bash npm install emoji-regex ``` In [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/): ```js const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex'); // Note: because the regular expression has the global flag set, this module // exports a function that returns the regex rather than exporting the regular // expression itself, to make it impossible to (accidentally) mutate the // original regular expression. const text = ` \u{231A}: ⌚ default emoji presentation character (Emoji_Presentation) \u{2194}\u{FE0F}: ↔️ default text presentation character rendered as emoji \u{1F469}: 👩 emoji modifier base (Emoji_Modifier_Base) \u{1F469}\u{1F3FF}: 👩🏿 emoji modifier base followed by a modifier `; const regex = emojiRegex(); let match; while (match = regex.exec(text)) { const emoji = match[0]; console.log(`Matched sequence ${ emoji } — code points: ${ [...emoji].length }`); } ``` Console output: ``` Matched sequence ⌚ — code points: 1 Matched sequence ⌚ — code points: 1 Matched sequence ↔️ — code points: 2 Matched sequence ↔️ — code points: 2 Matched sequence 👩 — code points: 1 Matched sequence 👩 — code points: 1 Matched sequence 👩🏿 — code points: 2 Matched sequence 👩🏿 — code points: 2 ``` To match emoji in their textual representation as well (i.e. emoji that are not `Emoji_Presentation` symbols and that aren’t forced to render as emoji by a variation selector), `require` the other regex: ```js const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex/text.js'); ``` Additionally, in environments which support ES2015 Unicode escapes, you may `require` ES2015-style versions of the regexes: ```js const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex/es2015/index.js'); const emojiRegexText = require('emoji-regex/es2015/text.js'); ``` ## Author | [![twitter/mathias](https://gravatar.com/avatar/24e08a9ea84deb17ae121074d0f17125?s=70)](https://twitter.com/mathias "Follow @mathias on Twitter") | |---| | [Mathias Bynens](https://mathiasbynens.be/) | ## License _emoji-regex_ is available under the [MIT](https://mths.be/mit) license. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/rimraf.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/rimraf) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf.svg)](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf) [![devDependency Status](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf/dev-status.svg)](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf#info=devDependencies) The [UNIX command](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rm_(Unix)) `rm -rf` for node. Install with `npm install rimraf`, or just drop rimraf.js somewhere. ## API `rimraf(f, [opts], callback)` The first parameter will be interpreted as a globbing pattern for files. If you want to disable globbing you can do so with `opts.disableGlob` (defaults to `false`). This might be handy, for instance, if you have filenames that contain globbing wildcard characters. The callback will be called with an error if there is one. Certain errors are handled for you: * Windows: `EBUSY` and `ENOTEMPTY` - rimraf will back off a maximum of `opts.maxBusyTries` times before giving up, adding 100ms of wait between each attempt. The default `maxBusyTries` is 3. * `ENOENT` - If the file doesn't exist, rimraf will return successfully, since your desired outcome is already the case. * `EMFILE` - Since `readdir` requires opening a file descriptor, it's possible to hit `EMFILE` if too many file descriptors are in use. In the sync case, there's nothing to be done for this. But in the async case, rimraf will gradually back off with timeouts up to `opts.emfileWait` ms, which defaults to 1000. ## options * unlink, chmod, stat, lstat, rmdir, readdir, unlinkSync, chmodSync, statSync, lstatSync, rmdirSync, readdirSync In order to use a custom file system library, you can override specific fs functions on the options object. If any of these functions are present on the options object, then the supplied function will be used instead of the default fs method. Sync methods are only relevant for `rimraf.sync()`, of course. For example: ```javascript var myCustomFS = require('some-custom-fs') rimraf('some-thing', myCustomFS, callback) ``` * maxBusyTries If an `EBUSY`, `ENOTEMPTY`, or `EPERM` error code is encountered on Windows systems, then rimraf will retry with a linear backoff wait of 100ms longer on each try. The default maxBusyTries is 3. Only relevant for async usage. * emfileWait If an `EMFILE` error is encountered, then rimraf will retry repeatedly with a linear backoff of 1ms longer on each try, until the timeout counter hits this max. The default limit is 1000. If you repeatedly encounter `EMFILE` errors, then consider using [graceful-fs](http://npm.im/graceful-fs) in your program. Only relevant for async usage. * glob Set to `false` to disable [glob](http://npm.im/glob) pattern matching. Set to an object to pass options to the glob module. The default glob options are `{ nosort: true, silent: true }`. Glob version 6 is used in this module. Relevant for both sync and async usage. * disableGlob Set to any non-falsey value to disable globbing entirely. (Equivalent to setting `glob: false`.) ## rimraf.sync It can remove stuff synchronously, too. But that's not so good. Use the async API. It's better. ## CLI If installed with `npm install rimraf -g` it can be used as a global command `rimraf <path> [<path> ...]` which is useful for cross platform support. ## mkdirp If you need to create a directory recursively, check out [mkdirp](https://github.com/substack/node-mkdirp). # minimatch A minimal matching utility. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/minimatch.svg?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/isaacs/minimatch) This is the matching library used internally by npm. It works by converting glob expressions into JavaScript `RegExp` objects. ## Usage ```javascript var minimatch = require("minimatch") minimatch("bar.foo", "*.foo") // true! minimatch("bar.foo", "*.bar") // false! minimatch("bar.foo", "*.+(bar|foo)", { debug: true }) // true, and noisy! ``` ## Features Supports these glob features: * Brace Expansion * Extended glob matching * "Globstar" `**` matching See: * `man sh` * `man bash` * `man 3 fnmatch` * `man 5 gitignore` ## Minimatch Class Create a minimatch object by instantiating the `minimatch.Minimatch` class. ```javascript var Minimatch = require("minimatch").Minimatch var mm = new Minimatch(pattern, options) ``` ### Properties * `pattern` The original pattern the minimatch object represents. * `options` The options supplied to the constructor. * `set` A 2-dimensional array of regexp or string expressions. Each row in the array corresponds to a brace-expanded pattern. Each item in the row corresponds to a single path-part. For example, the pattern `{a,b/c}/d` would expand to a set of patterns like: [ [ a, d ] , [ b, c, d ] ] If a portion of the pattern doesn't have any "magic" in it (that is, it's something like `"foo"` rather than `fo*o?`), then it will be left as a string rather than converted to a regular expression. * `regexp` Created by the `makeRe` method. A single regular expression expressing the entire pattern. This is useful in cases where you wish to use the pattern somewhat like `fnmatch(3)` with `FNM_PATH` enabled. * `negate` True if the pattern is negated. * `comment` True if the pattern is a comment. * `empty` True if the pattern is `""`. ### Methods * `makeRe` Generate the `regexp` member if necessary, and return it. Will return `false` if the pattern is invalid. * `match(fname)` Return true if the filename matches the pattern, or false otherwise. * `matchOne(fileArray, patternArray, partial)` Take a `/`-split filename, and match it against a single row in the `regExpSet`. This method is mainly for internal use, but is exposed so that it can be used by a glob-walker that needs to avoid excessive filesystem calls. All other methods are internal, and will be called as necessary. ### minimatch(path, pattern, options) Main export. Tests a path against the pattern using the options. ```javascript var isJS = minimatch(file, "*.js", { matchBase: true }) ``` ### minimatch.filter(pattern, options) Returns a function that tests its supplied argument, suitable for use with `Array.filter`. Example: ```javascript var javascripts = fileList.filter(minimatch.filter("*.js", {matchBase: true})) ``` ### minimatch.match(list, pattern, options) Match against the list of files, in the style of fnmatch or glob. If nothing is matched, and options.nonull is set, then return a list containing the pattern itself. ```javascript var javascripts = minimatch.match(fileList, "*.js", {matchBase: true})) ``` ### minimatch.makeRe(pattern, options) Make a regular expression object from the pattern. ## Options All options are `false` by default. ### debug Dump a ton of stuff to stderr. ### nobrace Do not expand `{a,b}` and `{1..3}` brace sets. ### noglobstar Disable `**` matching against multiple folder names. ### dot Allow patterns to match filenames starting with a period, even if the pattern does not explicitly have a period in that spot. Note that by default, `a/**/b` will **not** match `a/.d/b`, unless `dot` is set. ### noext Disable "extglob" style patterns like `+(a|b)`. ### nocase Perform a case-insensitive match. ### nonull When a match is not found by `minimatch.match`, return a list containing the pattern itself if this option is set. When not set, an empty list is returned if there are no matches. ### matchBase If set, then patterns without slashes will be matched against the basename of the path if it contains slashes. For example, `a?b` would match the path `/xyz/123/acb`, but not `/xyz/acb/123`. ### nocomment Suppress the behavior of treating `#` at the start of a pattern as a comment. ### nonegate Suppress the behavior of treating a leading `!` character as negation. ### flipNegate Returns from negate expressions the same as if they were not negated. (Ie, true on a hit, false on a miss.) ### partial Compare a partial path to a pattern. As long as the parts of the path that are present are not contradicted by the pattern, it will be treated as a match. This is useful in applications where you're walking through a folder structure, and don't yet have the full path, but want to ensure that you do not walk down paths that can never be a match. For example, ```js minimatch('/a/b', '/a/*/c/d', { partial: true }) // true, might be /a/b/c/d minimatch('/a/b', '/**/d', { partial: true }) // true, might be /a/b/.../d minimatch('/x/y/z', '/a/**/z', { partial: true }) // false, because x !== a ``` ### allowWindowsEscape Windows path separator `\` is by default converted to `/`, which prohibits the usage of `\` as a escape character. This flag skips that behavior and allows using the escape character. ## Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations While strict compliance with the existing standards is a worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between minimatch and other implementations, and are intentional. If the pattern starts with a `!` character, then it is negated. Set the `nonegate` flag to suppress this behavior, and treat leading `!` characters normally. This is perhaps relevant if you wish to start the pattern with a negative extglob pattern like `!(a|B)`. Multiple `!` characters at the start of a pattern will negate the pattern multiple times. If a pattern starts with `#`, then it is treated as a comment, and will not match anything. Use `\#` to match a literal `#` at the start of a line, or set the `nocomment` flag to suppress this behavior. The double-star character `**` is supported by default, unless the `noglobstar` flag is set. This is supported in the manner of bsdglob and bash 4.1, where `**` only has special significance if it is the only thing in a path part. That is, `a/**/b` will match `a/x/y/b`, but `a/**b` will not. If an escaped pattern has no matches, and the `nonull` flag is set, then minimatch.match returns the pattern as-provided, rather than interpreting the character escapes. For example, `minimatch.match([], "\\*a\\?")` will return `"\\*a\\?"` rather than `"*a?"`. This is akin to setting the `nullglob` option in bash, except that it does not resolve escaped pattern characters. If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before any other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern like `+(a|{b),c)}`, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is expanded **first** into the set of `+(a|b)` and `+(a|c)`, and those patterns are checked for validity. Since those two are valid, matching proceeds. # levn [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/levn.png)](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/levn) <a name="levn" /> __Light ECMAScript (JavaScript) Value Notation__ Levn is a library which allows you to parse a string into a JavaScript value based on an expected type. It is meant for short amounts of human entered data (eg. config files, command line arguments). Levn aims to concisely describe JavaScript values in text, and allow for the extraction and validation of those values. Levn uses [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) for its type format, and to validate the results. MIT license. Version 0.4.1. __How is this different than JSON?__ levn is meant to be written by humans only, is (due to the previous point) much more concise, can be validated against supplied types, has regex and date literals, and can easily be extended with custom types. On the other hand, it is probably slower and thus less efficient at transporting large amounts of data, which is fine since this is not its purpose. npm install levn For updates on levn, [follow me on twitter](https://twitter.com/gkzahariev). ## Quick Examples ```js var parse = require('levn').parse; parse('Number', '2'); // 2 parse('String', '2'); // '2' parse('String', 'levn'); // 'levn' parse('String', 'a b'); // 'a b' parse('Boolean', 'true'); // true parse('Date', '#2011-11-11#'); // (Date object) parse('Date', '2011-11-11'); // (Date object) parse('RegExp', '/[a-z]/gi'); // /[a-z]/gi parse('RegExp', 're'); // /re/ parse('Int', '2'); // 2 parse('Number | String', 'str'); // 'str' parse('Number | String', '2'); // 2 parse('[Number]', '[1,2,3]'); // [1,2,3] parse('(String, Boolean)', '(hi, false)'); // ['hi', false] parse('{a: String, b: Number}', '{a: str, b: 2}'); // {a: 'str', b: 2} // at the top level, you can ommit surrounding delimiters parse('[Number]', '1,2,3'); // [1,2,3] parse('(String, Boolean)', 'hi, false'); // ['hi', false] parse('{a: String, b: Number}', 'a: str, b: 2'); // {a: 'str', b: 2} // wildcard - auto choose type parse('*', '[hi,(null,[42]),{k: true}]'); // ['hi', [null, [42]], {k: true}] ``` ## Usage `require('levn');` returns an object that exposes three properties. `VERSION` is the current version of the library as a string. `parse` and `parsedTypeParse` are functions. ```js // parse(type, input, options); parse('[Number]', '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3] // parsedTypeParse(parsedType, input, options); var parsedType = require('type-check').parseType('[Number]'); parsedTypeParse(parsedType, '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3] ``` ### parse(type, input, options) `parse` casts the string `input` into a JavaScript value according to the specified `type` in the [type format](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#type-format) (and taking account the optional `options`) and returns the resulting JavaScript value. ##### arguments * type - `String` - the type written in the [type format](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#type-format) which to check against * input - `String` - the value written in the [levn format](#levn-format) * options - `Maybe Object` - an optional parameter specifying additional [options](#options) ##### returns `*` - the resulting JavaScript value ##### example ```js parse('[Number]', '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3] ``` ### parsedTypeParse(parsedType, input, options) `parsedTypeParse` casts the string `input` into a JavaScript value according to the specified `type` which has already been parsed (and taking account the optional `options`) and returns the resulting JavaScript value. You can parse a type using the [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) library's `parseType` function. ##### arguments * type - `Object` - the type in the parsed type format which to check against * input - `String` - the value written in the [levn format](#levn-format) * options - `Maybe Object` - an optional parameter specifying additional [options](#options) ##### returns `*` - the resulting JavaScript value ##### example ```js var parsedType = require('type-check').parseType('[Number]'); parsedTypeParse(parsedType, '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3] ``` ## Levn Format Levn can use the type information you provide to choose the appropriate value to produce from the input. For the same input, it will choose a different output value depending on the type provided. For example, `parse('Number', '2')` will produce the number `2`, but `parse('String', '2')` will produce the string `"2"`. If you do not provide type information, and simply use `*`, levn will parse the input according the unambiguous "explicit" mode, which we will now detail - you can also set the `explicit` option to true manually in the [options](#options). * `"string"`, `'string'` are parsed as a String, eg. `"a msg"` is `"a msg"` * `#date#` is parsed as a Date, eg. `#2011-11-11#` is `new Date('2011-11-11')` * `/regexp/flags` is parsed as a RegExp, eg. `/re/gi` is `/re/gi` * `undefined`, `null`, `NaN`, `true`, and `false` are all their JavaScript equivalents * `[element1, element2, etc]` is an Array, and the casting procedure is recursively applied to each element. Eg. `[1,2,3]` is `[1,2,3]`. * `(element1, element2, etc)` is an tuple, and the casting procedure is recursively applied to each element. Eg. `(1, a)` is `(1, a)` (is `[1, 'a']`). * `{key1: val1, key2: val2, ...}` is an Object, and the casting procedure is recursively applied to each property. Eg. `{a: 1, b: 2}` is `{a: 1, b: 2}`. * Any test which does not fall under the above, and which does not contain special characters (`[``]``(``)``{``}``:``,`) is a string, eg. `$12- blah` is `"$12- blah"`. If you do provide type information, you can make your input more concise as the program already has some information about what it expects. Please see the [type format](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#type-format) section of [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) for more information about how to specify types. There are some rules about what levn can do with the information: * If a String is expected, and only a String, all characters of the input (including any special ones) will become part of the output. Eg. `[({})]` is `"[({})]"`, and `"hi"` is `'"hi"'`. * If a Date is expected, the surrounding `#` can be omitted from date literals. Eg. `2011-11-11` is `new Date('2011-11-11')`. * If a RegExp is expected, no flags need to be specified, and the regex is not using any of the special characters,the opening and closing `/` can be omitted - this will have the affect of setting the source of the regex to the input. Eg. `regex` is `/regex/`. * If an Array is expected, and it is the root node (at the top level), the opening `[` and closing `]` can be omitted. Eg. `1,2,3` is `[1,2,3]`. * If a tuple is expected, and it is the root node (at the top level), the opening `(` and closing `)` can be omitted. Eg. `1, a` is `(1, a)` (is `[1, 'a']`). * If an Object is expected, and it is the root node (at the top level), the opening `{` and closing `}` can be omitted. Eg `a: 1, b: 2` is `{a: 1, b: 2}`. If you list multiple types (eg. `Number | String`), it will first attempt to cast to the first type and then validate - if the validation fails it will move on to the next type and so forth, left to right. You must be careful as some types will succeed with any input, such as String. Thus put String at the end of your list. In non-explicit mode, Date and RegExp will succeed with a large variety of input - also be careful with these and list them near the end if not last in your list. Whitespace between special characters and elements is inconsequential. ## Options Options is an object. It is an optional parameter to the `parse` and `parsedTypeParse` functions. ### Explicit A `Boolean`. By default it is `false`. __Example:__ ```js parse('RegExp', 're', {explicit: false}); // /re/ parse('RegExp', 're', {explicit: true}); // Error: ... does not type check... parse('RegExp | String', 're', {explicit: true}); // 're' ``` `explicit` sets whether to be in explicit mode or not. Using `*` automatically activates explicit mode. For more information, read the [levn format](#levn-format) section. ### customTypes An `Object`. Empty `{}` by default. __Example:__ ```js var options = { customTypes: { Even: { typeOf: 'Number', validate: function (x) { return x % 2 === 0; }, cast: function (x) { return {type: 'Just', value: parseInt(x)}; } } } } parse('Even', '2', options); // 2 parse('Even', '3', options); // Error: Value: "3" does not type check... ``` __Another Example:__ ```js function Person(name, age){ this.name = name; this.age = age; } var options = { customTypes: { Person: { typeOf: 'Object', validate: function (x) { x instanceof Person; }, cast: function (value, options, typesCast) { var name, age; if ({}.toString.call(value).slice(8, -1) !== 'Object') { return {type: 'Nothing'}; } name = typesCast(value.name, [{type: 'String'}], options); age = typesCast(value.age, [{type: 'Numger'}], options); return {type: 'Just', value: new Person(name, age)}; } } } parse('Person', '{name: Laura, age: 25}', options); // Person {name: 'Laura', age: 25} ``` `customTypes` is an object whose keys are the name of the types, and whose values are an object with three properties, `typeOf`, `validate`, and `cast`. For more information about `typeOf` and `validate`, please see the [custom types](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#custom-types) section of type-check. `cast` is a function which receives three arguments, the value under question, options, and the typesCast function. In `cast`, attempt to cast the value into the specified type. If you are successful, return an object in the format `{type: 'Just', value: CAST-VALUE}`, if you know it won't work, return `{type: 'Nothing'}`. You can use the `typesCast` function to cast any child values. Remember to pass `options` to it. In your function you can also check for `options.explicit` and act accordingly. ## Technical About `levn` is written in [LiveScript](http://livescript.net/) - a language that compiles to JavaScript. It uses [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) to both parse types and validate values. It also uses the [prelude.ls](http://preludels.com/) library. # assemblyscript-json ![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/assemblyscript-json) ![npm downloads per month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/assemblyscript-json) JSON encoder / decoder for AssemblyScript. Special thanks to https://github.com/MaxGraey/bignum.wasm for basic unit testing infra for AssemblyScript. ## Installation `assemblyscript-json` is available as a [npm package](https://www.npmjs.com/package/assemblyscript-json). You can install `assemblyscript-json` in your AssemblyScript project by running: `npm install --save assemblyscript-json` ## Usage ### Parsing JSON ```typescript import { JSON } from "assemblyscript-json"; // Parse an object using the JSON object let jsonObj: JSON.Obj = <JSON.Obj>(JSON.parse('{"hello": "world", "value": 24}')); // We can then use the .getX functions to read from the object if you know it's type // This will return the appropriate JSON.X value if the key exists, or null if the key does not exist let worldOrNull: JSON.Str | null = jsonObj.getString("hello"); // This will return a JSON.Str or null if (worldOrNull != null) { // use .valueOf() to turn the high level JSON.Str type into a string let world: string = worldOrNull.valueOf(); } let numOrNull: JSON.Num | null = jsonObj.getNum("value"); if (numOrNull != null) { // use .valueOf() to turn the high level JSON.Num type into a f64 let value: f64 = numOrNull.valueOf(); } // If you don't know the value type, get the parent JSON.Value let valueOrNull: JSON.Value | null = jsonObj.getValue("hello"); if (valueOrNull != null) { let value = <JSON.Value>valueOrNull; // Next we could figure out what type we are if(value.isString) { // value.isString would be true, so we can cast to a string let innerString = (<JSON.Str>value).valueOf(); let jsonString = (<JSON.Str>value).stringify(); // Do something with string value } } ``` ### Encoding JSON ```typescript import { JSONEncoder } from "assemblyscript-json"; // Create encoder let encoder = new JSONEncoder(); // Construct necessary object encoder.pushObject("obj"); encoder.setInteger("int", 10); encoder.setString("str", ""); encoder.popObject(); // Get serialized data let json: Uint8Array = encoder.serialize(); // Or get serialized data as string let jsonString: string = encoder.stringify(); assert(jsonString, '"obj": {"int": 10, "str": ""}'); // True! ``` ### Custom JSON Deserializers ```typescript import { JSONDecoder, JSONHandler } from "assemblyscript-json"; // Events need to be received by custom object extending JSONHandler. // NOTE: All methods are optional to implement. class MyJSONEventsHandler extends JSONHandler { setString(name: string, value: string): void { // Handle field } setBoolean(name: string, value: bool): void { // Handle field } setNull(name: string): void { // Handle field } setInteger(name: string, value: i64): void { // Handle field } setFloat(name: string, value: f64): void { // Handle field } pushArray(name: string): bool { // Handle array start // true means that nested object needs to be traversed, false otherwise // Note that returning false means JSONDecoder.startIndex need to be updated by handler return true; } popArray(): void { // Handle array end } pushObject(name: string): bool { // Handle object start // true means that nested object needs to be traversed, false otherwise // Note that returning false means JSONDecoder.startIndex need to be updated by handler return true; } popObject(): void { // Handle object end } } // Create decoder let decoder = new JSONDecoder<MyJSONEventsHandler>(new MyJSONEventsHandler()); // Create a byte buffer of our JSON. NOTE: Deserializers work on UTF8 string buffers. let jsonString = '{"hello": "world"}'; let jsonBuffer = Uint8Array.wrap(String.UTF8.encode(jsonString)); // Parse JSON decoder.deserialize(jsonBuffer); // This will send events to MyJSONEventsHandler ``` Feel free to look through the [tests](https://github.com/nearprotocol/assemblyscript-json/tree/master/assembly/__tests__) for more usage examples. ## Reference Documentation Reference API Documentation can be found in the [docs directory](./docs). ## License [MIT](./LICENSE) # AssemblyScript Rtrace A tiny utility to sanitize the AssemblyScript runtime. Records allocations and frees performed by the runtime and emits an error if something is off. Also checks for leaks. Instructions ------------ Compile your module that uses the full or half runtime with `-use ASC_RTRACE=1 --explicitStart` and include an instance of this module as the import named `rtrace`. ```js const rtrace = new Rtrace({ onerror(err, info) { // handle error }, oninfo(msg) { // print message, optional }, getMemory() { // obtain the module's memory, // e.g. with --explicitStart: return instance.exports.memory; } }); const { module, instance } = await WebAssembly.instantiate(..., rtrace.install({ ...imports... }) ); instance.exports._start(); ... if (rtrace.active) { let leakCount = rtr.check(); if (leakCount) { // handle error } } ``` Note that references in globals which are not cleared before collection is performed appear as leaks, including their inner members. A TypedArray would leak itself and its backing ArrayBuffer in this case for example. This is perfectly normal and clearing all globals avoids this. # lodash.truncate v4.4.2 The [lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.truncate` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.truncate ``` In Node.js: ```js var truncate = require('lodash.truncate'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#truncate) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.4.2-npm-packages/lodash.truncate) for more details. long.js ======= A Long class for representing a 64 bit two's-complement integer value derived from the [Closure Library](https://github.com/google/closure-library) for stand-alone use and extended with unsigned support. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/dcodeIO/long.js.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/dcodeIO/long.js) Background ---------- As of [ECMA-262 5th Edition](http://ecma262-5.com/ELS5_HTML.htm#Section_8.5), "all the positive and negative integers whose magnitude is no greater than 2<sup>53</sup> are representable in the Number type", which is "representing the doubleprecision 64-bit format IEEE 754 values as specified in the IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic". The [maximum safe integer](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Number/MAX_SAFE_INTEGER) in JavaScript is 2<sup>53</sup>-1. Example: 2<sup>64</sup>-1 is 1844674407370955**1615** but in JavaScript it evaluates to 1844674407370955**2000**. Furthermore, bitwise operators in JavaScript "deal only with integers in the range −2<sup>31</sup> through 2<sup>31</sup>−1, inclusive, or in the range 0 through 2<sup>32</sup>−1, inclusive. These operators accept any value of the Number type but first convert each such value to one of 2<sup>32</sup> integer values." In some use cases, however, it is required to be able to reliably work with and perform bitwise operations on the full 64 bits. This is where long.js comes into play. Usage ----- The class is compatible with CommonJS and AMD loaders and is exposed globally as `Long` if neither is available. ```javascript var Long = require("long"); var longVal = new Long(0xFFFFFFFF, 0x7FFFFFFF); console.log(longVal.toString()); ... ``` API --- ### Constructor * new **Long**(low: `number`, high: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`)<br /> Constructs a 64 bit two's-complement integer, given its low and high 32 bit values as *signed* integers. See the from* functions below for more convenient ways of constructing Longs. ### Fields * Long#**low**: `number`<br /> The low 32 bits as a signed value. * Long#**high**: `number`<br /> The high 32 bits as a signed value. * Long#**unsigned**: `boolean`<br /> Whether unsigned or not. ### Constants * Long.**ZERO**: `Long`<br /> Signed zero. * Long.**ONE**: `Long`<br /> Signed one. * Long.**NEG_ONE**: `Long`<br /> Signed negative one. * Long.**UZERO**: `Long`<br /> Unsigned zero. * Long.**UONE**: `Long`<br /> Unsigned one. * Long.**MAX_VALUE**: `Long`<br /> Maximum signed value. * Long.**MIN_VALUE**: `Long`<br /> Minimum signed value. * Long.**MAX_UNSIGNED_VALUE**: `Long`<br /> Maximum unsigned value. ### Utility * Long.**isLong**(obj: `*`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if the specified object is a Long. * Long.**fromBits**(lowBits: `number`, highBits: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Returns a Long representing the 64 bit integer that comes by concatenating the given low and high bits. Each is assumed to use 32 bits. * Long.**fromBytes**(bytes: `number[]`, unsigned?: `boolean`, le?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Creates a Long from its byte representation. * Long.**fromBytesLE**(bytes: `number[]`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Creates a Long from its little endian byte representation. * Long.**fromBytesBE**(bytes: `number[]`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Creates a Long from its big endian byte representation. * Long.**fromInt**(value: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Returns a Long representing the given 32 bit integer value. * Long.**fromNumber**(value: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Returns a Long representing the given value, provided that it is a finite number. Otherwise, zero is returned. * Long.**fromString**(str: `string`, unsigned?: `boolean`, radix?: `number`)<br /> Long.**fromString**(str: `string`, radix: `number`)<br /> Returns a Long representation of the given string, written using the specified radix. * Long.**fromValue**(val: `*`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Converts the specified value to a Long using the appropriate from* function for its type. ### Methods * Long#**add**(addend: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the sum of this and the specified Long. * Long#**and**(other: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise AND of this Long and the specified. * Long#**compare**/**comp**(other: `Long | number | string`): `number`<br /> Compares this Long's value with the specified's. Returns `0` if they are the same, `1` if the this is greater and `-1` if the given one is greater. * Long#**divide**/**div**(divisor: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long divided by the specified. * Long#**equals**/**eq**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value equals the specified's. * Long#**getHighBits**(): `number`<br /> Gets the high 32 bits as a signed integer. * Long#**getHighBitsUnsigned**(): `number`<br /> Gets the high 32 bits as an unsigned integer. * Long#**getLowBits**(): `number`<br /> Gets the low 32 bits as a signed integer. * Long#**getLowBitsUnsigned**(): `number`<br /> Gets the low 32 bits as an unsigned integer. * Long#**getNumBitsAbs**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of bits needed to represent the absolute value of this Long. * Long#**greaterThan**/**gt**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is greater than the specified's. * Long#**greaterThanOrEqual**/**gte**/**ge**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is greater than or equal the specified's. * Long#**isEven**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is even. * Long#**isNegative**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is negative. * Long#**isOdd**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is odd. * Long#**isPositive**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is positive. * Long#**isZero**/**eqz**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value equals zero. * Long#**lessThan**/**lt**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is less than the specified's. * Long#**lessThanOrEqual**/**lte**/**le**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is less than or equal the specified's. * Long#**modulo**/**mod**/**rem**(divisor: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long modulo the specified. * Long#**multiply**/**mul**(multiplier: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the product of this and the specified Long. * Long#**negate**/**neg**(): `Long`<br /> Negates this Long's value. * Long#**not**(): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise NOT of this Long. * Long#**notEquals**/**neq**/**ne**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value differs from the specified's. * Long#**or**(other: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise OR of this Long and the specified. * Long#**shiftLeft**/**shl**(numBits: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long with bits shifted to the left by the given amount. * Long#**shiftRight**/**shr**(numBits: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long with bits arithmetically shifted to the right by the given amount. * Long#**shiftRightUnsigned**/**shru**/**shr_u**(numBits: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long with bits logically shifted to the right by the given amount. * Long#**subtract**/**sub**(subtrahend: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the difference of this and the specified Long. * Long#**toBytes**(le?: `boolean`): `number[]`<br /> Converts this Long to its byte representation. * Long#**toBytesLE**(): `number[]`<br /> Converts this Long to its little endian byte representation. * Long#**toBytesBE**(): `number[]`<br /> Converts this Long to its big endian byte representation. * Long#**toInt**(): `number`<br /> Converts the Long to a 32 bit integer, assuming it is a 32 bit integer. * Long#**toNumber**(): `number`<br /> Converts the Long to a the nearest floating-point representation of this value (double, 53 bit mantissa). * Long#**toSigned**(): `Long`<br /> Converts this Long to signed. * Long#**toString**(radix?: `number`): `string`<br /> Converts the Long to a string written in the specified radix. * Long#**toUnsigned**(): `Long`<br /> Converts this Long to unsigned. * Long#**xor**(other: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise XOR of this Long and the given one. Building -------- To build an UMD bundle to `dist/long.js`, run: ``` $> npm install $> npm run build ``` Running the [tests](./tests): ``` $> npm test ``` # debug [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/debug-js/debug.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/debug-js/debug) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/debug-js/debug/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/debug-js/debug?branch=master) [![Slack](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/badge.svg)](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/backers/badge.svg)](#backers) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/sponsors/badge.svg)](#sponsors) <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> A tiny JavaScript debugging utility modelled after Node.js core's debugging technique. Works in Node.js and web browsers. ## Installation ```bash $ npm install debug ``` ## Usage `debug` exposes a function; simply pass this function the name of your module, and it will return a decorated version of `console.error` for you to pass debug statements to. This will allow you to toggle the debug output for different parts of your module as well as the module as a whole. Example [_app.js_](./examples/node/app.js): ```js var debug = require('debug')('http') , http = require('http') , name = 'My App'; // fake app debug('booting %o', name); http.createServer(function(req, res){ debug(req.method + ' ' + req.url); res.end('hello\n'); }).listen(3000, function(){ debug('listening'); }); // fake worker of some kind require('./worker'); ``` Example [_worker.js_](./examples/node/worker.js): ```js var a = require('debug')('worker:a') , b = require('debug')('worker:b'); function work() { a('doing lots of uninteresting work'); setTimeout(work, Math.random() * 1000); } work(); function workb() { b('doing some work'); setTimeout(workb, Math.random() * 2000); } workb(); ``` The `DEBUG` environment variable is then used to enable these based on space or comma-delimited names. Here are some examples: <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 04 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091703-a6302cdc-7c38-11e7-8304-7c0b3bc600cd.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 38 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091700-a62a6888-7c38-11e7-800b-db911291ca2b.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 25 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091701-a62ea114-7c38-11e7-826a-2692bedca740.png"> #### Windows command prompt notes ##### CMD On Windows the environment variable is set using the `set` command. ```cmd set DEBUG=*,-not_this ``` Example: ```cmd set DEBUG=* & node app.js ``` ##### PowerShell (VS Code default) PowerShell uses different syntax to set environment variables. ```cmd $env:DEBUG = "*,-not_this" ``` Example: ```cmd $env:DEBUG='app';node app.js ``` Then, run the program to be debugged as usual. npm script example: ```js "windowsDebug": "@powershell -Command $env:DEBUG='*';node app.js", ``` ## Namespace Colors Every debug instance has a color generated for it based on its namespace name. This helps when visually parsing the debug output to identify which debug instance a debug line belongs to. #### Node.js In Node.js, colors are enabled when stderr is a TTY. You also _should_ install the [`supports-color`](https://npmjs.org/supports-color) module alongside debug, otherwise debug will only use a small handful of basic colors. <img width="521" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092181-47f6a9e6-7c3a-11e7-9a14-1928d8a711cd.png"> #### Web Browser Colors are also enabled on "Web Inspectors" that understand the `%c` formatting option. These are WebKit web inspectors, Firefox ([since version 31](https://hacks.mozilla.org/2014/05/editable-box-model-multiple-selection-sublime-text-keys-much-more-firefox-developer-tools-episode-31/)) and the Firebug plugin for Firefox (any version). <img width="524" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092033-b65f9f2e-7c39-11e7-8e32-f6f0d8e865c1.png"> ## Millisecond diff When actively developing an application it can be useful to see when the time spent between one `debug()` call and the next. Suppose for example you invoke `debug()` before requesting a resource, and after as well, the "+NNNms" will show you how much time was spent between calls. <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> When stdout is not a TTY, `Date#toISOString()` is used, making it more useful for logging the debug information as shown below: <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091956-6bd78372-7c39-11e7-8c55-c948396d6edd.png"> ## Conventions If you're using this in one or more of your libraries, you _should_ use the name of your library so that developers may toggle debugging as desired without guessing names. If you have more than one debuggers you _should_ prefix them with your library name and use ":" to separate features. For example "bodyParser" from Connect would then be "connect:bodyParser". If you append a "*" to the end of your name, it will always be enabled regardless of the setting of the DEBUG environment variable. You can then use it for normal output as well as debug output. ## Wildcards The `*` character may be used as a wildcard. Suppose for example your library has debuggers named "connect:bodyParser", "connect:compress", "connect:session", instead of listing all three with `DEBUG=connect:bodyParser,connect:compress,connect:session`, you may simply do `DEBUG=connect:*`, or to run everything using this module simply use `DEBUG=*`. You can also exclude specific debuggers by prefixing them with a "-" character. For example, `DEBUG=*,-connect:*` would include all debuggers except those starting with "connect:". ## Environment Variables When running through Node.js, you can set a few environment variables that will change the behavior of the debug logging: | Name | Purpose | |-----------|-------------------------------------------------| | `DEBUG` | Enables/disables specific debugging namespaces. | | `DEBUG_HIDE_DATE` | Hide date from debug output (non-TTY). | | `DEBUG_COLORS`| Whether or not to use colors in the debug output. | | `DEBUG_DEPTH` | Object inspection depth. | | `DEBUG_SHOW_HIDDEN` | Shows hidden properties on inspected objects. | __Note:__ The environment variables beginning with `DEBUG_` end up being converted into an Options object that gets used with `%o`/`%O` formatters. See the Node.js documentation for [`util.inspect()`](https://nodejs.org/api/util.html#util_util_inspect_object_options) for the complete list. ## Formatters Debug uses [printf-style](https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Printf_format_string) formatting. Below are the officially supported formatters: | Formatter | Representation | |-----------|----------------| | `%O` | Pretty-print an Object on multiple lines. | | `%o` | Pretty-print an Object all on a single line. | | `%s` | String. | | `%d` | Number (both integer and float). | | `%j` | JSON. Replaced with the string '[Circular]' if the argument contains circular references. | | `%%` | Single percent sign ('%'). This does not consume an argument. | ### Custom formatters You can add custom formatters by extending the `debug.formatters` object. For example, if you wanted to add support for rendering a Buffer as hex with `%h`, you could do something like: ```js const createDebug = require('debug') createDebug.formatters.h = (v) => { return v.toString('hex') } // …elsewhere const debug = createDebug('foo') debug('this is hex: %h', new Buffer('hello world')) // foo this is hex: 68656c6c6f20776f726c6421 +0ms ``` ## Browser Support You can build a browser-ready script using [browserify](https://github.com/substack/node-browserify), or just use the [browserify-as-a-service](https://wzrd.in/) [build](https://wzrd.in/standalone/debug@latest), if you don't want to build it yourself. Debug's enable state is currently persisted by `localStorage`. Consider the situation shown below where you have `worker:a` and `worker:b`, and wish to debug both. You can enable this using `localStorage.debug`: ```js localStorage.debug = 'worker:*' ``` And then refresh the page. ```js a = debug('worker:a'); b = debug('worker:b'); setInterval(function(){ a('doing some work'); }, 1000); setInterval(function(){ b('doing some work'); }, 1200); ``` In Chromium-based web browsers (e.g. Brave, Chrome, and Electron), the JavaScript console will—by default—only show messages logged by `debug` if the "Verbose" log level is _enabled_. <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/7143133/152083257-29034707-c42c-4959-8add-3cee850e6fcf.png"> ## Output streams By default `debug` will log to stderr, however this can be configured per-namespace by overriding the `log` method: Example [_stdout.js_](./examples/node/stdout.js): ```js var debug = require('debug'); var error = debug('app:error'); // by default stderr is used error('goes to stderr!'); var log = debug('app:log'); // set this namespace to log via console.log log.log = console.log.bind(console); // don't forget to bind to console! log('goes to stdout'); error('still goes to stderr!'); // set all output to go via console.info // overrides all per-namespace log settings debug.log = console.info.bind(console); error('now goes to stdout via console.info'); log('still goes to stdout, but via console.info now'); ``` ## Extend You can simply extend debugger ```js const log = require('debug')('auth'); //creates new debug instance with extended namespace const logSign = log.extend('sign'); const logLogin = log.extend('login'); log('hello'); // auth hello logSign('hello'); //auth:sign hello logLogin('hello'); //auth:login hello ``` ## Set dynamically You can also enable debug dynamically by calling the `enable()` method : ```js let debug = require('debug'); console.log(1, debug.enabled('test')); debug.enable('test'); console.log(2, debug.enabled('test')); debug.disable(); console.log(3, debug.enabled('test')); ``` print : ``` 1 false 2 true 3 false ``` Usage : `enable(namespaces)` `namespaces` can include modes separated by a colon and wildcards. Note that calling `enable()` completely overrides previously set DEBUG variable : ``` $ DEBUG=foo node -e 'var dbg = require("debug"); dbg.enable("bar"); console.log(dbg.enabled("foo"))' => false ``` `disable()` Will disable all namespaces. The functions returns the namespaces currently enabled (and skipped). This can be useful if you want to disable debugging temporarily without knowing what was enabled to begin with. For example: ```js let debug = require('debug'); debug.enable('foo:*,-foo:bar'); let namespaces = debug.disable(); debug.enable(namespaces); ``` Note: There is no guarantee that the string will be identical to the initial enable string, but semantically they will be identical. ## Checking whether a debug target is enabled After you've created a debug instance, you can determine whether or not it is enabled by checking the `enabled` property: ```javascript const debug = require('debug')('http'); if (debug.enabled) { // do stuff... } ``` You can also manually toggle this property to force the debug instance to be enabled or disabled. ## Usage in child processes Due to the way `debug` detects if the output is a TTY or not, colors are not shown in child processes when `stderr` is piped. A solution is to pass the `DEBUG_COLORS=1` environment variable to the child process. For example: ```javascript worker = fork(WORKER_WRAP_PATH, [workerPath], { stdio: [ /* stdin: */ 0, /* stdout: */ 'pipe', /* stderr: */ 'pipe', 'ipc', ], env: Object.assign({}, process.env, { DEBUG_COLORS: 1 // without this settings, colors won't be shown }), }); worker.stderr.pipe(process.stderr, { end: false }); ``` ## Authors - TJ Holowaychuk - Nathan Rajlich - Andrew Rhyne - Josh Junon ## Backers Support us with a monthly donation and help us continue our activities. 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Copyright (c) 2018-2021 Josh Junon Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # yallist Yet Another Linked List There are many doubly-linked list implementations like it, but this one is mine. For when an array would be too big, and a Map can't be iterated in reverse order. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/yallist.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/yallist) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/isaacs/yallist/badge.svg?service=github)](https://coveralls.io/github/isaacs/yallist) ## basic usage ```javascript var yallist = require('yallist') var myList = yallist.create([1, 2, 3]) myList.push('foo') myList.unshift('bar') // of course pop() and shift() are there, too console.log(myList.toArray()) // ['bar', 1, 2, 3, 'foo'] myList.forEach(function (k) { // walk the list head to tail }) myList.forEachReverse(function (k, index, list) { // walk the list tail to head }) var myDoubledList = myList.map(function (k) { return k + k }) // now myDoubledList contains ['barbar', 2, 4, 6, 'foofoo'] // mapReverse is also a thing var myDoubledListReverse = myList.mapReverse(function (k) { return k + k }) // ['foofoo', 6, 4, 2, 'barbar'] var reduced = myList.reduce(function (set, entry) { set += entry return set }, 'start') console.log(reduced) // 'startfoo123bar' ``` ## api The whole API is considered "public". Functions with the same name as an Array method work more or less the same way. There's reverse versions of most things because that's the point. ### Yallist Default export, the class that holds and manages a list. Call it with either a forEach-able (like an array) or a set of arguments, to initialize the list. The Array-ish methods all act like you'd expect. No magic length, though, so if you change that it won't automatically prune or add empty spots. ### Yallist.create(..) Alias for Yallist function. Some people like factories. #### yallist.head The first node in the list #### yallist.tail The last node in the list #### yallist.length The number of nodes in the list. (Change this at your peril. It is not magic like Array length.) #### yallist.toArray() Convert the list to an array. #### yallist.forEach(fn, [thisp]) Call a function on each item in the list. #### yallist.forEachReverse(fn, [thisp]) Call a function on each item in the list, in reverse order. #### yallist.get(n) Get the data at position `n` in the list. If you use this a lot, probably better off just using an Array. #### yallist.getReverse(n) Get the data at position `n`, counting from the tail. #### yallist.map(fn, thisp) Create a new Yallist with the result of calling the function on each item. #### yallist.mapReverse(fn, thisp) Same as `map`, but in reverse. #### yallist.pop() Get the data from the list tail, and remove the tail from the list. #### yallist.push(item, ...) Insert one or more items to the tail of the list. #### yallist.reduce(fn, initialValue) Like Array.reduce. #### yallist.reduceReverse Like Array.reduce, but in reverse. #### yallist.reverse Reverse the list in place. #### yallist.shift() Get the data from the list head, and remove the head from the list. #### yallist.slice([from], [to]) Just like Array.slice, but returns a new Yallist. #### yallist.sliceReverse([from], [to]) Just like yallist.slice, but the result is returned in reverse. #### yallist.toArray() Create an array representation of the list. #### yallist.toArrayReverse() Create a reversed array representation of the list. #### yallist.unshift(item, ...) Insert one or more items to the head of the list. #### yallist.unshiftNode(node) Move a Node object to the front of the list. (That is, pull it out of wherever it lives, and make it the new head.) If the node belongs to a different list, then that list will remove it first. #### yallist.pushNode(node) Move a Node object to the end of the list. (That is, pull it out of wherever it lives, and make it the new tail.) If the node belongs to a list already, then that list will remove it first. #### yallist.removeNode(node) Remove a node from the list, preserving referential integrity of head and tail and other nodes. Will throw an error if you try to have a list remove a node that doesn't belong to it. ### Yallist.Node The class that holds the data and is actually the list. Call with `var n = new Node(value, previousNode, nextNode)` Note that if you do direct operations on Nodes themselves, it's very easy to get into weird states where the list is broken. Be careful :) #### node.next The next node in the list. #### node.prev The previous node in the list. #### node.value The data the node contains. #### node.list The list to which this node belongs. (Null if it does not belong to any list.) # wrappy Callback wrapping utility ## USAGE ```javascript var wrappy = require("wrappy") // var wrapper = wrappy(wrapperFunction) // make sure a cb is called only once // See also: http://npm.im/once for this specific use case var once = wrappy(function (cb) { var called = false return function () { if (called) return called = true return cb.apply(this, arguments) } }) function printBoo () { console.log('boo') } // has some rando property printBoo.iAmBooPrinter = true var onlyPrintOnce = once(printBoo) onlyPrintOnce() // prints 'boo' onlyPrintOnce() // does nothing // random property is retained! assert.equal(onlyPrintOnce.iAmBooPrinter, true) ``` semver(1) -- The semantic versioner for npm =========================================== ## Install ```bash npm install semver ```` ## Usage As a node module: ```js const semver = require('semver') semver.valid('1.2.3') // '1.2.3' semver.valid('a.b.c') // null semver.clean(' =v1.2.3 ') // '1.2.3' semver.satisfies('1.2.3', '1.x || >=2.5.0 || 5.0.0 - 7.2.3') // true semver.gt('1.2.3', '9.8.7') // false semver.lt('1.2.3', '9.8.7') // true semver.minVersion('>=1.0.0') // '1.0.0' semver.valid(semver.coerce('v2')) // '2.0.0' semver.valid(semver.coerce('42.6.7.9.3-alpha')) // '42.6.7' ``` You can also just load the module for the function that you care about, if you'd like to minimize your footprint. ```js // load the whole API at once in a single object const semver = require('semver') // or just load the bits you need // all of them listed here, just pick and choose what you want // classes const SemVer = require('semver/classes/semver') const Comparator = require('semver/classes/comparator') const Range = require('semver/classes/range') // functions for working with versions const semverParse = require('semver/functions/parse') const semverValid = require('semver/functions/valid') const semverClean = require('semver/functions/clean') const semverInc = require('semver/functions/inc') const semverDiff = require('semver/functions/diff') const semverMajor = require('semver/functions/major') const semverMinor = require('semver/functions/minor') const semverPatch = require('semver/functions/patch') const semverPrerelease = require('semver/functions/prerelease') const semverCompare = require('semver/functions/compare') const semverRcompare = require('semver/functions/rcompare') const semverCompareLoose = require('semver/functions/compare-loose') const semverCompareBuild = require('semver/functions/compare-build') const semverSort = require('semver/functions/sort') const semverRsort = require('semver/functions/rsort') // low-level comparators between versions const semverGt = require('semver/functions/gt') const semverLt = require('semver/functions/lt') const semverEq = require('semver/functions/eq') const semverNeq = require('semver/functions/neq') const semverGte = require('semver/functions/gte') const semverLte = require('semver/functions/lte') const semverCmp = require('semver/functions/cmp') const semverCoerce = require('semver/functions/coerce') // working with ranges const semverSatisfies = require('semver/functions/satisfies') const semverMaxSatisfying = require('semver/ranges/max-satisfying') const semverMinSatisfying = require('semver/ranges/min-satisfying') const semverToComparators = require('semver/ranges/to-comparators') const semverMinVersion = require('semver/ranges/min-version') const semverValidRange = require('semver/ranges/valid') const semverOutside = require('semver/ranges/outside') const semverGtr = require('semver/ranges/gtr') const semverLtr = require('semver/ranges/ltr') const semverIntersects = require('semver/ranges/intersects') const simplifyRange = require('semver/ranges/simplify') const rangeSubset = require('semver/ranges/subset') ``` As a command-line utility: ``` $ semver -h A JavaScript implementation of the https://semver.org/ specification Copyright Isaac Z. Schlueter Usage: semver [options] <version> [<version> [...]] Prints valid versions sorted by SemVer precedence Options: -r --range <range> Print versions that match the specified range. -i --increment [<level>] Increment a version by the specified level. Level can be one of: major, minor, patch, premajor, preminor, prepatch, or prerelease. Default level is 'patch'. Only one version may be specified. --preid <identifier> Identifier to be used to prefix premajor, preminor, prepatch or prerelease version increments. -l --loose Interpret versions and ranges loosely -p --include-prerelease Always include prerelease versions in range matching -c --coerce Coerce a string into SemVer if possible (does not imply --loose) --rtl Coerce version strings right to left --ltr Coerce version strings left to right (default) Program exits successfully if any valid version satisfies all supplied ranges, and prints all satisfying versions. If no satisfying versions are found, then exits failure. Versions are printed in ascending order, so supplying multiple versions to the utility will just sort them. ``` ## Versions A "version" is described by the `v2.0.0` specification found at <https://semver.org/>. A leading `"="` or `"v"` character is stripped off and ignored. ## Ranges A `version range` is a set of `comparators` which specify versions that satisfy the range. A `comparator` is composed of an `operator` and a `version`. The set of primitive `operators` is: * `<` Less than * `<=` Less than or equal to * `>` Greater than * `>=` Greater than or equal to * `=` Equal. If no operator is specified, then equality is assumed, so this operator is optional, but MAY be included. For example, the comparator `>=1.2.7` would match the versions `1.2.7`, `1.2.8`, `2.5.3`, and `1.3.9`, but not the versions `1.2.6` or `1.1.0`. Comparators can be joined by whitespace to form a `comparator set`, which is satisfied by the **intersection** of all of the comparators it includes. A range is composed of one or more comparator sets, joined by `||`. A version matches a range if and only if every comparator in at least one of the `||`-separated comparator sets is satisfied by the version. For example, the range `>=1.2.7 <1.3.0` would match the versions `1.2.7`, `1.2.8`, and `1.2.99`, but not the versions `1.2.6`, `1.3.0`, or `1.1.0`. The range `1.2.7 || >=1.2.9 <2.0.0` would match the versions `1.2.7`, `1.2.9`, and `1.4.6`, but not the versions `1.2.8` or `2.0.0`. ### Prerelease Tags If a version has a prerelease tag (for example, `1.2.3-alpha.3`) then it will only be allowed to satisfy comparator sets if at least one comparator with the same `[major, minor, patch]` tuple also has a prerelease tag. For example, the range `>1.2.3-alpha.3` would be allowed to match the version `1.2.3-alpha.7`, but it would *not* be satisfied by `3.4.5-alpha.9`, even though `3.4.5-alpha.9` is technically "greater than" `1.2.3-alpha.3` according to the SemVer sort rules. The version range only accepts prerelease tags on the `1.2.3` version. The version `3.4.5` *would* satisfy the range, because it does not have a prerelease flag, and `3.4.5` is greater than `1.2.3-alpha.7`. The purpose for this behavior is twofold. First, prerelease versions frequently are updated very quickly, and contain many breaking changes that are (by the author's design) not yet fit for public consumption. Therefore, by default, they are excluded from range matching semantics. Second, a user who has opted into using a prerelease version has clearly indicated the intent to use *that specific* set of alpha/beta/rc versions. By including a prerelease tag in the range, the user is indicating that they are aware of the risk. However, it is still not appropriate to assume that they have opted into taking a similar risk on the *next* set of prerelease versions. Note that this behavior can be suppressed (treating all prerelease versions as if they were normal versions, for the purpose of range matching) by setting the `includePrerelease` flag on the options object to any [functions](https://github.com/npm/node-semver#functions) that do range matching. #### Prerelease Identifiers The method `.inc` takes an additional `identifier` string argument that will append the value of the string as a prerelease identifier: ```javascript semver.inc('1.2.3', 'prerelease', 'beta') // '1.2.4-beta.0' ``` command-line example: ```bash $ semver 1.2.3 -i prerelease --preid beta 1.2.4-beta.0 ``` Which then can be used to increment further: ```bash $ semver 1.2.4-beta.0 -i prerelease 1.2.4-beta.1 ``` ### Advanced Range Syntax Advanced range syntax desugars to primitive comparators in deterministic ways. Advanced ranges may be combined in the same way as primitive comparators using white space or `||`. #### Hyphen Ranges `X.Y.Z - A.B.C` Specifies an inclusive set. * `1.2.3 - 2.3.4` := `>=1.2.3 <=2.3.4` If a partial version is provided as the first version in the inclusive range, then the missing pieces are replaced with zeroes. * `1.2 - 2.3.4` := `>=1.2.0 <=2.3.4` If a partial version is provided as the second version in the inclusive range, then all versions that start with the supplied parts of the tuple are accepted, but nothing that would be greater than the provided tuple parts. * `1.2.3 - 2.3` := `>=1.2.3 <2.4.0-0` * `1.2.3 - 2` := `>=1.2.3 <3.0.0-0` #### X-Ranges `1.2.x` `1.X` `1.2.*` `*` Any of `X`, `x`, or `*` may be used to "stand in" for one of the numeric values in the `[major, minor, patch]` tuple. * `*` := `>=0.0.0` (Any non-prerelease version satisfies, unless `includePrerelease` is specified, in which case any version at all satisfies) * `1.x` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0-0` (Matching major version) * `1.2.x` := `>=1.2.0 <1.3.0-0` (Matching major and minor versions) A partial version range is treated as an X-Range, so the special character is in fact optional. * `""` (empty string) := `*` := `>=0.0.0` * `1` := `1.x.x` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0-0` * `1.2` := `1.2.x` := `>=1.2.0 <1.3.0-0` #### Tilde Ranges `~1.2.3` `~1.2` `~1` Allows patch-level changes if a minor version is specified on the comparator. Allows minor-level changes if not. * `~1.2.3` := `>=1.2.3 <1.(2+1).0` := `>=1.2.3 <1.3.0-0` * `~1.2` := `>=1.2.0 <1.(2+1).0` := `>=1.2.0 <1.3.0-0` (Same as `1.2.x`) * `~1` := `>=1.0.0 <(1+1).0.0` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0-0` (Same as `1.x`) * `~0.2.3` := `>=0.2.3 <0.(2+1).0` := `>=0.2.3 <0.3.0-0` * `~0.2` := `>=0.2.0 <0.(2+1).0` := `>=0.2.0 <0.3.0-0` (Same as `0.2.x`) * `~0` := `>=0.0.0 <(0+1).0.0` := `>=0.0.0 <1.0.0-0` (Same as `0.x`) * `~1.2.3-beta.2` := `>=1.2.3-beta.2 <1.3.0-0` Note that prereleases in the `1.2.3` version will be allowed, if they are greater than or equal to `beta.2`. So, `1.2.3-beta.4` would be allowed, but `1.2.4-beta.2` would not, because it is a prerelease of a different `[major, minor, patch]` tuple. #### Caret Ranges `^1.2.3` `^0.2.5` `^0.0.4` Allows changes that do not modify the left-most non-zero element in the `[major, minor, patch]` tuple. In other words, this allows patch and minor updates for versions `1.0.0` and above, patch updates for versions `0.X >=0.1.0`, and *no* updates for versions `0.0.X`. Many authors treat a `0.x` version as if the `x` were the major "breaking-change" indicator. Caret ranges are ideal when an author may make breaking changes between `0.2.4` and `0.3.0` releases, which is a common practice. However, it presumes that there will *not* be breaking changes between `0.2.4` and `0.2.5`. It allows for changes that are presumed to be additive (but non-breaking), according to commonly observed practices. * `^1.2.3` := `>=1.2.3 <2.0.0-0` * `^0.2.3` := `>=0.2.3 <0.3.0-0` * `^0.0.3` := `>=0.0.3 <0.0.4-0` * `^1.2.3-beta.2` := `>=1.2.3-beta.2 <2.0.0-0` Note that prereleases in the `1.2.3` version will be allowed, if they are greater than or equal to `beta.2`. So, `1.2.3-beta.4` would be allowed, but `1.2.4-beta.2` would not, because it is a prerelease of a different `[major, minor, patch]` tuple. * `^0.0.3-beta` := `>=0.0.3-beta <0.0.4-0` Note that prereleases in the `0.0.3` version *only* will be allowed, if they are greater than or equal to `beta`. So, `0.0.3-pr.2` would be allowed. When parsing caret ranges, a missing `patch` value desugars to the number `0`, but will allow flexibility within that value, even if the major and minor versions are both `0`. * `^1.2.x` := `>=1.2.0 <2.0.0-0` * `^0.0.x` := `>=0.0.0 <0.1.0-0` * `^0.0` := `>=0.0.0 <0.1.0-0` A missing `minor` and `patch` values will desugar to zero, but also allow flexibility within those values, even if the major version is zero. * `^1.x` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0-0` * `^0.x` := `>=0.0.0 <1.0.0-0` ### Range Grammar Putting all this together, here is a Backus-Naur grammar for ranges, for the benefit of parser authors: ```bnf range-set ::= range ( logical-or range ) * logical-or ::= ( ' ' ) * '||' ( ' ' ) * range ::= hyphen | simple ( ' ' simple ) * | '' hyphen ::= partial ' - ' partial simple ::= primitive | partial | tilde | caret primitive ::= ( '<' | '>' | '>=' | '<=' | '=' ) partial partial ::= xr ( '.' xr ( '.' xr qualifier ? )? )? xr ::= 'x' | 'X' | '*' | nr nr ::= '0' | ['1'-'9'] ( ['0'-'9'] ) * tilde ::= '~' partial caret ::= '^' partial qualifier ::= ( '-' pre )? ( '+' build )? pre ::= parts build ::= parts parts ::= part ( '.' part ) * part ::= nr | [-0-9A-Za-z]+ ``` ## Functions All methods and classes take a final `options` object argument. All options in this object are `false` by default. The options supported are: - `loose` Be more forgiving about not-quite-valid semver strings. (Any resulting output will always be 100% strict compliant, of course.) For backwards compatibility reasons, if the `options` argument is a boolean value instead of an object, it is interpreted to be the `loose` param. - `includePrerelease` Set to suppress the [default behavior](https://github.com/npm/node-semver#prerelease-tags) of excluding prerelease tagged versions from ranges unless they are explicitly opted into. Strict-mode Comparators and Ranges will be strict about the SemVer strings that they parse. * `valid(v)`: Return the parsed version, or null if it's not valid. * `inc(v, release)`: Return the version incremented by the release type (`major`, `premajor`, `minor`, `preminor`, `patch`, `prepatch`, or `prerelease`), or null if it's not valid * `premajor` in one call will bump the version up to the next major version and down to a prerelease of that major version. `preminor`, and `prepatch` work the same way. * If called from a non-prerelease version, the `prerelease` will work the same as `prepatch`. It increments the patch version, then makes a prerelease. If the input version is already a prerelease it simply increments it. * `prerelease(v)`: Returns an array of prerelease components, or null if none exist. Example: `prerelease('1.2.3-alpha.1') -> ['alpha', 1]` * `major(v)`: Return the major version number. * `minor(v)`: Return the minor version number. * `patch(v)`: Return the patch version number. * `intersects(r1, r2, loose)`: Return true if the two supplied ranges or comparators intersect. * `parse(v)`: Attempt to parse a string as a semantic version, returning either a `SemVer` object or `null`. ### Comparison * `gt(v1, v2)`: `v1 > v2` * `gte(v1, v2)`: `v1 >= v2` * `lt(v1, v2)`: `v1 < v2` * `lte(v1, v2)`: `v1 <= v2` * `eq(v1, v2)`: `v1 == v2` This is true if they're logically equivalent, even if they're not the exact same string. You already know how to compare strings. * `neq(v1, v2)`: `v1 != v2` The opposite of `eq`. * `cmp(v1, comparator, v2)`: Pass in a comparison string, and it'll call the corresponding function above. `"==="` and `"!=="` do simple string comparison, but are included for completeness. Throws if an invalid comparison string is provided. * `compare(v1, v2)`: Return `0` if `v1 == v2`, or `1` if `v1` is greater, or `-1` if `v2` is greater. Sorts in ascending order if passed to `Array.sort()`. * `rcompare(v1, v2)`: The reverse of compare. Sorts an array of versions in descending order when passed to `Array.sort()`. * `compareBuild(v1, v2)`: The same as `compare` but considers `build` when two versions are equal. Sorts in ascending order if passed to `Array.sort()`. `v2` is greater. Sorts in ascending order if passed to `Array.sort()`. * `diff(v1, v2)`: Returns difference between two versions by the release type (`major`, `premajor`, `minor`, `preminor`, `patch`, `prepatch`, or `prerelease`), or null if the versions are the same. ### Comparators * `intersects(comparator)`: Return true if the comparators intersect ### Ranges * `validRange(range)`: Return the valid range or null if it's not valid * `satisfies(version, range)`: Return true if the version satisfies the range. * `maxSatisfying(versions, range)`: Return the highest version in the list that satisfies the range, or `null` if none of them do. * `minSatisfying(versions, range)`: Return the lowest version in the list that satisfies the range, or `null` if none of them do. * `minVersion(range)`: Return the lowest version that can possibly match the given range. * `gtr(version, range)`: Return `true` if version is greater than all the versions possible in the range. * `ltr(version, range)`: Return `true` if version is less than all the versions possible in the range. * `outside(version, range, hilo)`: Return true if the version is outside the bounds of the range in either the high or low direction. The `hilo` argument must be either the string `'>'` or `'<'`. (This is the function called by `gtr` and `ltr`.) * `intersects(range)`: Return true if any of the ranges comparators intersect * `simplifyRange(versions, range)`: Return a "simplified" range that matches the same items in `versions` list as the range specified. Note that it does *not* guarantee that it would match the same versions in all cases, only for the set of versions provided. This is useful when generating ranges by joining together multiple versions with `||` programmatically, to provide the user with something a bit more ergonomic. If the provided range is shorter in string-length than the generated range, then that is returned. * `subset(subRange, superRange)`: Return `true` if the `subRange` range is entirely contained by the `superRange` range. Note that, since ranges may be non-contiguous, a version might not be greater than a range, less than a range, *or* satisfy a range! For example, the range `1.2 <1.2.9 || >2.0.0` would have a hole from `1.2.9` until `2.0.0`, so the version `1.2.10` would not be greater than the range (because `2.0.1` satisfies, which is higher), nor less than the range (since `1.2.8` satisfies, which is lower), and it also does not satisfy the range. If you want to know if a version satisfies or does not satisfy a range, use the `satisfies(version, range)` function. ### Coercion * `coerce(version, options)`: Coerces a string to semver if possible This aims to provide a very forgiving translation of a non-semver string to semver. It looks for the first digit in a string, and consumes all remaining characters which satisfy at least a partial semver (e.g., `1`, `1.2`, `1.2.3`) up to the max permitted length (256 characters). Longer versions are simply truncated (`4.6.3.9.2-alpha2` becomes `4.6.3`). All surrounding text is simply ignored (`v3.4 replaces v3.3.1` becomes `3.4.0`). Only text which lacks digits will fail coercion (`version one` is not valid). The maximum length for any semver component considered for coercion is 16 characters; longer components will be ignored (`10000000000000000.4.7.4` becomes `4.7.4`). The maximum value for any semver component is `Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER || (2**53 - 1)`; higher value components are invalid (`9999999999999999.4.7.4` is likely invalid). If the `options.rtl` flag is set, then `coerce` will return the right-most coercible tuple that does not share an ending index with a longer coercible tuple. For example, `1.2.3.4` will return `2.3.4` in rtl mode, not `4.0.0`. `1.2.3/4` will return `4.0.0`, because the `4` is not a part of any other overlapping SemVer tuple. ### Clean * `clean(version)`: Clean a string to be a valid semver if possible This will return a cleaned and trimmed semver version. If the provided version is not valid a null will be returned. This does not work for ranges. ex. * `s.clean(' = v 2.1.5foo')`: `null` * `s.clean(' = v 2.1.5foo', { loose: true })`: `'2.1.5-foo'` * `s.clean(' = v 2.1.5-foo')`: `null` * `s.clean(' = v 2.1.5-foo', { loose: true })`: `'2.1.5-foo'` * `s.clean('=v2.1.5')`: `'2.1.5'` * `s.clean(' =v2.1.5')`: `2.1.5` * `s.clean(' 2.1.5 ')`: `'2.1.5'` * `s.clean('~1.0.0')`: `null` ## Exported Modules <!-- TODO: Make sure that all of these items are documented (classes aren't, eg), and then pull the module name into the documentation for that specific thing. --> You may pull in just the part of this semver utility that you need, if you are sensitive to packing and tree-shaking concerns. The main `require('semver')` export uses getter functions to lazily load the parts of the API that are used. The following modules are available: * `require('semver')` * `require('semver/classes')` * `require('semver/classes/comparator')` * `require('semver/classes/range')` * `require('semver/classes/semver')` * `require('semver/functions/clean')` * `require('semver/functions/cmp')` * `require('semver/functions/coerce')` * `require('semver/functions/compare')` * `require('semver/functions/compare-build')` * `require('semver/functions/compare-loose')` * `require('semver/functions/diff')` * `require('semver/functions/eq')` * `require('semver/functions/gt')` * `require('semver/functions/gte')` * `require('semver/functions/inc')` * `require('semver/functions/lt')` * `require('semver/functions/lte')` * `require('semver/functions/major')` * `require('semver/functions/minor')` * `require('semver/functions/neq')` * `require('semver/functions/parse')` * `require('semver/functions/patch')` * `require('semver/functions/prerelease')` * `require('semver/functions/rcompare')` * `require('semver/functions/rsort')` * `require('semver/functions/satisfies')` * `require('semver/functions/sort')` * `require('semver/functions/valid')` * `require('semver/ranges/gtr')` * `require('semver/ranges/intersects')` * `require('semver/ranges/ltr')` * `require('semver/ranges/max-satisfying')` * `require('semver/ranges/min-satisfying')` * `require('semver/ranges/min-version')` * `require('semver/ranges/outside')` * `require('semver/ranges/to-comparators')` * `require('semver/ranges/valid')` # lru cache A cache object that deletes the least-recently-used items. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-lru-cache.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-lru-cache) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/isaacs/node-lru-cache/badge.svg?service=github)](https://coveralls.io/github/isaacs/node-lru-cache) ## Installation: ```javascript npm install lru-cache --save ``` ## Usage: ```javascript var LRU = require("lru-cache") , options = { max: 500 , length: function (n, key) { return n * 2 + key.length } , dispose: function (key, n) { n.close() } , maxAge: 1000 * 60 * 60 } , cache = new LRU(options) , otherCache = new LRU(50) // sets just the max size cache.set("key", "value") cache.get("key") // "value" // non-string keys ARE fully supported // but note that it must be THE SAME object, not // just a JSON-equivalent object. var someObject = { a: 1 } cache.set(someObject, 'a value') // Object keys are not toString()-ed cache.set('[object Object]', 'a different value') assert.equal(cache.get(someObject), 'a value') // A similar object with same keys/values won't work, // because it's a different object identity assert.equal(cache.get({ a: 1 }), undefined) cache.reset() // empty the cache ``` If you put more stuff in it, then items will fall out. If you try to put an oversized thing in it, then it'll fall out right away. ## Options * `max` The maximum size of the cache, checked by applying the length function to all values in the cache. Not setting this is kind of silly, since that's the whole purpose of this lib, but it defaults to `Infinity`. Setting it to a non-number or negative number will throw a `TypeError`. Setting it to 0 makes it be `Infinity`. * `maxAge` Maximum age in ms. Items are not pro-actively pruned out as they age, but if you try to get an item that is too old, it'll drop it and return undefined instead of giving it to you. Setting this to a negative value will make everything seem old! Setting it to a non-number will throw a `TypeError`. * `length` Function that is used to calculate the length of stored items. If you're storing strings or buffers, then you probably want to do something like `function(n, key){return n.length}`. The default is `function(){return 1}`, which is fine if you want to store `max` like-sized things. The item is passed as the first argument, and the key is passed as the second argumnet. * `dispose` Function that is called on items when they are dropped from the cache. This can be handy if you want to close file descriptors or do other cleanup tasks when items are no longer accessible. Called with `key, value`. It's called *before* actually removing the item from the internal cache, so if you want to immediately put it back in, you'll have to do that in a `nextTick` or `setTimeout` callback or it won't do anything. * `stale` By default, if you set a `maxAge`, it'll only actually pull stale items out of the cache when you `get(key)`. (That is, it's not pre-emptively doing a `setTimeout` or anything.) If you set `stale:true`, it'll return the stale value before deleting it. If you don't set this, then it'll return `undefined` when you try to get a stale entry, as if it had already been deleted. * `noDisposeOnSet` By default, if you set a `dispose()` method, then it'll be called whenever a `set()` operation overwrites an existing key. If you set this option, `dispose()` will only be called when a key falls out of the cache, not when it is overwritten. * `updateAgeOnGet` When using time-expiring entries with `maxAge`, setting this to `true` will make each item's effective time update to the current time whenever it is retrieved from cache, causing it to not expire. (It can still fall out of cache based on recency of use, of course.) ## API * `set(key, value, maxAge)` * `get(key) => value` Both of these will update the "recently used"-ness of the key. They do what you think. `maxAge` is optional and overrides the cache `maxAge` option if provided. If the key is not found, `get()` will return `undefined`. The key and val can be any value. * `peek(key)` Returns the key value (or `undefined` if not found) without updating the "recently used"-ness of the key. (If you find yourself using this a lot, you *might* be using the wrong sort of data structure, but there are some use cases where it's handy.) * `del(key)` Deletes a key out of the cache. * `reset()` Clear the cache entirely, throwing away all values. * `has(key)` Check if a key is in the cache, without updating the recent-ness or deleting it for being stale. * `forEach(function(value,key,cache), [thisp])` Just like `Array.prototype.forEach`. Iterates over all the keys in the cache, in order of recent-ness. (Ie, more recently used items are iterated over first.) * `rforEach(function(value,key,cache), [thisp])` The same as `cache.forEach(...)` but items are iterated over in reverse order. (ie, less recently used items are iterated over first.) * `keys()` Return an array of the keys in the cache. * `values()` Return an array of the values in the cache. * `length` Return total length of objects in cache taking into account `length` options function. * `itemCount` Return total quantity of objects currently in cache. Note, that `stale` (see options) items are returned as part of this item count. * `dump()` Return an array of the cache entries ready for serialization and usage with 'destinationCache.load(arr)`. * `load(cacheEntriesArray)` Loads another cache entries array, obtained with `sourceCache.dump()`, into the cache. The destination cache is reset before loading new entries * `prune()` Manually iterates over the entire cache proactively pruning old entries nearvote ================== This [React] app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Install dependencies: `yarn install` 3. Run the local development server: `yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `yarn run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `yarn install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: yarn install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `nearvote.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `nearvote.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account nearvote.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'nearvote.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [React]: https://reactjs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages # cross-spawn [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][npm-url] [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Build status][appveyor-image]][appveyor-url] [![Coverage Status][codecov-image]][codecov-url] [![Dependency status][david-dm-image]][david-dm-url] [![Dev Dependency status][david-dm-dev-image]][david-dm-dev-url] [npm-url]:https://npmjs.org/package/cross-spawn [downloads-image]:https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/cross-spawn.svg [npm-image]:https://img.shields.io/npm/v/cross-spawn.svg [travis-url]:https://travis-ci.org/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn [travis-image]:https://img.shields.io/travis/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn/master.svg [appveyor-url]:https://ci.appveyor.com/project/satazor/node-cross-spawn [appveyor-image]:https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/satazor/node-cross-spawn/master.svg [codecov-url]:https://codecov.io/gh/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn [codecov-image]:https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn/master.svg [david-dm-url]:https://david-dm.org/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn [david-dm-image]:https://img.shields.io/david/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn.svg [david-dm-dev-url]:https://david-dm.org/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn?type=dev [david-dm-dev-image]:https://img.shields.io/david/dev/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn.svg A cross platform solution to node's spawn and spawnSync. ## Installation Node.js version 8 and up: `$ npm install cross-spawn` Node.js version 7 and under: `$ npm install cross-spawn@6` ## Why Node has issues when using spawn on Windows: - It ignores [PATHEXT](https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/2318) - It does not support [shebangs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shebang_(Unix)) - Has problems running commands with [spaces](https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/7367) - Has problems running commands with posix relative paths (e.g.: `./my-folder/my-executable`) - Has an [issue](https://github.com/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn/issues/82) with command shims (files in `node_modules/.bin/`), where arguments with quotes and parenthesis would result in [invalid syntax error](https://github.com/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn/blob/e77b8f22a416db46b6196767bcd35601d7e11d54/test/index.test.js#L149) - No `options.shell` support on node `<v4.8` All these issues are handled correctly by `cross-spawn`. There are some known modules, such as [win-spawn](https://github.com/ForbesLindesay/win-spawn), that try to solve this but they are either broken or provide faulty escaping of shell arguments. ## Usage Exactly the same way as node's [`spawn`](https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_process_child_process_spawn_command_args_options) or [`spawnSync`](https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_process_child_process_spawnsync_command_args_options), so it's a drop in replacement. ```js const spawn = require('cross-spawn'); // Spawn NPM asynchronously const child = spawn('npm', ['list', '-g', '-depth', '0'], { stdio: 'inherit' }); // Spawn NPM synchronously const result = spawn.sync('npm', ['list', '-g', '-depth', '0'], { stdio: 'inherit' }); ``` ## Caveats ### Using `options.shell` as an alternative to `cross-spawn` Starting from node `v4.8`, `spawn` has a `shell` option that allows you run commands from within a shell. This new option solves the [PATHEXT](https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/2318) issue but: - It's not supported in node `<v4.8` - You must manually escape the command and arguments which is very error prone, specially when passing user input - There are a lot of other unresolved issues from the [Why](#why) section that you must take into account If you are using the `shell` option to spawn a command in a cross platform way, consider using `cross-spawn` instead. You have been warned. ### `options.shell` support While `cross-spawn` adds support for `options.shell` in node `<v4.8`, all of its enhancements are disabled. This mimics the Node.js behavior. More specifically, the command and its arguments will not be automatically escaped nor shebang support will be offered. This is by design because if you are using `options.shell` you are probably targeting a specific platform anyway and you don't want things to get into your way. ### Shebangs support While `cross-spawn` handles shebangs on Windows, its support is limited. More specifically, it just supports `#!/usr/bin/env <program>` where `<program>` must not contain any arguments. If you would like to have the shebang support improved, feel free to contribute via a pull-request. Remember to always test your code on Windows! ## Tests `$ npm test` `$ npm test -- --watch` during development ## License Released under the [MIT License](https://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php). # is-glob [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/is-glob.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-glob) [![NPM monthly downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/is-glob.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/is-glob) [![NPM total downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dt/is-glob.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/is-glob) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/micromatch/is-glob/dev)](https://github.com/micromatch/is-glob/actions) > Returns `true` if the given string looks like a glob pattern or an extglob pattern. This makes it easy to create code that only uses external modules like node-glob when necessary, resulting in much faster code execution and initialization time, and a better user experience. Please consider following this project's author, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert), and consider starring the project to show your :heart: and support. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install --save is-glob ``` You might also be interested in [is-valid-glob](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-valid-glob) and [has-glob](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/has-glob). ## Usage ```js var isGlob = require('is-glob'); ``` ### Default behavior **True** Patterns that have glob characters or regex patterns will return `true`: ```js isGlob('!foo.js'); isGlob('*.js'); isGlob('**/abc.js'); isGlob('abc/*.js'); isGlob('abc/(aaa|bbb).js'); isGlob('abc/[a-z].js'); isGlob('abc/{a,b}.js'); //=> true ``` Extglobs ```js isGlob('abc/@(a).js'); isGlob('abc/!(a).js'); isGlob('abc/+(a).js'); isGlob('abc/*(a).js'); isGlob('abc/?(a).js'); //=> true ``` **False** Escaped globs or extglobs return `false`: ```js isGlob('abc/\\@(a).js'); isGlob('abc/\\!(a).js'); isGlob('abc/\\+(a).js'); isGlob('abc/\\*(a).js'); isGlob('abc/\\?(a).js'); isGlob('\\!foo.js'); isGlob('\\*.js'); isGlob('\\*\\*/abc.js'); isGlob('abc/\\*.js'); isGlob('abc/\\(aaa|bbb).js'); isGlob('abc/\\[a-z].js'); isGlob('abc/\\{a,b}.js'); //=> false ``` Patterns that do not have glob patterns return `false`: ```js isGlob('abc.js'); isGlob('abc/def/ghi.js'); isGlob('foo.js'); isGlob('abc/@.js'); isGlob('abc/+.js'); isGlob('abc/?.js'); isGlob(); isGlob(null); //=> false ``` Arrays are also `false` (If you want to check if an array has a glob pattern, use [has-glob](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/has-glob)): ```js isGlob(['**/*.js']); isGlob(['foo.js']); //=> false ``` ### Option strict When `options.strict === false` the behavior is less strict in determining if a pattern is a glob. Meaning that some patterns that would return `false` may return `true`. This is done so that matching libraries like [micromatch](https://github.com/micromatch/micromatch) have a chance at determining if the pattern is a glob or not. **True** Patterns that have glob characters or regex patterns will return `true`: ```js isGlob('!foo.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('*.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('**/abc.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/*.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/(aaa|bbb).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/[a-z].js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/{a,b}.js', {strict: false}); //=> true ``` Extglobs ```js isGlob('abc/@(a).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/!(a).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/+(a).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/*(a).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/?(a).js', {strict: false}); //=> true ``` **False** Escaped globs or extglobs return `false`: ```js isGlob('\\!foo.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('\\*.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('\\*\\*/abc.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/\\*.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/\\(aaa|bbb).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/\\[a-z].js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/\\{a,b}.js', {strict: false}); //=> false ``` ## About <details> <summary><strong>Contributing</strong></summary> Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). </details> <details> <summary><strong>Running Tests</strong></summary> Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command: ```sh $ npm install && npm test ``` </details> <details> <summary><strong>Building docs</strong></summary> _(This project's readme.md is generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the [.verb.md](.verb.md) readme template.)_ To generate the readme, run the following command: ```sh $ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb ``` </details> ### Related projects You might also be interested in these projects: * [assemble](https://www.npmjs.com/package/assemble): Get the rocks out of your socks! Assemble makes you fast at creating web projects… [more](https://github.com/assemble/assemble) | [homepage](https://github.com/assemble/assemble "Get the rocks out of your socks! Assemble makes you fast at creating web projects. Assemble is used by thousands of projects for rapid prototyping, creating themes, scaffolds, boilerplates, e-books, UI components, API documentation, blogs, building websit") * [base](https://www.npmjs.com/package/base): Framework for rapidly creating high quality, server-side node.js applications, using plugins like building blocks | [homepage](https://github.com/node-base/base "Framework for rapidly creating high quality, server-side node.js applications, using plugins like building blocks") * [update](https://www.npmjs.com/package/update): Be scalable! Update is a new, open source developer framework and CLI for automating updates… [more](https://github.com/update/update) | [homepage](https://github.com/update/update "Be scalable! Update is a new, open source developer framework and CLI for automating updates of any kind in code projects.") * [verb](https://www.npmjs.com/package/verb): Documentation generator for GitHub projects. Verb is extremely powerful, easy to use, and is used… [more](https://github.com/verbose/verb) | [homepage](https://github.com/verbose/verb "Documentation generator for GitHub projects. Verb is extremely powerful, easy to use, and is used on hundreds of projects of all sizes to generate everything from API docs to readmes.") ### Contributors | **Commits** | **Contributor** | | --- | --- | | 47 | [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) | | 5 | [doowb](https://github.com/doowb) | | 1 | [phated](https://github.com/phated) | | 1 | [danhper](https://github.com/danhper) | | 1 | [paulmillr](https://github.com/paulmillr) | ### Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [GitHub Profile](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [Twitter Profile](https://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) * [LinkedIn Profile](https://linkedin.com/in/jonschlinkert) ### License Copyright © 2019, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), v0.8.0, on March 27, 2019._ # near-sdk-core This package contain a convenient interface for interacting with NEAR's host runtime. To see the functions that are provided by the host node see [`env.ts`](./assembly/env/env.ts). binaryen.js =========== **binaryen.js** is a port of [Binaryen](https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen) to the Web, allowing you to generate [WebAssembly](https://webassembly.org) using a JavaScript API. <a href="https://github.com/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/actions?query=workflow%3ABuild"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/Build/master?label=build&logo=github" alt="Build status" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/binaryen"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/binaryen.svg?label=latest&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm version" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/binaryen"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/binaryen/nightly.svg?label=nightly&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm nightly version" /></a> Usage ----- ``` $> npm install binaryen ``` ```js var binaryen = require("binaryen"); // Create a module with a single function var myModule = new binaryen.Module(); myModule.addFunction("add", binaryen.createType([ binaryen.i32, binaryen.i32 ]), binaryen.i32, [ binaryen.i32 ], myModule.block(null, [ myModule.local.set(2, myModule.i32.add( myModule.local.get(0, binaryen.i32), myModule.local.get(1, binaryen.i32) ) ), myModule.return( myModule.local.get(2, binaryen.i32) ) ]) ); myModule.addFunctionExport("add", "add"); // Optimize the module using default passes and levels myModule.optimize(); // Validate the module if (!myModule.validate()) throw new Error("validation error"); // Generate text format and binary var textData = myModule.emitText(); var wasmData = myModule.emitBinary(); // Example usage with the WebAssembly API var compiled = new WebAssembly.Module(wasmData); var instance = new WebAssembly.Instance(compiled, {}); console.log(instance.exports.add(41, 1)); ``` The buildbot also publishes nightly versions once a day if there have been changes. The latest nightly can be installed through ``` $> npm install binaryen@nightly ``` or you can use one of the [previous versions](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/tags) instead if necessary. ### Usage with a CDN * From GitHub via [jsDelivr](https://www.jsdelivr.com):<br /> `https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js@VERSION/index.js` * From npm via [jsDelivr](https://www.jsdelivr.com):<br /> `https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/binaryen@VERSION/index.js` * From npm via [unpkg](https://unpkg.com):<br /> `https://unpkg.com/binaryen@VERSION/index.js` Replace `VERSION` with a [specific version](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/releases) or omit it (not recommended in production) to use master/latest. API --- **Please note** that the Binaryen API is evolving fast and that definitions and documentation provided by the package tend to get out of sync despite our best efforts. It's a bot after all. If you rely on binaryen.js and spot an issue, please consider sending a PR our way by updating [index.d.ts](./index.d.ts) and [README.md](./README.md) to reflect the [current API](https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen/blob/master/src/js/binaryen.js-post.js). <!-- START doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update --> <!-- DON'T EDIT THIS SECTION, INSTEAD RE-RUN doctoc TO UPDATE --> ### Contents - [Types](#types) - [Module construction](#module-construction) - [Module manipulation](#module-manipulation) - [Module validation](#module-validation) - [Module optimization](#module-optimization) - [Module creation](#module-creation) - [Expression construction](#expression-construction) - [Control flow](#control-flow) - [Variable accesses](#variable-accesses) - [Integer operations](#integer-operations) - [Floating point operations](#floating-point-operations) - [Datatype conversions](#datatype-conversions) - [Function calls](#function-calls) - [Linear memory accesses](#linear-memory-accesses) - [Host operations](#host-operations) - [Vector operations 🦄](#vector-operations-) - [Atomic memory accesses 🦄](#atomic-memory-accesses-) - [Atomic read-modify-write operations 🦄](#atomic-read-modify-write-operations-) - [Atomic wait and notify operations 🦄](#atomic-wait-and-notify-operations-) - [Sign extension operations 🦄](#sign-extension-operations-) - [Multi-value operations 🦄](#multi-value-operations-) - [Exception handling operations 🦄](#exception-handling-operations-) - [Reference types operations 🦄](#reference-types-operations-) - [Expression manipulation](#expression-manipulation) - [Relooper](#relooper) - [Source maps](#source-maps) - [Debugging](#debugging) <!-- END doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update --> [Future features](http://webassembly.org/docs/future-features/) 🦄 might not be supported by all runtimes. ### Types * **none**: `Type`<br /> The none type, e.g., `void`. * **i32**: `Type`<br /> 32-bit integer type. * **i64**: `Type`<br /> 64-bit integer type. * **f32**: `Type`<br /> 32-bit float type. * **f64**: `Type`<br /> 64-bit float (double) type. * **v128**: `Type`<br /> 128-bit vector type. 🦄 * **funcref**: `Type`<br /> A function reference. 🦄 * **anyref**: `Type`<br /> Any host reference. 🦄 * **nullref**: `Type`<br /> A null reference. 🦄 * **exnref**: `Type`<br /> An exception reference. 🦄 * **unreachable**: `Type`<br /> Special type indicating unreachable code when obtaining information about an expression. * **auto**: `Type`<br /> Special type used in **Module#block** exclusively. Lets the API figure out a block's result type automatically. * **createType**(types: `Type[]`): `Type`<br /> Creates a multi-value type from an array of types. * **expandType**(type: `Type`): `Type[]`<br /> Expands a multi-value type to an array of types. ### Module construction * new **Module**()<br /> Constructs a new module. * **parseText**(text: `string`): `Module`<br /> Creates a module from Binaryen's s-expression text format (not official stack-style text format). * **readBinary**(data: `Uint8Array`): `Module`<br /> Creates a module from binary data. ### Module manipulation * Module#**addFunction**(name: `string`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`, vars: `Type[]`, body: `ExpressionRef`): `FunctionRef`<br /> Adds a function. `vars` indicate additional locals, in the given order. * Module#**getFunction**(name: `string`): `FunctionRef`<br /> Gets a function, by name, * Module#**removeFunction**(name: `string`): `void`<br /> Removes a function, by name. * Module#**getNumFunctions**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of functions within the module. * Module#**getFunctionByIndex**(index: `number`): `FunctionRef`<br /> Gets the function at the specified index. * Module#**addFunctionImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `void`<br /> Adds a function import. * Module#**addTableImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`): `void`<br /> Adds a table import. There's just one table for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addMemoryImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`): `void`<br /> Adds a memory import. There's just one memory for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addGlobalImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`, globalType: `Type`): `void`<br /> Adds a global variable import. Imported globals must be immutable. * Module#**addFunctionExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a function export. * Module#**addTableExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a table export. There's just one table for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addMemoryExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a memory export. There's just one memory for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addGlobalExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a global variable export. Exported globals must be immutable. * Module#**getNumExports**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of exports witin the module. * Module#**getExportByIndex**(index: `number`): `ExportRef`<br /> Gets the export at the specified index. * Module#**removeExport**(externalName: `string`): `void`<br /> Removes an export, by external name. * Module#**addGlobal**(name: `string`, type: `Type`, mutable: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `GlobalRef`<br /> Adds a global instance variable. * Module#**getGlobal**(name: `string`): `GlobalRef`<br /> Gets a global, by name, * Module#**removeGlobal**(name: `string`): `void`<br /> Removes a global, by name. * Module#**setFunctionTable**(initial: `number`, maximum: `number`, funcs: `string[]`, offset?: `ExpressionRef`): `void`<br /> Sets the contents of the function table. There's just one table for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**getFunctionTable**(): `{ imported: boolean, segments: TableElement[] }`<br /> Gets the contents of the function table. * TableElement#**offset**: `ExpressionRef` * TableElement#**names**: `string[]` * Module#**setMemory**(initial: `number`, maximum: `number`, exportName: `string | null`, segments: `MemorySegment[]`, flags?: `number[]`, shared?: `boolean`): `void`<br /> Sets the memory. There's just one memory for now, using name `"0"`. Providing `exportName` also creates a memory export. * MemorySegment#**offset**: `ExpressionRef` * MemorySegment#**data**: `Uint8Array` * MemorySegment#**passive**: `boolean` * Module#**getNumMemorySegments**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of memory segments within the module. * Module#**getMemorySegmentInfoByIndex**(index: `number`): `MemorySegmentInfo`<br /> Gets information about the memory segment at the specified index. * MemorySegmentInfo#**offset**: `number` * MemorySegmentInfo#**data**: `Uint8Array` * MemorySegmentInfo#**passive**: `boolean` * Module#**setStart**(start: `FunctionRef`): `void`<br /> Sets the start function. * Module#**getFeatures**(): `Features`<br /> Gets the WebAssembly features enabled for this module. Note that the return value may be a bitmask indicating multiple features. Possible feature flags are: * Features.**MVP**: `Features` * Features.**Atomics**: `Features` * Features.**BulkMemory**: `Features` * Features.**MutableGlobals**: `Features` * Features.**NontrappingFPToInt**: `Features` * Features.**SignExt**: `Features` * Features.**SIMD128**: `Features` * Features.**ExceptionHandling**: `Features` * Features.**TailCall**: `Features` * Features.**ReferenceTypes**: `Features` * Features.**Multivalue**: `Features` * Features.**All**: `Features` * Module#**setFeatures**(features: `Features`): `void`<br /> Sets the WebAssembly features enabled for this module. * Module#**addCustomSection**(name: `string`, contents: `Uint8Array`): `void`<br /> Adds a custom section to the binary. * Module#**autoDrop**(): `void`<br /> Enables automatic insertion of `drop` operations where needed. Lets you not worry about dropping when creating your code. * **getFunctionInfo**(ftype: `FunctionRef`: `FunctionInfo`<br /> Obtains information about a function. * FunctionInfo#**name**: `string` * FunctionInfo#**module**: `string | null` (if imported) * FunctionInfo#**base**: `string | null` (if imported) * FunctionInfo#**params**: `Type` * FunctionInfo#**results**: `Type` * FunctionInfo#**vars**: `Type` * FunctionInfo#**body**: `ExpressionRef` * **getGlobalInfo**(global: `GlobalRef`): `GlobalInfo`<br /> Obtains information about a global. * GlobalInfo#**name**: `string` * GlobalInfo#**module**: `string | null` (if imported) * GlobalInfo#**base**: `string | null` (if imported) * GlobalInfo#**type**: `Type` * GlobalInfo#**mutable**: `boolean` * GlobalInfo#**init**: `ExpressionRef` * **getExportInfo**(export_: `ExportRef`): `ExportInfo`<br /> Obtains information about an export. * ExportInfo#**kind**: `ExternalKind` * ExportInfo#**name**: `string` * ExportInfo#**value**: `string` Possible `ExternalKind` values are: * **ExternalFunction**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalTable**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalMemory**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalGlobal**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalEvent**: `ExternalKind` * **getEventInfo**(event: `EventRef`): `EventInfo`<br /> Obtains information about an event. * EventInfo#**name**: `string` * EventInfo#**module**: `string | null` (if imported) * EventInfo#**base**: `string | null` (if imported) * EventInfo#**attribute**: `number` * EventInfo#**params**: `Type` * EventInfo#**results**: `Type` * **getSideEffects**(expr: `ExpressionRef`, features: `FeatureFlags`): `SideEffects`<br /> Gets the side effects of the specified expression. * SideEffects.**None**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Branches**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Calls**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ReadsLocal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**WritesLocal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ReadsGlobal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**WritesGlobal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ReadsMemory**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**WritesMemory**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ImplicitTrap**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**IsAtomic**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Throws**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Any**: `SideEffects` ### Module validation * Module#**validate**(): `boolean`<br /> Validates the module. Returns `true` if valid, otherwise prints validation errors and returns `false`. ### Module optimization * Module#**optimize**(): `void`<br /> Optimizes the module using the default optimization passes. * Module#**optimizeFunction**(func: `FunctionRef | string`): `void`<br /> Optimizes a single function using the default optimization passes. * Module#**runPasses**(passes: `string[]`): `void`<br /> Runs the specified passes on the module. * Module#**runPassesOnFunction**(func: `FunctionRef | string`, passes: `string[]`): `void`<br /> Runs the specified passes on a single function. * **getOptimizeLevel**(): `number`<br /> Gets the currently set optimize level. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-O1`, `-O2` (default), etc. * **setOptimizeLevel**(level: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the optimization level to use. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-O1`, `-O2` (default), etc. * **getShrinkLevel**(): `number`<br /> Gets the currently set shrink level. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-Os` (default), `-Oz`. * **setShrinkLevel**(level: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the shrink level to use. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-Os` (default), `-Oz`. * **getDebugInfo**(): `boolean`<br /> Gets whether generating debug information is currently enabled or not. * **setDebugInfo**(on: `boolean`): `void`<br /> Enables or disables debug information in emitted binaries. * **getLowMemoryUnused**(): `boolean`<br /> Gets whether the low 1K of memory can be considered unused when optimizing. * **setLowMemoryUnused**(on: `boolean`): `void`<br /> Enables or disables whether the low 1K of memory can be considered unused when optimizing. * **getPassArgument**(key: `string`): `string | null`<br /> Gets the value of the specified arbitrary pass argument. * **setPassArgument**(key: `string`, value: `string | null`): `void`<br /> Sets the value of the specified arbitrary pass argument. Removes the respective argument if `value` is `null`. * **clearPassArguments**(): `void`<br /> Clears all arbitrary pass arguments. * **getAlwaysInlineMaxSize**(): `number`<br /> Gets the function size at which we always inline. * **setAlwaysInlineMaxSize**(size: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the function size at which we always inline. * **getFlexibleInlineMaxSize**(): `number`<br /> Gets the function size which we inline when functions are lightweight. * **setFlexibleInlineMaxSize**(size: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the function size which we inline when functions are lightweight. * **getOneCallerInlineMaxSize**(): `number`<br /> Gets the function size which we inline when there is only one caller. * **setOneCallerInlineMaxSize**(size: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the function size which we inline when there is only one caller. ### Module creation * Module#**emitBinary**(): `Uint8Array`<br /> Returns the module in binary format. * Module#**emitBinary**(sourceMapUrl: `string | null`): `BinaryWithSourceMap`<br /> Returns the module in binary format with its source map. If `sourceMapUrl` is `null`, source map generation is skipped. * BinaryWithSourceMap#**binary**: `Uint8Array` * BinaryWithSourceMap#**sourceMap**: `string | null` * Module#**emitText**(): `string`<br /> Returns the module in Binaryen's s-expression text format (not official stack-style text format). * Module#**emitAsmjs**(): `string`<br /> Returns the [asm.js](http://asmjs.org/) representation of the module. * Module#**dispose**(): `void`<br /> Releases the resources held by the module once it isn't needed anymore. ### Expression construction #### [Control flow](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#control-constructs-and-instructions) * Module#**block**(label: `string | null`, children: `ExpressionRef[]`, resultType?: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a block. `resultType` defaults to `none`. * Module#**if**(condition: `ExpressionRef`, ifTrue: `ExpressionRef`, ifFalse?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates an if or if/else combination. * Module#**loop**(label: `string | null`, body: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a loop. * Module#**br**(label: `string`, condition?: `ExpressionRef`, value?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a branch (br) to a label. * Module#**switch**(labels: `string[]`, defaultLabel: `string`, condition: `ExpressionRef`, value?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a switch (br_table). * Module#**nop**(): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a no-operation (nop) instruction. * Module#**return**(value?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` Creates a return. * Module#**unreachable**(): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates an [unreachable](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#unreachable) instruction that will always trap. * Module#**drop**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a [drop](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#type-parametric-operators) of a value. * Module#**select**(condition: `ExpressionRef`, ifTrue: `ExpressionRef`, ifFalse: `ExpressionRef`, type?: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a [select](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#type-parametric-operators) of one of two values. #### [Variable accesses](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#local-variables) * Module#**local.get**(index: `number`, type: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a local.get for the local at the specified index. Note that we must specify the type here as we may not have created the local being accessed yet. * Module#**local.set**(index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a local.set for the local at the specified index. * Module#**local.tee**(index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`, type: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a local.tee for the local at the specified index. A tee differs from a set in that the value remains on the stack. Note that we must specify the type here as we may not have created the local being accessed yet. * Module#**global.get**(name: `string`, type: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a global.get for the global with the specified name. Note that we must specify the type here as we may not have created the global being accessed yet. * Module#**global.set**(name: `string`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a global.set for the global with the specified name. #### [Integer operations](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#32-bit-integer-operators) * Module#i32.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**clz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ctz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**popcnt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**eqz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**div_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**div_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rem_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rem_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**and**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**or**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**xor**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**shl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**shr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**shr_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rotl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rotr**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**le_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**const**(low: `number`, high: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**clz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ctz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**popcnt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**eqz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**div_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**div_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rem_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rem_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**and**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**or**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**xor**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**shl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**shr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**shr_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rotl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rotr**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**le_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Floating point operations](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#floating-point-operators) * Module#f32.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**const_bits**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**ceil**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**floor**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**trunc**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**nearest**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**copysign**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**const_bits**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**ceil**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**floor**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**trunc**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**nearest**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**copysign**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Datatype conversions](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#datatype-conversions-truncations-reinterpretations-promotions-and-demotions) * Module#i32.**trunc_s.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**trunc_s.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**trunc_u.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**trunc_u.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**wrap**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**trunc_s.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**trunc_s.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**trunc_u.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**trunc_u.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f32.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_s.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_s.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_u.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_u.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**demote**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_s.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_s.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_u.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_u.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**promote**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Function calls](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#calls) * Module#**call**(name: `string`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, returnType: `Type`): `ExpressionRef` Creates a call to a function. Note that we must specify the return type here as we may not have created the function being called yet. * Module#**return_call**(name: `string`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, returnType: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Like **call**, but creates a tail-call. 🦄 * Module#**call_indirect**(target: `ExpressionRef`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Similar to **call**, but calls indirectly, i.e., via a function pointer, so an expression replaces the name as the called value. * Module#**return_call_indirect**(target: `ExpressionRef`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Like **call_indirect**, but creates a tail-call. 🦄 #### [Linear memory accesses](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#linear-memory-accesses) * Module#i32.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load8_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load8_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load16_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load16_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**store8**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**store16**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> > * Module#i64.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load8_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load8_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load16_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load16_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load32_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load32_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store8**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store16**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store32**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f32.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Host operations](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#resizing) * Module#**memory.size**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**memory.grow**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Vector operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/simd/blob/master/proposals/simd/SIMD.md) 🦄 * Module#v128.**const**(bytes: `Uint8Array`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**not**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**and**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**or**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**xor**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**andnot**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**bitselect**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`, cond: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i8x16.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**add_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**add_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**sub_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**sub_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**min_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**min_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**max_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**max_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**avgr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**narrow_i16x8_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**narrow_i16x8_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i16x8.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**add_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**add_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**sub_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**sub_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**min_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**min_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**max_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**max_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**avgr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**narrow_i32x4_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**narrow_i32x4_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_low_i8x16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_high_i8x16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_low_i8x16_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_high_i8x16_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**load8x8_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**load8x8_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i32x4.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**min_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**min_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**max_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**max_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**dot_i16x8_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**trunc_sat_f32x4_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**trunc_sat_f32x4_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_low_i16x8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_high_i16x8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_low_i16x8_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_high_i16x8_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**load16x4_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**load16x4_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64x2.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**trunc_sat_f64x2_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**trunc_sat_f64x2_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**load32x2_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**load32x2_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f32x4.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**extract_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**qfma**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**qfms**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**convert_i32x4_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**convert_i32x4_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64x2.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**extract_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**qfma**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**qfms**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**convert_i64x2_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**convert_i64x2_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v8x16.**shuffle**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`, mask: `Uint8Array`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v8x16.**swizzle**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v8x16.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v16x8.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v32x4.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v64x2.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Atomic memory accesses](https://github.com/WebAssembly/threads/blob/master/proposals/threads/Overview.md#atomic-memory-accesses) 🦄 * Module#i32.**atomic.load**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.load8_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.load16_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.store**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.store8**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.store16**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**atomic.load**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.load8_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.load16_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.load32_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store8**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store16**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store32**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Atomic read-modify-write operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/threads/blob/master/proposals/threads/Overview.md#read-modify-write) 🦄 * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Atomic wait and notify operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/threads/blob/master/proposals/threads/Overview.md#wait-and-notify-operators) 🦄 * Module#i32.**atomic.wait**(ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, timeout: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.wait**(ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, timeout: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**atomic.notify**(ptr: `ExpressionRef`, notifyCount: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**atomic.fence**(): `ExpressionRef` #### [Sign extension operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/sign-extension-ops/blob/master/proposals/sign-extension-ops/Overview.md) 🦄 * Module#i32.**extend8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**extend16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**extend8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend32_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Multi-value operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/multi-value/blob/master/proposals/multi-value/Overview.md) 🦄 Note that these are pseudo instructions enabling Binaryen to reason about multiple values on the stack. * Module#**push**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#funcref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#anyref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#nullref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#exnref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#tuple.**make**(elements: `ExpressionRef[]`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#tuple.**extract**(tuple: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Exception handling operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/blob/master/proposals/Exceptions.md) 🦄 * Module#**try**(body: `ExpressionRef`, catchBody: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**throw**(event: `string`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**rethrow**(exnref: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**br_on_exn**(label: `string`, event: `string`, exnref: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#**addEvent**(name: `string`, attribute: `number`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `Event` * Module#**getEvent**(name: `string`): `Event` * Module#**removeEvent**(name: `stirng`): `void` * Module#**addEventImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`, attribute: `number`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `void` * Module#**addEventExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef` #### [Reference types operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/reference-types/blob/master/proposals/reference-types/Overview.md) 🦄 * Module#ref.**null**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#ref.**is_null**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#ref.**func**(name: `string`): `ExpressionRef` ### Expression manipulation * **getExpressionId**(expr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionId`<br /> Gets the id (kind) of the specified expression. Possible values are: * **InvalidId**: `ExpressionId` * **BlockId**: `ExpressionId` * **IfId**: `ExpressionId` * **LoopId**: `ExpressionId` * **BreakId**: `ExpressionId` * **SwitchId**: `ExpressionId` * **CallId**: `ExpressionId` * **CallIndirectId**: `ExpressionId` * **LocalGetId**: `ExpressionId` * **LocalSetId**: `ExpressionId` * **GlobalGetId**: `ExpressionId` * **GlobalSetId**: `ExpressionId` * **LoadId**: `ExpressionId` * **StoreId**: `ExpressionId` * **ConstId**: `ExpressionId` * **UnaryId**: `ExpressionId` * **BinaryId**: `ExpressionId` * **SelectId**: `ExpressionId` * **DropId**: `ExpressionId` * **ReturnId**: `ExpressionId` * **HostId**: `ExpressionId` * **NopId**: `ExpressionId` * **UnreachableId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicCmpxchgId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicRMWId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicWaitId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicNotifyId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicFenceId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDExtractId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDReplaceId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDShuffleId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDTernaryId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDShiftId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDLoadId**: `ExpressionId` * **MemoryInitId**: `ExpressionId` * **DataDropId**: `ExpressionId` * **MemoryCopyId**: `ExpressionId` * **MemoryFillId**: `ExpressionId` * **RefNullId**: `ExpressionId` * **RefIsNullId**: `ExpressionId` * **RefFuncId**: `ExpressionId` * **TryId**: `ExpressionId` * **ThrowId**: `ExpressionId` * **RethrowId**: `ExpressionId` * **BrOnExnId**: `ExpressionId` * **PushId**: `ExpressionId` * **PopId**: `ExpressionId` * **getExpressionType**(expr: `ExpressionRef`): `Type`<br /> Gets the type of the specified expression. * **getExpressionInfo**(expr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionInfo`<br /> Obtains information about an expression, always including: * Info#**id**: `ExpressionId` * Info#**type**: `Type` Additional properties depend on the expression's `id` and are usually equivalent to the respective parameters when creating such an expression: * BlockInfo#**name**: `string` * BlockInfo#**children**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * IfInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef` * IfInfo#**ifTrue**: `ExpressionRef` * IfInfo#**ifFalse**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * LoopInfo#**name**: `string` * LoopInfo#**body**: `ExpressionRef` > * BreakInfo#**name**: `string` * BreakInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef | null` * BreakInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * SwitchInfo#**names**: `string[]` * SwitchInfo#**defaultName**: `string | null` * SwitchInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef` * SwitchInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * CallInfo#**target**: `string` * CallInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * CallImportInfo#**target**: `string` * CallImportInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * CallIndirectInfo#**target**: `ExpressionRef` * CallIndirectInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * LocalGetInfo#**index**: `number` > * LocalSetInfo#**isTee**: `boolean` * LocalSetInfo#**index**: `number` * LocalSetInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * GlobalGetInfo#**name**: `string` > * GlobalSetInfo#**name**: `string` * GlobalSetInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * LoadInfo#**isAtomic**: `boolean` * LoadInfo#**isSigned**: `boolean` * LoadInfo#**offset**: `number` * LoadInfo#**bytes**: `number` * LoadInfo#**align**: `number` * LoadInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` > * StoreInfo#**isAtomic**: `boolean` * StoreInfo#**offset**: `number` * StoreInfo#**bytes**: `number` * StoreInfo#**align**: `number` * StoreInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * StoreInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * ConstInfo#**value**: `number | { low: number, high: number }` > * UnaryInfo#**op**: `number` * UnaryInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * BinaryInfo#**op**: `number` * BinaryInfo#**left**: `ExpressionRef` * BinaryInfo#**right**: `ExpressionRef` > * SelectInfo#**ifTrue**: `ExpressionRef` * SelectInfo#**ifFalse**: `ExpressionRef` * SelectInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef` > * DropInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * ReturnInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * NopInfo > * UnreachableInfo > * HostInfo#**op**: `number` * HostInfo#**nameOperand**: `string | null` * HostInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * AtomicRMWInfo#**op**: `number` * AtomicRMWInfo#**bytes**: `number` * AtomicRMWInfo#**offset**: `number` * AtomicRMWInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicRMWInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**bytes**: `number` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**offset**: `number` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**expected**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**replacement**: `ExpressionRef` > * AtomicWaitInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicWaitInfo#**expected**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicWaitInfo#**timeout**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicWaitInfo#**expectedType**: `Type` > * AtomicNotifyInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicNotifyInfo#**notifyCount**: `ExpressionRef` > * AtomicFenceInfo > * SIMDExtractInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDExtractInfo#**vec**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDExtractInfo#**index**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDReplaceInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDReplaceInfo#**vec**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDReplaceInfo#**index**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDReplaceInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDShuffleInfo#**left**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDShuffleInfo#**right**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDShuffleInfo#**mask**: `Uint8Array` > * SIMDTernaryInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDTernaryInfo#**a**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDTernaryInfo#**b**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDTernaryInfo#**c**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDShiftInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDShiftInfo#**vec**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDShiftInfo#**shift**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDLoadInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDLoadInfo#**offset**: `number` * SIMDLoadInfo#**align**: `number` * SIMDLoadInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` > * MemoryInitInfo#**segment**: `number` * MemoryInitInfo#**dest**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryInitInfo#**offset**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryInitInfo#**size**: `ExpressionRef` > * MemoryDropInfo#**segment**: `number` > * MemoryCopyInfo#**dest**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryCopyInfo#**source**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryCopyInfo#**size**: `ExpressionRef` > * MemoryFillInfo#**dest**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryFillInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryFillInfo#**size**: `ExpressionRef` > * TryInfo#**body**: `ExpressionRef` * TryInfo#**catchBody**: `ExpressionRef` > * RefNullInfo > * RefIsNullInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * RefFuncInfo#**func**: `string` > * ThrowInfo#**event**: `string` * ThrowInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * RethrowInfo#**exnref**: `ExpressionRef` > * BrOnExnInfo#**name**: `string` * BrOnExnInfo#**event**: `string` * BrOnExnInfo#**exnref**: `ExpressionRef` > * PopInfo > * PushInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` * **emitText**(expression: `ExpressionRef`): `string`<br /> Emits the expression in Binaryen's s-expression text format (not official stack-style text format). * **copyExpression**(expression: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a deep copy of an expression. ### Relooper * new **Relooper**()<br /> Constructs a relooper instance. This lets you provide an arbitrary CFG, and the relooper will structure it for WebAssembly. * Relooper#**addBlock**(code: `ExpressionRef`): `RelooperBlockRef`<br /> Adds a new block to the CFG, containing the provided code as its body. * Relooper#**addBranch**(from: `RelooperBlockRef`, to: `RelooperBlockRef`, condition: `ExpressionRef`, code: `ExpressionRef`): `void`<br /> Adds a branch from a block to another block, with a condition (or nothing, if this is the default branch to take from the origin - each block must have one such branch), and optional code to execute on the branch (useful for phis). * Relooper#**addBlockWithSwitch**(code: `ExpressionRef`, condition: `ExpressionRef`): `RelooperBlockRef`<br /> Adds a new block, which ends with a switch/br_table, with provided code and condition (that determines where we go in the switch). * Relooper#**addBranchForSwitch**(from: `RelooperBlockRef`, to: `RelooperBlockRef`, indexes: `number[]`, code: `ExpressionRef`): `void`<br /> Adds a branch from a block ending in a switch, to another block, using an array of indexes that determine where to go, and optional code to execute on the branch. * Relooper#**renderAndDispose**(entry: `RelooperBlockRef`, labelHelper: `number`, module: `Module`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Renders and cleans up the Relooper instance. Call this after you have created all the blocks and branches, giving it the entry block (where control flow begins), a label helper variable (an index of a local we can use, necessary for irreducible control flow), and the module. This returns an expression - normal WebAssembly code - that you can use normally anywhere. ### Source maps * Module#**addDebugInfoFileName**(filename: `string`): `number`<br /> Adds a debug info file name to the module and returns its index. * Module#**getDebugInfoFileName**(index: `number`): `string | null` <br /> Gets the name of the debug info file at the specified index. * Module#**setDebugLocation**(func: `FunctionRef`, expr: `ExpressionRef`, fileIndex: `number`, lineNumber: `number`, columnNumber: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the debug location of the specified `ExpressionRef` within the specified `FunctionRef`. ### Debugging * Module#**interpret**(): `void`<br /> Runs the module in the interpreter, calling the start function. # flatted [![Downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/flatted.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/flatted) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/WebReflection/flatted/badge.svg?branch=main)](https://coveralls.io/github/WebReflection/flatted?branch=main) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.com/WebReflection/flatted.svg?branch=main)](https://travis-ci.com/WebReflection/flatted) [![License: ISC](https://img.shields.io/badge/License-ISC-yellow.svg)](https://opensource.org/licenses/ISC) ![WebReflection status](https://offline.report/status/webreflection.svg) ![snow flake](./flatted.jpg) <sup>**Social Media Photo by [Matt Seymour](https://unsplash.com/@mattseymour) on [Unsplash](https://unsplash.com/)**</sup> ## Announcement 📣 There is a standard approach to recursion and more data-types than what JSON allows, and it's part of the [Structured Clone polyfill](https://github.com/ungap/structured-clone/#readme). Beside acting as a polyfill, its `@ungap/structured-clone/json` export provides both `stringify` and `parse`, and it's been tested for being faster than *flatted*, but its produced output is also smaller than *flatted* in general. The *@ungap/structured-clone* module is, in short, a drop in replacement for *flatted*, but it's not compatible with *flatted* specialized syntax. However, if recursion, as well as more data-types, are what you are after, or interesting for your projects/use cases, consider switching to this new module whenever you can 👍 - - - A super light (0.5K) and fast circular JSON parser, directly from the creator of [CircularJSON](https://github.com/WebReflection/circular-json/#circularjson). Now available also for **[PHP](./php/flatted.php)**. ```js npm i flatted ``` Usable via [CDN](https://unpkg.com/flatted) or as regular module. ```js // ESM import {parse, stringify, toJSON, fromJSON} from 'flatted'; // CJS const {parse, stringify, toJSON, fromJSON} = require('flatted'); const a = [{}]; a[0].a = a; a.push(a); stringify(a); // [["1","0"],{"a":"0"}] ``` ## toJSON and fromJSON If you'd like to implicitly survive JSON serialization, these two helpers helps: ```js import {toJSON, fromJSON} from 'flatted'; class RecursiveMap extends Map { static fromJSON(any) { return new this(fromJSON(any)); } toJSON() { return toJSON([...this.entries()]); } } const recursive = new RecursiveMap; const same = {}; same.same = same; recursive.set('same', same); const asString = JSON.stringify(recursive); const asMap = RecursiveMap.fromJSON(JSON.parse(asString)); asMap.get('same') === asMap.get('same').same; // true ``` ## Flatted VS JSON As it is for every other specialized format capable of serializing and deserializing circular data, you should never `JSON.parse(Flatted.stringify(data))`, and you should never `Flatted.parse(JSON.stringify(data))`. The only way this could work is to `Flatted.parse(Flatted.stringify(data))`, as it is also for _CircularJSON_ or any other, otherwise there's no granted data integrity. Also please note this project serializes and deserializes only data compatible with JSON, so that sockets, or anything else with internal classes different from those allowed by JSON standard, won't be serialized and unserialized as expected. ### New in V1: Exact same JSON API * Added a [reviver](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON/parse#Syntax) parameter to `.parse(string, reviver)` and revive your own objects. * Added a [replacer](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON/stringify#Syntax) and a `space` parameter to `.stringify(object, replacer, space)` for feature parity with JSON signature. ### Compatibility All ECMAScript engines compatible with `Map`, `Set`, `Object.keys`, and `Array.prototype.reduce` will work, even if polyfilled. ### How does it work ? While stringifying, all Objects, including Arrays, and strings, are flattened out and replaced as unique index. `*` Once parsed, all indexes will be replaced through the flattened collection. <sup><sub>`*` represented as string to avoid conflicts with numbers</sub></sup> ```js // logic example var a = [{one: 1}, {two: '2'}]; a[0].a = a; // a is the main object, will be at index '0' // {one: 1} is the second object, index '1' // {two: '2'} the third, in '2', and it has a string // which will be found at index '3' Flatted.stringify(a); // [["1","2"],{"one":1,"a":"0"},{"two":"3"},"2"] // a[one,two] {one: 1, a} {two: '2'} '2' ``` # Near Bindings Generator Transforms the Assembyscript AST to serialize exported functions and add `encode` and `decode` functions for generating and parsing JSON strings. ## Using via CLI After installling, `npm install nearprotocol/near-bindgen-as`, it can be added to the cli arguments of the assemblyscript compiler you must add the following: ```bash asc <file> --transform near-bindgen-as ... ``` This module also adds a binary `near-asc` which adds the default arguments required to build near contracts as well as the transformer. ```bash near-asc <input file> <output file> ``` ## Using a script to compile Another way is to add a file such as `asconfig.js` such as: ```js const compile = require("near-bindgen-as/compiler").compile; compile("assembly/index.ts", // input file "out/index.wasm", // output file [ // "-O1", // Optional arguments "--debug", "--measure" ], // Prints out the final cli arguments passed to compiler. {verbose: true} ); ``` It can then be built with `node asconfig.js`. There is an example of this in the test directory. # v8-compile-cache [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/zertosh/v8-compile-cache.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/zertosh/v8-compile-cache) `v8-compile-cache` attaches a `require` hook to use [V8's code cache](https://v8project.blogspot.com/2015/07/code-caching.html) to speed up instantiation time. The "code cache" is the work of parsing and compiling done by V8. The ability to tap into V8 to produce/consume this cache was introduced in [Node v5.7.0](https://nodejs.org/en/blog/release/v5.7.0/). ## Usage 1. Add the dependency: ```sh $ npm install --save v8-compile-cache ``` 2. Then, in your entry module add: ```js require('v8-compile-cache'); ``` **Requiring `v8-compile-cache` in Node <5.7.0 is a noop – but you need at least Node 4.0.0 to support the ES2015 syntax used by `v8-compile-cache`.** ## Options Set the environment variable `DISABLE_V8_COMPILE_CACHE=1` to disable the cache. Cache directory is defined by environment variable `V8_COMPILE_CACHE_CACHE_DIR` or defaults to `<os.tmpdir()>/v8-compile-cache-<V8_VERSION>`. ## Internals Cache files are suffixed `.BLOB` and `.MAP` corresponding to the entry module that required `v8-compile-cache`. The cache is _entry module specific_ because it is faster to load the entire code cache into memory at once, than it is to read it from disk on a file-by-file basis. ## Benchmarks See https://github.com/zertosh/v8-compile-cache/tree/master/bench. **Load Times:** | Module | Without Cache | With Cache | | ---------------- | -------------:| ----------:| | `babel-core` | `218ms` | `185ms` | | `yarn` | `153ms` | `113ms` | | `yarn` (bundled) | `228ms` | `105ms` | _^ Includes the overhead of loading the cache itself._ ## Acknowledgements * `FileSystemBlobStore` and `NativeCompileCache` are based on Atom's implementation of their v8 compile cache: - https://github.com/atom/atom/blob/b0d7a8a/src/file-system-blob-store.js - https://github.com/atom/atom/blob/b0d7a8a/src/native-compile-cache.js * `mkdirpSync` is based on: - https://github.com/substack/node-mkdirp/blob/f2003bb/index.js#L55-L98 # flat-cache > A stupidly simple key/value storage using files to persist the data [![NPM Version](http://img.shields.io/npm/v/flat-cache.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/flat-cache) [![Build Status](https://api.travis-ci.org/royriojas/flat-cache.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/royriojas/flat-cache) ## install ```bash npm i --save flat-cache ``` ## Usage ```js var flatCache = require('flat-cache') // loads the cache, if one does not exists for the given // Id a new one will be prepared to be created var cache = flatCache.load('cacheId'); // sets a key on the cache cache.setKey('key', { foo: 'var' }); // get a key from the cache cache.getKey('key') // { foo: 'var' } // fetch the entire persisted object cache.all() // { 'key': { foo: 'var' } } // remove a key cache.removeKey('key'); // removes a key from the cache // save it to disk cache.save(); // very important, if you don't save no changes will be persisted. // cache.save( true /* noPrune */) // can be used to prevent the removal of non visited keys // loads the cache from a given directory, if one does // not exists for the given Id a new one will be prepared to be created var cache = flatCache.load('cacheId', path.resolve('./path/to/folder')); // The following methods are useful to clear the cache // delete a given cache flatCache.clearCacheById('cacheId') // removes the cacheId document if one exists. // delete all cache flatCache.clearAll(); // remove the cache directory ``` ## Motivation for this module I needed a super simple and dumb **in-memory cache** with optional disk persistance in order to make a script that will beutify files with `esformatter` only execute on the files that were changed since the last run. To make that possible we need to store the `fileSize` and `modificationTime` of the files. So a simple `key/value` storage was needed and Bam! this module was born. ## Important notes - If no directory is especified when the `load` method is called, a folder named `.cache` will be created inside the module directory when `cache.save` is called. If you're committing your `node_modules` to any vcs, you might want to ignore the default `.cache` folder, or specify a custom directory. - The values set on the keys of the cache should be `stringify-able` ones, meaning no circular references - All the changes to the cache state are done to memory - I could have used a timer or `Object.observe` to deliver the changes to disk, but I wanted to keep this module intentionally dumb and simple - Non visited keys are removed when `cache.save()` is called. If this is not desired, you can pass `true` to the save call like: `cache.save( true /* noPrune */ )`. ## License MIT ## Changelog [changelog](./changelog.md) # universal-url [![NPM Version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Dependency Monitor][greenkeeper-image]][greenkeeper-url] > WHATWG [`URL`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/API/URL) for Node & Browser. * For Node.js versions `>= 8`, the native implementation will be used. * For Node.js versions `< 8`, a [shim](https://npmjs.com/whatwg-url) will be used. * For web browsers without a native implementation, the same shim will be used. ## Installation [Node.js](http://nodejs.org/) `>= 6` is required. To install, type this at the command line: ```shell npm install universal-url ``` ## Usage ```js const {URL, URLSearchParams} = require('universal-url'); const url = new URL('http://domain/'); const params = new URLSearchParams('?param=value'); ``` Global shim: ```js require('universal-url').shim(); const url = new URL('http://domain/'); const params = new URLSearchParams('?param=value'); ``` ## Browserify/etc The bundled file size of this library can be large for a web browser. If this is a problem, try using [universal-url-lite](https://npmjs.com/universal-url-lite) in your build as an alias for this module. [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/universal-url.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/universal-url [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/stevenvachon/universal-url.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/stevenvachon/universal-url [greenkeeper-image]: https://badges.greenkeeper.io/stevenvachon/universal-url.svg [greenkeeper-url]: https://greenkeeper.io/ # node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag <sup>[![Version Badge][npm-version-svg]][package-url]</sup> [![github actions][actions-image]][actions-url] [![coverage][codecov-image]][codecov-url] [![dependency status][deps-svg]][deps-url] [![dev dependency status][dev-deps-svg]][dev-deps-url] [![License][license-image]][license-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url] [![npm badge][npm-badge-png]][package-url] Determine if the current node version supports the `--preserve-symlinks` flag. ## Example ```js var supportsPreserveSymlinks = require('node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag'); var assert = require('assert'); assert.equal(supportsPreserveSymlinks, null); // in a browser assert.equal(supportsPreserveSymlinks, false); // in node < v6.2 assert.equal(supportsPreserveSymlinks, true); // in node v6.2+ ``` ## Tests Simply clone the repo, `npm install`, and run `npm test` [package-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag [npm-version-svg]: https://versionbadg.es/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.svg [deps-svg]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.svg [deps-url]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag [dev-deps-svg]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag/dev-status.svg [dev-deps-url]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag#info=devDependencies [npm-badge-png]: https://nodei.co/npm/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.png?downloads=true&stars=true [license-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/l/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.svg [license-url]: LICENSE [downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.svg [downloads-url]: https://npm-stat.com/charts.html?package=node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag [codecov-image]: https://codecov.io/gh/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag/branch/main/graphs/badge.svg [codecov-url]: https://app.codecov.io/gh/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag/ [actions-image]: https://img.shields.io/endpoint?url=https://github-actions-badge-u3jn4tfpocch.runkit.sh/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag [actions-url]: https://github.com/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag/actions # file-entry-cache > Super simple cache for file metadata, useful for process that work o a given series of files > and that only need to repeat the job on the changed ones since the previous run of the process — Edit [![NPM Version](http://img.shields.io/npm/v/file-entry-cache.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/file-entry-cache) [![Build Status](http://img.shields.io/travis/royriojas/file-entry-cache.svg?style=flat)](https://travis-ci.org/royriojas/file-entry-cache) ## install ```bash npm i --save file-entry-cache ``` ## Usage The module exposes two functions `create` and `createFromFile`. ## `create(cacheName, [directory, useCheckSum])` - **cacheName**: the name of the cache to be created - **directory**: Optional the directory to load the cache from - **usecheckSum**: Whether to use md5 checksum to verify if file changed. If false the default will be to use the mtime and size of the file. ## `createFromFile(pathToCache, [useCheckSum])` - **pathToCache**: the path to the cache file (this combines the cache name and directory) - **useCheckSum**: Whether to use md5 checksum to verify if file changed. If false the default will be to use the mtime and size of the file. ```js // loads the cache, if one does not exists for the given // Id a new one will be prepared to be created var fileEntryCache = require('file-entry-cache'); var cache = fileEntryCache.create('testCache'); var files = expand('../fixtures/*.txt'); // the first time this method is called, will return all the files var oFiles = cache.getUpdatedFiles(files); // this will persist this to disk checking each file stats and // updating the meta attributes `size` and `mtime`. // custom fields could also be added to the meta object and will be persisted // in order to retrieve them later cache.reconcile(); // use this if you want the non visited file entries to be kept in the cache // for more than one execution // // cache.reconcile( true /* noPrune */) // on a second run var cache2 = fileEntryCache.create('testCache'); // will return now only the files that were modified or none // if no files were modified previous to the execution of this function var oFiles = cache.getUpdatedFiles(files); // if you want to prevent a file from being considered non modified // something useful if a file failed some sort of validation // you can then remove the entry from the cache doing cache.removeEntry('path/to/file'); // path to file should be the same path of the file received on `getUpdatedFiles` // that will effectively make the file to appear again as modified until the validation is passed. In that // case you should not remove it from the cache // if you need all the files, so you can determine what to do with the changed ones // you can call var oFiles = cache.normalizeEntries(files); // oFiles will be an array of objects like the following entry = { key: 'some/name/file', the path to the file changed: true, // if the file was changed since previous run meta: { size: 3242, // the size of the file mtime: 231231231, // the modification time of the file data: {} // some extra field stored for this file (useful to save the result of a transformation on the file } } ``` ## Motivation for this module I needed a super simple and dumb **in-memory cache** with optional disk persistence (write-back cache) in order to make a script that will beautify files with `esformatter` to execute only on the files that were changed since the last run. In doing so the process of beautifying files was reduced from several seconds to a small fraction of a second. This module uses [flat-cache](https://www.npmjs.com/package/flat-cache) a super simple `key/value` cache storage with optional file persistance. The main idea is to read the files when the task begins, apply the transforms required, and if the process succeed, then store the new state of the files. The next time this module request for `getChangedFiles` will return only the files that were modified. Making the process to end faster. This module could also be used by processes that modify the files applying a transform, in that case the result of the transform could be stored in the `meta` field, of the entries. Anything added to the meta field will be persisted. Those processes won't need to call `getChangedFiles` they will instead call `normalizeEntries` that will return the entries with a `changed` field that can be used to determine if the file was changed or not. If it was not changed the transformed stored data could be used instead of actually applying the transformation, saving time in case of only a few files changed. In the worst case scenario all the files will be processed. In the best case scenario only a few of them will be processed. ## Important notes - The values set on the meta attribute of the entries should be `stringify-able` ones if possible, flat-cache uses `circular-json` to try to persist circular structures, but this should be considered experimental. The best results are always obtained with non circular values - All the changes to the cache state are done to memory first and only persisted after reconcile. ## License MIT # brace-expansion [Brace expansion](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Brace-Expansion.html), as known from sh/bash, in JavaScript. [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/juliangruber/brace-expansion.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/juliangruber/brace-expansion) [![downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/brace-expansion.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/brace-expansion) [![Greenkeeper badge](https://badges.greenkeeper.io/juliangruber/brace-expansion.svg)](https://greenkeeper.io/) [![testling badge](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/brace-expansion.png)](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/brace-expansion) ## Example ```js var expand = require('brace-expansion'); expand('file-{a,b,c}.jpg') // => ['file-a.jpg', 'file-b.jpg', 'file-c.jpg'] expand('-v{,,}') // => ['-v', '-v', '-v'] expand('file{0..2}.jpg') // => ['file0.jpg', 'file1.jpg', 'file2.jpg'] expand('file-{a..c}.jpg') // => ['file-a.jpg', 'file-b.jpg', 'file-c.jpg'] expand('file{2..0}.jpg') // => ['file2.jpg', 'file1.jpg', 'file0.jpg'] expand('file{0..4..2}.jpg') // => ['file0.jpg', 'file2.jpg', 'file4.jpg'] expand('file-{a..e..2}.jpg') // => ['file-a.jpg', 'file-c.jpg', 'file-e.jpg'] expand('file{00..10..5}.jpg') // => ['file00.jpg', 'file05.jpg', 'file10.jpg'] expand('{{A..C},{a..c}}') // => ['A', 'B', 'C', 'a', 'b', 'c'] expand('ppp{,config,oe{,conf}}') // => ['ppp', 'pppconfig', 'pppoe', 'pppoeconf'] ``` ## API ```js var expand = require('brace-expansion'); ``` ### var expanded = expand(str) Return an array of all possible and valid expansions of `str`. If none are found, `[str]` is returned. Valid expansions are: ```js /^(.*,)+(.+)?$/ // {a,b,...} ``` A comma separated list of options, like `{a,b}` or `{a,{b,c}}` or `{,a,}`. ```js /^-?\d+\.\.-?\d+(\.\.-?\d+)?$/ // {x..y[..incr]} ``` A numeric sequence from `x` to `y` inclusive, with optional increment. If `x` or `y` start with a leading `0`, all the numbers will be padded to have equal length. Negative numbers and backwards iteration work too. ```js /^-?\d+\.\.-?\d+(\.\.-?\d+)?$/ // {x..y[..incr]} ``` An alphabetic sequence from `x` to `y` inclusive, with optional increment. `x` and `y` must be exactly one character, and if given, `incr` must be a number. For compatibility reasons, the string `${` is not eligible for brace expansion. ## Installation With [npm](https://npmjs.org) do: ```bash npm install brace-expansion ``` ## Contributors - [Julian Gruber](https://github.com/juliangruber) - [Isaac Z. Schlueter](https://github.com/isaacs) ## Sponsors This module is proudly supported by my [Sponsors](https://github.com/juliangruber/sponsors)! Do you want to support modules like this to improve their quality, stability and weigh in on new features? Then please consider donating to my [Patreon](https://www.patreon.com/juliangruber). Not sure how much of my modules you're using? Try [feross/thanks](https://github.com/feross/thanks)! ## License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2013 Julian Gruber &lt;[email protected]&gt; Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # ShellJS - Unix shell commands for Node.js [![Travis](https://img.shields.io/travis/shelljs/shelljs/master.svg?style=flat-square&label=unix)](https://travis-ci.org/shelljs/shelljs) [![AppVeyor](https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/shelljs/shelljs/master.svg?style=flat-square&label=windows)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/shelljs/shelljs/branch/master) [![Codecov](https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/shelljs/shelljs/master.svg?style=flat-square&label=coverage)](https://codecov.io/gh/shelljs/shelljs) [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/shelljs.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/shelljs) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/shelljs.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/shelljs) ShellJS is a portable **(Windows/Linux/OS X)** implementation of Unix shell commands on top of the Node.js API. You can use it to eliminate your shell script's dependency on Unix while still keeping its familiar and powerful commands. You can also install it globally so you can run it from outside Node projects - say goodbye to those gnarly Bash scripts! ShellJS is proudly tested on every node release since `v4`! The project is [unit-tested](http://travis-ci.org/shelljs/shelljs) and battle-tested in projects like: + [Firebug](http://getfirebug.com/) - Firefox's infamous debugger + [JSHint](http://jshint.com) & [ESLint](http://eslint.org/) - popular JavaScript linters + [Zepto](http://zeptojs.com) - jQuery-compatible JavaScript library for modern browsers + [Yeoman](http://yeoman.io/) - Web application stack and development tool + [Deployd.com](http://deployd.com) - Open source PaaS for quick API backend generation + And [many more](https://npmjs.org/browse/depended/shelljs). If you have feedback, suggestions, or need help, feel free to post in our [issue tracker](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/issues). Think ShellJS is cool? Check out some related projects in our [Wiki page](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/wiki)! Upgrading from an older version? Check out our [breaking changes](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/wiki/Breaking-Changes) page to see what changes to watch out for while upgrading. ## Command line use If you just want cross platform UNIX commands, checkout our new project [shelljs/shx](https://github.com/shelljs/shx), a utility to expose `shelljs` to the command line. For example: ``` $ shx mkdir -p foo $ shx touch foo/bar.txt $ shx rm -rf foo ``` ## Plugin API ShellJS now supports third-party plugins! You can learn more about using plugins and writing your own ShellJS commands in [the wiki](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/wiki/Using-ShellJS-Plugins). ## A quick note about the docs For documentation on all the latest features, check out our [README](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs). To read docs that are consistent with the latest release, check out [the npm page](https://www.npmjs.com/package/shelljs) or [shelljs.org](http://documentup.com/shelljs/shelljs). ## Installing Via npm: ```bash $ npm install [-g] shelljs ``` ## Examples ```javascript var shell = require('shelljs'); if (!shell.which('git')) { shell.echo('Sorry, this script requires git'); shell.exit(1); } // Copy files to release dir shell.rm('-rf', 'out/Release'); shell.cp('-R', 'stuff/', 'out/Release'); // Replace macros in each .js file shell.cd('lib'); shell.ls('*.js').forEach(function (file) { shell.sed('-i', 'BUILD_VERSION', 'v0.1.2', file); shell.sed('-i', /^.*REMOVE_THIS_LINE.*$/, '', file); shell.sed('-i', /.*REPLACE_LINE_WITH_MACRO.*\n/, shell.cat('macro.js'), file); }); shell.cd('..'); // Run external tool synchronously if (shell.exec('git commit -am "Auto-commit"').code !== 0) { shell.echo('Error: Git commit failed'); shell.exit(1); } ``` ## Exclude options If you need to pass a parameter that looks like an option, you can do so like: ```js shell.grep('--', '-v', 'path/to/file'); // Search for "-v", no grep options shell.cp('-R', '-dir', 'outdir'); // If already using an option, you're done ``` ## Global vs. Local We no longer recommend using a global-import for ShellJS (i.e. `require('shelljs/global')`). While still supported for convenience, this pollutes the global namespace, and should therefore only be used with caution. Instead, we recommend a local import (standard for npm packages): ```javascript var shell = require('shelljs'); shell.echo('hello world'); ``` <!-- DO NOT MODIFY BEYOND THIS POINT - IT'S AUTOMATICALLY GENERATED --> ## Command reference All commands run synchronously, unless otherwise stated. All commands accept standard bash globbing characters (`*`, `?`, etc.), compatible with the [node `glob` module](https://github.com/isaacs/node-glob). For less-commonly used commands and features, please check out our [wiki page](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/wiki). ### cat([options,] file [, file ...]) ### cat([options,] file_array) Available options: + `-n`: number all output lines Examples: ```javascript var str = cat('file*.txt'); var str = cat('file1', 'file2'); var str = cat(['file1', 'file2']); // same as above ``` Returns a string containing the given file, or a concatenated string containing the files if more than one file is given (a new line character is introduced between each file). ### cd([dir]) Changes to directory `dir` for the duration of the script. Changes to home directory if no argument is supplied. ### chmod([options,] octal_mode || octal_string, file) ### chmod([options,] symbolic_mode, file) Available options: + `-v`: output a diagnostic for every file processed + `-c`: like verbose, but report only when a change is made + `-R`: change files and directories recursively Examples: ```javascript chmod(755, '/Users/brandon'); chmod('755', '/Users/brandon'); // same as above chmod('u+x', '/Users/brandon'); chmod('-R', 'a-w', '/Users/brandon'); ``` Alters the permissions of a file or directory by either specifying the absolute permissions in octal form or expressing the changes in symbols. This command tries to mimic the POSIX behavior as much as possible. Notable exceptions: + In symbolic modes, `a-r` and `-r` are identical. No consideration is given to the `umask`. + There is no "quiet" option, since default behavior is to run silent. ### cp([options,] source [, source ...], dest) ### cp([options,] source_array, dest) Available options: + `-f`: force (default behavior) + `-n`: no-clobber + `-u`: only copy if `source` is newer than `dest` + `-r`, `-R`: recursive + `-L`: follow symlinks + `-P`: don't follow symlinks Examples: ```javascript cp('file1', 'dir1'); cp('-R', 'path/to/dir/', '~/newCopy/'); cp('-Rf', '/tmp/*', '/usr/local/*', '/home/tmp'); cp('-Rf', ['/tmp/*', '/usr/local/*'], '/home/tmp'); // same as above ``` Copies files. ### pushd([options,] [dir | '-N' | '+N']) Available options: + `-n`: Suppresses the normal change of directory when adding directories to the stack, so that only the stack is manipulated. + `-q`: Supresses output to the console. Arguments: + `dir`: Sets the current working directory to the top of the stack, then executes the equivalent of `cd dir`. + `+N`: Brings the Nth directory (counting from the left of the list printed by dirs, starting with zero) to the top of the list by rotating the stack. + `-N`: Brings the Nth directory (counting from the right of the list printed by dirs, starting with zero) to the top of the list by rotating the stack. Examples: ```javascript // process.cwd() === '/usr' pushd('/etc'); // Returns /etc /usr pushd('+1'); // Returns /usr /etc ``` Save the current directory on the top of the directory stack and then `cd` to `dir`. With no arguments, `pushd` exchanges the top two directories. Returns an array of paths in the stack. ### popd([options,] ['-N' | '+N']) Available options: + `-n`: Suppress the normal directory change when removing directories from the stack, so that only the stack is manipulated. + `-q`: Supresses output to the console. Arguments: + `+N`: Removes the Nth directory (counting from the left of the list printed by dirs), starting with zero. + `-N`: Removes the Nth directory (counting from the right of the list printed by dirs), starting with zero. Examples: ```javascript echo(process.cwd()); // '/usr' pushd('/etc'); // '/etc /usr' echo(process.cwd()); // '/etc' popd(); // '/usr' echo(process.cwd()); // '/usr' ``` When no arguments are given, `popd` removes the top directory from the stack and performs a `cd` to the new top directory. The elements are numbered from 0, starting at the first directory listed with dirs (i.e., `popd` is equivalent to `popd +0`). Returns an array of paths in the stack. ### dirs([options | '+N' | '-N']) Available options: + `-c`: Clears the directory stack by deleting all of the elements. + `-q`: Supresses output to the console. Arguments: + `+N`: Displays the Nth directory (counting from the left of the list printed by dirs when invoked without options), starting with zero. + `-N`: Displays the Nth directory (counting from the right of the list printed by dirs when invoked without options), starting with zero. Display the list of currently remembered directories. Returns an array of paths in the stack, or a single path if `+N` or `-N` was specified. See also: `pushd`, `popd` ### echo([options,] string [, string ...]) Available options: + `-e`: interpret backslash escapes (default) + `-n`: remove trailing newline from output Examples: ```javascript echo('hello world'); var str = echo('hello world'); echo('-n', 'no newline at end'); ``` Prints `string` to stdout, and returns string with additional utility methods like `.to()`. ### exec(command [, options] [, callback]) Available options: + `async`: Asynchronous execution. If a callback is provided, it will be set to `true`, regardless of the passed value (default: `false`). + `silent`: Do not echo program output to console (default: `false`). + `encoding`: Character encoding to use. Affects the values returned to stdout and stderr, and what is written to stdout and stderr when not in silent mode (default: `'utf8'`). + and any option available to Node.js's [`child_process.exec()`](https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_process_child_process_exec_command_options_callback) Examples: ```javascript var version = exec('node --version', {silent:true}).stdout; var child = exec('some_long_running_process', {async:true}); child.stdout.on('data', function(data) { /* ... do something with data ... */ }); exec('some_long_running_process', function(code, stdout, stderr) { console.log('Exit code:', code); console.log('Program output:', stdout); console.log('Program stderr:', stderr); }); ``` Executes the given `command` _synchronously_, unless otherwise specified. When in synchronous mode, this returns a `ShellString` (compatible with ShellJS v0.6.x, which returns an object of the form `{ code:..., stdout:... , stderr:... }`). Otherwise, this returns the child process object, and the `callback` receives the arguments `(code, stdout, stderr)`. Not seeing the behavior you want? `exec()` runs everything through `sh` by default (or `cmd.exe` on Windows), which differs from `bash`. If you need bash-specific behavior, try out the `{shell: 'path/to/bash'}` option. ### find(path [, path ...]) ### find(path_array) Examples: ```javascript find('src', 'lib'); find(['src', 'lib']); // same as above find('.').filter(function(file) { return file.match(/\.js$/); }); ``` Returns array of all files (however deep) in the given paths. The main difference from `ls('-R', path)` is that the resulting file names include the base directories (e.g., `lib/resources/file1` instead of just `file1`). ### grep([options,] regex_filter, file [, file ...]) ### grep([options,] regex_filter, file_array) Available options: + `-v`: Invert `regex_filter` (only print non-matching lines). + `-l`: Print only filenames of matching files. + `-i`: Ignore case. Examples: ```javascript grep('-v', 'GLOBAL_VARIABLE', '*.js'); grep('GLOBAL_VARIABLE', '*.js'); ``` Reads input string from given files and returns a string containing all lines of the file that match the given `regex_filter`. ### head([{'-n': \<num\>},] file [, file ...]) ### head([{'-n': \<num\>},] file_array) Available options: + `-n <num>`: Show the first `<num>` lines of the files Examples: ```javascript var str = head({'-n': 1}, 'file*.txt'); var str = head('file1', 'file2'); var str = head(['file1', 'file2']); // same as above ``` Read the start of a file. ### ln([options,] source, dest) Available options: + `-s`: symlink + `-f`: force Examples: ```javascript ln('file', 'newlink'); ln('-sf', 'file', 'existing'); ``` Links `source` to `dest`. Use `-f` to force the link, should `dest` already exist. ### ls([options,] [path, ...]) ### ls([options,] path_array) Available options: + `-R`: recursive + `-A`: all files (include files beginning with `.`, except for `.` and `..`) + `-L`: follow symlinks + `-d`: list directories themselves, not their contents + `-l`: list objects representing each file, each with fields containing `ls -l` output fields. See [`fs.Stats`](https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_class_fs_stats) for more info Examples: ```javascript ls('projs/*.js'); ls('-R', '/users/me', '/tmp'); ls('-R', ['/users/me', '/tmp']); // same as above ls('-l', 'file.txt'); // { name: 'file.txt', mode: 33188, nlink: 1, ...} ``` Returns array of files in the given `path`, or files in the current directory if no `path` is provided. ### mkdir([options,] dir [, dir ...]) ### mkdir([options,] dir_array) Available options: + `-p`: full path (and create intermediate directories, if necessary) Examples: ```javascript mkdir('-p', '/tmp/a/b/c/d', '/tmp/e/f/g'); mkdir('-p', ['/tmp/a/b/c/d', '/tmp/e/f/g']); // same as above ``` Creates directories. ### mv([options ,] source [, source ...], dest') ### mv([options ,] source_array, dest') Available options: + `-f`: force (default behavior) + `-n`: no-clobber Examples: ```javascript mv('-n', 'file', 'dir/'); mv('file1', 'file2', 'dir/'); mv(['file1', 'file2'], 'dir/'); // same as above ``` Moves `source` file(s) to `dest`. ### pwd() Returns the current directory. ### rm([options,] file [, file ...]) ### rm([options,] file_array) Available options: + `-f`: force + `-r, -R`: recursive Examples: ```javascript rm('-rf', '/tmp/*'); rm('some_file.txt', 'another_file.txt'); rm(['some_file.txt', 'another_file.txt']); // same as above ``` Removes files. ### sed([options,] search_regex, replacement, file [, file ...]) ### sed([options,] search_regex, replacement, file_array) Available options: + `-i`: Replace contents of `file` in-place. _Note that no backups will be created!_ Examples: ```javascript sed('-i', 'PROGRAM_VERSION', 'v0.1.3', 'source.js'); sed(/.*DELETE_THIS_LINE.*\n/, '', 'source.js'); ``` Reads an input string from `file`s, and performs a JavaScript `replace()` on the input using the given `search_regex` and `replacement` string or function. Returns the new string after replacement. Note: Like unix `sed`, ShellJS `sed` supports capture groups. Capture groups are specified using the `$n` syntax: ```javascript sed(/(\w+)\s(\w+)/, '$2, $1', 'file.txt'); ``` ### set(options) Available options: + `+/-e`: exit upon error (`config.fatal`) + `+/-v`: verbose: show all commands (`config.verbose`) + `+/-f`: disable filename expansion (globbing) Examples: ```javascript set('-e'); // exit upon first error set('+e'); // this undoes a "set('-e')" ``` Sets global configuration variables. ### sort([options,] file [, file ...]) ### sort([options,] file_array) Available options: + `-r`: Reverse the results + `-n`: Compare according to numerical value Examples: ```javascript sort('foo.txt', 'bar.txt'); sort('-r', 'foo.txt'); ``` Return the contents of the `file`s, sorted line-by-line. Sorting multiple files mixes their content (just as unix `sort` does). ### tail([{'-n': \<num\>},] file [, file ...]) ### tail([{'-n': \<num\>},] file_array) Available options: + `-n <num>`: Show the last `<num>` lines of `file`s Examples: ```javascript var str = tail({'-n': 1}, 'file*.txt'); var str = tail('file1', 'file2'); var str = tail(['file1', 'file2']); // same as above ``` Read the end of a `file`. ### tempdir() Examples: ```javascript var tmp = tempdir(); // "/tmp" for most *nix platforms ``` Searches and returns string containing a writeable, platform-dependent temporary directory. Follows Python's [tempfile algorithm](http://docs.python.org/library/tempfile.html#tempfile.tempdir). ### test(expression) Available expression primaries: + `'-b', 'path'`: true if path is a block device + `'-c', 'path'`: true if path is a character device + `'-d', 'path'`: true if path is a directory + `'-e', 'path'`: true if path exists + `'-f', 'path'`: true if path is a regular file + `'-L', 'path'`: true if path is a symbolic link + `'-p', 'path'`: true if path is a pipe (FIFO) + `'-S', 'path'`: true if path is a socket Examples: ```javascript if (test('-d', path)) { /* do something with dir */ }; if (!test('-f', path)) continue; // skip if it's a regular file ``` Evaluates `expression` using the available primaries and returns corresponding value. ### ShellString.prototype.to(file) Examples: ```javascript cat('input.txt').to('output.txt'); ``` Analogous to the redirection operator `>` in Unix, but works with `ShellStrings` (such as those returned by `cat`, `grep`, etc.). _Like Unix redirections, `to()` will overwrite any existing file!_ ### ShellString.prototype.toEnd(file) Examples: ```javascript cat('input.txt').toEnd('output.txt'); ``` Analogous to the redirect-and-append operator `>>` in Unix, but works with `ShellStrings` (such as those returned by `cat`, `grep`, etc.). ### touch([options,] file [, file ...]) ### touch([options,] file_array) Available options: + `-a`: Change only the access time + `-c`: Do not create any files + `-m`: Change only the modification time + `-d DATE`: Parse `DATE` and use it instead of current time + `-r FILE`: Use `FILE`'s times instead of current time Examples: ```javascript touch('source.js'); touch('-c', '/path/to/some/dir/source.js'); touch({ '-r': FILE }, '/path/to/some/dir/source.js'); ``` Update the access and modification times of each `FILE` to the current time. A `FILE` argument that does not exist is created empty, unless `-c` is supplied. This is a partial implementation of [`touch(1)`](http://linux.die.net/man/1/touch). ### uniq([options,] [input, [output]]) Available options: + `-i`: Ignore case while comparing + `-c`: Prefix lines by the number of occurrences + `-d`: Only print duplicate lines, one for each group of identical lines Examples: ```javascript uniq('foo.txt'); uniq('-i', 'foo.txt'); uniq('-cd', 'foo.txt', 'bar.txt'); ``` Filter adjacent matching lines from `input`. ### which(command) Examples: ```javascript var nodeExec = which('node'); ``` Searches for `command` in the system's `PATH`. On Windows, this uses the `PATHEXT` variable to append the extension if it's not already executable. Returns string containing the absolute path to `command`. ### exit(code) Exits the current process with the given exit `code`. ### error() Tests if error occurred in the last command. Returns a truthy value if an error returned, or a falsy value otherwise. **Note**: do not rely on the return value to be an error message. If you need the last error message, use the `.stderr` attribute from the last command's return value instead. ### ShellString(str) Examples: ```javascript var foo = ShellString('hello world'); ``` Turns a regular string into a string-like object similar to what each command returns. This has special methods, like `.to()` and `.toEnd()`. ### env['VAR_NAME'] Object containing environment variables (both getter and setter). Shortcut to `process.env`. ### Pipes Examples: ```javascript grep('foo', 'file1.txt', 'file2.txt').sed(/o/g, 'a').to('output.txt'); echo('files with o\'s in the name:\n' + ls().grep('o')); cat('test.js').exec('node'); // pipe to exec() call ``` Commands can send their output to another command in a pipe-like fashion. `sed`, `grep`, `cat`, `exec`, `to`, and `toEnd` can appear on the right-hand side of a pipe. Pipes can be chained. ## Configuration ### config.silent Example: ```javascript var sh = require('shelljs'); var silentState = sh.config.silent; // save old silent state sh.config.silent = true; /* ... */ sh.config.silent = silentState; // restore old silent state ``` Suppresses all command output if `true`, except for `echo()` calls. Default is `false`. ### config.fatal Example: ```javascript require('shelljs/global'); config.fatal = true; // or set('-e'); cp('this_file_does_not_exist', '/dev/null'); // throws Error here /* more commands... */ ``` If `true`, the script will throw a Javascript error when any shell.js command encounters an error. Default is `false`. This is analogous to Bash's `set -e`. ### config.verbose Example: ```javascript config.verbose = true; // or set('-v'); cd('dir/'); rm('-rf', 'foo.txt', 'bar.txt'); exec('echo hello'); ``` Will print each command as follows: ``` cd dir/ rm -rf foo.txt bar.txt exec echo hello ``` ### config.globOptions Example: ```javascript config.globOptions = {nodir: true}; ``` Use this value for calls to `glob.sync()` instead of the default options. ### config.reset() Example: ```javascript var shell = require('shelljs'); // Make changes to shell.config, and do stuff... /* ... */ shell.config.reset(); // reset to original state // Do more stuff, but with original settings /* ... */ ``` Reset `shell.config` to the defaults: ```javascript { fatal: false, globOptions: {}, maxdepth: 255, noglob: false, silent: false, verbose: false, } ``` ## Team | [![Nate Fischer](https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/5801521?s=130)](https://github.com/nfischer) | [![Brandon Freitag](https://avatars1.githubusercontent.com/u/5988055?v=3&s=130)](http://github.com/freitagbr) | |:---:|:---:| | [Nate Fischer](https://github.com/nfischer) | [Brandon Freitag](http://github.com/freitagbr) | # set-blocking [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/set-blocking.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/set-blocking) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/set-blocking.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/set-blocking) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/yargs/set-blocking/badge.svg?branch=)](https://coveralls.io/r/yargs/set-blocking?branch=master) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) set blocking `stdio` and `stderr` ensuring that terminal output does not truncate. ```js const setBlocking = require('set-blocking') setBlocking(true) console.log(someLargeStringToOutput) ``` ## Historical Context/Word of Warning This was created as a shim to address the bug discussed in [node #6456](https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/6456). This bug crops up on newer versions of Node.js (`0.12+`), truncating terminal output. You should be mindful of the side-effects caused by using `set-blocking`: * if your module sets blocking to `true`, it will effect other modules consuming your library. In [yargs](https://github.com/yargs/yargs/blob/master/yargs.js#L653) we only call `setBlocking(true)` once we already know we are about to call `process.exit(code)`. * this patch will not apply to subprocesses spawned with `isTTY = true`, this is the [default `spawn()` behavior](https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_process_child_process_spawn_command_args_options). ## License ISC # cliui ![ci](https://github.com/yargs/cliui/workflows/ci/badge.svg) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/cliui.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cliui) [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) ![nycrc config on GitHub](https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/cliui) easily create complex multi-column command-line-interfaces. ## Example ```js const ui = require('cliui')() ui.div('Usage: $0 [command] [options]') ui.div({ text: 'Options:', padding: [2, 0, 1, 0] }) ui.div( { text: "-f, --file", width: 20, padding: [0, 4, 0, 4] }, { text: "the file to load." + chalk.green("(if this description is long it wraps).") , width: 20 }, { text: chalk.red("[required]"), align: 'right' } ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` ## Deno/ESM Support As of `v7` `cliui` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno) and [ESM](https://nodejs.org/api/esm.html#esm_ecmascript_modules): ```typescript import cliui from "https://deno.land/x/cliui/deno.ts"; const ui = cliui({}) ui.div('Usage: $0 [command] [options]') ui.div({ text: 'Options:', padding: [2, 0, 1, 0] }) ui.div({ text: "-f, --file", width: 20, padding: [0, 4, 0, 4] }) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` <img width="500" src="screenshot.png"> ## Layout DSL cliui exposes a simple layout DSL: If you create a single `ui.div`, passing a string rather than an object: * `\n`: characters will be interpreted as new rows. * `\t`: characters will be interpreted as new columns. * `\s`: characters will be interpreted as padding. **as an example...** ```js var ui = require('./')({ width: 60 }) ui.div( 'Usage: node ./bin/foo.js\n' + ' <regex>\t provide a regex\n' + ' <glob>\t provide a glob\t [required]' ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` **will output:** ```shell Usage: node ./bin/foo.js <regex> provide a regex <glob> provide a glob [required] ``` ## Methods ```js cliui = require('cliui') ``` ### cliui({width: integer}) Specify the maximum width of the UI being generated. If no width is provided, cliui will try to get the current window's width and use it, and if that doesn't work, width will be set to `80`. ### cliui({wrap: boolean}) Enable or disable the wrapping of text in a column. ### cliui.div(column, column, column) Create a row with any number of columns, a column can either be a string, or an object with the following options: * **text:** some text to place in the column. * **width:** the width of a column. * **align:** alignment, `right` or `center`. * **padding:** `[top, right, bottom, left]`. * **border:** should a border be placed around the div? ### cliui.span(column, column, column) Similar to `div`, except the next row will be appended without a new line being created. ### cliui.resetOutput() Resets the UI elements of the current cliui instance, maintaining the values set for `width` and `wrap`. [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/esprima.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/esprima) [![npm download](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/esprima.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/esprima) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jquery/esprima/master.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/jquery/esprima) [![Coverage Status](https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/jquery/esprima/master.svg)](https://codecov.io/github/jquery/esprima) **Esprima** ([esprima.org](http://esprima.org), BSD license) is a high performance, standard-compliant [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) parser written in ECMAScript (also popularly known as [JavaScript](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaScript)). Esprima is created and maintained by [Ariya Hidayat](https://twitter.com/ariyahidayat), with the help of [many contributors](https://github.com/jquery/esprima/contributors). ### Features - Full support for ECMAScript 2017 ([ECMA-262 8th Edition](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm)) - Sensible [syntax tree format](https://github.com/estree/estree/blob/master/es5.md) as standardized by [ESTree project](https://github.com/estree/estree) - Experimental support for [JSX](https://facebook.github.io/jsx/), a syntax extension for [React](https://facebook.github.io/react/) - Optional tracking of syntax node location (index-based and line-column) - [Heavily tested](http://esprima.org/test/ci.html) (~1500 [unit tests](https://github.com/jquery/esprima/tree/master/test/fixtures) with [full code coverage](https://codecov.io/github/jquery/esprima)) ### API Esprima can be used to perform [lexical analysis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexical_analysis) (tokenization) or [syntactic analysis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parsing) (parsing) of a JavaScript program. A simple example on Node.js REPL: ```javascript > var esprima = require('esprima'); > var program = 'const answer = 42'; > esprima.tokenize(program); [ { type: 'Keyword', value: 'const' }, { type: 'Identifier', value: 'answer' }, { type: 'Punctuator', value: '=' }, { type: 'Numeric', value: '42' } ] > esprima.parseScript(program); { type: 'Program', body: [ { type: 'VariableDeclaration', declarations: [Object], kind: 'const' } ], sourceType: 'script' } ``` For more information, please read the [complete documentation](http://esprima.org/doc). ### Estraverse [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse) Estraverse ([estraverse](http://github.com/estools/estraverse)) is [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) traversal functions from [esmangle project](http://github.com/estools/esmangle). ### Documentation You can find usage docs at [wiki page](https://github.com/estools/estraverse/wiki/Usage). ### Example Usage The following code will output all variables declared at the root of a file. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'FunctionExpression' || node.type == 'FunctionDeclaration') return estraverse.VisitorOption.Skip; }, leave: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'VariableDeclarator') console.log(node.id.name); } }); ``` We can use `this.skip`, `this.remove` and `this.break` functions instead of using Skip, Remove and Break. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node) { this.break(); } }); ``` And estraverse provides `estraverse.replace` function. When returning node from `enter`/`leave`, current node is replaced with it. ```javascript result = estraverse.replace(tree, { enter: function (node) { // Replace it with replaced. if (node.type === 'Literal') return replaced; } }); ``` By passing `visitor.keys` mapping, we can extend estraverse traversing functionality. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Extending the existing traversing rules. keys: { // TargetNodeName: [ 'keys', 'containing', 'the', 'other', '**node**' ] TestExpression: ['argument'] } }); ``` By passing `visitor.fallback` option, we can control the behavior when encountering unknown nodes. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Iterating the child **nodes** of unknown nodes. fallback: 'iteration' }); ``` When `visitor.fallback` is a function, we can determine which keys to visit on each node. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Skip the `argument` property of each node fallback: function(node) { return Object.keys(node).filter(function(key) { return key !== 'argument'; }); } }); ``` ### License Copyright (C) 2012-2016 [Yusuke Suzuki](http://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](http://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. # Web IDL Type Conversions on JavaScript Values This package implements, in JavaScript, the algorithms to convert a given JavaScript value according to a given [Web IDL](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/) [type](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#idl-types). The goal is that you should be able to write code like ```js "use strict"; const conversions = require("webidl-conversions"); function doStuff(x, y) { x = conversions["boolean"](x); y = conversions["unsigned long"](y); // actual algorithm code here } ``` and your function `doStuff` will behave the same as a Web IDL operation declared as ```webidl void doStuff(boolean x, unsigned long y); ``` ## API This package's main module's default export is an object with a variety of methods, each corresponding to a different Web IDL type. Each method, when invoked on a JavaScript value, will give back the new JavaScript value that results after passing through the Web IDL conversion rules. (See below for more details on what that means.) Alternately, the method could throw an error, if the Web IDL algorithm is specified to do so: for example `conversions["float"](NaN)` [will throw a `TypeError`](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-float). Each method also accepts a second, optional, parameter for miscellaneous options. For conversion methods that throw errors, a string option `{ context }` may be provided to provide more information in the error message. (For example, `conversions["float"](NaN, { context: "Argument 1 of Interface's operation" })` will throw an error with message `"Argument 1 of Interface's operation is not a finite floating-point value."`) Specific conversions may also accept other options, the details of which can be found below. ## Conversions implemented Conversions for all of the basic types from the Web IDL specification are implemented: - [`any`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-any) - [`void`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-void) - [`boolean`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-boolean) - [Integer types](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-integer-types), which can additionally be provided the boolean options `{ clamp, enforceRange }` as a second parameter - [`float`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-float), [`unrestricted float`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-unrestricted-float) - [`double`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-double), [`unrestricted double`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-unrestricted-double) - [`DOMString`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-DOMString), which can additionally be provided the boolean option `{ treatNullAsEmptyString }` as a second parameter - [`ByteString`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-ByteString), [`USVString`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-USVString) - [`object`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-object) - [`Error`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-Error) - [Buffer source types](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-buffer-source-types) Additionally, for convenience, the following derived type definitions are implemented: - [`ArrayBufferView`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#ArrayBufferView) - [`BufferSource`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#BufferSource) - [`DOMTimeStamp`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#DOMTimeStamp) - [`Function`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#Function) - [`VoidFunction`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#VoidFunction) (although it will not censor the return type) Derived types, such as nullable types, promise types, sequences, records, etc. are not handled by this library. You may wish to investigate the [webidl2js](https://github.com/jsdom/webidl2js) project. ### A note on the `long long` types The `long long` and `unsigned long long` Web IDL types can hold values that cannot be stored in JavaScript numbers, so the conversion is imperfect. For example, converting the JavaScript number `18446744073709552000` to a Web IDL `long long` is supposed to produce the Web IDL value `-18446744073709551232`. Since we are representing our Web IDL values in JavaScript, we can't represent `-18446744073709551232`, so we instead the best we could do is `-18446744073709552000` as the output. This library actually doesn't even get that far. Producing those results would require doing accurate modular arithmetic on 64-bit intermediate values, but JavaScript does not make this easy. We could pull in a big-integer library as a dependency, but in lieu of that, we for now have decided to just produce inaccurate results if you pass in numbers that are not strictly between `Number.MIN_SAFE_INTEGER` and `Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER`. ## Background What's actually going on here, conceptually, is pretty weird. Let's try to explain. Web IDL, as part of its madness-inducing design, has its own type system. When people write algorithms in web platform specs, they usually operate on Web IDL values, i.e. instances of Web IDL types. For example, if they were specifying the algorithm for our `doStuff` operation above, they would treat `x` as a Web IDL value of [Web IDL type `boolean`](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#idl-boolean). Crucially, they would _not_ treat `x` as a JavaScript variable whose value is either the JavaScript `true` or `false`. They're instead working in a different type system altogether, with its own rules. Separately from its type system, Web IDL defines a ["binding"](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#ecmascript-binding) of the type system into JavaScript. This contains rules like: when you pass a JavaScript value to the JavaScript method that manifests a given Web IDL operation, how does that get converted into a Web IDL value? For example, a JavaScript `true` passed in the position of a Web IDL `boolean` argument becomes a Web IDL `true`. But, a JavaScript `true` passed in the position of a [Web IDL `unsigned long`](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#idl-unsigned-long) becomes a Web IDL `1`. And so on. Finally, we have the actual implementation code. This is usually C++, although these days [some smart people are using Rust](https://github.com/servo/servo). The implementation, of course, has its own type system. So when they implement the Web IDL algorithms, they don't actually use Web IDL values, since those aren't "real" outside of specs. Instead, implementations apply the Web IDL binding rules in such a way as to convert incoming JavaScript values into C++ values. For example, if code in the browser called `doStuff(true, true)`, then the implementation code would eventually receive a C++ `bool` containing `true` and a C++ `uint32_t` containing `1`. The upside of all this is that implementations can abstract all the conversion logic away, letting Web IDL handle it, and focus on implementing the relevant methods in C++ with values of the correct type already provided. That is payoff of Web IDL, in a nutshell. And getting to that payoff is the goal of _this_ project—but for JavaScript implementations, instead of C++ ones. That is, this library is designed to make it easier for JavaScript developers to write functions that behave like a given Web IDL operation. So conceptually, the conversion pipeline, which in its general form is JavaScript values ↦ Web IDL values ↦ implementation-language values, in this case becomes JavaScript values ↦ Web IDL values ↦ JavaScript values. And that intermediate step is where all the logic is performed: a JavaScript `true` becomes a Web IDL `1` in an unsigned long context, which then becomes a JavaScript `1`. ## Don't use this Seriously, why would you ever use this? You really shouldn't. Web IDL is … strange, and you shouldn't be emulating its semantics. If you're looking for a generic argument-processing library, you should find one with better rules than those from Web IDL. In general, your JavaScript should not be trying to become more like Web IDL; if anything, we should fix Web IDL to make it more like JavaScript. The _only_ people who should use this are those trying to create faithful implementations (or polyfills) of web platform interfaces defined in Web IDL. Its main consumer is the [jsdom](https://github.com/tmpvar/jsdom) project. # ansi-colors [![Donate](https://img.shields.io/badge/Donate-PayPal-green.svg)](https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=W8YFZ425KND68) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/ansi-colors.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ansi-colors) [![NPM monthly downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/ansi-colors.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/ansi-colors) [![NPM total downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dt/ansi-colors.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/ansi-colors) [![Linux Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/doowb/ansi-colors.svg?style=flat&label=Travis)](https://travis-ci.org/doowb/ansi-colors) > Easily add ANSI colors to your text and symbols in the terminal. A faster drop-in replacement for chalk, kleur and turbocolor (without the dependencies and rendering bugs). Please consider following this project's author, [Brian Woodward](https://github.com/doowb), and consider starring the project to show your :heart: and support. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install --save ansi-colors ``` ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/39635445-8a98a3a6-4f8b-11e8-89c1-068c45d4fff8.png) ## Why use this? ansi-colors is _the fastest Node.js library for terminal styling_. A more performant drop-in replacement for chalk, with no dependencies. * _Blazing fast_ - Fastest terminal styling library in node.js, 10-20x faster than chalk! * _Drop-in replacement_ for [chalk](https://github.com/chalk/chalk). * _No dependencies_ (Chalk has 7 dependencies in its tree!) * _Safe_ - Does not modify the `String.prototype` like [colors](https://github.com/Marak/colors.js). * Supports [nested colors](#nested-colors), **and does not have the [nested styling bug](#nested-styling-bug) that is present in [colorette](https://github.com/jorgebucaran/colorette), [chalk](https://github.com/chalk/chalk), and [kleur](https://github.com/lukeed/kleur)**. * Supports [chained colors](#chained-colors). * [Toggle color support](#toggle-color-support) on or off. ## Usage ```js const c = require('ansi-colors'); console.log(c.red('This is a red string!')); console.log(c.green('This is a red string!')); console.log(c.cyan('This is a cyan string!')); console.log(c.yellow('This is a yellow string!')); ``` ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/39653848-a38e67da-4fc0-11e8-89ae-98c65ebe9dcf.png) ## Chained colors ```js console.log(c.bold.red('this is a bold red message')); console.log(c.bold.yellow.italic('this is a bold yellow italicized message')); console.log(c.green.bold.underline('this is a bold green underlined message')); ``` ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/39635780-7617246a-4f8c-11e8-89e9-05216cc54e38.png) ## Nested colors ```js console.log(c.yellow(`foo ${c.red.bold('red')} bar ${c.cyan('cyan')} baz`)); ``` ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/39635817-8ed93d44-4f8c-11e8-8afd-8c3ea35f5fbe.png) ### Nested styling bug `ansi-colors` does not have the nested styling bug found in [colorette](https://github.com/jorgebucaran/colorette), [chalk](https://github.com/chalk/chalk), and [kleur](https://github.com/lukeed/kleur). ```js const { bold, red } = require('ansi-styles'); console.log(bold(`foo ${red.dim('bar')} baz`)); const colorette = require('colorette'); console.log(colorette.bold(`foo ${colorette.red(colorette.dim('bar'))} baz`)); const kleur = require('kleur'); console.log(kleur.bold(`foo ${kleur.red.dim('bar')} baz`)); const chalk = require('chalk'); console.log(chalk.bold(`foo ${chalk.red.dim('bar')} baz`)); ``` **Results in the following** (sans icons and labels) ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/47280326-d2ee0580-d5a3-11e8-9611-ea6010f0a253.png) ## Toggle color support Easily enable/disable colors. ```js const c = require('ansi-colors'); // disable colors manually c.enabled = false; // or use a library to automatically detect support c.enabled = require('color-support').hasBasic; console.log(c.red('I will only be colored red if the terminal supports colors')); ``` ## Strip ANSI codes Use the `.unstyle` method to strip ANSI codes from a string. ```js console.log(c.unstyle(c.blue.bold('foo bar baz'))); //=> 'foo bar baz' ``` ## Available styles **Note** that bright and bright-background colors are not always supported. | Colors | Background Colors | Bright Colors | Bright Background Colors | | ------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------------------ | | black | bgBlack | blackBright | bgBlackBright | | red | bgRed | redBright | bgRedBright | | green | bgGreen | greenBright | bgGreenBright | | yellow | bgYellow | yellowBright | bgYellowBright | | blue | bgBlue | blueBright | bgBlueBright | | magenta | bgMagenta | magentaBright | bgMagentaBright | | cyan | bgCyan | cyanBright | bgCyanBright | | white | bgWhite | whiteBright | bgWhiteBright | | gray | | | | | grey | | | | _(`gray` is the U.S. spelling, `grey` is more commonly used in the Canada and U.K.)_ ### Style modifiers * dim * **bold** * hidden * _italic_ * underline * inverse * ~~strikethrough~~ * reset ## Aliases Create custom aliases for styles. ```js const colors = require('ansi-colors'); colors.alias('primary', colors.yellow); colors.alias('secondary', colors.bold); console.log(colors.primary.secondary('Foo')); ``` ## Themes A theme is an object of custom aliases. ```js const colors = require('ansi-colors'); colors.theme({ danger: colors.red, dark: colors.dim.gray, disabled: colors.gray, em: colors.italic, heading: colors.bold.underline, info: colors.cyan, muted: colors.dim, primary: colors.blue, strong: colors.bold, success: colors.green, underline: colors.underline, warning: colors.yellow }); // Now, we can use our custom styles alongside the built-in styles! console.log(colors.danger.strong.em('Error!')); console.log(colors.warning('Heads up!')); console.log(colors.info('Did you know...')); console.log(colors.success.bold('It worked!')); ``` ## Performance **Libraries tested** * ansi-colors v3.0.4 * chalk v2.4.1 ### Mac > MacBook Pro, Intel Core i7, 2.3 GHz, 16 GB. **Load time** Time it takes to load the first time `require()` is called: * ansi-colors - `1.915ms` * chalk - `12.437ms` **Benchmarks** ``` # All Colors ansi-colors x 173,851 ops/sec ±0.42% (91 runs sampled) chalk x 9,944 ops/sec ±2.53% (81 runs sampled))) # Chained colors ansi-colors x 20,791 ops/sec ±0.60% (88 runs sampled) chalk x 2,111 ops/sec ±2.34% (83 runs sampled) # Nested colors ansi-colors x 59,304 ops/sec ±0.98% (92 runs sampled) chalk x 4,590 ops/sec ±2.08% (82 runs sampled) ``` ### Windows > Windows 10, Intel Core i7-7700k CPU @ 4.2 GHz, 32 GB **Load time** Time it takes to load the first time `require()` is called: * ansi-colors - `1.494ms` * chalk - `11.523ms` **Benchmarks** ``` # All Colors ansi-colors x 193,088 ops/sec ±0.51% (95 runs sampled)) chalk x 9,612 ops/sec ±3.31% (77 runs sampled))) # Chained colors ansi-colors x 26,093 ops/sec ±1.13% (94 runs sampled) chalk x 2,267 ops/sec ±2.88% (80 runs sampled)) # Nested colors ansi-colors x 67,747 ops/sec ±0.49% (93 runs sampled) chalk x 4,446 ops/sec ±3.01% (82 runs sampled)) ``` ## About <details> <summary><strong>Contributing</strong></summary> Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). </details> <details> <summary><strong>Running Tests</strong></summary> Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command: ```sh $ npm install && npm test ``` </details> <details> <summary><strong>Building docs</strong></summary> _(This project's readme.md is generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the [.verb.md](.verb.md) readme template.)_ To generate the readme, run the following command: ```sh $ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb ``` </details> ### Related projects You might also be interested in these projects: * [ansi-wrap](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ansi-wrap): Create ansi colors by passing the open and close codes. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/ansi-wrap "Create ansi colors by passing the open and close codes.") * [strip-color](https://www.npmjs.com/package/strip-color): Strip ANSI color codes from a string. No dependencies. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/strip-color "Strip ANSI color codes from a string. No dependencies.") ### Contributors | **Commits** | **Contributor** | | --- | --- | | 48 | [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) | | 42 | [doowb](https://github.com/doowb) | | 6 | [lukeed](https://github.com/lukeed) | | 2 | [Silic0nS0ldier](https://github.com/Silic0nS0ldier) | | 1 | [dwieeb](https://github.com/dwieeb) | | 1 | [jorgebucaran](https://github.com/jorgebucaran) | | 1 | [madhavarshney](https://github.com/madhavarshney) | | 1 | [chapterjason](https://github.com/chapterjason) | ### Author **Brian Woodward** * [GitHub Profile](https://github.com/doowb) * [Twitter Profile](https://twitter.com/doowb) * [LinkedIn Profile](https://linkedin.com/in/woodwardbrian) ### License Copyright © 2019, [Brian Woodward](https://github.com/doowb). Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), v0.8.0, on July 01, 2019._ [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint) [![Downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint) [![Build Status](https://github.com/eslint/eslint/workflows/CI/badge.svg)](https://github.com/eslint/eslint/actions) [![FOSSA Status](https://app.fossa.io/api/projects/git%2Bhttps%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Feslint%2Feslint.svg?type=shield)](https://app.fossa.io/projects/git%2Bhttps%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Feslint%2Feslint?ref=badge_shield) <br /> [![Open Collective Backers](https://img.shields.io/opencollective/backers/eslint)](https://opencollective.com/eslint) [![Open Collective Sponsors](https://img.shields.io/opencollective/sponsors/eslint)](https://opencollective.com/eslint) [![Follow us on Twitter](https://img.shields.io/twitter/follow/geteslint?label=Follow&style=social)](https://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=geteslint) # ESLint [Website](https://eslint.org) | [Configuring](https://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/configuring) | [Rules](https://eslint.org/docs/rules/) | [Contributing](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing) | [Reporting Bugs](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/reporting-bugs) | [Code of Conduct](https://eslint.org/conduct) | [Twitter](https://twitter.com/geteslint) | [Mailing List](https://groups.google.com/group/eslint) | [Chat Room](https://eslint.org/chat) ESLint is a tool for identifying and reporting on patterns found in ECMAScript/JavaScript code. In many ways, it is similar to JSLint and JSHint with a few exceptions: * ESLint uses [Espree](https://github.com/eslint/espree) for JavaScript parsing. * ESLint uses an AST to evaluate patterns in code. * ESLint is completely pluggable, every single rule is a plugin and you can add more at runtime. ## Table of Contents 1. [Installation and Usage](#installation-and-usage) 2. [Configuration](#configuration) 3. [Code of Conduct](#code-of-conduct) 4. [Filing Issues](#filing-issues) 5. [Frequently Asked Questions](#faq) 6. [Releases](#releases) 7. [Security Policy](#security-policy) 8. [Semantic Versioning Policy](#semantic-versioning-policy) 9. [Stylistic Rule Updates](#stylistic-rule-updates) 10. [License](#license) 11. [Team](#team) 12. [Sponsors](#sponsors) 13. [Technology Sponsors](#technology-sponsors) ## <a name="installation-and-usage"></a>Installation and Usage Prerequisites: [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) (`^10.12.0`, or `>=12.0.0`) built with SSL support. (If you are using an official Node.js distribution, SSL is always built in.) You can install ESLint using npm: ``` $ npm install eslint --save-dev ``` You should then set up a configuration file: ``` $ ./node_modules/.bin/eslint --init ``` After that, you can run ESLint on any file or directory like this: ``` $ ./node_modules/.bin/eslint yourfile.js ``` ## <a name="configuration"></a>Configuration After running `eslint --init`, you'll have a `.eslintrc` file in your directory. In it, you'll see some rules configured like this: ```json { "rules": { "semi": ["error", "always"], "quotes": ["error", "double"] } } ``` The names `"semi"` and `"quotes"` are the names of [rules](https://eslint.org/docs/rules) in ESLint. The first value is the error level of the rule and can be one of these values: * `"off"` or `0` - turn the rule off * `"warn"` or `1` - turn the rule on as a warning (doesn't affect exit code) * `"error"` or `2` - turn the rule on as an error (exit code will be 1) The three error levels allow you fine-grained control over how ESLint applies rules (for more configuration options and details, see the [configuration docs](https://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/configuring)). ## <a name="code-of-conduct"></a>Code of Conduct ESLint adheres to the [JS Foundation Code of Conduct](https://eslint.org/conduct). ## <a name="filing-issues"></a>Filing Issues Before filing an issue, please be sure to read the guidelines for what you're reporting: * [Bug Report](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/reporting-bugs) * [Propose a New Rule](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/new-rules) * [Proposing a Rule Change](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/rule-changes) * [Request a Change](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/changes) ## <a name="faq"></a>Frequently Asked Questions ### I'm using JSCS, should I migrate to ESLint? Yes. [JSCS has reached end of life](https://eslint.org/blog/2016/07/jscs-end-of-life) and is no longer supported. We have prepared a [migration guide](https://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/migrating-from-jscs) to help you convert your JSCS settings to an ESLint configuration. We are now at or near 100% compatibility with JSCS. If you try ESLint and believe we are not yet compatible with a JSCS rule/configuration, please create an issue (mentioning that it is a JSCS compatibility issue) and we will evaluate it as per our normal process. ### Does Prettier replace ESLint? No, ESLint does both traditional linting (looking for problematic patterns) and style checking (enforcement of conventions). You can use ESLint for everything, or you can combine both using Prettier to format your code and ESLint to catch possible errors. ### Why can't ESLint find my plugins? * Make sure your plugins (and ESLint) are both in your project's `package.json` as devDependencies (or dependencies, if your project uses ESLint at runtime). * Make sure you have run `npm install` and all your dependencies are installed. * Make sure your plugins' peerDependencies have been installed as well. You can use `npm view eslint-plugin-myplugin peerDependencies` to see what peer dependencies `eslint-plugin-myplugin` has. ### Does ESLint support JSX? Yes, ESLint natively supports parsing JSX syntax (this must be enabled in [configuration](https://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/configuring)). Please note that supporting JSX syntax *is not* the same as supporting React. React applies specific semantics to JSX syntax that ESLint doesn't recognize. We recommend using [eslint-plugin-react](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-plugin-react) if you are using React and want React semantics. ### What ECMAScript versions does ESLint support? ESLint has full support for ECMAScript 3, 5 (default), 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020. You can set your desired ECMAScript syntax (and other settings, like global variables or your target environments) through [configuration](https://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/configuring). ### What about experimental features? ESLint's parser only officially supports the latest final ECMAScript standard. We will make changes to core rules in order to avoid crashes on stage 3 ECMAScript syntax proposals (as long as they are implemented using the correct experimental ESTree syntax). We may make changes to core rules to better work with language extensions (such as JSX, Flow, and TypeScript) on a case-by-case basis. In other cases (including if rules need to warn on more or fewer cases due to new syntax, rather than just not crashing), we recommend you use other parsers and/or rule plugins. If you are using Babel, you can use the [babel-eslint](https://github.com/babel/babel-eslint) parser and [eslint-plugin-babel](https://github.com/babel/eslint-plugin-babel) to use any option available in Babel. Once a language feature has been adopted into the ECMAScript standard (stage 4 according to the [TC39 process](https://tc39.github.io/process-document/)), we will accept issues and pull requests related to the new feature, subject to our [contributing guidelines](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing). Until then, please use the appropriate parser and plugin(s) for your experimental feature. ### Where to ask for help? Join our [Mailing List](https://groups.google.com/group/eslint) or [Chatroom](https://eslint.org/chat). ### Why doesn't ESLint lock dependency versions? Lock files like `package-lock.json` are helpful for deployed applications. They ensure that dependencies are consistent between environments and across deployments. Packages like `eslint` that get published to the npm registry do not include lock files. `npm install eslint` as a user will respect version constraints in ESLint's `package.json`. ESLint and its dependencies will be included in the user's lock file if one exists, but ESLint's own lock file would not be used. We intentionally don't lock dependency versions so that we have the latest compatible dependency versions in development and CI that our users get when installing ESLint in a project. The Twilio blog has a [deeper dive](https://www.twilio.com/blog/lockfiles-nodejs) to learn more. ## <a name="releases"></a>Releases We have scheduled releases every two weeks on Friday or Saturday. You can follow a [release issue](https://github.com/eslint/eslint/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Arelease) for updates about the scheduling of any particular release. ## <a name="security-policy"></a>Security Policy ESLint takes security seriously. We work hard to ensure that ESLint is safe for everyone and that security issues are addressed quickly and responsibly. Read the full [security policy](https://github.com/eslint/.github/blob/master/SECURITY.md). ## <a name="semantic-versioning-policy"></a>Semantic Versioning Policy ESLint follows [semantic versioning](https://semver.org). However, due to the nature of ESLint as a code quality tool, it's not always clear when a minor or major version bump occurs. To help clarify this for everyone, we've defined the following semantic versioning policy for ESLint: * Patch release (intended to not break your lint build) * A bug fix in a rule that results in ESLint reporting fewer linting errors. * A bug fix to the CLI or core (including formatters). * Improvements to documentation. * Non-user-facing changes such as refactoring code, adding, deleting, or modifying tests, and increasing test coverage. * Re-releasing after a failed release (i.e., publishing a release that doesn't work for anyone). * Minor release (might break your lint build) * A bug fix in a rule that results in ESLint reporting more linting errors. * A new rule is created. * A new option to an existing rule that does not result in ESLint reporting more linting errors by default. * A new addition to an existing rule to support a newly-added language feature (within the last 12 months) that will result in ESLint reporting more linting errors by default. * An existing rule is deprecated. * A new CLI capability is created. * New capabilities to the public API are added (new classes, new methods, new arguments to existing methods, etc.). * A new formatter is created. * `eslint:recommended` is updated and will result in strictly fewer linting errors (e.g., rule removals). * Major release (likely to break your lint build) * `eslint:recommended` is updated and may result in new linting errors (e.g., rule additions, most rule option updates). * A new option to an existing rule that results in ESLint reporting more linting errors by default. * An existing formatter is removed. * Part of the public API is removed or changed in an incompatible way. The public API includes: * Rule schemas * Configuration schema * Command-line options * Node.js API * Rule, formatter, parser, plugin APIs According to our policy, any minor update may report more linting errors than the previous release (ex: from a bug fix). As such, we recommend using the tilde (`~`) in `package.json` e.g. `"eslint": "~3.1.0"` to guarantee the results of your builds. ## <a name="stylistic-rule-updates"></a>Stylistic Rule Updates Stylistic rules are frozen according to [our policy](https://eslint.org/blog/2020/05/changes-to-rules-policies) on how we evaluate new rules and rule changes. This means: * **Bug fixes**: We will still fix bugs in stylistic rules. * **New ECMAScript features**: We will also make sure stylistic rules are compatible with new ECMAScript features. * **New options**: We will **not** add any new options to stylistic rules unless an option is the only way to fix a bug or support a newly-added ECMAScript feature. ## <a name="license"></a>License [![FOSSA Status](https://app.fossa.io/api/projects/git%2Bhttps%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Feslint%2Feslint.svg?type=large)](https://app.fossa.io/projects/git%2Bhttps%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Feslint%2Feslint?ref=badge_large) ## <a name="team"></a>Team These folks keep the project moving and are resources for help. <!-- NOTE: This section is autogenerated. Do not manually edit.--> <!--teamstart--> ### Technical Steering Committee (TSC) The people who manage releases, review feature requests, and meet regularly to ensure ESLint is properly maintained. <table><tbody><tr><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/nzakas"> <img src="https://github.com/nzakas.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Nicholas C. Zakas </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/btmills"> <img src="https://github.com/btmills.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Brandon Mills </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/mdjermanovic"> <img src="https://github.com/mdjermanovic.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Milos Djermanovic </a> </td></tr></tbody></table> ### Reviewers The people who review and implement new features. <table><tbody><tr><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/mysticatea"> <img src="https://github.com/mysticatea.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Toru Nagashima </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/aladdin-add"> <img src="https://github.com/aladdin-add.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> 薛定谔的猫 </a> </td></tr></tbody></table> ### Committers The people who review and fix bugs and help triage issues. <table><tbody><tr><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/brettz9"> <img src="https://github.com/brettz9.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Brett Zamir </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/bmish"> <img src="https://github.com/bmish.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Bryan Mishkin </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/g-plane"> <img src="https://github.com/g-plane.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Pig Fang </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/anikethsaha"> <img src="https://github.com/anikethsaha.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Anix </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/yeonjuan"> <img src="https://github.com/yeonjuan.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> YeonJuan </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/snitin315"> <img src="https://github.com/snitin315.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Nitin Kumar </a> </td></tr></tbody></table> <!--teamend--> ## <a name="sponsors"></a>Sponsors The following companies, organizations, and individuals support ESLint's ongoing maintenance and development. [Become a Sponsor](https://opencollective.com/eslint) to get your logo on our README and website. <!-- NOTE: This section is autogenerated. Do not manually edit.--> <!--sponsorsstart--> <h3>Platinum Sponsors</h3> <p><a href="https://automattic.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/photomatt/d0ef3e1/logo.png" alt="Automattic" height="undefined"></a></p><h3>Gold Sponsors</h3> <p><a href="https://nx.dev"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/nx/0efbe42/logo.png" alt="Nx (by Nrwl)" height="96"></a> <a href="https://google.com/chrome"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/chrome/dc55bd4/logo.png" alt="Chrome's Web Framework & Tools Performance Fund" height="96"></a> <a href="https://www.salesforce.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/salesforce/ca8f997/logo.png" alt="Salesforce" height="96"></a> <a href="https://www.airbnb.com/"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/airbnb/d327d66/logo.png" alt="Airbnb" height="96"></a> <a href="https://coinbase.com"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/1885080?v=4" alt="Coinbase" height="96"></a> <a href="https://substack.com/"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/53023767?v=4" alt="Substack" height="96"></a></p><h3>Silver Sponsors</h3> <p><a href="https://retool.com/"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/retool/98ea68e/logo.png" alt="Retool" height="64"></a> <a href="https://liftoff.io/"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/liftoff/5c4fa84/logo.png" alt="Liftoff" height="64"></a></p><h3>Bronze Sponsors</h3> <p><a href="https://www.crosswordsolver.org/anagram-solver/"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/anagram-solver/2666271/logo.png" alt="Anagram Solver" height="32"></a> <a href="null"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/bugsnag-stability-monitoring/c2cef36/logo.png" alt="Bugsnag Stability Monitoring" height="32"></a> <a href="https://mixpanel.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/mixpanel/cd682f7/logo.png" alt="Mixpanel" height="32"></a> <a href="https://www.vpsserver.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/vpsservercom/logo.png" alt="VPS Server" height="32"></a> <a href="https://icons8.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/icons8/7fa1641/logo.png" alt="Icons8: free icons, photos, illustrations, and music" height="32"></a> <a href="https://discord.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/discordapp/f9645d9/logo.png" alt="Discord" height="32"></a> <a href="https://themeisle.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/themeisle/d5592fe/logo.png" alt="ThemeIsle" height="32"></a> <a href="https://www.firesticktricks.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/fire-stick-tricks/b8fbe2c/logo.png" alt="Fire Stick Tricks" height="32"></a> <a href="https://www.practiceignition.com"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/5753491?v=4" alt="Practice Ignition" height="32"></a></p> <!--sponsorsend--> ## <a name="technology-sponsors"></a>Technology Sponsors * Site search ([eslint.org](https://eslint.org)) is sponsored by [Algolia](https://www.algolia.com) * Hosting for ([eslint.org](https://eslint.org)) is sponsored by [Netlify](https://www.netlify.com) * Password management is sponsored by [1Password](https://www.1password.com) # once Only call a function once. ## usage ```javascript var once = require('once') function load (file, cb) { cb = once(cb) loader.load('file') loader.once('load', cb) loader.once('error', cb) } ``` Or add to the Function.prototype in a responsible way: ```javascript // only has to be done once require('once').proto() function load (file, cb) { cb = cb.once() loader.load('file') loader.once('load', cb) loader.once('error', cb) } ``` Ironically, the prototype feature makes this module twice as complicated as necessary. To check whether you function has been called, use `fn.called`. Once the function is called for the first time the return value of the original function is saved in `fn.value` and subsequent calls will continue to return this value. ```javascript var once = require('once') function load (cb) { cb = once(cb) var stream = createStream() stream.once('data', cb) stream.once('end', function () { if (!cb.called) cb(new Error('not found')) }) } ``` ## `once.strict(func)` Throw an error if the function is called twice. Some functions are expected to be called only once. Using `once` for them would potentially hide logical errors. In the example below, the `greet` function has to call the callback only once: ```javascript function greet (name, cb) { // return is missing from the if statement // when no name is passed, the callback is called twice if (!name) cb('Hello anonymous') cb('Hello ' + name) } function log (msg) { console.log(msg) } // this will print 'Hello anonymous' but the logical error will be missed greet(null, once(msg)) // once.strict will print 'Hello anonymous' and throw an error when the callback will be called the second time greet(null, once.strict(msg)) ``` # color-convert [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/Qix-/color-convert.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/Qix-/color-convert) Color-convert is a color conversion library for JavaScript and node. It converts all ways between `rgb`, `hsl`, `hsv`, `hwb`, `cmyk`, `ansi`, `ansi16`, `hex` strings, and CSS `keyword`s (will round to closest): ```js var convert = require('color-convert'); convert.rgb.hsl(140, 200, 100); // [96, 48, 59] convert.keyword.rgb('blue'); // [0, 0, 255] var rgbChannels = convert.rgb.channels; // 3 var cmykChannels = convert.cmyk.channels; // 4 var ansiChannels = convert.ansi16.channels; // 1 ``` # Install ```console $ npm install color-convert ``` # API Simply get the property of the _from_ and _to_ conversion that you're looking for. All functions have a rounded and unrounded variant. By default, return values are rounded. To get the unrounded (raw) results, simply tack on `.raw` to the function. All 'from' functions have a hidden property called `.channels` that indicates the number of channels the function expects (not including alpha). ```js var convert = require('color-convert'); // Hex to LAB convert.hex.lab('DEADBF'); // [ 76, 21, -2 ] convert.hex.lab.raw('DEADBF'); // [ 75.56213190997677, 20.653827952644754, -2.290532499330533 ] // RGB to CMYK convert.rgb.cmyk(167, 255, 4); // [ 35, 0, 98, 0 ] convert.rgb.cmyk.raw(167, 255, 4); // [ 34.509803921568626, 0, 98.43137254901961, 0 ] ``` ### Arrays All functions that accept multiple arguments also support passing an array. Note that this does **not** apply to functions that convert from a color that only requires one value (e.g. `keyword`, `ansi256`, `hex`, etc.) ```js var convert = require('color-convert'); convert.rgb.hex(123, 45, 67); // '7B2D43' convert.rgb.hex([123, 45, 67]); // '7B2D43' ``` ## Routing Conversions that don't have an _explicitly_ defined conversion (in [conversions.js](conversions.js)), but can be converted by means of sub-conversions (e.g. XYZ -> **RGB** -> CMYK), are automatically routed together. This allows just about any color model supported by `color-convert` to be converted to any other model, so long as a sub-conversion path exists. This is also true for conversions requiring more than one step in between (e.g. LCH -> **LAB** -> **XYZ** -> **RGB** -> Hex). Keep in mind that extensive conversions _may_ result in a loss of precision, and exist only to be complete. For a list of "direct" (single-step) conversions, see [conversions.js](conversions.js). # Contribute If there is a new model you would like to support, or want to add a direct conversion between two existing models, please send us a pull request. # License Copyright &copy; 2011-2016, Heather Arthur and Josh Junon. Licensed under the [MIT License](LICENSE). Browser-friendly inheritance fully compatible with standard node.js [inherits](http://nodejs.org/api/util.html#util_util_inherits_constructor_superconstructor). This package exports standard `inherits` from node.js `util` module in node environment, but also provides alternative browser-friendly implementation through [browser field](https://gist.github.com/shtylman/4339901). Alternative implementation is a literal copy of standard one located in standalone module to avoid requiring of `util`. It also has a shim for old browsers with no `Object.create` support. While keeping you sure you are using standard `inherits` implementation in node.js environment, it allows bundlers such as [browserify](https://github.com/substack/node-browserify) to not include full `util` package to your client code if all you need is just `inherits` function. It worth, because browser shim for `util` package is large and `inherits` is often the single function you need from it. It's recommended to use this package instead of `require('util').inherits` for any code that has chances to be used not only in node.js but in browser too. ## usage ```js var inherits = require('inherits'); // then use exactly as the standard one ``` ## note on version ~1.0 Version ~1.0 had completely different motivation and is not compatible neither with 2.0 nor with standard node.js `inherits`. If you are using version ~1.0 and planning to switch to ~2.0, be careful: * new version uses `super_` instead of `super` for referencing superclass * new version overwrites current prototype while old one preserves any existing fields on it argparse ======== [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/nodeca/argparse.svg?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/nodeca/argparse) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/argparse.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/argparse) CLI arguments parser for node.js. Javascript port of python's [argparse](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html) module (original version 3.2). That's a full port, except some very rare options, recorded in issue tracker. **NB. Difference with original.** - Method names changed to camelCase. See [generated docs](http://nodeca.github.com/argparse/). - Use `defaultValue` instead of `default`. - Use `argparse.Const.REMAINDER` instead of `argparse.REMAINDER`, and similarly for constant values `OPTIONAL`, `ZERO_OR_MORE`, and `ONE_OR_MORE` (aliases for `nargs` values `'?'`, `'*'`, `'+'`, respectively), and `SUPPRESS`. Example ======= test.js file: ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node 'use strict'; var ArgumentParser = require('../lib/argparse').ArgumentParser; var parser = new ArgumentParser({ version: '0.0.1', addHelp:true, description: 'Argparse example' }); parser.addArgument( [ '-f', '--foo' ], { help: 'foo bar' } ); parser.addArgument( [ '-b', '--bar' ], { help: 'bar foo' } ); parser.addArgument( '--baz', { help: 'baz bar' } ); var args = parser.parseArgs(); console.dir(args); ``` Display help: ``` $ ./test.js -h usage: example.js [-h] [-v] [-f FOO] [-b BAR] [--baz BAZ] Argparse example Optional arguments: -h, --help Show this help message and exit. -v, --version Show program's version number and exit. -f FOO, --foo FOO foo bar -b BAR, --bar BAR bar foo --baz BAZ baz bar ``` Parse arguments: ``` $ ./test.js -f=3 --bar=4 --baz 5 { foo: '3', bar: '4', baz: '5' } ``` More [examples](https://github.com/nodeca/argparse/tree/master/examples). ArgumentParser objects ====================== ``` new ArgumentParser({parameters hash}); ``` Creates a new ArgumentParser object. **Supported params:** - ```description``` - Text to display before the argument help. - ```epilog``` - Text to display after the argument help. - ```addHelp``` - Add a -h/–help option to the parser. (default: true) - ```argumentDefault``` - Set the global default value for arguments. (default: null) - ```parents``` - A list of ArgumentParser objects whose arguments should also be included. - ```prefixChars``` - The set of characters that prefix optional arguments. (default: ‘-‘) - ```formatterClass``` - A class for customizing the help output. - ```prog``` - The name of the program (default: `path.basename(process.argv[1])`) - ```usage``` - The string describing the program usage (default: generated) - ```conflictHandler``` - Usually unnecessary, defines strategy for resolving conflicting optionals. **Not supported yet** - ```fromfilePrefixChars``` - The set of characters that prefix files from which additional arguments should be read. Details in [original ArgumentParser guide](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#argumentparser-objects) addArgument() method ==================== ``` ArgumentParser.addArgument(name or flag or [name] or [flags...], {options}) ``` Defines how a single command-line argument should be parsed. - ```name or flag or [name] or [flags...]``` - Either a positional name (e.g., `'foo'`), a single option (e.g., `'-f'` or `'--foo'`), an array of a single positional name (e.g., `['foo']`), or an array of options (e.g., `['-f', '--foo']`). Options: - ```action``` - The basic type of action to be taken when this argument is encountered at the command line. - ```nargs```- The number of command-line arguments that should be consumed. - ```constant``` - A constant value required by some action and nargs selections. - ```defaultValue``` - The value produced if the argument is absent from the command line. - ```type``` - The type to which the command-line argument should be converted. - ```choices``` - A container of the allowable values for the argument. - ```required``` - Whether or not the command-line option may be omitted (optionals only). - ```help``` - A brief description of what the argument does. - ```metavar``` - A name for the argument in usage messages. - ```dest``` - The name of the attribute to be added to the object returned by parseArgs(). Details in [original add_argument guide](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#the-add-argument-method) Action (some details) ================ ArgumentParser objects associate command-line arguments with actions. These actions can do just about anything with the command-line arguments associated with them, though most actions simply add an attribute to the object returned by parseArgs(). The action keyword argument specifies how the command-line arguments should be handled. The supported actions are: - ```store``` - Just stores the argument’s value. This is the default action. - ```storeConst``` - Stores value, specified by the const keyword argument. (Note that the const keyword argument defaults to the rather unhelpful None.) The 'storeConst' action is most commonly used with optional arguments, that specify some sort of flag. - ```storeTrue``` and ```storeFalse``` - Stores values True and False respectively. These are special cases of 'storeConst'. - ```append``` - Stores a list, and appends each argument value to the list. This is useful to allow an option to be specified multiple times. - ```appendConst``` - Stores a list, and appends value, specified by the const keyword argument to the list. (Note, that the const keyword argument defaults is None.) The 'appendConst' action is typically used when multiple arguments need to store constants to the same list. - ```count``` - Counts the number of times a keyword argument occurs. For example, used for increasing verbosity levels. - ```help``` - Prints a complete help message for all the options in the current parser and then exits. By default a help action is automatically added to the parser. See ArgumentParser for details of how the output is created. - ```version``` - Prints version information and exit. Expects a `version=` keyword argument in the addArgument() call. Details in [original action guide](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#action) Sub-commands ============ ArgumentParser.addSubparsers() Many programs split their functionality into a number of sub-commands, for example, the svn program can invoke sub-commands like `svn checkout`, `svn update`, and `svn commit`. Splitting up functionality this way can be a particularly good idea when a program performs several different functions which require different kinds of command-line arguments. `ArgumentParser` supports creation of such sub-commands with `addSubparsers()` method. The `addSubparsers()` method is normally called with no arguments and returns an special action object. This object has a single method `addParser()`, which takes a command name and any `ArgumentParser` constructor arguments, and returns an `ArgumentParser` object that can be modified as usual. Example: sub_commands.js ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node 'use strict'; var ArgumentParser = require('../lib/argparse').ArgumentParser; var parser = new ArgumentParser({ version: '0.0.1', addHelp:true, description: 'Argparse examples: sub-commands', }); var subparsers = parser.addSubparsers({ title:'subcommands', dest:"subcommand_name" }); var bar = subparsers.addParser('c1', {addHelp:true}); bar.addArgument( [ '-f', '--foo' ], { action: 'store', help: 'foo3 bar3' } ); var bar = subparsers.addParser( 'c2', {aliases:['co'], addHelp:true} ); bar.addArgument( [ '-b', '--bar' ], { action: 'store', type: 'int', help: 'foo3 bar3' } ); var args = parser.parseArgs(); console.dir(args); ``` Details in [original sub-commands guide](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#sub-commands) Contributors ============ - [Eugene Shkuropat](https://github.com/shkuropat) - [Paul Jacobson](https://github.com/hpaulj) [others](https://github.com/nodeca/argparse/graphs/contributors) License ======= Copyright (c) 2012 [Vitaly Puzrin](https://github.com/puzrin). Released under the MIT license. See [LICENSE](https://github.com/nodeca/argparse/blob/master/LICENSE) for details. # minizlib A fast zlib stream built on [minipass](http://npm.im/minipass) and Node.js's zlib binding. This module was created to serve the needs of [node-tar](http://npm.im/tar) and [minipass-fetch](http://npm.im/minipass-fetch). Brotli is supported in versions of node with a Brotli binding. ## How does this differ from the streams in `require('zlib')`? First, there are no convenience methods to compress or decompress a buffer. If you want those, use the built-in `zlib` module. This is only streams. That being said, Minipass streams to make it fairly easy to use as one-liners: `new zlib.Deflate().end(data).read()` will return the deflate compressed result. This module compresses and decompresses the data as fast as you feed it in. It is synchronous, and runs on the main process thread. Zlib and Brotli operations can be high CPU, but they're very fast, and doing it this way means much less bookkeeping and artificial deferral. Node's built in zlib streams are built on top of `stream.Transform`. They do the maximally safe thing with respect to consistent asynchrony, buffering, and backpressure. See [Minipass](http://npm.im/minipass) for more on the differences between Node.js core streams and Minipass streams, and the convenience methods provided by that class. ## Classes - Deflate - Inflate - Gzip - Gunzip - DeflateRaw - InflateRaw - Unzip - BrotliCompress (Node v10 and higher) - BrotliDecompress (Node v10 and higher) ## USAGE ```js const zlib = require('minizlib') const input = sourceOfCompressedData() const decode = new zlib.BrotliDecompress() const output = whereToWriteTheDecodedData() input.pipe(decode).pipe(output) ``` ## REPRODUCIBLE BUILDS To create reproducible gzip compressed files across different operating systems, set `portable: true` in the options. This causes minizlib to set the `OS` indicator in byte 9 of the extended gzip header to `0xFF` for 'unknown'. <h1 align="center">Enquirer</h1> <p align="center"> <a href="https://npmjs.org/package/enquirer"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/enquirer.svg" alt="version"> </a> <a href="https://travis-ci.org/enquirer/enquirer"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/travis/enquirer/enquirer.svg" alt="travis"> </a> <a href="https://npmjs.org/package/enquirer"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/enquirer.svg" alt="downloads"> </a> </p> <br> <br> <p align="center"> <b>Stylish CLI prompts that are user-friendly, intuitive and easy to create.</b><br> <sub>>_ Prompts should be more like conversations than inquisitions▌</sub> </p> <br> <p align="center"> <sub>(Example shows Enquirer's <a href="#survey-prompt">Survey Prompt</a>)</a></sub> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/survey-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Survey Prompt" width="750"><br> <sub>The terminal in all examples is <a href="https://hyper.is/">Hyper</a>, theme is <a href="https://github.com/jonschlinkert/hyper-monokai-extended">hyper-monokai-extended</a>.</sub><br><br> <a href="#built-in-prompts"><strong>See more prompt examples</strong></a> </p> <br> <br> Created by [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) and [doowb](https://github.com/doowb), Enquirer is fast, easy to use, and lightweight enough for small projects, while also being powerful and customizable enough for the most advanced use cases. * **Fast** - [Loads in ~4ms](#-performance) (that's about _3-4 times faster than a [single frame of a HD movie](http://www.endmemo.com/sconvert/framespersecondframespermillisecond.php) at 60fps_) * **Lightweight** - Only one dependency, the excellent [ansi-colors](https://github.com/doowb/ansi-colors) by [Brian Woodward](https://github.com/doowb). * **Easy to implement** - Uses promises and async/await and sensible defaults to make prompts easy to create and implement. * **Easy to use** - Thrill your users with a better experience! Navigating around input and choices is a breeze. You can even create [quizzes](examples/fun/countdown.js), or [record](examples/fun/record.js) and [playback](examples/fun/play.js) key bindings to aid with tutorials and videos. * **Intuitive** - Keypress combos are available to simplify usage. * **Flexible** - All prompts can be used standalone or chained together. * **Stylish** - Easily override semantic styles and symbols for any part of the prompt. * **Extensible** - Easily create and use custom prompts by extending Enquirer's built-in [prompts](#-prompts). * **Pluggable** - Add advanced features to Enquirer using plugins. * **Validation** - Optionally validate user input with any prompt. * **Well tested** - All prompts are well-tested, and tests are easy to create without having to use brittle, hacky solutions to spy on prompts or "inject" values. * **Examples** - There are numerous [examples](examples) available to help you get started. If you like Enquirer, please consider starring or tweeting about this project to show your support. Thanks! <br> <p align="center"> <b>>_ Ready to start making prompts your users will love? ▌</b><br> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/heartbeat.gif" alt="Enquirer Select Prompt with heartbeat example" width="750"> </p> <br> <br> ## ❯ Getting started Get started with Enquirer, the most powerful and easy-to-use Node.js library for creating interactive CLI prompts. * [Install](#-install) * [Usage](#-usage) * [Enquirer](#-enquirer) * [Prompts](#-prompts) - [Built-in Prompts](#-prompts) - [Custom Prompts](#-custom-prompts) * [Key Bindings](#-key-bindings) * [Options](#-options) * [Release History](#-release-history) * [Performance](#-performance) * [About](#-about) <br> ## ❯ Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install enquirer --save ``` Install with [yarn](https://yarnpkg.com/en/): ```sh $ yarn add enquirer ``` <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/npm-install.gif" alt="Install Enquirer with NPM" width="750"> </p> _(Requires Node.js 8.6 or higher. Please let us know if you need support for an earlier version by creating an [issue](../../issues/new).)_ <br> ## ❯ Usage ### Single prompt The easiest way to get started with enquirer is to pass a [question object](#prompt-options) to the `prompt` method. ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const response = await prompt({ type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }); console.log(response); // { username: 'jonschlinkert' } ``` _(Examples with `await` need to be run inside an `async` function)_ ### Multiple prompts Pass an array of ["question" objects](#prompt-options) to run a series of prompts. ```js const response = await prompt([ { type: 'input', name: 'name', message: 'What is your name?' }, { type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' } ]); console.log(response); // { name: 'Edward Chan', username: 'edwardmchan' } ``` ### Different ways to run enquirer #### 1. By importing the specific `built-in prompt` ```js const { Confirm } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Confirm({ name: 'question', message: 'Did you like enquirer?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)); ``` #### 2. By passing the options to `prompt` ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); prompt({ type: 'confirm', name: 'question', message: 'Did you like enquirer?' }) .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)); ``` **Jump to**: [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) · [Options](#-options) · [Key Bindings](#-key-bindings) <br> ## ❯ Enquirer **Enquirer is a prompt runner** Add Enquirer to your JavaScript project with following line of code. ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); ``` The main export of this library is the `Enquirer` class, which has methods and features designed to simplify running prompts. ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const question = [ { type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }, { type: 'password', name: 'password', message: 'What is your password?' } ]; let answers = await prompt(question); console.log(answers); ``` **Prompts control how values are rendered and returned** Each individual prompt is a class with special features and functionality for rendering the types of values you want to show users in the terminal, and subsequently returning the types of values you need to use in your application. **How can I customize prompts?** Below in this guide you will find information about creating [custom prompts](#-custom-prompts). For now, we'll focus on how to customize an existing prompt. All of the individual [prompt classes](#built-in-prompts) in this library are exposed as static properties on Enquirer. This allows them to be used directly without using `enquirer.prompt()`. Use this approach if you need to modify a prompt instance, or listen for events on the prompt. **Example** ```js const { Input } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Input({ name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Username:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` ### [Enquirer](index.js#L20) Create an instance of `Enquirer`. **Params** * `options` **{Object}**: (optional) Options to use with all prompts. * `answers` **{Object}**: (optional) Answers object to initialize with. **Example** ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); ``` ### [register()](index.js#L42) Register a custom prompt type. **Params** * `type` **{String}** * `fn` **{Function|Prompt}**: `Prompt` class, or a function that returns a `Prompt` class. * `returns` **{Object}**: Returns the Enquirer instance **Example** ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); enquirer.register('customType', require('./custom-prompt')); ``` ### [prompt()](index.js#L78) Prompt function that takes a "question" object or array of question objects, and returns an object with responses from the user. **Params** * `questions` **{Array|Object}**: Options objects for one or more prompts to run. * `returns` **{Promise}**: Promise that returns an "answers" object with the user's responses. **Example** ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); const response = await enquirer.prompt({ type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }); console.log(response); ``` ### [use()](index.js#L160) Use an enquirer plugin. **Params** * `plugin` **{Function}**: Plugin function that takes an instance of Enquirer. * `returns` **{Object}**: Returns the Enquirer instance. **Example** ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); const plugin = enquirer => { // do stuff to enquire instance }; enquirer.use(plugin); ``` ### [Enquirer#prompt](index.js#L210) Prompt function that takes a "question" object or array of question objects, and returns an object with responses from the user. **Params** * `questions` **{Array|Object}**: Options objects for one or more prompts to run. * `returns` **{Promise}**: Promise that returns an "answers" object with the user's responses. **Example** ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const response = await prompt({ type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }); console.log(response); ``` <br> ## ❯ Prompts This section is about Enquirer's prompts: what they look like, how they work, how to run them, available options, and how to customize the prompts or create your own prompt concept. **Getting started with Enquirer's prompts** * [Prompt](#prompt) - The base `Prompt` class used by other prompts - [Prompt Options](#prompt-options) * [Built-in prompts](#built-in-prompts) * [Prompt Types](#prompt-types) - The base `Prompt` class used by other prompts * [Custom prompts](#%E2%9D%AF-custom-prompts) - Enquirer 2.0 introduced the concept of prompt "types", with the goal of making custom prompts easier than ever to create and use. ### Prompt The base `Prompt` class is used to create all other prompts. ```js const { Prompt } = require('enquirer'); class MyCustomPrompt extends Prompt {} ``` See the documentation for [creating custom prompts](#-custom-prompts) to learn more about how this works. #### Prompt Options Each prompt takes an options object (aka "question" object), that implements the following interface: ```js { // required type: string | function, name: string | function, message: string | function | async function, // optional skip: boolean | function | async function, initial: string | function | async function, format: function | async function, result: function | async function, validate: function | async function, } ``` Each property of the options object is described below: | **Property** | **Required?** | **Type** | **Description** | | ------------ | ------------- | ------------------ | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `type` | yes | `string\|function` | Enquirer uses this value to determine the type of prompt to run, but it's optional when prompts are run directly. | | `name` | yes | `string\|function` | Used as the key for the answer on the returned values (answers) object. | | `message` | yes | `string\|function` | The message to display when the prompt is rendered in the terminal. | | `skip` | no | `boolean\|function` | If `true` it will not ask that prompt. | | `initial` | no | `string\|function` | The default value to return if the user does not supply a value. | | `format` | no | `function` | Function to format user input in the terminal. | | `result` | no | `function` | Function to format the final submitted value before it's returned. | | `validate` | no | `function` | Function to validate the submitted value before it's returned. This function may return a boolean or a string. If a string is returned it will be used as the validation error message. | **Example usage** ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const question = { type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }; prompt(question) .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` <br> ### Built-in prompts * [AutoComplete Prompt](#autocomplete-prompt) * [BasicAuth Prompt](#basicauth-prompt) * [Confirm Prompt](#confirm-prompt) * [Form Prompt](#form-prompt) * [Input Prompt](#input-prompt) * [Invisible Prompt](#invisible-prompt) * [List Prompt](#list-prompt) * [MultiSelect Prompt](#multiselect-prompt) * [Numeral Prompt](#numeral-prompt) * [Password Prompt](#password-prompt) * [Quiz Prompt](#quiz-prompt) * [Survey Prompt](#survey-prompt) * [Scale Prompt](#scale-prompt) * [Select Prompt](#select-prompt) * [Sort Prompt](#sort-prompt) * [Snippet Prompt](#snippet-prompt) * [Toggle Prompt](#toggle-prompt) ### AutoComplete Prompt Prompt that auto-completes as the user types, and returns the selected value as a string. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/autocomplete-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer AutoComplete Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { AutoComplete } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new AutoComplete({ name: 'flavor', message: 'Pick your favorite flavor', limit: 10, initial: 2, choices: [ 'Almond', 'Apple', 'Banana', 'Blackberry', 'Blueberry', 'Cherry', 'Chocolate', 'Cinnamon', 'Coconut', 'Cranberry', 'Grape', 'Nougat', 'Orange', 'Pear', 'Pineapple', 'Raspberry', 'Strawberry', 'Vanilla', 'Watermelon', 'Wintergreen' ] }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **AutoComplete Options** | Option | Type | Default | Description | | ----------- | ---------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | `highlight` | `function` | `dim` version of primary style | The color to use when "highlighting" characters in the list that match user input. | | `multiple` | `boolean` | `false` | Allow multiple choices to be selected. | | `suggest` | `function` | Greedy match, returns true if choice message contains input string. | Function that filters choices. Takes user input and a choices array, and returns a list of matching choices. | | `initial` | `number` | 0 | Preselected item in the list of choices. | | `footer` | `function` | None | Function that displays [footer text](https://github.com/enquirer/enquirer/blob/6c2819518a1e2ed284242a99a685655fbaabfa28/examples/autocomplete/option-footer.js#L10) | **Related prompts** * [Select](#select-prompt) * [MultiSelect](#multiselect-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### BasicAuth Prompt Prompt that asks for username and password to authenticate the user. The default implementation of `authenticate` function in `BasicAuth` prompt is to compare the username and password with the values supplied while running the prompt. The implementer is expected to override the `authenticate` function with a custom logic such as making an API request to a server to authenticate the username and password entered and expect a token back. <p align="center"> <img src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13731210/61570485-7ffd9c00-aaaa-11e9-857a-d47dc7008284.gif" alt="Enquirer BasicAuth Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { BasicAuth } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new BasicAuth({ name: 'password', message: 'Please enter your password', username: 'rajat-sr', password: '123', showPassword: true }); prompt .run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Confirm Prompt Prompt that returns `true` or `false`. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/confirm-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Confirm Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Confirm } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Confirm({ name: 'question', message: 'Want to answer?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Numeral](#numeral-prompt) * [Password](#password-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Form Prompt Prompt that allows the user to enter and submit multiple values on a single terminal screen. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/form-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Form Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Form } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Form({ name: 'user', message: 'Please provide the following information:', choices: [ { name: 'firstname', message: 'First Name', initial: 'Jon' }, { name: 'lastname', message: 'Last Name', initial: 'Schlinkert' }, { name: 'username', message: 'GitHub username', initial: 'jonschlinkert' } ] }); prompt.run() .then(value => console.log('Answer:', value)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Input Prompt Prompt that takes user input and returns a string. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/input-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Input Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Input } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Input({ message: 'What is your username?', initial: 'jonschlinkert' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.log); ``` You can use [data-store](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/data-store) to store [input history](https://github.com/enquirer/enquirer/blob/master/examples/input/option-history.js) that the user can cycle through (see [source](https://github.com/enquirer/enquirer/blob/8407dc3579123df5e6e20215078e33bb605b0c37/lib/prompts/input.js)). **Related prompts** * [Confirm](#confirm-prompt) * [Numeral](#numeral-prompt) * [Password](#password-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Invisible Prompt Prompt that takes user input, hides it from the terminal, and returns a string. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/invisible-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Invisible Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Invisible } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Invisible({ name: 'secret', message: 'What is your secret?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', { secret: answer })) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Password](#password-prompt) * [Input](#input-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### List Prompt Prompt that returns a list of values, created by splitting the user input. The default split character is `,` with optional trailing whitespace. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/list-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer List Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { List } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new List({ name: 'keywords', message: 'Type comma-separated keywords' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Sort](#sort-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### MultiSelect Prompt Prompt that allows the user to select multiple items from a list of options. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/multiselect-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer MultiSelect Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { MultiSelect } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new MultiSelect({ name: 'value', message: 'Pick your favorite colors', limit: 7, choices: [ { name: 'aqua', value: '#00ffff' }, { name: 'black', value: '#000000' }, { name: 'blue', value: '#0000ff' }, { name: 'fuchsia', value: '#ff00ff' }, { name: 'gray', value: '#808080' }, { name: 'green', value: '#008000' }, { name: 'lime', value: '#00ff00' }, { name: 'maroon', value: '#800000' }, { name: 'navy', value: '#000080' }, { name: 'olive', value: '#808000' }, { name: 'purple', value: '#800080' }, { name: 'red', value: '#ff0000' }, { name: 'silver', value: '#c0c0c0' }, { name: 'teal', value: '#008080' }, { name: 'white', value: '#ffffff' }, { name: 'yellow', value: '#ffff00' } ] }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); // Answer: ['aqua', 'blue', 'fuchsia'] ``` **Example key-value pairs** Optionally, pass a `result` function and use the `.map` method to return an object of key-value pairs of the selected names and values: [example](./examples/multiselect/option-result.js) ```js const { MultiSelect } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new MultiSelect({ name: 'value', message: 'Pick your favorite colors', limit: 7, choices: [ { name: 'aqua', value: '#00ffff' }, { name: 'black', value: '#000000' }, { name: 'blue', value: '#0000ff' }, { name: 'fuchsia', value: '#ff00ff' }, { name: 'gray', value: '#808080' }, { name: 'green', value: '#008000' }, { name: 'lime', value: '#00ff00' }, { name: 'maroon', value: '#800000' }, { name: 'navy', value: '#000080' }, { name: 'olive', value: '#808000' }, { name: 'purple', value: '#800080' }, { name: 'red', value: '#ff0000' }, { name: 'silver', value: '#c0c0c0' }, { name: 'teal', value: '#008080' }, { name: 'white', value: '#ffffff' }, { name: 'yellow', value: '#ffff00' } ], result(names) { return this.map(names); } }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); // Answer: { aqua: '#00ffff', blue: '#0000ff', fuchsia: '#ff00ff' } ``` **Related prompts** * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Numeral Prompt Prompt that takes a number as input. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/numeral-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Numeral Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { NumberPrompt } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new NumberPrompt({ name: 'number', message: 'Please enter a number' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Confirm](#confirm-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Password Prompt Prompt that takes user input and masks it in the terminal. Also see the [invisible prompt](#invisible-prompt) <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/password-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Password Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Password } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Password({ name: 'password', message: 'What is your password?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Invisible](#invisible-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Quiz Prompt Prompt that allows the user to play multiple-choice quiz questions. <p align="center"> <img src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13731210/61567561-891d4780-aa6f-11e9-9b09-3d504abd24ed.gif" alt="Enquirer Quiz Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Quiz } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Quiz({ name: 'countries', message: 'How many countries are there in the world?', choices: ['165', '175', '185', '195', '205'], correctChoice: 3 }); prompt .run() .then(answer => { if (answer.correct) { console.log('Correct!'); } else { console.log(`Wrong! Correct answer is ${answer.correctAnswer}`); } }) .catch(console.error); ``` **Quiz Options** | Option | Type | Required | Description | | ----------- | ---------- | ---------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | `choices` | `array` | Yes | The list of possible answers to the quiz question. | | `correctChoice`| `number` | Yes | Index of the correct choice from the `choices` array. | **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Survey Prompt Prompt that allows the user to provide feedback for a list of questions. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/survey-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Survey Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Survey } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Survey({ name: 'experience', message: 'Please rate your experience', scale: [ { name: '1', message: 'Strongly Disagree' }, { name: '2', message: 'Disagree' }, { name: '3', message: 'Neutral' }, { name: '4', message: 'Agree' }, { name: '5', message: 'Strongly Agree' } ], margin: [0, 0, 2, 1], choices: [ { name: 'interface', message: 'The website has a friendly interface.' }, { name: 'navigation', message: 'The website is easy to navigate.' }, { name: 'images', message: 'The website usually has good images.' }, { name: 'upload', message: 'The website makes it easy to upload images.' }, { name: 'colors', message: 'The website has a pleasing color palette.' } ] }); prompt.run() .then(value => console.log('ANSWERS:', value)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Scale](#scale-prompt) * [Snippet](#snippet-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) *** ### Scale Prompt A more compact version of the [Survey prompt](#survey-prompt), the Scale prompt allows the user to quickly provide feedback using a [Likert Scale](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Likert_scale). <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/scale-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Scale Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Scale } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Scale({ name: 'experience', message: 'Please rate your experience', scale: [ { name: '1', message: 'Strongly Disagree' }, { name: '2', message: 'Disagree' }, { name: '3', message: 'Neutral' }, { name: '4', message: 'Agree' }, { name: '5', message: 'Strongly Agree' } ], margin: [0, 0, 2, 1], choices: [ { name: 'interface', message: 'The website has a friendly interface.', initial: 2 }, { name: 'navigation', message: 'The website is easy to navigate.', initial: 2 }, { name: 'images', message: 'The website usually has good images.', initial: 2 }, { name: 'upload', message: 'The website makes it easy to upload images.', initial: 2 }, { name: 'colors', message: 'The website has a pleasing color palette.', initial: 2 } ] }); prompt.run() .then(value => console.log('ANSWERS:', value)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Select Prompt Prompt that allows the user to select from a list of options. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/select-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Select Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Select } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Select({ name: 'color', message: 'Pick a flavor', choices: ['apple', 'grape', 'watermelon', 'cherry', 'orange'] }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) * [MultiSelect](#multiselect-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Sort Prompt Prompt that allows the user to sort items in a list. **Example** In this [example](https://github.com/enquirer/enquirer/raw/master/examples/sort/prompt.js), custom styling is applied to the returned values to make it easier to see what's happening. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/sort-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Sort Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const colors = require('ansi-colors'); const { Sort } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Sort({ name: 'colors', message: 'Sort the colors in order of preference', hint: 'Top is best, bottom is worst', numbered: true, choices: ['red', 'white', 'green', 'cyan', 'yellow'].map(n => ({ name: n, message: colors[n](n) })) }); prompt.run() .then(function(answer = []) { console.log(answer); console.log('Your preferred order of colors is:'); console.log(answer.map(key => colors[key](key)).join('\n')); }) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [List](#list-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Snippet Prompt Prompt that allows the user to replace placeholders in a snippet of code or text. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/snippet-prompt.gif" alt="Prompts" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const semver = require('semver'); const { Snippet } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Snippet({ name: 'username', message: 'Fill out the fields in package.json', required: true, fields: [ { name: 'author_name', message: 'Author Name' }, { name: 'version', validate(value, state, item, index) { if (item && item.name === 'version' && !semver.valid(value)) { return prompt.styles.danger('version should be a valid semver value'); } return true; } } ], template: `{ "name": "\${name}", "description": "\${description}", "version": "\${version}", "homepage": "https://github.com/\${username}/\${name}", "author": "\${author_name} (https://github.com/\${username})", "repository": "\${username}/\${name}", "license": "\${license:ISC}" } ` }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer.result)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Survey](#survey-prompt) * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Toggle Prompt Prompt that allows the user to toggle between two values then returns `true` or `false`. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/toggle-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Toggle Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Toggle } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Toggle({ message: 'Want to answer?', enabled: 'Yep', disabled: 'Nope' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Confirm](#confirm-prompt) * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Sort](#sort-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Prompt Types There are 5 (soon to be 6!) type classes: * [ArrayPrompt](#arrayprompt) - [Options](#options) - [Properties](#properties) - [Methods](#methods) - [Choices](#choices) - [Defining choices](#defining-choices) - [Choice properties](#choice-properties) - [Related prompts](#related-prompts) * [AuthPrompt](#authprompt) * [BooleanPrompt](#booleanprompt) * DatePrompt (Coming Soon!) * [NumberPrompt](#numberprompt) * [StringPrompt](#stringprompt) Each type is a low-level class that may be used as a starting point for creating higher level prompts. Continue reading to learn how. ### ArrayPrompt The `ArrayPrompt` class is used for creating prompts that display a list of choices in the terminal. For example, Enquirer uses this class as the basis for the [Select](#select) and [Survey](#survey) prompts. #### Options In addition to the [options](#options) available to all prompts, Array prompts also support the following options. | **Option** | **Required?** | **Type** | **Description** | | ----------- | ------------- | --------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `autofocus` | `no` | `string\|number` | The index or name of the choice that should have focus when the prompt loads. Only one choice may have focus at a time. | | | `stdin` | `no` | `stream` | The input stream to use for emitting keypress events. Defaults to `process.stdin`. | | `stdout` | `no` | `stream` | The output stream to use for writing the prompt to the terminal. Defaults to `process.stdout`. | | | #### Properties Array prompts have the following instance properties and getters. | **Property name** | **Type** | **Description** | | ----------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `choices` | `array` | Array of choices that have been normalized from choices passed on the prompt options. | | `cursor` | `number` | Position of the cursor relative to the _user input (string)_. | | `enabled` | `array` | Returns an array of enabled choices. | | `focused` | `array` | Returns the currently selected choice in the visible list of choices. This is similar to the concept of focus in HTML and CSS. Focused choices are always visible (on-screen). When a list of choices is longer than the list of visible choices, and an off-screen choice is _focused_, the list will scroll to the focused choice and re-render. | | `focused` | Gets the currently selected choice. Equivalent to `prompt.choices[prompt.index]`. | | `index` | `number` | Position of the pointer in the _visible list (array) of choices_. | | `limit` | `number` | The number of choices to display on-screen. | | `selected` | `array` | Either a list of enabled choices (when `options.multiple` is true) or the currently focused choice. | | `visible` | `string` | | #### Methods | **Method** | **Description** | | ------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `pointer()` | Returns the visual symbol to use to identify the choice that currently has focus. The `❯` symbol is often used for this. The pointer is not always visible, as with the `autocomplete` prompt. | | `indicator()` | Returns the visual symbol that indicates whether or not a choice is checked/enabled. | | `focus()` | Sets focus on a choice, if it can be focused. | #### Choices Array prompts support the `choices` option, which is the array of choices users will be able to select from when rendered in the terminal. **Type**: `string|object` **Example** ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const questions = [{ type: 'select', name: 'color', message: 'Favorite color?', initial: 1, choices: [ { name: 'red', message: 'Red', value: '#ff0000' }, //<= choice object { name: 'green', message: 'Green', value: '#00ff00' }, //<= choice object { name: 'blue', message: 'Blue', value: '#0000ff' } //<= choice object ] }]; let answers = await prompt(questions); console.log('Answer:', answers.color); ``` #### Defining choices Whether defined as a string or object, choices are normalized to the following interface: ```js { name: string; message: string | undefined; value: string | undefined; hint: string | undefined; disabled: boolean | string | undefined; } ``` **Example** ```js const question = { name: 'fruit', message: 'Favorite fruit?', choices: ['Apple', 'Orange', 'Raspberry'] }; ``` Normalizes to the following when the prompt is run: ```js const question = { name: 'fruit', message: 'Favorite fruit?', choices: [ { name: 'Apple', message: 'Apple', value: 'Apple' }, { name: 'Orange', message: 'Orange', value: 'Orange' }, { name: 'Raspberry', message: 'Raspberry', value: 'Raspberry' } ] }; ``` #### Choice properties The following properties are supported on `choice` objects. | **Option** | **Type** | **Description** | | ----------- | ----------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `name` | `string` | The unique key to identify a choice | | `message` | `string` | The message to display in the terminal. `name` is used when this is undefined. | | `value` | `string` | Value to associate with the choice. Useful for creating key-value pairs from user choices. `name` is used when this is undefined. | | `choices` | `array` | Array of "child" choices. | | `hint` | `string` | Help message to display next to a choice. | | `role` | `string` | Determines how the choice will be displayed. Currently the only role supported is `separator`. Additional roles may be added in the future (like `heading`, etc). Please create a [feature request] | | `enabled` | `boolean` | Enabled a choice by default. This is only supported when `options.multiple` is true or on prompts that support multiple choices, like [MultiSelect](#-multiselect). | | `disabled` | `boolean\|string` | Disable a choice so that it cannot be selected. This value may either be `true`, `false`, or a message to display. | | `indicator` | `string\|function` | Custom indicator to render for a choice (like a check or radio button). | #### Related prompts * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) * [Form](#form-prompt) * [MultiSelect](#multiselect-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) *** ### AuthPrompt The `AuthPrompt` is used to create prompts to log in user using any authentication method. For example, Enquirer uses this class as the basis for the [BasicAuth Prompt](#basicauth-prompt). You can also find prompt examples in `examples/auth/` folder that utilizes `AuthPrompt` to create OAuth based authentication prompt or a prompt that authenticates using time-based OTP, among others. `AuthPrompt` has a factory function that creates an instance of `AuthPrompt` class and it expects an `authenticate` function, as an argument, which overrides the `authenticate` function of the `AuthPrompt` class. #### Methods | **Method** | **Description** | | ------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `authenticate()` | Contain all the authentication logic. This function should be overridden to implement custom authentication logic. The default `authenticate` function throws an error if no other function is provided. | #### Choices Auth prompt supports the `choices` option, which is the similar to the choices used in [Form Prompt](#form-prompt). **Example** ```js const { AuthPrompt } = require('enquirer'); function authenticate(value, state) { if (value.username === this.options.username && value.password === this.options.password) { return true; } return false; } const CustomAuthPrompt = AuthPrompt.create(authenticate); const prompt = new CustomAuthPrompt({ name: 'password', message: 'Please enter your password', username: 'rajat-sr', password: '1234567', choices: [ { name: 'username', message: 'username' }, { name: 'password', message: 'password' } ] }); prompt .run() .then(answer => console.log('Authenticated?', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` #### Related prompts * [BasicAuth Prompt](#basicauth-prompt) *** ### BooleanPrompt The `BooleanPrompt` class is used for creating prompts that display and return a boolean value. ```js const { BooleanPrompt } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new BooleanPrompt({ header: '========================', message: 'Do you love enquirer?', footer: '========================', }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Selected:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Returns**: `boolean` *** ### NumberPrompt The `NumberPrompt` class is used for creating prompts that display and return a numerical value. ```js const { NumberPrompt } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new NumberPrompt({ header: '************************', message: 'Input the Numbers:', footer: '************************', }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Numbers are:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Returns**: `string|number` (number, or number formatted as a string) *** ### StringPrompt The `StringPrompt` class is used for creating prompts that display and return a string value. ```js const { StringPrompt } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new StringPrompt({ header: '************************', message: 'Input the String:', footer: '************************' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('String is:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Returns**: `string` <br> ## ❯ Custom prompts With Enquirer 2.0, custom prompts are easier than ever to create and use. **How do I create a custom prompt?** Custom prompts are created by extending either: * Enquirer's `Prompt` class * one of the built-in [prompts](#-prompts), or * low-level [types](#-types). <!-- Example: HaiKarate Custom Prompt --> ```js const { Prompt } = require('enquirer'); class HaiKarate extends Prompt { constructor(options = {}) { super(options); this.value = options.initial || 0; this.cursorHide(); } up() { this.value++; this.render(); } down() { this.value--; this.render(); } render() { this.clear(); // clear previously rendered prompt from the terminal this.write(`${this.state.message}: ${this.value}`); } } // Use the prompt by creating an instance of your custom prompt class. const prompt = new HaiKarate({ message: 'How many sprays do you want?', initial: 10 }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Sprays:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` If you want to be able to specify your prompt by `type` so that it may be used alongside other prompts, you will need to first create an instance of `Enquirer`. ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); ``` Then use the `.register()` method to add your custom prompt. ```js enquirer.register('haikarate', HaiKarate); ``` Now you can do the following when defining "questions". ```js let spritzer = require('cologne-drone'); let answers = await enquirer.prompt([ { type: 'haikarate', name: 'cologne', message: 'How many sprays do you need?', initial: 10, async onSubmit(name, value) { await spritzer.activate(value); //<= activate drone return value; } } ]); ``` <br> ## ❯ Key Bindings ### All prompts These key combinations may be used with all prompts. | **command** | **description** | | -------------------------------- | -------------------------------------- | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>c</kbd> | Cancel the prompt. | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>g</kbd> | Reset the prompt to its initial state. | <br> ### Move cursor These combinations may be used on prompts that support user input (eg. [input prompt](#input-prompt), [password prompt](#password-prompt), and [invisible prompt](#invisible-prompt)). | **command** | **description** | | ------------------------------ | ---------------------------------------- | | <kbd>left</kbd> | Move the cursor back one character. | | <kbd>right</kbd> | Move the cursor forward one character. | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>a</kbd> | Move cursor to the start of the line | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>e</kbd> | Move cursor to the end of the line | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>b</kbd> | Move cursor back one character | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>f</kbd> | Move cursor forward one character | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>x</kbd> | Toggle between first and cursor position | <br> ### Edit Input These key combinations may be used on prompts that support user input (eg. [input prompt](#input-prompt), [password prompt](#password-prompt), and [invisible prompt](#invisible-prompt)). | **command** | **description** | | ------------------------------ | ---------------------------------------- | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>a</kbd> | Move cursor to the start of the line | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>e</kbd> | Move cursor to the end of the line | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>b</kbd> | Move cursor back one character | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>f</kbd> | Move cursor forward one character | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>x</kbd> | Toggle between first and cursor position | <br> | **command (Mac)** | **command (Windows)** | **description** | | ----------------------------------- | -------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>delete</kbd> | <kbd>backspace</kbd> | Delete one character to the left. | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>delete</kbd> | <kbd>delete</kbd> | Delete one character to the right. | | <kbd>option</kbd> + <kbd>up</kbd> | <kbd>alt</kbd> + <kbd>up</kbd> | Scroll to the previous item in history ([Input prompt](#input-prompt) only, when [history is enabled](examples/input/option-history.js)). | | <kbd>option</kbd> + <kbd>down</kbd> | <kbd>alt</kbd> + <kbd>down</kbd> | Scroll to the next item in history ([Input prompt](#input-prompt) only, when [history is enabled](examples/input/option-history.js)). | ### Select choices These key combinations may be used on prompts that support _multiple_ choices, such as the [multiselect prompt](#multiselect-prompt), or the [select prompt](#select-prompt) when the `multiple` options is true. | **command** | **description** | | ----------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>space</kbd> | Toggle the currently selected choice when `options.multiple` is true. | | <kbd>number</kbd> | Move the pointer to the choice at the given index. Also toggles the selected choice when `options.multiple` is true. | | <kbd>a</kbd> | Toggle all choices to be enabled or disabled. | | <kbd>i</kbd> | Invert the current selection of choices. | | <kbd>g</kbd> | Toggle the current choice group. | <br> ### Hide/show choices | **command** | **description** | | ------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>up</kbd> | Decrease the number of visible choices by one. | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>down</kbd> | Increase the number of visible choices by one. | <br> ### Move/lock Pointer | **command** | **description** | | ---------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>number</kbd> | Move the pointer to the choice at the given index. Also toggles the selected choice when `options.multiple` is true. | | <kbd>up</kbd> | Move the pointer up. | | <kbd>down</kbd> | Move the pointer down. | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>a</kbd> | Move the pointer to the first _visible_ choice. | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>e</kbd> | Move the pointer to the last _visible_ choice. | | <kbd>shift</kbd> + <kbd>up</kbd> | Scroll up one choice without changing pointer position (locks the pointer while scrolling). | | <kbd>shift</kbd> + <kbd>down</kbd> | Scroll down one choice without changing pointer position (locks the pointer while scrolling). | <br> | **command (Mac)** | **command (Windows)** | **description** | | -------------------------------- | --------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>left</kbd> | <kbd>home</kbd> | Move the pointer to the first choice in the choices array. | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>right</kbd> | <kbd>end</kbd> | Move the pointer to the last choice in the choices array. | <br> ## ❯ Release History Please see [CHANGELOG.md](CHANGELOG.md). ## ❯ Performance ### System specs MacBook Pro, Intel Core i7, 2.5 GHz, 16 GB. ### Load time Time it takes for the module to load the first time (average of 3 runs): ``` enquirer: 4.013ms inquirer: 286.717ms ``` <br> ## ❯ About <details> <summary><strong>Contributing</strong></summary> Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). ### Todo We're currently working on documentation for the following items. Please star and watch the repository for updates! * [ ] Customizing symbols * [ ] Customizing styles (palette) * [ ] Customizing rendered input * [ ] Customizing returned values * [ ] Customizing key bindings * [ ] Question validation * [ ] Choice validation * [ ] Skipping questions * [ ] Async choices * [ ] Async timers: loaders, spinners and other animations * [ ] Links to examples </details> <details> <summary><strong>Running Tests</strong></summary> Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command: ```sh $ npm install && npm test ``` ```sh $ yarn && yarn test ``` </details> <details> <summary><strong>Building docs</strong></summary> _(This project's readme.md is generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the [.verb.md](.verb.md) readme template.)_ To generate the readme, run the following command: ```sh $ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb ``` </details> #### Contributors | **Commits** | **Contributor** | | --- | --- | | 283 | [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) | | 82 | [doowb](https://github.com/doowb) | | 32 | [rajat-sr](https://github.com/rajat-sr) | | 20 | [318097](https://github.com/318097) | | 15 | [g-plane](https://github.com/g-plane) | | 12 | [pixelass](https://github.com/pixelass) | | 5 | [adityavyas611](https://github.com/adityavyas611) | | 5 | [satotake](https://github.com/satotake) | | 3 | [tunnckoCore](https://github.com/tunnckoCore) | | 3 | [Ovyerus](https://github.com/Ovyerus) | | 3 | [sw-yx](https://github.com/sw-yx) | | 2 | [DanielRuf](https://github.com/DanielRuf) | | 2 | [GabeL7r](https://github.com/GabeL7r) | | 1 | [AlCalzone](https://github.com/AlCalzone) | | 1 | [hipstersmoothie](https://github.com/hipstersmoothie) | | 1 | [danieldelcore](https://github.com/danieldelcore) | | 1 | [ImgBotApp](https://github.com/ImgBotApp) | | 1 | [jsonkao](https://github.com/jsonkao) | | 1 | [knpwrs](https://github.com/knpwrs) | | 1 | [yeskunall](https://github.com/yeskunall) | | 1 | [mischah](https://github.com/mischah) | | 1 | [renarsvilnis](https://github.com/renarsvilnis) | | 1 | [sbugert](https://github.com/sbugert) | | 1 | [stephencweiss](https://github.com/stephencweiss) | | 1 | [skellock](https://github.com/skellock) | | 1 | [whxaxes](https://github.com/whxaxes) | #### Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [GitHub Profile](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [Twitter Profile](https://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) * [LinkedIn Profile](https://linkedin.com/in/jonschlinkert) #### Credit Thanks to [derhuerst](https://github.com/derhuerst), creator of prompt libraries such as [prompt-skeleton](https://github.com/derhuerst/prompt-skeleton), which influenced some of the concepts we used in our prompts. #### License Copyright © 2018-present, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE). # eslint-utils [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint-utils.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-utils) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint-utils.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/eslint-utils) [![Build Status](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-utils/workflows/CI/badge.svg)](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-utils/actions) [![Coverage Status](https://codecov.io/gh/mysticatea/eslint-utils/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/mysticatea/eslint-utils) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/mysticatea/eslint-utils.svg)](https://david-dm.org/mysticatea/eslint-utils) ## 🏁 Goal This package provides utility functions and classes for make ESLint custom rules. For examples: - [getStaticValue](https://eslint-utils.mysticatea.dev/api/ast-utils.html#getstaticvalue) evaluates static value on AST. - [ReferenceTracker](https://eslint-utils.mysticatea.dev/api/scope-utils.html#referencetracker-class) checks the members of modules/globals as handling assignments and destructuring. ## 📖 Usage See [documentation](https://eslint-utils.mysticatea.dev/). ## 📰 Changelog See [releases](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-utils/releases). ## ❤️ Contributing Welcome contributing! Please use GitHub's Issues/PRs. ### Development Tools - `npm test` runs tests and measures coverage. - `npm run clean` removes the coverage result of `npm test` command. - `npm run coverage` shows the coverage result of the last `npm test` command. - `npm run lint` runs ESLint. - `npm run watch` runs tests on each file change. [![Build Status](https://api.travis-ci.org/adaltas/node-csv-stringify.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/#!/adaltas/node-csv-stringify) [![NPM](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/csv-stringify)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/csv-stringify) [![NPM](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/csv-stringify)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/csv-stringify) This package is a stringifier converting records into a CSV text and implementing the Node.js [`stream.Transform` API](https://nodejs.org/api/stream.html). It also provides the easier synchronous and callback-based APIs for conveniency. It is both extremely easy to use and powerful. It was first released in 2010 and is tested against big data sets by a large community. ## Documentation * [Project homepage](http://csv.js.org/stringify/) * [API](http://csv.js.org/stringify/api/) * [Options](http://csv.js.org/stringify/options/) * [Examples](http://csv.js.org/stringify/examples/) ## Main features * Follow the Node.js streaming API * Simplicity with the optional callback API * Support for custom formatters, delimiters, quotes, escape characters and header * Support big datasets * Complete test coverage and samples for inspiration * Only 1 external dependency * to be used conjointly with `csv-generate`, `csv-parse` and `stream-transform` * MIT License ## Usage The module is built on the Node.js Stream API. For the sake of simplicity, a simple callback API is also provided. To give you a quick look, here's an example of the callback API: ```javascript const stringify = require('csv-stringify') const assert = require('assert') // import stringify from 'csv-stringify' // import assert from 'assert/strict' const input = [ [ '1', '2', '3', '4' ], [ 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd' ] ] stringify(input, function(err, output) { const expected = '1,2,3,4\na,b,c,d\n' assert.strictEqual(output, expected, `output.should.eql ${expected}`) console.log("Passed.", output) }) ``` ## Development Tests are executed with mocha. To install it, run `npm install` followed by `npm test`. It will install mocha and its dependencies in your project "node_modules" directory and run the test suite. The tests run against the CoffeeScript source files. To generate the JavaScript files, run `npm run build`. The test suite is run online with [Travis](https://travis-ci.org/#!/adaltas/node-csv-stringify). See the [Travis definition file](https://github.com/adaltas/node-csv-stringify/blob/master/.travis.yml) to view the tested Node.js version. ## Contributors * David Worms: <https://github.com/wdavidw> [csv_home]: https://github.com/adaltas/node-csv [stream_transform]: http://nodejs.org/api/stream.html#stream_class_stream_transform [examples]: http://csv.js.org/stringify/examples/ [csv]: https://github.com/adaltas/node-csv # regexpp [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/regexpp.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/regexpp) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/regexpp.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/regexpp) [![Build Status](https://github.com/mysticatea/regexpp/workflows/CI/badge.svg)](https://github.com/mysticatea/regexpp/actions) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/mysticatea/regexpp/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/mysticatea/regexpp) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/mysticatea/regexpp.svg)](https://david-dm.org/mysticatea/regexpp) A regular expression parser for ECMAScript. ## 💿 Installation ```bash $ npm install regexpp ``` - require Node.js 8 or newer. ## 📖 Usage ```ts import { AST, RegExpParser, RegExpValidator, RegExpVisitor, parseRegExpLiteral, validateRegExpLiteral, visitRegExpAST } from "regexpp" ``` ### parseRegExpLiteral(source, options?) Parse a given regular expression literal then make AST object. This is equivalent to `new RegExpParser(options).parseLiteral(source)`. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string | RegExp`) The source code to parse. - `options?` ([`RegExpParser.Options`]) The options to parse. - **Return:** - The AST of the regular expression. ### validateRegExpLiteral(source, options?) Validate a given regular expression literal. This is equivalent to `new RegExpValidator(options).validateLiteral(source)`. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to validate. - `options?` ([`RegExpValidator.Options`]) The options to validate. ### visitRegExpAST(ast, handlers) Visit each node of a given AST. This is equivalent to `new RegExpVisitor(handlers).visit(ast)`. - **Parameters:** - `ast` ([`AST.Node`]) The AST to visit. - `handlers` ([`RegExpVisitor.Handlers`]) The callbacks. ### RegExpParser #### new RegExpParser(options?) - **Parameters:** - `options?` ([`RegExpParser.Options`]) The options to parse. #### parser.parseLiteral(source, start?, end?) Parse a regular expression literal. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to parse. E.g. `"/abc/g"`. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. - **Return:** - The AST of the regular expression. #### parser.parsePattern(source, start?, end?, uFlag?) Parse a regular expression pattern. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to parse. E.g. `"abc"`. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. - `uFlag?` (`boolean`) The flag to enable Unicode mode. - **Return:** - The AST of the regular expression pattern. #### parser.parseFlags(source, start?, end?) Parse a regular expression flags. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to parse. E.g. `"gim"`. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. - **Return:** - The AST of the regular expression flags. ### RegExpValidator #### new RegExpValidator(options) - **Parameters:** - `options` ([`RegExpValidator.Options`]) The options to validate. #### validator.validateLiteral(source, start, end) Validate a regular expression literal. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to validate. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. #### validator.validatePattern(source, start, end, uFlag) Validate a regular expression pattern. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to validate. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. - `uFlag?` (`boolean`) The flag to enable Unicode mode. #### validator.validateFlags(source, start, end) Validate a regular expression flags. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to validate. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. ### RegExpVisitor #### new RegExpVisitor(handlers) - **Parameters:** - `handlers` ([`RegExpVisitor.Handlers`]) The callbacks. #### visitor.visit(ast) Validate a regular expression literal. - **Parameters:** - `ast` ([`AST.Node`]) The AST to visit. ## 📰 Changelog - [GitHub Releases](https://github.com/mysticatea/regexpp/releases) ## 🍻 Contributing Welcome contributing! Please use GitHub's Issues/PRs. ### Development Tools - `npm test` runs tests and measures coverage. - `npm run build` compiles TypeScript source code to `index.js`, `index.js.map`, and `index.d.ts`. - `npm run clean` removes the temporary files which are created by `npm test` and `npm run build`. - `npm run lint` runs ESLint. - `npm run update:test` updates test fixtures. - `npm run update:ids` updates `src/unicode/ids.ts`. - `npm run watch` runs tests with `--watch` option. [`AST.Node`]: src/ast.ts#L4 [`RegExpParser.Options`]: src/parser.ts#L539 [`RegExpValidator.Options`]: src/validator.ts#L127 [`RegExpVisitor.Handlers`]: src/visitor.ts#L204 # whatwg-url whatwg-url is a full implementation of the WHATWG [URL Standard](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/). It can be used standalone, but it also exposes a lot of the internal algorithms that are useful for integrating a URL parser into a project like [jsdom](https://github.com/tmpvar/jsdom). ## Specification conformance whatwg-url is currently up to date with the URL spec up to commit [7ae1c69](https://github.com/whatwg/url/commit/7ae1c691c96f0d82fafa24c33aa1e8df9ffbf2bc). For `file:` URLs, whose [origin is left unspecified](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-origin), whatwg-url chooses to use a new opaque origin (which serializes to `"null"`). ## API ### The `URL` and `URLSearchParams` classes The main API is provided by the [`URL`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#url-class) and [`URLSearchParams`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#interface-urlsearchparams) exports, which follows the spec's behavior in all ways (including e.g. `USVString` conversion). Most consumers of this library will want to use these. ### Low-level URL Standard API The following methods are exported for use by places like jsdom that need to implement things like [`HTMLHyperlinkElementUtils`](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#htmlhyperlinkelementutils). They mostly operate on or return an "internal URL" or ["URL record"](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url) type. - [URL parser](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-parser): `parseURL(input, { baseURL, encodingOverride })` - [Basic URL parser](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-basic-url-parser): `basicURLParse(input, { baseURL, encodingOverride, url, stateOverride })` - [URL serializer](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-serializer): `serializeURL(urlRecord, excludeFragment)` - [Host serializer](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-host-serializer): `serializeHost(hostFromURLRecord)` - [Serialize an integer](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#serialize-an-integer): `serializeInteger(number)` - [Origin](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-origin) [serializer](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/origin.html#ascii-serialisation-of-an-origin): `serializeURLOrigin(urlRecord)` - [Set the username](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#set-the-username): `setTheUsername(urlRecord, usernameString)` - [Set the password](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#set-the-password): `setThePassword(urlRecord, passwordString)` - [Cannot have a username/password/port](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#cannot-have-a-username-password-port): `cannotHaveAUsernamePasswordPort(urlRecord)` - [Percent decode](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#percent-decode): `percentDecode(buffer)` The `stateOverride` parameter is one of the following strings: - [`"scheme start"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#scheme-start-state) - [`"scheme"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#scheme-state) - [`"no scheme"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#no-scheme-state) - [`"special relative or authority"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-relative-or-authority-state) - [`"path or authority"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#path-or-authority-state) - [`"relative"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#relative-state) - [`"relative slash"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#relative-slash-state) - [`"special authority slashes"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-authority-slashes-state) - [`"special authority ignore slashes"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-authority-ignore-slashes-state) - [`"authority"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#authority-state) - [`"host"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#host-state) - [`"hostname"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#hostname-state) - [`"port"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#port-state) - [`"file"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#file-state) - [`"file slash"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#file-slash-state) - [`"file host"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#file-host-state) - [`"path start"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#path-start-state) - [`"path"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#path-state) - [`"cannot-be-a-base-URL path"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#cannot-be-a-base-url-path-state) - [`"query"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#query-state) - [`"fragment"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#fragment-state) The URL record type has the following API: - [`scheme`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-scheme) - [`username`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-username) - [`password`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-password) - [`host`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-host) - [`port`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-port) - [`path`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-path) (as an array) - [`query`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-query) - [`fragment`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-fragment) - [`cannotBeABaseURL`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#url-cannot-be-a-base-url-flag) (as a boolean) These properties should be treated with care, as in general changing them will cause the URL record to be in an inconsistent state until the appropriate invocation of `basicURLParse` is used to fix it up. You can see examples of this in the URL Standard, where there are many step sequences like "4. Set context object’s url’s fragment to the empty string. 5. Basic URL parse _input_ with context object’s url as _url_ and fragment state as _state override_." In between those two steps, a URL record is in an unusable state. The return value of "failure" in the spec is represented by `null`. That is, functions like `parseURL` and `basicURLParse` can return _either_ a URL record _or_ `null`. ## Development instructions First, install [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/). Then, fetch the dependencies of whatwg-url, by running from this directory: npm install To run tests: npm test To generate a coverage report: npm run coverage To build and run the live viewer: npm run build npm run build-live-viewer Serve the contents of the `live-viewer` directory using any web server. ## Supporting whatwg-url The jsdom project (including whatwg-url) is a community-driven project maintained by a team of [volunteers](https://github.com/orgs/jsdom/people). You could support us by: - [Getting professional support for whatwg-url](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-whatwg-url?utm_source=npm-whatwg-url&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=readme) as part of a Tidelift subscription. Tidelift helps making open source sustainable for us while giving teams assurances for maintenance, licensing, and security. - Contributing directly to the project. [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/espree.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/espree) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/espree.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/espree) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/espree.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/espree) [![Bountysource](https://www.bountysource.com/badge/tracker?tracker_id=9348450)](https://www.bountysource.com/trackers/9348450-eslint?utm_source=9348450&utm_medium=shield&utm_campaign=TRACKER_BADGE) # Espree Espree started out as a fork of [Esprima](http://esprima.org) v1.2.2, the last stable published released of Esprima before work on ECMAScript 6 began. Espree is now built on top of [Acorn](https://github.com/ternjs/acorn), which has a modular architecture that allows extension of core functionality. The goal of Espree is to produce output that is similar to Esprima with a similar API so that it can be used in place of Esprima. ## Usage Install: ``` npm i espree ``` And in your Node.js code: ```javascript const espree = require("espree"); const ast = espree.parse(code); ``` ## API ### `parse()` `parse` parses the given code and returns a abstract syntax tree (AST). It takes two parameters. - `code` [string]() - the code which needs to be parsed. - `options (Optional)` [Object]() - read more about this [here](#options). ```javascript const espree = require("espree"); const ast = espree.parse(code, options); ``` **Example :** ```js const ast = espree.parse('let foo = "bar"', { ecmaVersion: 6 }); console.log(ast); ``` <details><summary>Output</summary> <p> ``` Node { type: 'Program', start: 0, end: 15, body: [ Node { type: 'VariableDeclaration', start: 0, end: 15, declarations: [Array], kind: 'let' } ], sourceType: 'script' } ``` </p> </details> ### `tokenize()` `tokenize` returns the tokens of a given code. It takes two parameters. - `code` [string]() - the code which needs to be parsed. - `options (Optional)` [Object]() - read more about this [here](#options). Even if `options` is empty or undefined or `options.tokens` is `false`, it assigns it to `true` in order to get the `tokens` array **Example :** ```js const tokens = espree.tokenize('let foo = "bar"', { ecmaVersion: 6 }); console.log(tokens); ``` <details><summary>Output</summary> <p> ``` Token { type: 'Keyword', value: 'let', start: 0, end: 3 }, Token { type: 'Identifier', value: 'foo', start: 4, end: 7 }, Token { type: 'Punctuator', value: '=', start: 8, end: 9 }, Token { type: 'String', value: '"bar"', start: 10, end: 15 } ``` </p> </details> ### `version` Returns the current `espree` version ### `VisitorKeys` Returns all visitor keys for traversing the AST from [eslint-visitor-keys](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) ### `latestEcmaVersion` Returns the latest ECMAScript supported by `espree` ### `supportedEcmaVersions` Returns an array of all supported ECMAScript versions ## Options ```js const options = { // attach range information to each node range: false, // attach line/column location information to each node loc: false, // create a top-level comments array containing all comments comment: false, // create a top-level tokens array containing all tokens tokens: false, // Set to 3, 5 (default), 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, or 12 to specify the version of ECMAScript syntax you want to use. // You can also set to 2015 (same as 6), 2016 (same as 7), 2017 (same as 8), 2018 (same as 9), 2019 (same as 10), 2020 (same as 11), or 2021 (same as 12) to use the year-based naming. ecmaVersion: 5, // specify which type of script you're parsing ("script" or "module") sourceType: "script", // specify additional language features ecmaFeatures: { // enable JSX parsing jsx: false, // enable return in global scope globalReturn: false, // enable implied strict mode (if ecmaVersion >= 5) impliedStrict: false } } ``` ## Esprima Compatibility Going Forward The primary goal is to produce the exact same AST structure and tokens as Esprima, and that takes precedence over anything else. (The AST structure being the [ESTree](https://github.com/estree/estree) API with JSX extensions.) Separate from that, Espree may deviate from what Esprima outputs in terms of where and how comments are attached, as well as what additional information is available on AST nodes. That is to say, Espree may add more things to the AST nodes than Esprima does but the overall AST structure produced will be the same. Espree may also deviate from Esprima in the interface it exposes. ## Contributing Issues and pull requests will be triaged and responded to as quickly as possible. We operate under the [ESLint Contributor Guidelines](http://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing), so please be sure to read them before contributing. If you're not sure where to dig in, check out the [issues](https://github.com/eslint/espree/issues). Espree is licensed under a permissive BSD 2-clause license. ## Security Policy We work hard to ensure that Espree is safe for everyone and that security issues are addressed quickly and responsibly. Read the full [security policy](https://github.com/eslint/.github/blob/master/SECURITY.md). ## Build Commands * `npm test` - run all linting and tests * `npm run lint` - run all linting * `npm run browserify` - creates a version of Espree that is usable in a browser ## Differences from Espree 2.x * The `tokenize()` method does not use `ecmaFeatures`. Any string will be tokenized completely based on ECMAScript 6 semantics. * Trailing whitespace no longer is counted as part of a node. * `let` and `const` declarations are no longer parsed by default. You must opt-in by using an `ecmaVersion` newer than `5` or setting `sourceType` to `module`. * The `esparse` and `esvalidate` binary scripts have been removed. * There is no `tolerant` option. We will investigate adding this back in the future. ## Known Incompatibilities In an effort to help those wanting to transition from other parsers to Espree, the following is a list of noteworthy incompatibilities with other parsers. These are known differences that we do not intend to change. ### Esprima 1.2.2 * Esprima counts trailing whitespace as part of each AST node while Espree does not. In Espree, the end of a node is where the last token occurs. * Espree does not parse `let` and `const` declarations by default. * Error messages returned for parsing errors are different. * There are two addition properties on every node and token: `start` and `end`. These represent the same data as `range` and are used internally by Acorn. ### Esprima 2.x * Esprima 2.x uses a different comment attachment algorithm that results in some comments being added in different places than Espree. The algorithm Espree uses is the same one used in Esprima 1.2.2. ## Frequently Asked Questions ### Why another parser [ESLint](http://eslint.org) had been relying on Esprima as its parser from the beginning. While that was fine when the JavaScript language was evolving slowly, the pace of development increased dramatically and Esprima had fallen behind. ESLint, like many other tools reliant on Esprima, has been stuck in using new JavaScript language features until Esprima updates, and that caused our users frustration. We decided the only way for us to move forward was to create our own parser, bringing us inline with JSHint and JSLint, and allowing us to keep implementing new features as we need them. We chose to fork Esprima instead of starting from scratch in order to move as quickly as possible with a compatible API. With Espree 2.0.0, we are no longer a fork of Esprima but rather a translation layer between Acorn and Esprima syntax. This allows us to put work back into a community-supported parser (Acorn) that is continuing to grow and evolve while maintaining an Esprima-compatible parser for those utilities still built on Esprima. ### Have you tried working with Esprima? Yes. Since the start of ESLint, we've regularly filed bugs and feature requests with Esprima and will continue to do so. However, there are some different philosophies around how the projects work that need to be worked through. The initial goal was to have Espree track Esprima and eventually merge the two back together, but we ultimately decided that building on top of Acorn was a better choice due to Acorn's plugin support. ### Why don't you just use Acorn? Acorn is a great JavaScript parser that produces an AST that is compatible with Esprima. Unfortunately, ESLint relies on more than just the AST to do its job. It relies on Esprima's tokens and comment attachment features to get a complete picture of the source code. We investigated switching to Acorn, but the inconsistencies between Esprima and Acorn created too much work for a project like ESLint. We are building on top of Acorn, however, so that we can contribute back and help make Acorn even better. ### What ECMAScript features do you support? Espree supports all ECMAScript 2020 features and partially supports ECMAScript 2021 features. Because ECMAScript 2021 is still under development, we are implementing features as they are finalized. Currently, Espree supports: * [Logical Assignment Operators](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-logical-assignment) * [Numeric Separators](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-numeric-separator) See [finished-proposals.md](https://github.com/tc39/proposals/blob/master/finished-proposals.md) to know what features are finalized. ### How do you determine which experimental features to support? In general, we do not support experimental JavaScript features. We may make exceptions from time to time depending on the maturity of the features. Overview [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/lydell/js-tokens.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/lydell/js-tokens) ======== A regex that tokenizes JavaScript. ```js var jsTokens = require("js-tokens").default var jsString = "var foo=opts.foo;\n..." jsString.match(jsTokens) // ["var", " ", "foo", "=", "opts", ".", "foo", ";", "\n", ...] ``` Installation ============ `npm install js-tokens` ```js import jsTokens from "js-tokens" // or: var jsTokens = require("js-tokens").default ``` Usage ===== ### `jsTokens` ### A regex with the `g` flag that matches JavaScript tokens. The regex _always_ matches, even invalid JavaScript and the empty string. The next match is always directly after the previous. ### `var token = matchToToken(match)` ### ```js import {matchToToken} from "js-tokens" // or: var matchToToken = require("js-tokens").matchToToken ``` Takes a `match` returned by `jsTokens.exec(string)`, and returns a `{type: String, value: String}` object. The following types are available: - string - comment - regex - number - name - punctuator - whitespace - invalid Multi-line comments and strings also have a `closed` property indicating if the token was closed or not (see below). Comments and strings both come in several flavors. To distinguish them, check if the token starts with `//`, `/*`, `'`, `"` or `` ` ``. Names are ECMAScript IdentifierNames, that is, including both identifiers and keywords. You may use [is-keyword-js] to tell them apart. Whitespace includes both line terminators and other whitespace. [is-keyword-js]: https://github.com/crissdev/is-keyword-js ECMAScript support ================== The intention is to always support the latest ECMAScript version whose feature set has been finalized. If adding support for a newer version requires changes, a new version with a major verion bump will be released. Currently, ECMAScript 2018 is supported. Invalid code handling ===================== Unterminated strings are still matched as strings. JavaScript strings cannot contain (unescaped) newlines, so unterminated strings simply end at the end of the line. Unterminated template strings can contain unescaped newlines, though, so they go on to the end of input. Unterminated multi-line comments are also still matched as comments. They simply go on to the end of the input. Unterminated regex literals are likely matched as division and whatever is inside the regex. Invalid ASCII characters have their own capturing group. Invalid non-ASCII characters are treated as names, to simplify the matching of names (except unicode spaces which are treated as whitespace). Note: See also the [ES2018](#es2018) section. Regex literals may contain invalid regex syntax. They are still matched as regex literals. They may also contain repeated regex flags, to keep the regex simple. Strings may contain invalid escape sequences. Limitations =========== Tokenizing JavaScript using regexes—in fact, _one single regex_—won’t be perfect. But that’s not the point either. You may compare jsTokens with [esprima] by using `esprima-compare.js`. See `npm run esprima-compare`! [esprima]: http://esprima.org/ ### Template string interpolation ### Template strings are matched as single tokens, from the starting `` ` `` to the ending `` ` ``, including interpolations (whose tokens are not matched individually). Matching template string interpolations requires recursive balancing of `{` and `}`—something that JavaScript regexes cannot do. Only one level of nesting is supported. ### Division and regex literals collision ### Consider this example: ```js var g = 9.82 var number = bar / 2/g var regex = / 2/g ``` A human can easily understand that in the `number` line we’re dealing with division, and in the `regex` line we’re dealing with a regex literal. How come? Because humans can look at the whole code to put the `/` characters in context. A JavaScript regex cannot. It only sees forwards. (Well, ES2018 regexes can also look backwards. See the [ES2018](#es2018) section). When the `jsTokens` regex scans throught the above, it will see the following at the end of both the `number` and `regex` rows: ```js / 2/g ``` It is then impossible to know if that is a regex literal, or part of an expression dealing with division. Here is a similar case: ```js foo /= 2/g foo(/= 2/g) ``` The first line divides the `foo` variable with `2/g`. The second line calls the `foo` function with the regex literal `/= 2/g`. Again, since `jsTokens` only sees forwards, it cannot tell the two cases apart. There are some cases where we _can_ tell division and regex literals apart, though. First off, we have the simple cases where there’s only one slash in the line: ```js var foo = 2/g foo /= 2 ``` Regex literals cannot contain newlines, so the above cases are correctly identified as division. Things are only problematic when there are more than one non-comment slash in a single line. Secondly, not every character is a valid regex flag. ```js var number = bar / 2/e ``` The above example is also correctly identified as division, because `e` is not a valid regex flag. I initially wanted to future-proof by allowing `[a-zA-Z]*` (any letter) as flags, but it is not worth it since it increases the amount of ambigous cases. So only the standard `g`, `m`, `i`, `y` and `u` flags are allowed. This means that the above example will be identified as division as long as you don’t rename the `e` variable to some permutation of `gmiyus` 1 to 6 characters long. Lastly, we can look _forward_ for information. - If the token following what looks like a regex literal is not valid after a regex literal, but is valid in a division expression, then the regex literal is treated as division instead. For example, a flagless regex cannot be followed by a string, number or name, but all of those three can be the denominator of a division. - Generally, if what looks like a regex literal is followed by an operator, the regex literal is treated as division instead. This is because regexes are seldomly used with operators (such as `+`, `*`, `&&` and `==`), but division could likely be part of such an expression. Please consult the regex source and the test cases for precise information on when regex or division is matched (should you need to know). In short, you could sum it up as: If the end of a statement looks like a regex literal (even if it isn’t), it will be treated as one. Otherwise it should work as expected (if you write sane code). ### ES2018 ### ES2018 added some nice regex improvements to the language. - [Unicode property escapes] should allow telling names and invalid non-ASCII characters apart without blowing up the regex size. - [Lookbehind assertions] should allow matching telling division and regex literals apart in more cases. - [Named capture groups] might simplify some things. These things would be nice to do, but are not critical. They probably have to wait until the oldest maintained Node.js LTS release supports those features. [Unicode property escapes]: http://2ality.com/2017/07/regexp-unicode-property-escapes.html [Lookbehind assertions]: http://2ality.com/2017/05/regexp-lookbehind-assertions.html [Named capture groups]: http://2ality.com/2017/05/regexp-named-capture-groups.html License ======= [MIT](LICENSE). # eslint-visitor-keys [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) Constants and utilities about visitor keys to traverse AST. ## 💿 Installation Use [npm] to install. ```bash $ npm install eslint-visitor-keys ``` ### Requirements - [Node.js] 4.0.0 or later. ## 📖 Usage ```js const evk = require("eslint-visitor-keys") ``` ### evk.KEYS > type: `{ [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Visitor keys. This keys are frozen. This is an object. Keys are the type of [ESTree] nodes. Their values are an array of property names which have child nodes. For example: ``` console.log(evk.KEYS.AssignmentExpression) // → ["left", "right"] ``` ### evk.getKeys(node) > type: `(node: object) => string[]` Get the visitor keys of a given AST node. This is similar to `Object.keys(node)` of ES Standard, but some keys are excluded: `parent`, `leadingComments`, `trailingComments`, and names which start with `_`. This will be used to traverse unknown nodes. For example: ``` const node = { type: "AssignmentExpression", left: { type: "Identifier", name: "foo" }, right: { type: "Literal", value: 0 } } console.log(evk.getKeys(node)) // → ["type", "left", "right"] ``` ### evk.unionWith(additionalKeys) > type: `(additionalKeys: object) => { [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Make the union set with `evk.KEYS` and the given keys. - The order of keys is, `additionalKeys` is at first, then `evk.KEYS` is concatenated after that. - It removes duplicated keys as keeping the first one. For example: ``` console.log(evk.unionWith({ MethodDefinition: ["decorators"] })) // → { ..., MethodDefinition: ["decorators", "key", "value"], ... } ``` ## 📰 Change log See [GitHub releases](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys/releases). ## 🍻 Contributing Welcome. See [ESLint contribution guidelines](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/). ### Development commands - `npm test` runs tests and measures code coverage. - `npm run lint` checks source codes with ESLint. - `npm run coverage` opens the code coverage report of the previous test with your default browser. - `npm run release` publishes this package to [npm] registory. [npm]: https://www.npmjs.com/ [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/ [ESTree]: https://github.com/estree/estree iMurmurHash.js ============== An incremental implementation of the MurmurHash3 (32-bit) hashing algorithm for JavaScript based on [Gary Court's implementation](https://github.com/garycourt/murmurhash-js) with [kazuyukitanimura's modifications](https://github.com/kazuyukitanimura/murmurhash-js). This version works significantly faster than the non-incremental version if you need to hash many small strings into a single hash, since string concatenation (to build the single string to pass the non-incremental version) is fairly costly. In one case tested, using the incremental version was about 50% faster than concatenating 5-10 strings and then hashing. Installation ------------ To use iMurmurHash in the browser, [download the latest version](https://raw.github.com/jensyt/imurmurhash-js/master/imurmurhash.min.js) and include it as a script on your site. ```html <script type="text/javascript" src="/scripts/imurmurhash.min.js"></script> <script> // Your code here, access iMurmurHash using the global object MurmurHash3 </script> ``` --- To use iMurmurHash in Node.js, install the module using NPM: ```bash npm install imurmurhash ``` Then simply include it in your scripts: ```javascript MurmurHash3 = require('imurmurhash'); ``` Quick Example ------------- ```javascript // Create the initial hash var hashState = MurmurHash3('string'); // Incrementally add text hashState.hash('more strings'); hashState.hash('even more strings'); // All calls can be chained if desired hashState.hash('and').hash('some').hash('more'); // Get a result hashState.result(); // returns 0xe4ccfe6b ``` Functions --------- ### MurmurHash3 ([string], [seed]) Get a hash state object, optionally initialized with the given _string_ and _seed_. _Seed_ must be a positive integer if provided. Calling this function without the `new` keyword will return a cached state object that has been reset. This is safe to use as long as the object is only used from a single thread and no other hashes are created while operating on this one. If this constraint cannot be met, you can use `new` to create a new state object. For example: ```javascript // Use the cached object, calling the function again will return the same // object (but reset, so the current state would be lost) hashState = MurmurHash3(); ... // Create a new object that can be safely used however you wish. Calling the // function again will simply return a new state object, and no state loss // will occur, at the cost of creating more objects. hashState = new MurmurHash3(); ``` Both methods can be mixed however you like if you have different use cases. --- ### MurmurHash3.prototype.hash (string) Incrementally add _string_ to the hash. This can be called as many times as you want for the hash state object, including after a call to `result()`. Returns `this` so calls can be chained. --- ### MurmurHash3.prototype.result () Get the result of the hash as a 32-bit positive integer. This performs the tail and finalizer portions of the algorithm, but does not store the result in the state object. This means that it is perfectly safe to get results and then continue adding strings via `hash`. ```javascript // Do the whole string at once MurmurHash3('this is a test string').result(); // 0x70529328 // Do part of the string, get a result, then the other part var m = MurmurHash3('this is a'); m.result(); // 0xbfc4f834 m.hash(' test string').result(); // 0x70529328 (same as above) ``` --- ### MurmurHash3.prototype.reset ([seed]) Reset the state object for reuse, optionally using the given _seed_ (defaults to 0 like the constructor). Returns `this` so calls can be chained. --- License (MIT) ------------- Copyright (c) 2013 Gary Court, Jens Taylor Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # hasurl [![NPM Version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] > Determine whether Node.js' native [WHATWG `URL`](https://nodejs.org/api/url.html#url_the_whatwg_url_api) implementation is available. ## Installation [Node.js](http://nodejs.org/) `>= 4` is required. To install, type this at the command line: ```shell npm install hasurl ``` ## Usage ```js const hasURL = require('hasurl'); if (hasURL()) { // supported } else { // fallback } ``` [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/hasurl.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/hasurl [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/stevenvachon/hasurl.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/stevenvachon/hasurl # fast-json-stable-stringify Deterministic `JSON.stringify()` - a faster version of [@substack](https://github.com/substack)'s json-stable-strigify without [jsonify](https://github.com/substack/jsonify). You can also pass in a custom comparison function. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify?branch=master) # example ``` js var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify'); var obj = { c: 8, b: [{z:6,y:5,x:4},7], a: 3 }; console.log(stringify(obj)); ``` output: ``` {"a":3,"b":[{"x":4,"y":5,"z":6},7],"c":8} ``` # methods ``` js var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify') ``` ## var str = stringify(obj, opts) Return a deterministic stringified string `str` from the object `obj`. ## options ### cmp If `opts` is given, you can supply an `opts.cmp` to have a custom comparison function for object keys. Your function `opts.cmp` is called with these parameters: ``` js opts.cmp({ key: akey, value: avalue }, { key: bkey, value: bvalue }) ``` For example, to sort on the object key names in reverse order you could write: ``` js var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify'); var obj = { c: 8, b: [{z:6,y:5,x:4},7], a: 3 }; var s = stringify(obj, function (a, b) { return a.key < b.key ? 1 : -1; }); console.log(s); ``` which results in the output string: ``` {"c":8,"b":[{"z":6,"y":5,"x":4},7],"a":3} ``` Or if you wanted to sort on the object values in reverse order, you could write: ``` var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify'); var obj = { d: 6, c: 5, b: [{z:3,y:2,x:1},9], a: 10 }; var s = stringify(obj, function (a, b) { return a.value < b.value ? 1 : -1; }); console.log(s); ``` which outputs: ``` {"d":6,"c":5,"b":[{"z":3,"y":2,"x":1},9],"a":10} ``` ### cycles Pass `true` in `opts.cycles` to stringify circular property as `__cycle__` - the result will not be a valid JSON string in this case. TypeError will be thrown in case of circular object without this option. # install With [npm](https://npmjs.org) do: ``` npm install fast-json-stable-stringify ``` # benchmark To run benchmark (requires Node.js 6+): ``` node benchmark ``` Results: ``` fast-json-stable-stringify x 17,189 ops/sec ±1.43% (83 runs sampled) json-stable-stringify x 13,634 ops/sec ±1.39% (85 runs sampled) fast-stable-stringify x 20,212 ops/sec ±1.20% (84 runs sampled) faster-stable-stringify x 15,549 ops/sec ±1.12% (84 runs sampled) The fastest is fast-stable-stringify ``` ## Enterprise support fast-json-stable-stringify package is a part of [Tidelift enterprise subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-fast-json-stable-stringify?utm_source=npm-fast-json-stable-stringify&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo) - it provides a centralised commercial support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerability via GitHub issues. # license [MIT](https://github.com/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify/blob/master/LICENSE) # Regular Expression Tokenizer Tokenizes strings that represent a regular expressions. [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/fent/ret.js.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/fent/ret.js) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/fent/ret.js.svg)](https://david-dm.org/fent/ret.js) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/ret.js/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/ret.js) # Usage ```js var ret = require('ret'); var tokens = ret(/foo|bar/.source); ``` `tokens` will contain the following object ```js { "type": ret.types.ROOT "options": [ [ { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 102 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 111 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 111 } ], [ { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 98 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 97 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 114 } ] ] } ``` # Token Types `ret.types` is a collection of the various token types exported by ret. ### ROOT Only used in the root of the regexp. This is needed due to the posibility of the root containing a pipe `|` character. In that case, the token will have an `options` key that will be an array of arrays of tokens. If not, it will contain a `stack` key that is an array of tokens. ```js { "type": ret.types.ROOT, "stack": [token1, token2...], } ``` ```js { "type": ret.types.ROOT, "options" [ [token1, token2...], [othertoken1, othertoken2...] ... ], } ``` ### GROUP Groups contain tokens that are inside of a parenthesis. If the group begins with `?` followed by another character, it's a special type of group. A ':' tells the group not to be remembered when `exec` is used. '=' means the previous token matches only if followed by this group, and '!' means the previous token matches only if NOT followed. Like root, it can contain an `options` key instead of `stack` if there is a pipe. ```js { "type": ret.types.GROUP, "remember" true, "followedBy": false, "notFollowedBy": false, "stack": [token1, token2...], } ``` ```js { "type": ret.types.GROUP, "remember" true, "followedBy": false, "notFollowedBy": false, "options" [ [token1, token2...], [othertoken1, othertoken2...] ... ], } ``` ### POSITION `\b`, `\B`, `^`, and `$` specify positions in the regexp. ```js { "type": ret.types.POSITION, "value": "^", } ``` ### SET Contains a key `set` specifying what tokens are allowed and a key `not` specifying if the set should be negated. A set can contain other sets, ranges, and characters. ```js { "type": ret.types.SET, "set": [token1, token2...], "not": false, } ``` ### RANGE Used in set tokens to specify a character range. `from` and `to` are character codes. ```js { "type": ret.types.RANGE, "from": 97, "to": 122, } ``` ### REPETITION ```js { "type": ret.types.REPETITION, "min": 0, "max": Infinity, "value": token, } ``` ### REFERENCE References a group token. `value` is 1-9. ```js { "type": ret.types.REFERENCE, "value": 1, } ``` ### CHAR Represents a single character token. `value` is the character code. This might seem a bit cluttering instead of concatenating characters together. But since repetition tokens only repeat the last token and not the last clause like the pipe, it's simpler to do it this way. ```js { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value": 123, } ``` ## Errors ret.js will throw errors if given a string with an invalid regular expression. All possible errors are * Invalid group. When a group with an immediate `?` character is followed by an invalid character. It can only be followed by `!`, `=`, or `:`. Example: `/(?_abc)/` * Nothing to repeat. Thrown when a repetitional token is used as the first token in the current clause, as in right in the beginning of the regexp or group, or right after a pipe. Example: `/foo|?bar/`, `/{1,3}foo|bar/`, `/foo(+bar)/` * Unmatched ). A group was not opened, but was closed. Example: `/hello)2u/` * Unterminated group. A group was not closed. Example: `/(1(23)4/` * Unterminated character class. A custom character set was not closed. Example: `/[abc/` # Install npm install ret # Tests Tests are written with [vows](http://vowsjs.org/) ```bash npm test ``` # License MIT # has > Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call shortcut ## Installation ```sh npm install --save has ``` ## Usage ```js var has = require('has'); has({}, 'hasOwnProperty'); // false has(Object.prototype, 'hasOwnProperty'); // true ``` # fast-deep-equal The fastest deep equal with ES6 Map, Set and Typed arrays support. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal) [![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/fast-deep-equal.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/fast-deep-equal) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal?branch=master) ## Install ```bash npm install fast-deep-equal ``` ## Features - ES5 compatible - works in node.js (8+) and browsers (IE9+) - checks equality of Date and RegExp objects by value. ES6 equal (`require('fast-deep-equal/es6')`) also supports: - Maps - Sets - Typed arrays ## Usage ```javascript var equal = require('fast-deep-equal'); console.log(equal({foo: 'bar'}, {foo: 'bar'})); // true ``` To support ES6 Maps, Sets and Typed arrays equality use: ```javascript var equal = require('fast-deep-equal/es6'); console.log(equal(Int16Array([1, 2]), Int16Array([1, 2]))); // true ``` To use with React (avoiding the traversal of React elements' _owner property that contains circular references and is not needed when comparing the elements - borrowed from [react-fast-compare](https://github.com/FormidableLabs/react-fast-compare)): ```javascript var equal = require('fast-deep-equal/react'); var equal = require('fast-deep-equal/es6/react'); ``` ## Performance benchmark Node.js v12.6.0: ``` fast-deep-equal x 261,950 ops/sec ±0.52% (89 runs sampled) fast-deep-equal/es6 x 212,991 ops/sec ±0.34% (92 runs sampled) fast-equals x 230,957 ops/sec ±0.83% (85 runs sampled) nano-equal x 187,995 ops/sec ±0.53% (88 runs sampled) shallow-equal-fuzzy x 138,302 ops/sec ±0.49% (90 runs sampled) underscore.isEqual x 74,423 ops/sec ±0.38% (89 runs sampled) lodash.isEqual x 36,637 ops/sec ±0.72% (90 runs sampled) deep-equal x 2,310 ops/sec ±0.37% (90 runs sampled) deep-eql x 35,312 ops/sec ±0.67% (91 runs sampled) ramda.equals x 12,054 ops/sec ±0.40% (91 runs sampled) util.isDeepStrictEqual x 46,440 ops/sec ±0.43% (90 runs sampled) assert.deepStrictEqual x 456 ops/sec ±0.71% (88 runs sampled) The fastest is fast-deep-equal ``` To run benchmark (requires node.js 6+): ```bash npm run benchmark ``` __Please note__: this benchmark runs against the available test cases. To choose the most performant library for your application, it is recommended to benchmark against your data and to NOT expect this benchmark to reflect the performance difference in your application. ## Enterprise support fast-deep-equal package is a part of [Tidelift enterprise subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-fast-deep-equal?utm_source=npm-fast-deep-equal&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo) - it provides a centralised commercial support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerability via GitHub issues. ## License [MIT](https://github.com/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal/blob/master/LICENSE) # fs.realpath A backwards-compatible fs.realpath for Node v6 and above In Node v6, the JavaScript implementation of fs.realpath was replaced with a faster (but less resilient) native implementation. That raises new and platform-specific errors and cannot handle long or excessively symlink-looping paths. This module handles those cases by detecting the new errors and falling back to the JavaScript implementation. On versions of Node prior to v6, it has no effect. ## USAGE ```js var rp = require('fs.realpath') // async version rp.realpath(someLongAndLoopingPath, function (er, real) { // the ELOOP was handled, but it was a bit slower }) // sync version var real = rp.realpathSync(someLongAndLoopingPath) // monkeypatch at your own risk! // This replaces the fs.realpath/fs.realpathSync builtins rp.monkeypatch() // un-do the monkeypatching rp.unmonkeypatch() ``` # Glob Match files using the patterns the shell uses, like stars and stuff. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-glob.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-glob/) [![Build Status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/kd7f3yftf7unxlsx?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/isaacs/node-glob) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/isaacs/node-glob/badge.svg?branch=master&service=github)](https://coveralls.io/github/isaacs/node-glob?branch=master) This is a glob implementation in JavaScript. It uses the `minimatch` library to do its matching. ![a fun cartoon logo made of glob characters](logo/glob.png) ## Usage Install with npm ``` npm i glob ``` ```javascript var glob = require("glob") // options is optional glob("**/*.js", options, function (er, files) { // files is an array of filenames. // If the `nonull` option is set, and nothing // was found, then files is ["**/*.js"] // er is an error object or null. }) ``` ## Glob Primer "Globs" are the patterns you type when you do stuff like `ls *.js` on the command line, or put `build/*` in a `.gitignore` file. Before parsing the path part patterns, braced sections are expanded into a set. Braced sections start with `{` and end with `}`, with any number of comma-delimited sections within. Braced sections may contain slash characters, so `a{/b/c,bcd}` would expand into `a/b/c` and `abcd`. The following characters have special magic meaning when used in a path portion: * `*` Matches 0 or more characters in a single path portion * `?` Matches 1 character * `[...]` Matches a range of characters, similar to a RegExp range. If the first character of the range is `!` or `^` then it matches any character not in the range. * `!(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches anything that does not match any of the patterns provided. * `?(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches zero or one occurrence of the patterns provided. * `+(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches one or more occurrences of the patterns provided. * `*(a|b|c)` Matches zero or more occurrences of the patterns provided * `@(pattern|pat*|pat?erN)` Matches exactly one of the patterns provided * `**` If a "globstar" is alone in a path portion, then it matches zero or more directories and subdirectories searching for matches. It does not crawl symlinked directories. ### Dots If a file or directory path portion has a `.` as the first character, then it will not match any glob pattern unless that pattern's corresponding path part also has a `.` as its first character. For example, the pattern `a/.*/c` would match the file at `a/.b/c`. However the pattern `a/*/c` would not, because `*` does not start with a dot character. You can make glob treat dots as normal characters by setting `dot:true` in the options. ### Basename Matching If you set `matchBase:true` in the options, and the pattern has no slashes in it, then it will seek for any file anywhere in the tree with a matching basename. For example, `*.js` would match `test/simple/basic.js`. ### Empty Sets If no matching files are found, then an empty array is returned. This differs from the shell, where the pattern itself is returned. For example: $ echo a*s*d*f a*s*d*f To get the bash-style behavior, set the `nonull:true` in the options. ### See Also: * `man sh` * `man bash` (Search for "Pattern Matching") * `man 3 fnmatch` * `man 5 gitignore` * [minimatch documentation](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch) ## glob.hasMagic(pattern, [options]) Returns `true` if there are any special characters in the pattern, and `false` otherwise. Note that the options affect the results. If `noext:true` is set in the options object, then `+(a|b)` will not be considered a magic pattern. If the pattern has a brace expansion, like `a/{b/c,x/y}` then that is considered magical, unless `nobrace:true` is set in the options. ## glob(pattern, [options], cb) * `pattern` `{String}` Pattern to be matched * `options` `{Object}` * `cb` `{Function}` * `err` `{Error | null}` * `matches` `{Array<String>}` filenames found matching the pattern Perform an asynchronous glob search. ## glob.sync(pattern, [options]) * `pattern` `{String}` Pattern to be matched * `options` `{Object}` * return: `{Array<String>}` filenames found matching the pattern Perform a synchronous glob search. ## Class: glob.Glob Create a Glob object by instantiating the `glob.Glob` class. ```javascript var Glob = require("glob").Glob var mg = new Glob(pattern, options, cb) ``` It's an EventEmitter, and starts walking the filesystem to find matches immediately. ### new glob.Glob(pattern, [options], [cb]) * `pattern` `{String}` pattern to search for * `options` `{Object}` * `cb` `{Function}` Called when an error occurs, or matches are found * `err` `{Error | null}` * `matches` `{Array<String>}` filenames found matching the pattern Note that if the `sync` flag is set in the options, then matches will be immediately available on the `g.found` member. ### Properties * `minimatch` The minimatch object that the glob uses. * `options` The options object passed in. * `aborted` Boolean which is set to true when calling `abort()`. There is no way at this time to continue a glob search after aborting, but you can re-use the statCache to avoid having to duplicate syscalls. * `cache` Convenience object. Each field has the following possible values: * `false` - Path does not exist * `true` - Path exists * `'FILE'` - Path exists, and is not a directory * `'DIR'` - Path exists, and is a directory * `[file, entries, ...]` - Path exists, is a directory, and the array value is the results of `fs.readdir` * `statCache` Cache of `fs.stat` results, to prevent statting the same path multiple times. * `symlinks` A record of which paths are symbolic links, which is relevant in resolving `**` patterns. * `realpathCache` An optional object which is passed to `fs.realpath` to minimize unnecessary syscalls. It is stored on the instantiated Glob object, and may be re-used. ### Events * `end` When the matching is finished, this is emitted with all the matches found. If the `nonull` option is set, and no match was found, then the `matches` list contains the original pattern. The matches are sorted, unless the `nosort` flag is set. * `match` Every time a match is found, this is emitted with the specific thing that matched. It is not deduplicated or resolved to a realpath. * `error` Emitted when an unexpected error is encountered, or whenever any fs error occurs if `options.strict` is set. * `abort` When `abort()` is called, this event is raised. ### Methods * `pause` Temporarily stop the search * `resume` Resume the search * `abort` Stop the search forever ### Options All the options that can be passed to Minimatch can also be passed to Glob to change pattern matching behavior. Also, some have been added, or have glob-specific ramifications. All options are false by default, unless otherwise noted. All options are added to the Glob object, as well. If you are running many `glob` operations, you can pass a Glob object as the `options` argument to a subsequent operation to shortcut some `stat` and `readdir` calls. At the very least, you may pass in shared `symlinks`, `statCache`, `realpathCache`, and `cache` options, so that parallel glob operations will be sped up by sharing information about the filesystem. * `cwd` The current working directory in which to search. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. * `root` The place where patterns starting with `/` will be mounted onto. Defaults to `path.resolve(options.cwd, "/")` (`/` on Unix systems, and `C:\` or some such on Windows.) * `dot` Include `.dot` files in normal matches and `globstar` matches. Note that an explicit dot in a portion of the pattern will always match dot files. * `nomount` By default, a pattern starting with a forward-slash will be "mounted" onto the root setting, so that a valid filesystem path is returned. Set this flag to disable that behavior. * `mark` Add a `/` character to directory matches. Note that this requires additional stat calls. * `nosort` Don't sort the results. * `stat` Set to true to stat *all* results. This reduces performance somewhat, and is completely unnecessary, unless `readdir` is presumed to be an untrustworthy indicator of file existence. * `silent` When an unusual error is encountered when attempting to read a directory, a warning will be printed to stderr. Set the `silent` option to true to suppress these warnings. * `strict` When an unusual error is encountered when attempting to read a directory, the process will just continue on in search of other matches. Set the `strict` option to raise an error in these cases. * `cache` See `cache` property above. Pass in a previously generated cache object to save some fs calls. * `statCache` A cache of results of filesystem information, to prevent unnecessary stat calls. While it should not normally be necessary to set this, you may pass the statCache from one glob() call to the options object of another, if you know that the filesystem will not change between calls. (See "Race Conditions" below.) * `symlinks` A cache of known symbolic links. You may pass in a previously generated `symlinks` object to save `lstat` calls when resolving `**` matches. * `sync` DEPRECATED: use `glob.sync(pattern, opts)` instead. * `nounique` In some cases, brace-expanded patterns can result in the same file showing up multiple times in the result set. By default, this implementation prevents duplicates in the result set. Set this flag to disable that behavior. * `nonull` Set to never return an empty set, instead returning a set containing the pattern itself. This is the default in glob(3). * `debug` Set to enable debug logging in minimatch and glob. * `nobrace` Do not expand `{a,b}` and `{1..3}` brace sets. * `noglobstar` Do not match `**` against multiple filenames. (Ie, treat it as a normal `*` instead.) * `noext` Do not match `+(a|b)` "extglob" patterns. * `nocase` Perform a case-insensitive match. Note: on case-insensitive filesystems, non-magic patterns will match by default, since `stat` and `readdir` will not raise errors. * `matchBase` Perform a basename-only match if the pattern does not contain any slash characters. That is, `*.js` would be treated as equivalent to `**/*.js`, matching all js files in all directories. * `nodir` Do not match directories, only files. (Note: to match *only* directories, simply put a `/` at the end of the pattern.) * `ignore` Add a pattern or an array of glob patterns to exclude matches. Note: `ignore` patterns are *always* in `dot:true` mode, regardless of any other settings. * `follow` Follow symlinked directories when expanding `**` patterns. Note that this can result in a lot of duplicate references in the presence of cyclic links. * `realpath` Set to true to call `fs.realpath` on all of the results. In the case of a symlink that cannot be resolved, the full absolute path to the matched entry is returned (though it will usually be a broken symlink) * `absolute` Set to true to always receive absolute paths for matched files. Unlike `realpath`, this also affects the values returned in the `match` event. * `fs` File-system object with Node's `fs` API. By default, the built-in `fs` module will be used. Set to a volume provided by a library like `memfs` to avoid using the "real" file-system. ## Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations While strict compliance with the existing standards is a worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between node-glob and other implementations, and are intentional. The double-star character `**` is supported by default, unless the `noglobstar` flag is set. This is supported in the manner of bsdglob and bash 4.3, where `**` only has special significance if it is the only thing in a path part. That is, `a/**/b` will match `a/x/y/b`, but `a/**b` will not. Note that symlinked directories are not crawled as part of a `**`, though their contents may match against subsequent portions of the pattern. This prevents infinite loops and duplicates and the like. If an escaped pattern has no matches, and the `nonull` flag is set, then glob returns the pattern as-provided, rather than interpreting the character escapes. For example, `glob.match([], "\\*a\\?")` will return `"\\*a\\?"` rather than `"*a?"`. This is akin to setting the `nullglob` option in bash, except that it does not resolve escaped pattern characters. If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before any other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern like `+(a|{b),c)}`, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is expanded **first** into the set of `+(a|b)` and `+(a|c)`, and those patterns are checked for validity. Since those two are valid, matching proceeds. ### Comments and Negation Previously, this module let you mark a pattern as a "comment" if it started with a `#` character, or a "negated" pattern if it started with a `!` character. These options were deprecated in version 5, and removed in version 6. To specify things that should not match, use the `ignore` option. ## Windows **Please only use forward-slashes in glob expressions.** Though windows uses either `/` or `\` as its path separator, only `/` characters are used by this glob implementation. You must use forward-slashes **only** in glob expressions. Back-slashes will always be interpreted as escape characters, not path separators. Results from absolute patterns such as `/foo/*` are mounted onto the root setting using `path.join`. On windows, this will by default result in `/foo/*` matching `C:\foo\bar.txt`. ## Race Conditions Glob searching, by its very nature, is susceptible to race conditions, since it relies on directory walking and such. As a result, it is possible that a file that exists when glob looks for it may have been deleted or modified by the time it returns the result. As part of its internal implementation, this program caches all stat and readdir calls that it makes, in order to cut down on system overhead. However, this also makes it even more susceptible to races, especially if the cache or statCache objects are reused between glob calls. Users are thus advised not to use a glob result as a guarantee of filesystem state in the face of rapid changes. For the vast majority of operations, this is never a problem. ## Glob Logo Glob's logo was created by [Tanya Brassie](http://tanyabrassie.com/). Logo files can be found [here](https://github.com/isaacs/node-glob/tree/master/logo). The logo is licensed under a [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). ## Contributing Any change to behavior (including bugfixes) must come with a test. Patches that fail tests or reduce performance will be rejected. ``` # to run tests npm test # to re-generate test fixtures npm run test-regen # to benchmark against bash/zsh npm run bench # to profile javascript npm run prof ``` ![](oh-my-glob.gif) # randexp.js randexp will generate a random string that matches a given RegExp Javascript object. [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/fent/randexp.js.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/fent/randexp.js) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/fent/randexp.js.svg)](https://david-dm.org/fent/randexp.js) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/randexp.js/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/randexp.js) # Usage ```js var RandExp = require('randexp'); // supports grouping and piping new RandExp(/hello+ (world|to you)/).gen(); // => hellooooooooooooooooooo world // sets and ranges and references new RandExp(/<([a-z]\w{0,20})>foo<\1>/).gen(); // => <m5xhdg>foo<m5xhdg> // wildcard new RandExp(/random stuff: .+/).gen(); // => random stuff: l3m;Hf9XYbI [YPaxV>U*4-_F!WXQh9>;rH3i l!8.zoh?[utt1OWFQrE ^~8zEQm]~tK // ignore case new RandExp(/xxx xtreme dragon warrior xxx/i).gen(); // => xxx xtReME dRAGON warRiOR xXX // dynamic regexp shortcut new RandExp('(sun|mon|tue|wednes|thurs|fri|satur)day', 'i'); // is the same as new RandExp(new RegExp('(sun|mon|tue|wednes|thurs|fri|satur)day', 'i')); ``` If you're only going to use `gen()` once with a regexp and want slightly shorter syntax for it ```js var randexp = require('randexp').randexp; randexp(/[1-6]/); // 4 randexp('great|good( job)?|excellent'); // great ``` If you miss the old syntax ```js require('randexp').sugar(); /yes|no|maybe|i don't know/.gen(); // maybe ``` # Motivation Regular expressions are used in every language, every programmer is familiar with them. Regex can be used to easily express complex strings. What better way to generate a random string than with a language you can use to express the string you want? Thanks to [String-Random](http://search.cpan.org/~steve/String-Random-0.22/lib/String/Random.pm) for giving me the idea to make this in the first place and [randexp](https://github.com/benburkert/randexp) for the sweet `.gen()` syntax. # Default Range The default generated character range includes printable ASCII. In order to add or remove characters, a `defaultRange` attribute is exposed. you can `subtract(from, to)` and `add(from, to)` ```js var randexp = new RandExp(/random stuff: .+/); randexp.defaultRange.subtract(32, 126); randexp.defaultRange.add(0, 65535); randexp.gen(); // => random stuff: 湐箻ໜ䫴␩⶛㳸長���邓蕲뤀쑡篷皇硬剈궦佔칗븛뀃匫鴔事좍ﯣ⭼ꝏ䭍詳蒂䥂뽭 ``` # Custom PRNG The default randomness is provided by `Math.random()`. If you need to use a seedable or cryptographic PRNG, you can override `RandExp.prototype.randInt` or `randexp.randInt` (where `randexp` is an instance of `RandExp`). `randInt(from, to)` accepts an inclusive range and returns a randomly selected number within that range. # Infinite Repetitionals Repetitional tokens such as `*`, `+`, and `{3,}` have an infinite max range. In this case, randexp looks at its min and adds 100 to it to get a useable max value. If you want to use another int other than 100 you can change the `max` property in `RandExp.prototype` or the RandExp instance. ```js var randexp = new RandExp(/no{1,}/); randexp.max = 1000000; ``` With `RandExp.sugar()` ```js var regexp = /(hi)*/; regexp.max = 1000000; ``` # Bad Regular Expressions There are some regular expressions which can never match any string. * Ones with badly placed positionals such as `/a^/` and `/$c/m`. Randexp will ignore positional tokens. * Back references to non-existing groups like `/(a)\1\2/`. Randexp will ignore those references, returning an empty string for them. If the group exists only after the reference is used such as in `/\1 (hey)/`, it will too be ignored. * Custom negated character sets with two sets inside that cancel each other out. Example: `/[^\w\W]/`. If you give this to randexp, it will return an empty string for this set since it can't match anything. # Projects based on randexp.js ## JSON-Schema Faker Use generators to populate JSON Schema samples. See: [jsf on github](https://github.com/json-schema-faker/json-schema-faker/) and [jsf demo page](http://json-schema-faker.js.org/). # Install ### Node.js npm install randexp ### Browser Download the [minified version](https://github.com/fent/randexp.js/releases) from the latest release. # Tests Tests are written with [mocha](https://mochajs.org) ```bash npm test ``` # License MIT # axios [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/axios) [![build status](https://img.shields.io/travis/axios/axios/master.svg?style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/axios/axios) [![code coverage](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/mzabriskie/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://coveralls.io/r/mzabriskie/axios) [![install size](https://packagephobia.now.sh/badge?p=axios)](https://packagephobia.now.sh/result?p=axios) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](http://npm-stat.com/charts.html?package=axios) [![gitter chat](https://img.shields.io/gitter/room/mzabriskie/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://gitter.im/mzabriskie/axios) [![code helpers](https://www.codetriage.com/axios/axios/badges/users.svg)](https://www.codetriage.com/axios/axios) Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js ## Features - Make [XMLHttpRequests](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/XMLHttpRequest) from the browser - Make [http](http://nodejs.org/api/http.html) requests from node.js - Supports the [Promise](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise) API - Intercept request and response - Transform request and response data - Cancel requests - Automatic transforms for JSON data - Client side support for protecting against [XSRF](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery) ## Browser Support ![Chrome](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/chrome/chrome_48x48.png) | ![Firefox](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/firefox/firefox_48x48.png) | ![Safari](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/safari/safari_48x48.png) | ![Opera](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/opera/opera_48x48.png) | ![Edge](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/edge/edge_48x48.png) | ![IE](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/archive/internet-explorer_9-11/internet-explorer_9-11_48x48.png) | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | 11 ✔ | [![Browser Matrix](https://saucelabs.com/open_sauce/build_matrix/axios.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/axios) ## Installing Using npm: ```bash $ npm install axios ``` Using bower: ```bash $ bower install axios ``` Using yarn: ```bash $ yarn add axios ``` Using cdn: ```html <script src="https://unpkg.com/axios/dist/axios.min.js"></script> ``` ## Example ### note: CommonJS usage In order to gain the TypeScript typings (for intellisense / autocomplete) while using CommonJS imports with `require()` use the following approach: ```js const axios = require('axios').default; // axios.<method> will now provide autocomplete and parameter typings ``` Performing a `GET` request ```js const axios = require('axios'); // Make a request for a user with a given ID axios.get('/user?ID=12345') .then(function (response) { // handle success console.log(response); }) .catch(function (error) { // handle error console.log(error); }) .finally(function () { // always executed }); // Optionally the request above could also be done as axios.get('/user', { params: { ID: 12345 } }) .then(function (response) { console.log(response); }) .catch(function (error) { console.log(error); }) .finally(function () { // always executed }); // Want to use async/await? Add the `async` keyword to your outer function/method. async function getUser() { try { const response = await axios.get('/user?ID=12345'); console.log(response); } catch (error) { console.error(error); } } ``` > **NOTE:** `async/await` is part of ECMAScript 2017 and is not supported in Internet > Explorer and older browsers, so use with caution. Performing a `POST` request ```js axios.post('/user', { firstName: 'Fred', lastName: 'Flintstone' }) .then(function (response) { console.log(response); }) .catch(function (error) { console.log(error); }); ``` Performing multiple concurrent requests ```js function getUserAccount() { return axios.get('/user/12345'); } function getUserPermissions() { return axios.get('/user/12345/permissions'); } axios.all([getUserAccount(), getUserPermissions()]) .then(axios.spread(function (acct, perms) { // Both requests are now complete })); ``` ## axios API Requests can be made by passing the relevant config to `axios`. ##### axios(config) ```js // Send a POST request axios({ method: 'post', url: '/user/12345', data: { firstName: 'Fred', lastName: 'Flintstone' } }); ``` ```js // GET request for remote image axios({ method: 'get', url: 'http://bit.ly/2mTM3nY', responseType: 'stream' }) .then(function (response) { response.data.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('ada_lovelace.jpg')) }); ``` ##### axios(url[, config]) ```js // Send a GET request (default method) axios('/user/12345'); ``` ### Request method aliases For convenience aliases have been provided for all supported request methods. ##### axios.request(config) ##### axios.get(url[, config]) ##### axios.delete(url[, config]) ##### axios.head(url[, config]) ##### axios.options(url[, config]) ##### axios.post(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios.put(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios.patch(url[, data[, config]]) ###### NOTE When using the alias methods `url`, `method`, and `data` properties don't need to be specified in config. ### Concurrency Helper functions for dealing with concurrent requests. ##### axios.all(iterable) ##### axios.spread(callback) ### Creating an instance You can create a new instance of axios with a custom config. ##### axios.create([config]) ```js const instance = axios.create({ baseURL: 'https://some-domain.com/api/', timeout: 1000, headers: {'X-Custom-Header': 'foobar'} }); ``` ### Instance methods The available instance methods are listed below. The specified config will be merged with the instance config. ##### axios#request(config) ##### axios#get(url[, config]) ##### axios#delete(url[, config]) ##### axios#head(url[, config]) ##### axios#options(url[, config]) ##### axios#post(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios#put(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios#patch(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios#getUri([config]) ## Request Config These are the available config options for making requests. Only the `url` is required. Requests will default to `GET` if `method` is not specified. ```js { // `url` is the server URL that will be used for the request url: '/user', // `method` is the request method to be used when making the request method: 'get', // default // `baseURL` will be prepended to `url` unless `url` is absolute. // It can be convenient to set `baseURL` for an instance of axios to pass relative URLs // to methods of that instance. baseURL: 'https://some-domain.com/api/', // `transformRequest` allows changes to the request data before it is sent to the server // This is only applicable for request methods 'PUT', 'POST', 'PATCH' and 'DELETE' // The last function in the array must return a string or an instance of Buffer, ArrayBuffer, // FormData or Stream // You may modify the headers object. transformRequest: [function (data, headers) { // Do whatever you want to transform the data return data; }], // `transformResponse` allows changes to the response data to be made before // it is passed to then/catch transformResponse: [function (data) { // Do whatever you want to transform the data return data; }], // `headers` are custom headers to be sent headers: {'X-Requested-With': 'XMLHttpRequest'}, // `params` are the URL parameters to be sent with the request // Must be a plain object or a URLSearchParams object params: { ID: 12345 }, // `paramsSerializer` is an optional function in charge of serializing `params` // (e.g. https://www.npmjs.com/package/qs, http://api.jquery.com/jquery.param/) paramsSerializer: function (params) { return Qs.stringify(params, {arrayFormat: 'brackets'}) }, // `data` is the data to be sent as the request body // Only applicable for request methods 'PUT', 'POST', and 'PATCH' // When no `transformRequest` is set, must be of one of the following types: // - string, plain object, ArrayBuffer, ArrayBufferView, URLSearchParams // - Browser only: FormData, File, Blob // - Node only: Stream, Buffer data: { firstName: 'Fred' }, // syntax alternative to send data into the body // method post // only the value is sent, not the key data: 'Country=Brasil&City=Belo Horizonte', // `timeout` specifies the number of milliseconds before the request times out. // If the request takes longer than `timeout`, the request will be aborted. timeout: 1000, // default is `0` (no timeout) // `withCredentials` indicates whether or not cross-site Access-Control requests // should be made using credentials withCredentials: false, // default // `adapter` allows custom handling of requests which makes testing easier. // Return a promise and supply a valid response (see lib/adapters/README.md). adapter: function (config) { /* ... */ }, // `auth` indicates that HTTP Basic auth should be used, and supplies credentials. // This will set an `Authorization` header, overwriting any existing // `Authorization` custom headers you have set using `headers`. // Please note that only HTTP Basic auth is configurable through this parameter. // For Bearer tokens and such, use `Authorization` custom headers instead. auth: { username: 'janedoe', password: 's00pers3cret' }, // `responseType` indicates the type of data that the server will respond with // options are: 'arraybuffer', 'document', 'json', 'text', 'stream' // browser only: 'blob' responseType: 'json', // default // `responseEncoding` indicates encoding to use for decoding responses // Note: Ignored for `responseType` of 'stream' or client-side requests responseEncoding: 'utf8', // default // `xsrfCookieName` is the name of the cookie to use as a value for xsrf token xsrfCookieName: 'XSRF-TOKEN', // default // `xsrfHeaderName` is the name of the http header that carries the xsrf token value xsrfHeaderName: 'X-XSRF-TOKEN', // default // `onUploadProgress` allows handling of progress events for uploads onUploadProgress: function (progressEvent) { // Do whatever you want with the native progress event }, // `onDownloadProgress` allows handling of progress events for downloads onDownloadProgress: function (progressEvent) { // Do whatever you want with the native progress event }, // `maxContentLength` defines the max size of the http response content in bytes allowed maxContentLength: 2000, // `validateStatus` defines whether to resolve or reject the promise for a given // HTTP response status code. If `validateStatus` returns `true` (or is set to `null` // or `undefined`), the promise will be resolved; otherwise, the promise will be // rejected. validateStatus: function (status) { return status >= 200 && status < 300; // default }, // `maxRedirects` defines the maximum number of redirects to follow in node.js. // If set to 0, no redirects will be followed. maxRedirects: 5, // default // `socketPath` defines a UNIX Socket to be used in node.js. // e.g. '/var/run/docker.sock' to send requests to the docker daemon. // Only either `socketPath` or `proxy` can be specified. // If both are specified, `socketPath` is used. socketPath: null, // default // `httpAgent` and `httpsAgent` define a custom agent to be used when performing http // and https requests, respectively, in node.js. This allows options to be added like // `keepAlive` that are not enabled by default. httpAgent: new http.Agent({ keepAlive: true }), httpsAgent: new https.Agent({ keepAlive: true }), // 'proxy' defines the hostname and port of the proxy server. // You can also define your proxy using the conventional `http_proxy` and // `https_proxy` environment variables. If you are using environment variables // for your proxy configuration, you can also define a `no_proxy` environment // variable as a comma-separated list of domains that should not be proxied. // Use `false` to disable proxies, ignoring environment variables. // `auth` indicates that HTTP Basic auth should be used to connect to the proxy, and // supplies credentials. // This will set an `Proxy-Authorization` header, overwriting any existing // `Proxy-Authorization` custom headers you have set using `headers`. proxy: { host: '127.0.0.1', port: 9000, auth: { username: 'mikeymike', password: 'rapunz3l' } }, // `cancelToken` specifies a cancel token that can be used to cancel the request // (see Cancellation section below for details) cancelToken: new CancelToken(function (cancel) { }) } ``` ## Response Schema The response for a request contains the following information. ```js { // `data` is the response that was provided by the server data: {}, // `status` is the HTTP status code from the server response status: 200, // `statusText` is the HTTP status message from the server response statusText: 'OK', // `headers` the headers that the server responded with // All header names are lower cased headers: {}, // `config` is the config that was provided to `axios` for the request config: {}, // `request` is the request that generated this response // It is the last ClientRequest instance in node.js (in redirects) // and an XMLHttpRequest instance in the browser request: {} } ``` When using `then`, you will receive the response as follows: ```js axios.get('/user/12345') .then(function (response) { console.log(response.data); console.log(response.status); console.log(response.statusText); console.log(response.headers); console.log(response.config); }); ``` When using `catch`, or passing a [rejection callback](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise/then) as second parameter of `then`, the response will be available through the `error` object as explained in the [Handling Errors](#handling-errors) section. ## Config Defaults You can specify config defaults that will be applied to every request. ### Global axios defaults ```js axios.defaults.baseURL = 'https://api.example.com'; axios.defaults.headers.common['Authorization'] = AUTH_TOKEN; axios.defaults.headers.post['Content-Type'] = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'; ``` ### Custom instance defaults ```js // Set config defaults when creating the instance const instance = axios.create({ baseURL: 'https://api.example.com' }); // Alter defaults after instance has been created instance.defaults.headers.common['Authorization'] = AUTH_TOKEN; ``` ### Config order of precedence Config will be merged with an order of precedence. The order is library defaults found in [lib/defaults.js](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/lib/defaults.js#L28), then `defaults` property of the instance, and finally `config` argument for the request. The latter will take precedence over the former. Here's an example. ```js // Create an instance using the config defaults provided by the library // At this point the timeout config value is `0` as is the default for the library const instance = axios.create(); // Override timeout default for the library // Now all requests using this instance will wait 2.5 seconds before timing out instance.defaults.timeout = 2500; // Override timeout for this request as it's known to take a long time instance.get('/longRequest', { timeout: 5000 }); ``` ## Interceptors You can intercept requests or responses before they are handled by `then` or `catch`. ```js // Add a request interceptor axios.interceptors.request.use(function (config) { // Do something before request is sent return config; }, function (error) { // Do something with request error return Promise.reject(error); }); // Add a response interceptor axios.interceptors.response.use(function (response) { // Any status code that lie within the range of 2xx cause this function to trigger // Do something with response data return response; }, function (error) { // Any status codes that falls outside the range of 2xx cause this function to trigger // Do something with response error return Promise.reject(error); }); ``` If you need to remove an interceptor later you can. ```js const myInterceptor = axios.interceptors.request.use(function () {/*...*/}); axios.interceptors.request.eject(myInterceptor); ``` You can add interceptors to a custom instance of axios. ```js const instance = axios.create(); instance.interceptors.request.use(function () {/*...*/}); ``` ## Handling Errors ```js axios.get('/user/12345') .catch(function (error) { if (error.response) { // The request was made and the server responded with a status code // that falls out of the range of 2xx console.log(error.response.data); console.log(error.response.status); console.log(error.response.headers); } else if (error.request) { // The request was made but no response was received // `error.request` is an instance of XMLHttpRequest in the browser and an instance of // http.ClientRequest in node.js console.log(error.request); } else { // Something happened in setting up the request that triggered an Error console.log('Error', error.message); } console.log(error.config); }); ``` Using the `validateStatus` config option, you can define HTTP code(s) that should throw an error. ```js axios.get('/user/12345', { validateStatus: function (status) { return status < 500; // Reject only if the status code is greater than or equal to 500 } }) ``` Using `toJSON` you get an object with more information about the HTTP error. ```js axios.get('/user/12345') .catch(function (error) { console.log(error.toJSON()); }); ``` ## Cancellation You can cancel a request using a *cancel token*. > The axios cancel token API is based on the withdrawn [cancelable promises proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-cancelable-promises). You can create a cancel token using the `CancelToken.source` factory as shown below: ```js const CancelToken = axios.CancelToken; const source = CancelToken.source(); axios.get('/user/12345', { cancelToken: source.token }).catch(function (thrown) { if (axios.isCancel(thrown)) { console.log('Request canceled', thrown.message); } else { // handle error } }); axios.post('/user/12345', { name: 'new name' }, { cancelToken: source.token }) // cancel the request (the message parameter is optional) source.cancel('Operation canceled by the user.'); ``` You can also create a cancel token by passing an executor function to the `CancelToken` constructor: ```js const CancelToken = axios.CancelToken; let cancel; axios.get('/user/12345', { cancelToken: new CancelToken(function executor(c) { // An executor function receives a cancel function as a parameter cancel = c; }) }); // cancel the request cancel(); ``` > Note: you can cancel several requests with the same cancel token. ## Using application/x-www-form-urlencoded format By default, axios serializes JavaScript objects to `JSON`. To send data in the `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` format instead, you can use one of the following options. ### Browser In a browser, you can use the [`URLSearchParams`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URLSearchParams) API as follows: ```js const params = new URLSearchParams(); params.append('param1', 'value1'); params.append('param2', 'value2'); axios.post('/foo', params); ``` > Note that `URLSearchParams` is not supported by all browsers (see [caniuse.com](http://www.caniuse.com/#feat=urlsearchparams)), but there is a [polyfill](https://github.com/WebReflection/url-search-params) available (make sure to polyfill the global environment). Alternatively, you can encode data using the [`qs`](https://github.com/ljharb/qs) library: ```js const qs = require('qs'); axios.post('/foo', qs.stringify({ 'bar': 123 })); ``` Or in another way (ES6), ```js import qs from 'qs'; const data = { 'bar': 123 }; const options = { method: 'POST', headers: { 'content-type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' }, data: qs.stringify(data), url, }; axios(options); ``` ### Node.js In node.js, you can use the [`querystring`](https://nodejs.org/api/querystring.html) module as follows: ```js const querystring = require('querystring'); axios.post('http://something.com/', querystring.stringify({ foo: 'bar' })); ``` You can also use the [`qs`](https://github.com/ljharb/qs) library. ###### NOTE The `qs` library is preferable if you need to stringify nested objects, as the `querystring` method has known issues with that use case (https://github.com/nodejs/node-v0.x-archive/issues/1665). ## Semver Until axios reaches a `1.0` release, breaking changes will be released with a new minor version. For example `0.5.1`, and `0.5.4` will have the same API, but `0.6.0` will have breaking changes. ## Promises axios depends on a native ES6 Promise implementation to be [supported](http://caniuse.com/promises). If your environment doesn't support ES6 Promises, you can [polyfill](https://github.com/jakearchibald/es6-promise). ## TypeScript axios includes [TypeScript](http://typescriptlang.org) definitions. ```typescript import axios from 'axios'; axios.get('/user?ID=12345'); ``` ## Resources * [Changelog](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md) * [Upgrade Guide](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/UPGRADE_GUIDE.md) * [Ecosystem](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/ECOSYSTEM.md) * [Contributing Guide](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) * [Code of Conduct](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md) ## Credits axios is heavily inspired by the [$http service](https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$http) provided in [Angular](https://angularjs.org/). Ultimately axios is an effort to provide a standalone `$http`-like service for use outside of Angular. ## License [MIT](LICENSE) <a name="table"></a> # Table > Produces a string that represents array data in a text table. [![Github action status](https://github.com/gajus/table/actions/workflows/main.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/gajus/table/actions) [![Coveralls](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/gajus/table.svg?style=flat-square)](https://coveralls.io/github/gajus/table) [![NPM version](http://img.shields.io/npm/v/table.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/table) [![Canonical Code Style](https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-canonical-blue.svg?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/gajus/canonical) [![Twitter Follow](https://img.shields.io/twitter/follow/kuizinas.svg?style=social&label=Follow)](https://twitter.com/kuizinas) * [Table](#table) * [Features](#table-features) * [Install](#table-install) * [Usage](#table-usage) * [API](#table-api) * [table](#table-api-table-1) * [createStream](#table-api-createstream) * [getBorderCharacters](#table-api-getbordercharacters) ![Demo of table displaying a list of missions to the Moon.](./.README/demo.png) <a name="table-features"></a> ## Features * Works with strings containing [fullwidth](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfwidth_and_fullwidth_forms) characters. * Works with strings containing [ANSI escape codes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code). * Configurable border characters. * Configurable content alignment per column. * Configurable content padding per column. * Configurable column width. * Text wrapping. <a name="table-install"></a> ## Install ```bash npm install table ``` [![Buy Me A Coffee](https://www.buymeacoffee.com/assets/img/custom_images/orange_img.png)](https://www.buymeacoffee.com/gajus) [![Become a Patron](https://c5.patreon.com/external/logo/become_a_patron_button.png)](https://www.patreon.com/gajus) <a name="table-usage"></a> ## Usage ```js import { table } from 'table'; // Using commonjs? // const { table } = require('table'); const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; console.log(table(data)); ``` ``` ╔════╤════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚════╧════╧════╝ ``` <a name="table-api"></a> ## API <a name="table-api-table-1"></a> ### table Returns the string in the table format **Parameters:** - **_data_:** The data to display - Type: `any[][]` - Required: `true` - **_config_:** Table configuration - Type: `object` - Required: `false` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-border"></a> ##### config.border Type: `{ [type: string]: string }`\ Default: `honeywell` [template](#getbordercharacters) Custom borders. The keys are any of: - `topLeft`, `topRight`, `topBody`,`topJoin` - `bottomLeft`, `bottomRight`, `bottomBody`, `bottomJoin` - `joinLeft`, `joinRight`, `joinBody`, `joinJoin` - `bodyLeft`, `bodyRight`, `bodyJoin` - `headerJoin` ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; const config = { border: { topBody: `─`, topJoin: `┬`, topLeft: `┌`, topRight: `┐`, bottomBody: `─`, bottomJoin: `┴`, bottomLeft: `└`, bottomRight: `┘`, bodyLeft: `│`, bodyRight: `│`, bodyJoin: `│`, joinBody: `─`, joinLeft: `├`, joinRight: `┤`, joinJoin: `┼` } }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ┌────┬────┬────┐ │ 0A │ 0B │ 0C │ ├────┼────┼────┤ │ 1A │ 1B │ 1C │ ├────┼────┼────┤ │ 2A │ 2B │ 2C │ └────┴────┴────┘ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-drawverticalline"></a> ##### config.drawVerticalLine Type: `(lineIndex: number, columnCount: number) => boolean`\ Default: `() => true` It is used to tell whether to draw a vertical line. This callback is called for each vertical border of the table. If the table has `n` columns, then the `index` parameter is alternatively received all numbers in range `[0, n]` inclusively. ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'], ['3A', '3B', '3C'], ['4A', '4B', '4C'] ]; const config = { drawVerticalLine: (lineIndex, columnCount) => { return lineIndex === 0 || lineIndex === columnCount; } }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔════════════╗ ║ 0A 0B 0C ║ ╟────────────╢ ║ 1A 1B 1C ║ ╟────────────╢ ║ 2A 2B 2C ║ ╟────────────╢ ║ 3A 3B 3C ║ ╟────────────╢ ║ 4A 4B 4C ║ ╚════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-drawhorizontalline"></a> ##### config.drawHorizontalLine Type: `(lineIndex: number, rowCount: number) => boolean`\ Default: `() => true` It is used to tell whether to draw a horizontal line. This callback is called for each horizontal border of the table. If the table has `n` rows, then the `index` parameter is alternatively received all numbers in range `[0, n]` inclusively. If the table has `n` rows and contains the header, then the range will be `[0, n+1]` inclusively. ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'], ['3A', '3B', '3C'], ['4A', '4B', '4C'] ]; const config = { drawHorizontalLine: (lineIndex, rowCount) => { return lineIndex === 0 || lineIndex === 1 || lineIndex === rowCount - 1 || lineIndex === rowCount; } }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔════╤════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ║ 3A │ 3B │ 3C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 4A │ 4B │ 4C ║ ╚════╧════╧════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-singleline"></a> ##### config.singleLine Type: `boolean`\ Default: `false` If `true`, horizontal lines inside the table are not drawn. This option also overrides the `config.drawHorizontalLine` if specified. ```js const data = [ ['-rw-r--r--', '1', 'pandorym', 'staff', '1529', 'May 23 11:25', 'LICENSE'], ['-rw-r--r--', '1', 'pandorym', 'staff', '16327', 'May 23 11:58', 'README.md'], ['drwxr-xr-x', '76', 'pandorym', 'staff', '2432', 'May 23 12:02', 'dist'], ['drwxr-xr-x', '634', 'pandorym', 'staff', '20288', 'May 23 11:54', 'node_modules'], ['-rw-r--r--', '1,', 'pandorym', 'staff', '525688', 'May 23 11:52', 'package-lock.json'], ['-rw-r--r--@', '1', 'pandorym', 'staff', '2440', 'May 23 11:25', 'package.json'], ['drwxr-xr-x', '27', 'pandorym', 'staff', '864', 'May 23 11:25', 'src'], ['drwxr-xr-x', '20', 'pandorym', 'staff', '640', 'May 23 11:25', 'test'], ]; const config = { singleLine: true }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔═════════════╤═════╤══════════╤═══════╤════════╤══════════════╤═══════════════════╗ ║ -rw-r--r-- │ 1 │ pandorym │ staff │ 1529 │ May 23 11:25 │ LICENSE ║ ║ -rw-r--r-- │ 1 │ pandorym │ staff │ 16327 │ May 23 11:58 │ README.md ║ ║ drwxr-xr-x │ 76 │ pandorym │ staff │ 2432 │ May 23 12:02 │ dist ║ ║ drwxr-xr-x │ 634 │ pandorym │ staff │ 20288 │ May 23 11:54 │ node_modules ║ ║ -rw-r--r-- │ 1, │ pandorym │ staff │ 525688 │ May 23 11:52 │ package-lock.json ║ ║ -rw-r--r--@ │ 1 │ pandorym │ staff │ 2440 │ May 23 11:25 │ package.json ║ ║ drwxr-xr-x │ 27 │ pandorym │ staff │ 864 │ May 23 11:25 │ src ║ ║ drwxr-xr-x │ 20 │ pandorym │ staff │ 640 │ May 23 11:25 │ test ║ ╚═════════════╧═════╧══════════╧═══════╧════════╧══════════════╧═══════════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns"></a> ##### config.columns Type: `Column[] | { [columnIndex: number]: Column }` Column specific configurations. <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-width"></a> ###### config.columns[*].width Type: `number`\ Default: the maximum cell widths of the column Column width (excluding the paddings). ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; const config = { columns: { 1: { width: 10 } } }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔════╤════════════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────┼────────────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟────┼────────────┼────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚════╧════════════╧════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-alignment"></a> ###### config.columns[*].alignment Type: `'center' | 'justify' | 'left' | 'right'`\ Default: `'left'` Cell content horizontal alignment ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C', '0D 0E 0F'], ['1A', '1B', '1C', '1D 1E 1F'], ['2A', '2B', '2C', '2D 2E 2F'], ]; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 10, }, columns: [ { alignment: 'left' }, { alignment: 'center' }, { alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'justify' } ], }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔════════════╤════════════╤════════════╤════════════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C │ 0D 0E 0F ║ ╟────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C │ 1D 1E 1F ║ ╟────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C │ 2D 2E 2F ║ ╚════════════╧════════════╧════════════╧════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-verticalalignment"></a> ###### config.columns[*].verticalAlignment Type: `'top' | 'middle' | 'bottom'`\ Default: `'top'` Cell content vertical alignment ```js const data = [ ['A', 'B', 'C', 'DEF'], ]; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 1, }, columns: [ { verticalAlignment: 'top' }, { verticalAlignment: 'middle' }, { verticalAlignment: 'bottom' }, ], }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔═══╤═══╤═══╤═══╗ ║ A │ │ │ D ║ ║ │ B │ │ E ║ ║ │ │ C │ F ║ ╚═══╧═══╧═══╧═══╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-paddingleft"></a> ###### config.columns[*].paddingLeft Type: `number`\ Default: `1` The number of whitespaces used to pad the content on the left. <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-paddingright"></a> ###### config.columns[*].paddingRight Type: `number`\ Default: `1` The number of whitespaces used to pad the content on the right. The `paddingLeft` and `paddingRight` options do not count on the column width. So the column has `width = 5`, `paddingLeft = 2` and `paddingRight = 2` will have the total width is `9`. ```js const data = [ ['0A', 'AABBCC', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; const config = { columns: [ { paddingLeft: 3 }, { width: 2, paddingRight: 3 } ] }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════╤══════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ AA │ 0C ║ ║ │ BB │ ║ ║ │ CC │ ║ ╟──────┼──────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟──────┼──────┼────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚══════╧══════╧════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-truncate"></a> ###### config.columns[*].truncate Type: `number`\ Default: `Infinity` The number of characters is which the content will be truncated. To handle a content that overflows the container width, `table` package implements [text wrapping](#config.columns[*].wrapWord). However, sometimes you may want to truncate content that is too long to be displayed in the table. ```js const data = [ ['Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Phasellus pulvinar nibh sed mauris convallis dapibus. Nunc venenatis tempus nulla sit amet viverra.'] ]; const config = { columns: [ { width: 20, truncate: 100 } ] }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════════════════════╗ ║ Lorem ipsum dolor si ║ ║ t amet, consectetur ║ ║ adipiscing elit. Pha ║ ║ sellus pulvinar nibh ║ ║ sed mauris convall… ║ ╚══════════════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-wrapword"></a> ###### config.columns[*].wrapWord Type: `boolean`\ Default: `false` The `table` package implements auto text wrapping, i.e., text that has the width greater than the container width will be separated into multiple lines at the nearest space or one of the special characters: `\|/_.,;-`. When `wrapWord` is `false`: ```js const data = [ ['Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Phasellus pulvinar nibh sed mauris convallis dapibus. Nunc venenatis tempus nulla sit amet viverra.'] ]; const config = { columns: [ { width: 20 } ] }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════════════════════╗ ║ Lorem ipsum dolor si ║ ║ t amet, consectetur ║ ║ adipiscing elit. Pha ║ ║ sellus pulvinar nibh ║ ║ sed mauris convallis ║ ║ dapibus. Nunc venena ║ ║ tis tempus nulla sit ║ ║ amet viverra. ║ ╚══════════════════════╝ ``` When `wrapWord` is `true`: ``` ╔══════════════════════╗ ║ Lorem ipsum dolor ║ ║ sit amet, ║ ║ consectetur ║ ║ adipiscing elit. ║ ║ Phasellus pulvinar ║ ║ nibh sed mauris ║ ║ convallis dapibus. ║ ║ Nunc venenatis ║ ║ tempus nulla sit ║ ║ amet viverra. ║ ╚══════════════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columndefault"></a> ##### config.columnDefault Type: `Column`\ Default: `{}` The default configuration for all columns. Column-specific settings will overwrite the default values. <a name="table-api-table-1-config-header"></a> ##### config.header Type: `object` Header configuration. *Deprecated in favor of the new spanning cells API.* The header configuration inherits the most of the column's, except: - `content` **{string}**: the header content. - `width:` calculate based on the content width automatically. - `alignment:` `center` be default. - `verticalAlignment:` is not supported. - `config.border.topJoin` will be `config.border.topBody` for prettier. ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'], ]; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 10, }, header: { alignment: 'center', content: 'THE HEADER\nThis is the table about something', }, } console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════════════════════════════════════╗ ║ THE HEADER ║ ║ This is the table about something ║ ╟────────────┬────────────┬────────────╢ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────────────┼────────────┼────────────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟────────────┼────────────┼────────────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚════════════╧════════════╧════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-spanningcells"></a> ##### config.spanningCells Type: `SpanningCellConfig[]` Spanning cells configuration. The configuration should be straightforward: just specify an array of minimal cell configurations including the position of top-left cell and the number of columns and/or rows will be expanded from it. The content of overlap cells will be ignored to make the `data` shape be consistent. By default, the configuration of column that the top-left cell belongs to will be applied to the whole spanning cell, except: * The `width` will be summed up of all spanning columns. * The `paddingRight` will be received from the right-most column intentionally. Advances customized column-like styles can be configurable to each spanning cell to overwrite the default behavior. ```js const data = [ ['Test Coverage Report', '', '', '', '', ''], ['Module', 'Component', 'Test Cases', 'Failures', 'Durations', 'Success Rate'], ['Services', 'User', '50', '30', '3m 7s', '60.0%'], ['', 'Payment', '100', '80', '7m 15s', '80.0%'], ['Subtotal', '', '150', '110', '10m 22s', '73.3%'], ['Controllers', 'User', '24', '18', '1m 30s', '75.0%'], ['', 'Payment', '30', '24', '50s', '80.0%'], ['Subtotal', '', '54', '42', '2m 20s', '77.8%'], ['Total', '', '204', '152', '12m 42s', '74.5%'], ]; const config = { columns: [ { alignment: 'center', width: 12 }, { alignment: 'center', width: 10 }, { alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'right' } ], spanningCells: [ { col: 0, row: 0, colSpan: 6 }, { col: 0, row: 2, rowSpan: 2, verticalAlignment: 'middle'}, { col: 0, row: 4, colSpan: 2, alignment: 'right'}, { col: 0, row: 5, rowSpan: 2, verticalAlignment: 'middle'}, { col: 0, row: 7, colSpan: 2, alignment: 'right' }, { col: 0, row: 8, colSpan: 2, alignment: 'right' } ], }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╗ ║ Test Coverage Report ║ ╟──────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬──────────┬───────────┬──────────────╢ ║ Module │ Component │ Test Cases │ Failures │ Durations │ Success Rate ║ ╟──────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ │ User │ 50 │ 30 │ 3m 7s │ 60.0% ║ ║ Services ├────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ │ Payment │ 100 │ 80 │ 7m 15s │ 80.0% ║ ╟──────────────┴────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ Subtotal │ 150 │ 110 │ 10m 22s │ 73.3% ║ ╟──────────────┬────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ │ User │ 24 │ 18 │ 1m 30s │ 75.0% ║ ║ Controllers ├────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ │ Payment │ 30 │ 24 │ 50s │ 80.0% ║ ╟──────────────┴────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ Subtotal │ 54 │ 42 │ 2m 20s │ 77.8% ║ ╟───────────────────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ Total │ 204 │ 152 │ 12m 42s │ 74.5% ║ ╚═══════════════════════════╧════════════╧══════════╧═══════════╧══════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-createstream"></a> ### createStream `table` package exports `createStream` function used to draw a table and append rows. **Parameter:** - _**config:**_ the same as `table`'s, except `config.columnDefault.width` and `config.columnCount` must be provided. ```js import { createStream } from 'table'; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 50 }, columnCount: 1 }; const stream = createStream(config); setInterval(() => { stream.write([new Date()]); }, 500); ``` ![Streaming current date.](./.README/api/stream/streaming.gif) `table` package uses ANSI escape codes to overwrite the output of the last line when a new row is printed. The underlying implementation is explained in this [Stack Overflow answer](http://stackoverflow.com/a/32938658/368691). Streaming supports all of the configuration properties and functionality of a static table (such as auto text wrapping, alignment and padding), e.g. ```js import { createStream } from 'table'; import _ from 'lodash'; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 50 }, columnCount: 3, columns: [ { width: 10, alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'center' }, { width: 10 } ] }; const stream = createStream(config); let i = 0; setInterval(() => { let random; random = _.sample('abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz', _.random(1, 30)).join(''); stream.write([i++, new Date(), random]); }, 500); ``` ![Streaming random data.](./.README/api/stream/streaming-random.gif) <a name="table-api-getbordercharacters"></a> ### getBorderCharacters **Parameter:** - **_template_** - Type: `'honeywell' | 'norc' | 'ramac' | 'void'` - Required: `true` You can load one of the predefined border templates using `getBorderCharacters` function. ```js import { table, getBorderCharacters } from 'table'; const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; const config = { border: getBorderCharacters(`name of the template`) }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` # honeywell ╔════╤════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚════╧════╧════╝ # norc ┌────┬────┬────┐ │ 0A │ 0B │ 0C │ ├────┼────┼────┤ │ 1A │ 1B │ 1C │ ├────┼────┼────┤ │ 2A │ 2B │ 2C │ └────┴────┴────┘ # ramac (ASCII; for use in terminals that do not support Unicode characters) +----+----+----+ | 0A | 0B | 0C | |----|----|----| | 1A | 1B | 1C | |----|----|----| | 2A | 2B | 2C | +----+----+----+ # void (no borders; see "borderless table" section of the documentation) 0A 0B 0C 1A 1B 1C 2A 2B 2C ``` Raise [an issue](https://github.com/gajus/table/issues) if you'd like to contribute a new border template. <a name="table-api-getbordercharacters-borderless-table"></a> #### Borderless Table Simply using `void` border character template creates a table with a lot of unnecessary spacing. To create a more pleasant to the eye table, reset the padding and remove the joining rows, e.g. ```js const output = table(data, { border: getBorderCharacters('void'), columnDefault: { paddingLeft: 0, paddingRight: 1 }, drawHorizontalLine: () => false } ); console.log(output); ``` ``` 0A 0B 0C 1A 1B 1C 2A 2B 2C ``` Like `chown -R`. Takes the same arguments as `fs.chown()` <p align="center"> <a href="http://gulpjs.com"> <img height="257" width="114" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/gulpjs/artwork/master/gulp-2x.png"> </a> </p> # interpret [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][npm-url] [![Travis Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![AppVeyor Build Status][appveyor-image]][appveyor-url] [![Coveralls Status][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url] [![Gitter chat][gitter-image]][gitter-url] A dictionary of file extensions and associated module loaders. ## What is it This is used by [Liftoff](http://github.com/tkellen/node-liftoff) to automatically require dependencies for configuration files, and by [rechoir](http://github.com/tkellen/node-rechoir) for registering module loaders. ## API ### extensions Map file types to modules which provide a [require.extensions] loader. ```js { '.babel.js': [ { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { // register on .js extension due to https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/v0.12.0/lib/module.js#L353 // which only captures the final extension (.babel.js -> .js) hook({ extensions: '.js' }); }, }, { module: 'babel-register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.js' }); }, }, { module: 'babel-core/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.js' }); }, }, { module: 'babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.js' }); }, }, ], '.babel.ts': [ { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.ts' }); }, }, ], '.buble.js': 'buble/register', '.cirru': 'cirru-script/lib/register', '.cjsx': 'node-cjsx/register', '.co': 'coco', '.coffee': ['coffeescript/register', 'coffee-script/register', 'coffeescript', 'coffee-script'], '.coffee.md': ['coffeescript/register', 'coffee-script/register', 'coffeescript', 'coffee-script'], '.csv': 'require-csv', '.eg': 'earlgrey/register', '.esm.js': { module: 'esm', register: function(hook) { // register on .js extension due to https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/v0.12.0/lib/module.js#L353 // which only captures the final extension (.babel.js -> .js) var esmLoader = hook(module); require.extensions['.js'] = esmLoader('module')._extensions['.js']; }, }, '.iced': ['iced-coffee-script/register', 'iced-coffee-script'], '.iced.md': 'iced-coffee-script/register', '.ini': 'require-ini', '.js': null, '.json': null, '.json5': 'json5/lib/require', '.jsx': [ { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.jsx' }); }, }, { module: 'babel-register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.jsx' }); }, }, { module: 'babel-core/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.jsx' }); }, }, { module: 'babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.jsx' }); }, }, { module: 'node-jsx', register: function(hook) { hook.install({ extension: '.jsx', harmony: true }); }, }, ], '.litcoffee': ['coffeescript/register', 'coffee-script/register', 'coffeescript', 'coffee-script'], '.liticed': 'iced-coffee-script/register', '.ls': ['livescript', 'LiveScript'], '.mjs': '/absolute/path/to/interpret/mjs-stub.js', '.node': null, '.toml': { module: 'toml-require', register: function(hook) { hook.install(); }, }, '.ts': [ 'ts-node/register', 'typescript-node/register', 'typescript-register', 'typescript-require', 'sucrase/register/ts', { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.ts' }); }, }, ], '.tsx': [ 'ts-node/register', 'typescript-node/register', 'sucrase/register', { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.tsx' }); }, }, ], '.wisp': 'wisp/engine/node', '.xml': 'require-xml', '.yaml': 'require-yaml', '.yml': 'require-yaml', } ``` ### jsVariants Same as above, but only include the extensions which are javascript variants. ## How to use it Consumers should use the exported `extensions` or `jsVariants` object to determine which module should be loaded for a given extension. If a matching extension is found, consumers should do the following: 1. If the value is null, do nothing. 2. If the value is a string, try to require it. 3. If the value is an object, try to require the `module` property. If successful, the `register` property (a function) should be called with the module passed as the first argument. 4. If the value is an array, iterate over it, attempting step #2 or #3 until one of the attempts does not throw. [require.extensions]: http://nodejs.org/api/globals.html#globals_require_extensions [downloads-image]: http://img.shields.io/npm/dm/interpret.svg [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/interpret [npm-image]: http://img.shields.io/npm/v/interpret.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/gulpjs/interpret [travis-image]: http://img.shields.io/travis/gulpjs/interpret.svg?label=travis-ci [appveyor-url]: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/gulpjs/interpret [appveyor-image]: https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/gulpjs/interpret.svg?label=appveyor [coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/r/gulpjs/interpret [coveralls-image]: http://img.shields.io/coveralls/gulpjs/interpret/master.svg [gitter-url]: https://gitter.im/gulpjs/gulp [gitter-image]: https://badges.gitter.im/gulpjs/gulp.svg # eslint-visitor-keys [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) Constants and utilities about visitor keys to traverse AST. ## 💿 Installation Use [npm] to install. ```bash $ npm install eslint-visitor-keys ``` ### Requirements - [Node.js] 4.0.0 or later. ## 📖 Usage ```js const evk = require("eslint-visitor-keys") ``` ### evk.KEYS > type: `{ [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Visitor keys. This keys are frozen. This is an object. Keys are the type of [ESTree] nodes. Their values are an array of property names which have child nodes. For example: ``` console.log(evk.KEYS.AssignmentExpression) // → ["left", "right"] ``` ### evk.getKeys(node) > type: `(node: object) => string[]` Get the visitor keys of a given AST node. This is similar to `Object.keys(node)` of ES Standard, but some keys are excluded: `parent`, `leadingComments`, `trailingComments`, and names which start with `_`. This will be used to traverse unknown nodes. For example: ``` const node = { type: "AssignmentExpression", left: { type: "Identifier", name: "foo" }, right: { type: "Literal", value: 0 } } console.log(evk.getKeys(node)) // → ["type", "left", "right"] ``` ### evk.unionWith(additionalKeys) > type: `(additionalKeys: object) => { [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Make the union set with `evk.KEYS` and the given keys. - The order of keys is, `additionalKeys` is at first, then `evk.KEYS` is concatenated after that. - It removes duplicated keys as keeping the first one. For example: ``` console.log(evk.unionWith({ MethodDefinition: ["decorators"] })) // → { ..., MethodDefinition: ["decorators", "key", "value"], ... } ``` ## 📰 Change log See [GitHub releases](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys/releases). ## 🍻 Contributing Welcome. See [ESLint contribution guidelines](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/). ### Development commands - `npm test` runs tests and measures code coverage. - `npm run lint` checks source codes with ESLint. - `npm run coverage` opens the code coverage report of the previous test with your default browser. - `npm run release` publishes this package to [npm] registory. [npm]: https://www.npmjs.com/ [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/ [ESTree]: https://github.com/estree/estree # minipass A _very_ minimal implementation of a [PassThrough stream](https://nodejs.org/api/stream.html#stream_class_stream_passthrough) [It's very fast](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1oObKSrVwLX_7Ut4Z6g3fZW-AX1j1-k6w-cDsrkaSbHM/edit#gid=0) for objects, strings, and buffers. Supports `pipe()`ing (including multi-`pipe()` and backpressure transmission), buffering data until either a `data` event handler or `pipe()` is added (so you don't lose the first chunk), and most other cases where PassThrough is a good idea. There is a `read()` method, but it's much more efficient to consume data from this stream via `'data'` events or by calling `pipe()` into some other stream. Calling `read()` requires the buffer to be flattened in some cases, which requires copying memory. There is also no `unpipe()` method. Once you start piping, there is no stopping it! If you set `objectMode: true` in the options, then whatever is written will be emitted. Otherwise, it'll do a minimal amount of Buffer copying to ensure proper Streams semantics when `read(n)` is called. `objectMode` can also be set by doing `stream.objectMode = true`, or by writing any non-string/non-buffer data. `objectMode` cannot be set to false once it is set. This is not a `through` or `through2` stream. It doesn't transform the data, it just passes it right through. If you want to transform the data, extend the class, and override the `write()` method. Once you're done transforming the data however you want, call `super.write()` with the transform output. For some examples of streams that extend Minipass in various ways, check out: - [minizlib](http://npm.im/minizlib) - [fs-minipass](http://npm.im/fs-minipass) - [tar](http://npm.im/tar) - [minipass-collect](http://npm.im/minipass-collect) - [minipass-flush](http://npm.im/minipass-flush) - [minipass-pipeline](http://npm.im/minipass-pipeline) - [tap](http://npm.im/tap) - [tap-parser](http://npm.im/tap-parser) - [treport](http://npm.im/treport) - [minipass-fetch](http://npm.im/minipass-fetch) - [pacote](http://npm.im/pacote) - [make-fetch-happen](http://npm.im/make-fetch-happen) - [cacache](http://npm.im/cacache) - [ssri](http://npm.im/ssri) - [npm-registry-fetch](http://npm.im/npm-registry-fetch) - [minipass-json-stream](http://npm.im/minipass-json-stream) - [minipass-sized](http://npm.im/minipass-sized) ## Differences from Node.js Streams There are several things that make Minipass streams different from (and in some ways superior to) Node.js core streams. Please read these caveats if you are familiar with node-core streams and intend to use Minipass streams in your programs. ### Timing Minipass streams are designed to support synchronous use-cases. Thus, data is emitted as soon as it is available, always. It is buffered until read, but no longer. Another way to look at it is that Minipass streams are exactly as synchronous as the logic that writes into them. This can be surprising if your code relies on `PassThrough.write()` always providing data on the next tick rather than the current one, or being able to call `resume()` and not have the entire buffer disappear immediately. However, without this synchronicity guarantee, there would be no way for Minipass to achieve the speeds it does, or support the synchronous use cases that it does. Simply put, waiting takes time. This non-deferring approach makes Minipass streams much easier to reason about, especially in the context of Promises and other flow-control mechanisms. ### No High/Low Water Marks Node.js core streams will optimistically fill up a buffer, returning `true` on all writes until the limit is hit, even if the data has nowhere to go. Then, they will not attempt to draw more data in until the buffer size dips below a minimum value. Minipass streams are much simpler. The `write()` method will return `true` if the data has somewhere to go (which is to say, given the timing guarantees, that the data is already there by the time `write()` returns). If the data has nowhere to go, then `write()` returns false, and the data sits in a buffer, to be drained out immediately as soon as anyone consumes it. ### Hazards of Buffering (or: Why Minipass Is So Fast) Since data written to a Minipass stream is immediately written all the way through the pipeline, and `write()` always returns true/false based on whether the data was fully flushed, backpressure is communicated immediately to the upstream caller. This minimizes buffering. Consider this case: ```js const {PassThrough} = require('stream') const p1 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) const p2 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) const p3 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) const p4 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) p1.pipe(p2).pipe(p3).pipe(p4) p4.on('data', () => console.log('made it through')) // this returns false and buffers, then writes to p2 on next tick (1) // p2 returns false and buffers, pausing p1, then writes to p3 on next tick (2) // p3 returns false and buffers, pausing p2, then writes to p4 on next tick (3) // p4 returns false and buffers, pausing p3, then emits 'data' and 'drain' // on next tick (4) // p3 sees p4's 'drain' event, and calls resume(), emitting 'resume' and // 'drain' on next tick (5) // p2 sees p3's 'drain', calls resume(), emits 'resume' and 'drain' on next tick (6) // p1 sees p2's 'drain', calls resume(), emits 'resume' and 'drain' on next // tick (7) p1.write(Buffer.alloc(2048)) // returns false ``` Along the way, the data was buffered and deferred at each stage, and multiple event deferrals happened, for an unblocked pipeline where it was perfectly safe to write all the way through! Furthermore, setting a `highWaterMark` of `1024` might lead someone reading the code to think an advisory maximum of 1KiB is being set for the pipeline. However, the actual advisory buffering level is the _sum_ of `highWaterMark` values, since each one has its own bucket. Consider the Minipass case: ```js const m1 = new Minipass() const m2 = new Minipass() const m3 = new Minipass() const m4 = new Minipass() m1.pipe(m2).pipe(m3).pipe(m4) m4.on('data', () => console.log('made it through')) // m1 is flowing, so it writes the data to m2 immediately // m2 is flowing, so it writes the data to m3 immediately // m3 is flowing, so it writes the data to m4 immediately // m4 is flowing, so it fires the 'data' event immediately, returns true // m4's write returned true, so m3 is still flowing, returns true // m3's write returned true, so m2 is still flowing, returns true // m2's write returned true, so m1 is still flowing, returns true // No event deferrals or buffering along the way! m1.write(Buffer.alloc(2048)) // returns true ``` It is extremely unlikely that you _don't_ want to buffer any data written, or _ever_ buffer data that can be flushed all the way through. Neither node-core streams nor Minipass ever fail to buffer written data, but node-core streams do a lot of unnecessary buffering and pausing. As always, the faster implementation is the one that does less stuff and waits less time to do it. ### Immediately emit `end` for empty streams (when not paused) If a stream is not paused, and `end()` is called before writing any data into it, then it will emit `end` immediately. If you have logic that occurs on the `end` event which you don't want to potentially happen immediately (for example, closing file descriptors, moving on to the next entry in an archive parse stream, etc.) then be sure to call `stream.pause()` on creation, and then `stream.resume()` once you are ready to respond to the `end` event. ### Emit `end` When Asked One hazard of immediately emitting `'end'` is that you may not yet have had a chance to add a listener. In order to avoid this hazard, Minipass streams safely re-emit the `'end'` event if a new listener is added after `'end'` has been emitted. Ie, if you do `stream.on('end', someFunction)`, and the stream has already emitted `end`, then it will call the handler right away. (You can think of this somewhat like attaching a new `.then(fn)` to a previously-resolved Promise.) To prevent calling handlers multiple times who would not expect multiple ends to occur, all listeners are removed from the `'end'` event whenever it is emitted. ### Impact of "immediate flow" on Tee-streams A "tee stream" is a stream piping to multiple destinations: ```js const tee = new Minipass() t.pipe(dest1) t.pipe(dest2) t.write('foo') // goes to both destinations ``` Since Minipass streams _immediately_ process any pending data through the pipeline when a new pipe destination is added, this can have surprising effects, especially when a stream comes in from some other function and may or may not have data in its buffer. ```js // WARNING! WILL LOSE DATA! const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') src.pipe(dest1) // 'foo' chunk flows to dest1 immediately, and is gone src.pipe(dest2) // gets nothing! ``` The solution is to create a dedicated tee-stream junction that pipes to both locations, and then pipe to _that_ instead. ```js // Safe example: tee to both places const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') const tee = new Minipass() tee.pipe(dest1) tee.pipe(dest2) src.pipe(tee) // tee gets 'foo', pipes to both locations ``` The same caveat applies to `on('data')` event listeners. The first one added will _immediately_ receive all of the data, leaving nothing for the second: ```js // WARNING! WILL LOSE DATA! const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') src.on('data', handler1) // receives 'foo' right away src.on('data', handler2) // nothing to see here! ``` Using a dedicated tee-stream can be used in this case as well: ```js // Safe example: tee to both data handlers const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') const tee = new Minipass() tee.on('data', handler1) tee.on('data', handler2) src.pipe(tee) ``` ## USAGE It's a stream! Use it like a stream and it'll most likely do what you want. ```js const Minipass = require('minipass') const mp = new Minipass(options) // optional: { encoding, objectMode } mp.write('foo') mp.pipe(someOtherStream) mp.end('bar') ``` ### OPTIONS * `encoding` How would you like the data coming _out_ of the stream to be encoded? Accepts any values that can be passed to `Buffer.toString()`. * `objectMode` Emit data exactly as it comes in. This will be flipped on by default if you write() something other than a string or Buffer at any point. Setting `objectMode: true` will prevent setting any encoding value. ### API Implements the user-facing portions of Node.js's `Readable` and `Writable` streams. ### Methods * `write(chunk, [encoding], [callback])` - Put data in. (Note that, in the base Minipass class, the same data will come out.) Returns `false` if the stream will buffer the next write, or true if it's still in "flowing" mode. * `end([chunk, [encoding]], [callback])` - Signal that you have no more data to write. This will queue an `end` event to be fired when all the data has been consumed. * `setEncoding(encoding)` - Set the encoding for data coming of the stream. This can only be done once. * `pause()` - No more data for a while, please. This also prevents `end` from being emitted for empty streams until the stream is resumed. * `resume()` - Resume the stream. If there's data in the buffer, it is all discarded. Any buffered events are immediately emitted. * `pipe(dest)` - Send all output to the stream provided. There is no way to unpipe. When data is emitted, it is immediately written to any and all pipe destinations. * `on(ev, fn)`, `emit(ev, fn)` - Minipass streams are EventEmitters. Some events are given special treatment, however. (See below under "events".) * `promise()` - Returns a Promise that resolves when the stream emits `end`, or rejects if the stream emits `error`. * `collect()` - Return a Promise that resolves on `end` with an array containing each chunk of data that was emitted, or rejects if the stream emits `error`. Note that this consumes the stream data. * `concat()` - Same as `collect()`, but concatenates the data into a single Buffer object. Will reject the returned promise if the stream is in objectMode, or if it goes into objectMode by the end of the data. * `read(n)` - Consume `n` bytes of data out of the buffer. If `n` is not provided, then consume all of it. If `n` bytes are not available, then it returns null. **Note** consuming streams in this way is less efficient, and can lead to unnecessary Buffer copying. * `destroy([er])` - Destroy the stream. If an error is provided, then an `'error'` event is emitted. If the stream has a `close()` method, and has not emitted a `'close'` event yet, then `stream.close()` will be called. Any Promises returned by `.promise()`, `.collect()` or `.concat()` will be rejected. After being destroyed, writing to the stream will emit an error. No more data will be emitted if the stream is destroyed, even if it was previously buffered. ### Properties * `bufferLength` Read-only. Total number of bytes buffered, or in the case of objectMode, the total number of objects. * `encoding` The encoding that has been set. (Setting this is equivalent to calling `setEncoding(enc)` and has the same prohibition against setting multiple times.) * `flowing` Read-only. Boolean indicating whether a chunk written to the stream will be immediately emitted. * `emittedEnd` Read-only. Boolean indicating whether the end-ish events (ie, `end`, `prefinish`, `finish`) have been emitted. Note that listening on any end-ish event will immediateyl re-emit it if it has already been emitted. * `writable` Whether the stream is writable. Default `true`. Set to `false` when `end()` * `readable` Whether the stream is readable. Default `true`. * `buffer` A [yallist](http://npm.im/yallist) linked list of chunks written to the stream that have not yet been emitted. (It's probably a bad idea to mess with this.) * `pipes` A [yallist](http://npm.im/yallist) linked list of streams that this stream is piping into. (It's probably a bad idea to mess with this.) * `destroyed` A getter that indicates whether the stream was destroyed. * `paused` True if the stream has been explicitly paused, otherwise false. * `objectMode` Indicates whether the stream is in `objectMode`. Once set to `true`, it cannot be set to `false`. ### Events * `data` Emitted when there's data to read. Argument is the data to read. This is never emitted while not flowing. If a listener is attached, that will resume the stream. * `end` Emitted when there's no more data to read. This will be emitted immediately for empty streams when `end()` is called. If a listener is attached, and `end` was already emitted, then it will be emitted again. All listeners are removed when `end` is emitted. * `prefinish` An end-ish event that follows the same logic as `end` and is emitted in the same conditions where `end` is emitted. Emitted after `'end'`. * `finish` An end-ish event that follows the same logic as `end` and is emitted in the same conditions where `end` is emitted. Emitted after `'prefinish'`. * `close` An indication that an underlying resource has been released. Minipass does not emit this event, but will defer it until after `end` has been emitted, since it throws off some stream libraries otherwise. * `drain` Emitted when the internal buffer empties, and it is again suitable to `write()` into the stream. * `readable` Emitted when data is buffered and ready to be read by a consumer. * `resume` Emitted when stream changes state from buffering to flowing mode. (Ie, when `resume` is called, `pipe` is called, or a `data` event listener is added.) ### Static Methods * `Minipass.isStream(stream)` Returns `true` if the argument is a stream, and false otherwise. To be considered a stream, the object must be either an instance of Minipass, or an EventEmitter that has either a `pipe()` method, or both `write()` and `end()` methods. (Pretty much any stream in node-land will return `true` for this.) ## EXAMPLES Here are some examples of things you can do with Minipass streams. ### simple "are you done yet" promise ```js mp.promise().then(() => { // stream is finished }, er => { // stream emitted an error }) ``` ### collecting ```js mp.collect().then(all => { // all is an array of all the data emitted // encoding is supported in this case, so // so the result will be a collection of strings if // an encoding is specified, or buffers/objects if not. // // In an async function, you may do // const data = await stream.collect() }) ``` ### collecting into a single blob This is a bit slower because it concatenates the data into one chunk for you, but if you're going to do it yourself anyway, it's convenient this way: ```js mp.concat().then(onebigchunk => { // onebigchunk is a string if the stream // had an encoding set, or a buffer otherwise. }) ``` ### iteration You can iterate over streams synchronously or asynchronously in platforms that support it. Synchronous iteration will end when the currently available data is consumed, even if the `end` event has not been reached. In string and buffer mode, the data is concatenated, so unless multiple writes are occurring in the same tick as the `read()`, sync iteration loops will generally only have a single iteration. To consume chunks in this way exactly as they have been written, with no flattening, create the stream with the `{ objectMode: true }` option. ```js const mp = new Minipass({ objectMode: true }) mp.write('a') mp.write('b') for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // a, b } mp.write('c') mp.write('d') for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // c, d } mp.write('e') mp.end() for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // e } for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // nothing } ``` Asynchronous iteration will continue until the end event is reached, consuming all of the data. ```js const mp = new Minipass({ encoding: 'utf8' }) // some source of some data let i = 5 const inter = setInterval(() => { if (i-- > 0) mp.write(Buffer.from('foo\n', 'utf8')) else { mp.end() clearInterval(inter) } }, 100) // consume the data with asynchronous iteration async function consume () { for await (let chunk of mp) { console.log(chunk) } return 'ok' } consume().then(res => console.log(res)) // logs `foo\n` 5 times, and then `ok` ``` ### subclass that `console.log()`s everything written into it ```js class Logger extends Minipass { write (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('WRITE', chunk, encoding) return super.write(chunk, encoding, callback) } end (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('END', chunk, encoding) return super.end(chunk, encoding, callback) } } someSource.pipe(new Logger()).pipe(someDest) ``` ### same thing, but using an inline anonymous class ```js // js classes are fun someSource .pipe(new (class extends Minipass { emit (ev, ...data) { // let's also log events, because debugging some weird thing console.log('EMIT', ev) return super.emit(ev, ...data) } write (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('WRITE', chunk, encoding) return super.write(chunk, encoding, callback) } end (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('END', chunk, encoding) return super.end(chunk, encoding, callback) } })) .pipe(someDest) ``` ### subclass that defers 'end' for some reason ```js class SlowEnd extends Minipass { emit (ev, ...args) { if (ev === 'end') { console.log('going to end, hold on a sec') setTimeout(() => { console.log('ok, ready to end now') super.emit('end', ...args) }, 100) } else { return super.emit(ev, ...args) } } } ``` ### transform that creates newline-delimited JSON ```js class NDJSONEncode extends Minipass { write (obj, cb) { try { // JSON.stringify can throw, emit an error on that return super.write(JSON.stringify(obj) + '\n', 'utf8', cb) } catch (er) { this.emit('error', er) } } end (obj, cb) { if (typeof obj === 'function') { cb = obj obj = undefined } if (obj !== undefined) { this.write(obj) } return super.end(cb) } } ``` ### transform that parses newline-delimited JSON ```js class NDJSONDecode extends Minipass { constructor (options) { // always be in object mode, as far as Minipass is concerned super({ objectMode: true }) this._jsonBuffer = '' } write (chunk, encoding, cb) { if (typeof chunk === 'string' && typeof encoding === 'string' && encoding !== 'utf8') { chunk = Buffer.from(chunk, encoding).toString() } else if (Buffer.isBuffer(chunk)) chunk = chunk.toString() } if (typeof encoding === 'function') { cb = encoding } const jsonData = (this._jsonBuffer + chunk).split('\n') this._jsonBuffer = jsonData.pop() for (let i = 0; i < jsonData.length; i++) { try { // JSON.parse can throw, emit an error on that super.write(JSON.parse(jsonData[i])) } catch (er) { this.emit('error', er) continue } } if (cb) cb() } } ``` Shims used when bundling asc for browser usage. A JSON with color names and its values. Based on http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-color/#named-colors. [![NPM](https://nodei.co/npm/color-name.png?mini=true)](https://nodei.co/npm/color-name/) ```js var colors = require('color-name'); colors.red //[255,0,0] ``` <a href="LICENSE"><img src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0c/MIT_logo.svg" width="120"/></a> # yargs-parser ![ci](https://github.com/yargs/yargs-parser/workflows/ci/badge.svg) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs-parser.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs-parser) [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) ![nycrc config on GitHub](https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/yargs-parser) The mighty option parser used by [yargs](https://github.com/yargs/yargs). visit the [yargs website](http://yargs.js.org/) for more examples, and thorough usage instructions. <img width="250" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yargs/yargs-parser/main/yargs-logo.png"> ## Example ```sh npm i yargs-parser --save ``` ```js const argv = require('yargs-parser')(process.argv.slice(2)) console.log(argv) ``` ```console $ node example.js --foo=33 --bar hello { _: [], foo: 33, bar: 'hello' } ``` _or parse a string!_ ```js const argv = require('yargs-parser')('--foo=99 --bar=33') console.log(argv) ``` ```console { _: [], foo: 99, bar: 33 } ``` Convert an array of mixed types before passing to `yargs-parser`: ```js const parse = require('yargs-parser') parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].join(' ')) // <-- array to string parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].map(String)) // <-- array of strings ``` ## Deno Example As of `v19` `yargs-parser` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno): ```typescript import parser from "https://deno.land/x/yargs_parser/deno.ts"; const argv = parser('--foo=99 --bar=9987930', { string: ['bar'] }) console.log(argv) ``` ## ESM Example As of `v19` `yargs-parser` supports ESM (_both in Node.js and in the browser_): **Node.js:** ```js import parser from 'yargs-parser' const argv = parser('--foo=99 --bar=9987930', { string: ['bar'] }) console.log(argv) ``` **Browsers:** ```html <!doctype html> <body> <script type="module"> import parser from "https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/browser.js"; const argv = parser('--foo=99 --bar=9987930', { string: ['bar'] }) console.log(argv) </script> </body> ``` ## API ### parser(args, opts={}) Parses command line arguments returning a simple mapping of keys and values. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing the options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args` should be parsed: * `opts.alias`: an object representing the set of aliases for a key: `{alias: {foo: ['f']}}`. * `opts.array`: indicate that keys should be parsed as an array: `{array: ['foo', 'bar']}`.<br> Indicate that keys should be parsed as an array and coerced to booleans / numbers:<br> `{array: [{ key: 'foo', boolean: true }, {key: 'bar', number: true}]}`. * `opts.boolean`: arguments should be parsed as booleans: `{boolean: ['x', 'y']}`. * `opts.coerce`: provide a custom synchronous function that returns a coerced value from the argument provided (or throws an error). For arrays the function is called only once for the entire array:<br> `{coerce: {foo: function (arg) {return modifiedArg}}}`. * `opts.config`: indicate a key that represents a path to a configuration file (this file will be loaded and parsed). * `opts.configObjects`: configuration objects to parse, their properties will be set as arguments:<br> `{configObjects: [{'x': 5, 'y': 33}, {'z': 44}]}`. * `opts.configuration`: provide configuration options to the yargs-parser (see: [configuration](#configuration)). * `opts.count`: indicate a key that should be used as a counter, e.g., `-vvv` = `{v: 3}`. * `opts.default`: provide default values for keys: `{default: {x: 33, y: 'hello world!'}}`. * `opts.envPrefix`: environment variables (`process.env`) with the prefix provided should be parsed. * `opts.narg`: specify that a key requires `n` arguments: `{narg: {x: 2}}`. * `opts.normalize`: `path.normalize()` will be applied to values set to this key. * `opts.number`: keys should be treated as numbers. * `opts.string`: keys should be treated as strings (even if they resemble a number `-x 33`). **returns:** * `obj`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. ### require('yargs-parser').detailed(args, opts={}) Parses a command line string, returning detailed information required by the yargs engine. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args`, inputs are identical to `require('yargs-parser')(args, opts={})`. **returns:** * `argv`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. * `error`: populated with an error object if an exception occurred during parsing. * `aliases`: the inferred list of aliases built by combining lists in `opts.alias`. * `newAliases`: any new aliases added via camel-case expansion: * `boolean`: `{ fooBar: true }` * `defaulted`: any new argument created by `opts.default`, no aliases included. * `boolean`: `{ foo: true }` * `configuration`: given by default settings and `opts.configuration`. <a name="configuration"></a> ### Configuration The yargs-parser applies several automated transformations on the keys provided in `args`. These features can be turned on and off using the `configuration` field of `opts`. ```js var parsed = parser(['--no-dice'], { configuration: { 'boolean-negation': false } }) ``` ### short option groups * default: `true`. * key: `short-option-groups`. Should a group of short-options be treated as boolean flags? ```console $ node example.js -abc { _: [], a: true, b: true, c: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -abc { _: [], abc: true } ``` ### camel-case expansion * default: `true`. * key: `camel-case-expansion`. Should hyphenated arguments be expanded into camel-case aliases? ```console $ node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true, fooBar: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true } ``` ### dot-notation * default: `true` * key: `dot-notation` Should keys that contain `.` be treated as objects? ```console $ node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], foo: { bar: true } } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], "foo.bar": true } ``` ### parse numbers * default: `true` * key: `parse-numbers` Should keys that look like numbers be treated as such? ```console $ node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: 99.3 } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: "99.3" } ``` ### parse positional numbers * default: `true` * key: `parse-positional-numbers` Should positional keys that look like numbers be treated as such. ```console $ node example.js 99.3 { _: [99.3] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js 99.3 { _: ['99.3'] } ``` ### boolean negation * default: `true` * key: `boolean-negation` Should variables prefixed with `--no` be treated as negations? ```console $ node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --no-foo { _: [], "no-foo": true } ``` ### combine arrays * default: `false` * key: `combine-arrays` Should arrays be combined when provided by both command line arguments and a configuration file. ### duplicate arguments array * default: `true` * key: `duplicate-arguments-array` Should arguments be coerced into an array when duplicated: ```console $ node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: 2 } ``` ### flatten duplicate arrays * default: `true` * key: `flatten-duplicate-arrays` Should array arguments be coerced into a single array when duplicated: ```console $ node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [1, 2, 3, 4] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [[1, 2], [3, 4]] } ``` ### greedy arrays * default: `true` * key: `greedy-arrays` Should arrays consume more than one positional argument following their flag. ```console $ node example --arr 1 2 { _: [], arr: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example --arr 1 2 { _: [2], arr: [1] } ``` **Note: in `v18.0.0` we are considering defaulting greedy arrays to `false`.** ### nargs eats options * default: `false` * key: `nargs-eats-options` Should nargs consume dash options as well as positional arguments. ### negation prefix * default: `no-` * key: `negation-prefix` The prefix to use for negated boolean variables. ```console $ node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if set to `quux`:_ ```console $ node example.js --quuxfoo { _: [], foo: false } ``` ### populate -- * default: `false`. * key: `populate--` Should unparsed flags be stored in `--` or `_`. _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a', 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a' ], '--': [ 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` ### set placeholder key * default: `false`. * key: `set-placeholder-key`. Should a placeholder be added for keys not set via the corresponding CLI argument? _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, c: 2 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, b: undefined, c: 2 } ``` ### halt at non-option * default: `false`. * key: `halt-at-non-option`. Should parsing stop at the first positional argument? This is similar to how e.g. `ssh` parses its command line. _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b' ], a: 'run', x: 'y' } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b', '-x', 'y' ], a: 'run' } ``` ### strip aliased * default: `false` * key: `strip-aliased` Should aliases be removed before returning results? _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1, 'test-alias': 1, testAlias: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` ### strip dashed * default: `false` * key: `strip-dashed` Should dashed keys be removed before returning results? This option has no effect if `camel-case-expansion` is disabled. _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], testField: 1 } ``` ### unknown options as args * default: `false` * key: `unknown-options-as-args` Should unknown options be treated like regular arguments? An unknown option is one that is not configured in `opts`. _If disabled_ ```console $ node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: [], unknownOption: true, knownOption: 2, stringOption: '', unknownOption2: true } ``` _If enabled_ ```console $ node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: ['--unknown-option'], knownOption: 2, stringOption: '--unknown-option2' } ``` ## Supported Node.js Versions Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track [Node.js' release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/). Here's [a post on why we think this is important](https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/maintainers-should-consider-following-node-js-release-schedule-ab08ed4de71a). ## Special Thanks The yargs project evolves from optimist and minimist. It owes its existence to a lot of James Halliday's hard work. Thanks [substack](https://github.com/substack) **beep** **boop** \o/ ## License ISC # axios // adapters The modules under `adapters/` are modules that handle dispatching a request and settling a returned `Promise` once a response is received. ## Example ```js var settle = require('./../core/settle'); module.exports = function myAdapter(config) { // At this point: // - config has been merged with defaults // - request transformers have already run // - request interceptors have already run // Make the request using config provided // Upon response settle the Promise return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) { var response = { data: responseData, status: request.status, statusText: request.statusText, headers: responseHeaders, config: config, request: request }; settle(resolve, reject, response); // From here: // - response transformers will run // - response interceptors will run }); } ``` # Visitor utilities for AssemblyScript Compiler transformers ## Example ### List Fields The transformer: ```ts import { ClassDeclaration, FieldDeclaration, MethodDeclaration, } from "../../as"; import { ClassDecorator, registerDecorator } from "../decorator"; import { toString } from "../utils"; class ListMembers extends ClassDecorator { visitFieldDeclaration(node: FieldDeclaration): void { if (!node.name) console.log(toString(node) + "\n"); const name = toString(node.name); const _type = toString(node.type!); this.stdout.write(name + ": " + _type + "\n"); } visitMethodDeclaration(node: MethodDeclaration): void { const name = toString(node.name); if (name == "constructor") { return; } const sig = toString(node.signature); this.stdout.write(name + ": " + sig + "\n"); } visitClassDeclaration(node: ClassDeclaration): void { this.visit(node.members); } get name(): string { return "list"; } } export = registerDecorator(new ListMembers()); ``` assembly/foo.ts: ```ts @list class Foo { a: u8; b: bool; i: i32; } ``` And then compile with `--transform` flag: ``` asc assembly/foo.ts --transform ./dist/examples/list --noEmit ``` Which prints the following to the console: ``` a: u8 b: bool i: i32 ``` # `asbuild` [![Stars](https://img.shields.io/github/stars/AssemblyScript/asbuild.svg?style=social&maxAge=3600&label=Star)](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/asbuild/stargazers) *A simple build tool for [AssemblyScript](https://assemblyscript.org) projects, similar to `cargo`, etc.* ## 🚩 Table of Contents - [Installing](#-installing) - [Usage](#-usage) - [`asb init`](#asb-init---create-an-empty-project) - [`asb test`](#asb-test---run-as-pect-tests) - [`asb fmt`](#asb-fmt---format-as-files-using-eslint) - [`asb run`](#asb-run---run-a-wasi-binary) - [`asb build`](#asb-build---compile-the-project-using-asc) - [Background](#-background) ## 🔧 Installing Install it globally ``` npm install -g asbuild ``` Or, locally as dev dependencies ``` npm install --save-dev asbuild ``` ## 💡 Usage ``` Build tool for AssemblyScript projects. Usage: asb [command] [options] Commands: asb Alias of build command, to maintain back-ward compatibility [default] asb build Compile a local package and all of its dependencies [aliases: compile, make] asb init [baseDir] Create a new AS package in an given directory asb test Run as-pect tests asb fmt [paths..] This utility formats current module using eslint. [aliases: format, lint] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] ``` ### `asb init` - Create an empty project ``` asb init [baseDir] Create a new AS package in an given directory Positionals: baseDir Create a sample AS project in this directory [string] [default: "."] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] --yes Skip the interactive prompt [boolean] [default: false] ``` ### `asb test` - Run as-pect tests ``` asb test Run as-pect tests USAGE: asb test [options] -- [aspect_options] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] --verbose, --vv Print out arguments passed to as-pect [boolean] [default: false] ``` ### `asb fmt` - Format AS files using ESlint ``` asb fmt [paths..] This utility formats current module using eslint. Positionals: paths Paths to format [array] [default: ["."]] Initialisation: --init Generates recommended eslint config for AS Projects [boolean] Miscellaneous --lint, --dry-run Tries to fix problems without saving the changes to the file system [boolean] [default: false] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help ``` ### `asb run` - Run a WASI binary ``` asb run Run a WASI binary USAGE: asb run [options] [binary path] -- [binary options] Positionals: binary path to Wasm binary [string] [required] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] --preopen, -p comma separated list of directories to open. [default: "."] ``` ### `asb build` - Compile the project using asc ``` asb build Compile a local package and all of its dependencies USAGE: asb build [entry_file] [options] -- [asc_options] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] --baseDir, -d Base directory of project. [string] [default: "."] --config, -c Path to asconfig file [string] [default: "./asconfig.json"] --wat Output wat file to outDir [boolean] [default: false] --outDir Directory to place built binaries. Default "./build/<target>/" [string] --target Target for compilation [string] [default: "release"] --verbose Print out arguments passed to asc [boolean] [default: false] Examples: asb build Build release of 'assembly/index.ts to build/release/packageName.wasm asb build --target release Build a release binary asb build -- --measure Pass argument to 'asc' ``` #### Defaults ##### Project structure ``` project/ package.json asconfig.json assembly/ index.ts build/ release/ project.wasm debug/ project.wasm ``` - If no entry file passed and no `entry` field is in `asconfig.json`, `project/assembly/index.ts` is assumed. - `asconfig.json` allows for options for different compile targets, e.g. release, debug, etc. `asc` defaults to the release target. - The default build directory is `./build`, and artifacts are placed at `./build/<target>/packageName.wasm`. ##### Workspaces If a `workspace` field is added to a top level `asconfig.json` file, then each path in the array is built and placed into the top level `outDir`. For example, `asconfig.json`: ```json { "workspaces": ["a", "b"] } ``` Running `asb` in the directory below will use the top level build directory to place all the binaries. ``` project/ package.json asconfig.json a/ asconfig.json assembly/ index.ts b/ asconfig.json assembly/ index.ts build/ release/ a.wasm b.wasm debug/ a.wasm b.wasm ``` To see an example in action check out the [test workspace](./tests/build_test) ## 📖 Background Asbuild started as wrapper around `asc` to provide an easier CLI interface and now has been extened to support other commands like `init`, `test` and `fmt` just like `cargo` to become a one stop build tool for AS Projects. ## 📜 License This library is provided under the open-source [MIT license](https://choosealicense.com/licenses/mit/). # prelude.ls [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/prelude-ls.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/prelude-ls) is a functionally oriented utility library. It is powerful and flexible. Almost all of its functions are curried. It is written in, and is the recommended base library for, <a href="http://livescript.net">LiveScript</a>. See **[the prelude.ls site](http://preludels.com)** for examples, a reference, and more. You can install via npm `npm install prelude-ls` ### Development `make test` to test `make build` to build `lib` from `src` `make build-browser` to build browser versions # yargs-parser [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/yargs-parser.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/yargs-parser) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs-parser.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs-parser) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) The mighty option parser used by [yargs](https://github.com/yargs/yargs). visit the [yargs website](http://yargs.js.org/) for more examples, and thorough usage instructions. <img width="250" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yargs/yargs-parser/master/yargs-logo.png"> ## Example ```sh npm i yargs-parser --save ``` ```js var argv = require('yargs-parser')(process.argv.slice(2)) console.log(argv) ``` ```sh node example.js --foo=33 --bar hello { _: [], foo: 33, bar: 'hello' } ``` _or parse a string!_ ```js var argv = require('yargs-parser')('--foo=99 --bar=33') console.log(argv) ``` ```sh { _: [], foo: 99, bar: 33 } ``` Convert an array of mixed types before passing to `yargs-parser`: ```js var parse = require('yargs-parser') parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].join(' ')) // <-- array to string parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].map(String)) // <-- array of strings ``` ## API ### require('yargs-parser')(args, opts={}) Parses command line arguments returning a simple mapping of keys and values. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing the options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args` should be parsed: * `opts.alias`: an object representing the set of aliases for a key: `{alias: {foo: ['f']}}`. * `opts.array`: indicate that keys should be parsed as an array: `{array: ['foo', 'bar']}`.<br> Indicate that keys should be parsed as an array and coerced to booleans / numbers:<br> `{array: [{ key: 'foo', boolean: true }, {key: 'bar', number: true}]}`. * `opts.boolean`: arguments should be parsed as booleans: `{boolean: ['x', 'y']}`. * `opts.coerce`: provide a custom synchronous function that returns a coerced value from the argument provided (or throws an error). For arrays the function is called only once for the entire array:<br> `{coerce: {foo: function (arg) {return modifiedArg}}}`. * `opts.config`: indicate a key that represents a path to a configuration file (this file will be loaded and parsed). * `opts.configObjects`: configuration objects to parse, their properties will be set as arguments:<br> `{configObjects: [{'x': 5, 'y': 33}, {'z': 44}]}`. * `opts.configuration`: provide configuration options to the yargs-parser (see: [configuration](#configuration)). * `opts.count`: indicate a key that should be used as a counter, e.g., `-vvv` = `{v: 3}`. * `opts.default`: provide default values for keys: `{default: {x: 33, y: 'hello world!'}}`. * `opts.envPrefix`: environment variables (`process.env`) with the prefix provided should be parsed. * `opts.narg`: specify that a key requires `n` arguments: `{narg: {x: 2}}`. * `opts.normalize`: `path.normalize()` will be applied to values set to this key. * `opts.number`: keys should be treated as numbers. * `opts.string`: keys should be treated as strings (even if they resemble a number `-x 33`). **returns:** * `obj`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. ### require('yargs-parser').detailed(args, opts={}) Parses a command line string, returning detailed information required by the yargs engine. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args`, inputs are identical to `require('yargs-parser')(args, opts={})`. **returns:** * `argv`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. * `error`: populated with an error object if an exception occurred during parsing. * `aliases`: the inferred list of aliases built by combining lists in `opts.alias`. * `newAliases`: any new aliases added via camel-case expansion: * `boolean`: `{ fooBar: true }` * `defaulted`: any new argument created by `opts.default`, no aliases included. * `boolean`: `{ foo: true }` * `configuration`: given by default settings and `opts.configuration`. <a name="configuration"></a> ### Configuration The yargs-parser applies several automated transformations on the keys provided in `args`. These features can be turned on and off using the `configuration` field of `opts`. ```js var parsed = parser(['--no-dice'], { configuration: { 'boolean-negation': false } }) ``` ### short option groups * default: `true`. * key: `short-option-groups`. Should a group of short-options be treated as boolean flags? ```sh node example.js -abc { _: [], a: true, b: true, c: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -abc { _: [], abc: true } ``` ### camel-case expansion * default: `true`. * key: `camel-case-expansion`. Should hyphenated arguments be expanded into camel-case aliases? ```sh node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true, fooBar: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true } ``` ### dot-notation * default: `true` * key: `dot-notation` Should keys that contain `.` be treated as objects? ```sh node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], foo: { bar: true } } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], "foo.bar": true } ``` ### parse numbers * default: `true` * key: `parse-numbers` Should keys that look like numbers be treated as such? ```sh node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: 99.3 } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: "99.3" } ``` ### boolean negation * default: `true` * key: `boolean-negation` Should variables prefixed with `--no` be treated as negations? ```sh node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --no-foo { _: [], "no-foo": true } ``` ### combine arrays * default: `false` * key: `combine-arrays` Should arrays be combined when provided by both command line arguments and a configuration file. ### duplicate arguments array * default: `true` * key: `duplicate-arguments-array` Should arguments be coerced into an array when duplicated: ```sh node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: 2 } ``` ### flatten duplicate arrays * default: `true` * key: `flatten-duplicate-arrays` Should array arguments be coerced into a single array when duplicated: ```sh node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [1, 2, 3, 4] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [[1, 2], [3, 4]] } ``` ### greedy arrays * default: `true` * key: `greedy-arrays` Should arrays consume more than one positional argument following their flag. ```sh node example --arr 1 2 { _[], arr: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example --arr 1 2 { _[2], arr: [1] } ``` **Note: in `v18.0.0` we are considering defaulting greedy arrays to `false`.** ### nargs eats options * default: `false` * key: `nargs-eats-options` Should nargs consume dash options as well as positional arguments. ### negation prefix * default: `no-` * key: `negation-prefix` The prefix to use for negated boolean variables. ```sh node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if set to `quux`:_ ```sh node example.js --quuxfoo { _: [], foo: false } ``` ### populate -- * default: `false`. * key: `populate--` Should unparsed flags be stored in `--` or `_`. _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a', 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a' ], '--': [ 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` ### set placeholder key * default: `false`. * key: `set-placeholder-key`. Should a placeholder be added for keys not set via the corresponding CLI argument? _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, c: 2 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, b: undefined, c: 2 } ``` ### halt at non-option * default: `false`. * key: `halt-at-non-option`. Should parsing stop at the first positional argument? This is similar to how e.g. `ssh` parses its command line. _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b' ], a: 'run', x: 'y' } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b', '-x', 'y' ], a: 'run' } ``` ### strip aliased * default: `false` * key: `strip-aliased` Should aliases be removed before returning results? _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1, 'test-alias': 1, testAlias: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` ### strip dashed * default: `false` * key: `strip-dashed` Should dashed keys be removed before returning results? This option has no effect if `camel-case-expansion` is disabled. _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], testField: 1 } ``` ### unknown options as args * default: `false` * key: `unknown-options-as-args` Should unknown options be treated like regular arguments? An unknown option is one that is not configured in `opts`. _If disabled_ ```sh node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: [], unknownOption: true, knownOption: 2, stringOption: '', unknownOption2: true } ``` _If enabled_ ```sh node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: ['--unknown-option'], knownOption: 2, stringOption: '--unknown-option2' } ``` ## Special Thanks The yargs project evolves from optimist and minimist. It owes its existence to a lot of James Halliday's hard work. Thanks [substack](https://github.com/substack) **beep** **boop** \o/ ## License ISC assemblyscript-json # assemblyscript-json ## Table of contents ### Namespaces - [JSON](modules/json.md) ### Classes - [DecoderState](classes/decoderstate.md) - [JSONDecoder](classes/jsondecoder.md) - [JSONEncoder](classes/jsonencoder.md) - [JSONHandler](classes/jsonhandler.md) - [ThrowingJSONHandler](classes/throwingjsonhandler.md) # node-tar [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/npm/node-tar.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/npm/node-tar) [Fast](./benchmarks) and full-featured Tar for Node.js The API is designed to mimic the behavior of `tar(1)` on unix systems. If you are familiar with how tar works, most of this will hopefully be straightforward for you. If not, then hopefully this module can teach you useful unix skills that may come in handy someday :) ## Background A "tar file" or "tarball" is an archive of file system entries (directories, files, links, etc.) The name comes from "tape archive". If you run `man tar` on almost any Unix command line, you'll learn quite a bit about what it can do, and its history. Tar has 5 main top-level commands: * `c` Create an archive * `r` Replace entries within an archive * `u` Update entries within an archive (ie, replace if they're newer) * `t` List out the contents of an archive * `x` Extract an archive to disk The other flags and options modify how this top level function works. ## High-Level API These 5 functions are the high-level API. All of them have a single-character name (for unix nerds familiar with `tar(1)`) as well as a long name (for everyone else). All the high-level functions take the following arguments, all three of which are optional and may be omitted. 1. `options` - An optional object specifying various options 2. `paths` - An array of paths to add or extract 3. `callback` - Called when the command is completed, if async. (If sync or no file specified, providing a callback throws a `TypeError`.) If the command is sync (ie, if `options.sync=true`), then the callback is not allowed, since the action will be completed immediately. If a `file` argument is specified, and the command is async, then a `Promise` is returned. In this case, if async, a callback may be provided which is called when the command is completed. If a `file` option is not specified, then a stream is returned. For `create`, this is a readable stream of the generated archive. For `list` and `extract` this is a writable stream that an archive should be written into. If a file is not specified, then a callback is not allowed, because you're already getting a stream to work with. `replace` and `update` only work on existing archives, and so require a `file` argument. Sync commands without a file argument return a stream that acts on its input immediately in the same tick. For readable streams, this means that all of the data is immediately available by calling `stream.read()`. For writable streams, it will be acted upon as soon as it is provided, but this can be at any time. ### Warnings and Errors Tar emits warnings and errors for recoverable and unrecoverable situations, respectively. In many cases, a warning only affects a single entry in an archive, or is simply informing you that it's modifying an entry to comply with the settings provided. Unrecoverable warnings will always raise an error (ie, emit `'error'` on streaming actions, throw for non-streaming sync actions, reject the returned Promise for non-streaming async operations, or call a provided callback with an `Error` as the first argument). Recoverable errors will raise an error only if `strict: true` is set in the options. Respond to (recoverable) warnings by listening to the `warn` event. Handlers receive 3 arguments: - `code` String. One of the error codes below. This may not match `data.code`, which preserves the original error code from fs and zlib. - `message` String. More details about the error. - `data` Metadata about the error. An `Error` object for errors raised by fs and zlib. All fields are attached to errors raisd by tar. Typically contains the following fields, as relevant: - `tarCode` The tar error code. - `code` Either the tar error code, or the error code set by the underlying system. - `file` The archive file being read or written. - `cwd` Working directory for creation and extraction operations. - `entry` The entry object (if it could be created) for `TAR_ENTRY_INFO`, `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID`, and `TAR_ENTRY_ERROR` warnings. - `header` The header object (if it could be created, and the entry could not be created) for `TAR_ENTRY_INFO` and `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID` warnings. - `recoverable` Boolean. If `false`, then the warning will emit an `error`, even in non-strict mode. #### Error Codes * `TAR_ENTRY_INFO` An informative error indicating that an entry is being modified, but otherwise processed normally. For example, removing `/` or `C:\` from absolute paths if `preservePaths` is not set. * `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID` An indication that a given entry is not a valid tar archive entry, and will be skipped. This occurs when: - a checksum fails, - a `linkpath` is missing for a link type, or - a `linkpath` is provided for a non-link type. If every entry in a parsed archive raises an `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID` error, then the archive is presumed to be unrecoverably broken, and `TAR_BAD_ARCHIVE` will be raised. * `TAR_ENTRY_ERROR` The entry appears to be a valid tar archive entry, but encountered an error which prevented it from being unpacked. This occurs when: - an unrecoverable fs error happens during unpacking, - an entry has `..` in the path and `preservePaths` is not set, or - an entry is extracting through a symbolic link, when `preservePaths` is not set. * `TAR_ENTRY_UNSUPPORTED` An indication that a given entry is a valid archive entry, but of a type that is unsupported, and so will be skipped in archive creation or extracting. * `TAR_ABORT` When parsing gzipped-encoded archives, the parser will abort the parse process raise a warning for any zlib errors encountered. Aborts are considered unrecoverable for both parsing and unpacking. * `TAR_BAD_ARCHIVE` The archive file is totally hosed. This can happen for a number of reasons, and always occurs at the end of a parse or extract: - An entry body was truncated before seeing the full number of bytes. - The archive contained only invalid entries, indicating that it is likely not an archive, or at least, not an archive this library can parse. `TAR_BAD_ARCHIVE` is considered informative for parse operations, but unrecoverable for extraction. Note that, if encountered at the end of an extraction, tar WILL still have extracted as much it could from the archive, so there may be some garbage files to clean up. Errors that occur deeper in the system (ie, either the filesystem or zlib) will have their error codes left intact, and a `tarCode` matching one of the above will be added to the warning metadata or the raised error object. Errors generated by tar will have one of the above codes set as the `error.code` field as well, but since errors originating in zlib or fs will have their original codes, it's better to read `error.tarCode` if you wish to see how tar is handling the issue. ### Examples The API mimics the `tar(1)` command line functionality, with aliases for more human-readable option and function names. The goal is that if you know how to use `tar(1)` in Unix, then you know how to use `require('tar')` in JavaScript. To replicate `tar czf my-tarball.tgz files and folders`, you'd do: ```js tar.c( { gzip: <true|gzip options>, file: 'my-tarball.tgz' }, ['some', 'files', 'and', 'folders'] ).then(_ => { .. tarball has been created .. }) ``` To replicate `tar cz files and folders > my-tarball.tgz`, you'd do: ```js tar.c( // or tar.create { gzip: <true|gzip options> }, ['some', 'files', 'and', 'folders'] ).pipe(fs.createWriteStream('my-tarball.tgz')) ``` To replicate `tar xf my-tarball.tgz` you'd do: ```js tar.x( // or tar.extract( { file: 'my-tarball.tgz' } ).then(_=> { .. tarball has been dumped in cwd .. }) ``` To replicate `cat my-tarball.tgz | tar x -C some-dir --strip=1`: ```js fs.createReadStream('my-tarball.tgz').pipe( tar.x({ strip: 1, C: 'some-dir' // alias for cwd:'some-dir', also ok }) ) ``` To replicate `tar tf my-tarball.tgz`, do this: ```js tar.t({ file: 'my-tarball.tgz', onentry: entry => { .. do whatever with it .. } }) ``` To replicate `cat my-tarball.tgz | tar t` do: ```js fs.createReadStream('my-tarball.tgz') .pipe(tar.t()) .on('entry', entry => { .. do whatever with it .. }) ``` To do anything synchronous, add `sync: true` to the options. Note that sync functions don't take a callback and don't return a promise. When the function returns, it's already done. Sync methods without a file argument return a sync stream, which flushes immediately. But, of course, it still won't be done until you `.end()` it. To filter entries, add `filter: <function>` to the options. Tar-creating methods call the filter with `filter(path, stat)`. Tar-reading methods (including extraction) call the filter with `filter(path, entry)`. The filter is called in the `this`-context of the `Pack` or `Unpack` stream object. The arguments list to `tar t` and `tar x` specify a list of filenames to extract or list, so they're equivalent to a filter that tests if the file is in the list. For those who _aren't_ fans of tar's single-character command names: ``` tar.c === tar.create tar.r === tar.replace (appends to archive, file is required) tar.u === tar.update (appends if newer, file is required) tar.x === tar.extract tar.t === tar.list ``` Keep reading for all the command descriptions and options, as well as the low-level API that they are built on. ### tar.c(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.create] Create a tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to add to the tarball. Adding a directory also adds its children recursively. An entry in `fileList` that starts with an `@` symbol is a tar archive whose entries will be added. To add a file that starts with `@`, prepend it with `./`. The following options are supported: - `file` Write the tarball archive to the specified filename. If this is specified, then the callback will be fired when the file has been written, and a promise will be returned that resolves when the file is written. If a filename is not specified, then a Readable Stream will be returned which will emit the file data. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Act synchronously. If this is set, then any provided file will be fully written after the call to `tar.c`. If this is set, and a file is not provided, then the resulting stream will already have the data ready to `read` or `emit('data')` as soon as you request it. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` [Alias: `z`] - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. [Alias: `P`] - `mode` The mode to set on the created file archive - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. [Alias: `n`] - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. [Alias: `L`, `h`] - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. The following options are mostly internal, but can be modified in some advanced use cases, such as re-using caches between runs. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `readdirCache` A Map object that caches calls to `readdir`. - `jobs` A number specifying how many concurrent jobs to run. Defaults to 4. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. ### tar.x(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.extract] Extract a tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to extract from the tarball. If no paths are provided, then all the entries are extracted. If the archive is gzipped, then tar will detect this and unzip it. Note that all directories that are created will be forced to be writable, readable, and listable by their owner, to avoid cases where a directory prevents extraction of child entries by virtue of its mode. Most extraction errors will cause a `warn` event to be emitted. If the `cwd` is missing, or not a directory, then the extraction will fail completely. The following options are supported: - `cwd` Extract files relative to the specified directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. If provided, this must exist and must be a directory. [Alias: `C`] - `file` The archive file to extract. If not specified, then a Writable stream is returned where the archive data should be written. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Create files and directories synchronously. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being unpacked. Return `true` to unpack the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `newer` Set to true to keep the existing file on disk if it's newer than the file in the archive. [Alias: `keep-newer`, `keep-newer-files`] - `keep` Do not overwrite existing files. In particular, if a file appears more than once in an archive, later copies will not overwrite earlier copies. [Alias: `k`, `keep-existing`] - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths, paths containing `..`, and extracting through symbolic links. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths, `..` paths are not extracted, and any file whose location would be modified by a symbolic link is not extracted. [Alias: `P`] - `unlink` Unlink files before creating them. Without this option, tar overwrites existing files, which preserves existing hardlinks. With this option, existing hardlinks will be broken, as will any symlink that would affect the location of an extracted file. [Alias: `U`] - `strip` Remove the specified number of leading path elements. Pathnames with fewer elements will be silently skipped. Note that the pathname is edited after applying the filter, but before security checks. [Alias: `strip-components`, `stripComponents`] - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `preserveOwner` If true, tar will set the `uid` and `gid` of extracted entries to the `uid` and `gid` fields in the archive. This defaults to true when run as root, and false otherwise. If false, then files and directories will be set with the owner and group of the user running the process. This is similar to `-p` in `tar(1)`, but ACLs and other system-specific data is never unpacked in this implementation, and modes are set by default already. [Alias: `p`] - `uid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified user id, regardless of the `uid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `gid` option. - `gid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified group id, regardless of the `gid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `uid` option. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` value for extracted entries. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `transform` Provide a function that takes an `entry` object, and returns a stream, or any falsey value. If a stream is provided, then that stream's data will be written instead of the contents of the archive entry. If a falsey value is provided, then the entry is written to disk as normal. (To exclude items from extraction, use the `filter` option described above.) - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. The following options are mostly internal, but can be modified in some advanced use cases, such as re-using caches between runs. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `umask` Filter the modes of entries like `process.umask()`. - `dmode` Default mode for directories - `fmode` Default mode for files - `dirCache` A Map object of which directories exist. - `maxMetaEntrySize` The maximum size of meta entries that is supported. Defaults to 1 MB. Note that using an asynchronous stream type with the `transform` option will cause undefined behavior in sync extractions. [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass)-based streams are designed for this use case. ### tar.t(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.list] List the contents of a tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to list from the tarball. If no paths are provided, then all the entries are listed. If the archive is gzipped, then tar will detect this and unzip it. Returns an event emitter that emits `entry` events with `tar.ReadEntry` objects. However, they don't emit `'data'` or `'end'` events. (If you want to get actual readable entries, use the `tar.Parse` class instead.) The following options are supported: - `cwd` Extract files relative to the specified directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `file` The archive file to list. If not specified, then a Writable stream is returned where the archive data should be written. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Read the specified file synchronously. (This has no effect when a file option isn't specified, because entries are emitted as fast as they are parsed from the stream anyway.) - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being listed. Return `true` to emit the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. This is important for when both `file` and `sync` are set, because it will be called synchronously. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noResume` By default, `entry` streams are resumed immediately after the call to `onentry`. Set `noResume: true` to suppress this behavior. Note that by opting into this, the stream will never complete until the entry data is consumed. ### tar.u(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.update] Add files to an archive if they are newer than the entry already in the tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to add to the tarball. Adding a directory also adds its children recursively. An entry in `fileList` that starts with an `@` symbol is a tar archive whose entries will be added. To add a file that starts with `@`, prepend it with `./`. The following options are supported: - `file` Required. Write the tarball archive to the specified filename. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Act synchronously. If this is set, then any provided file will be fully written after the call to `tar.c`. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for adding entries to the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` [Alias: `z`] - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. [Alias: `P`] - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. [Alias: `n`] - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. [Alias: `L`, `h`] - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. ### tar.r(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.replace] Add files to an existing archive. Because later entries override earlier entries, this effectively replaces any existing entries. The `fileList` is an array of paths to add to the tarball. Adding a directory also adds its children recursively. An entry in `fileList` that starts with an `@` symbol is a tar archive whose entries will be added. To add a file that starts with `@`, prepend it with `./`. The following options are supported: - `file` Required. Write the tarball archive to the specified filename. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Act synchronously. If this is set, then any provided file will be fully written after the call to `tar.c`. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for adding entries to the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` [Alias: `z`] - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. [Alias: `P`] - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. [Alias: `n`] - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. [Alias: `L`, `h`] - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. ## Low-Level API ### class tar.Pack A readable tar stream. Has all the standard readable stream interface stuff. `'data'` and `'end'` events, `read()` method, `pause()` and `resume()`, etc. #### constructor(options) The following options are supported: - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `readdirCache` A Map object that caches calls to `readdir`. - `jobs` A number specifying how many concurrent jobs to run. Defaults to 4. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. #### add(path) Adds an entry to the archive. Returns the Pack stream. #### write(path) Adds an entry to the archive. Returns true if flushed. #### end() Finishes the archive. ### class tar.Pack.Sync Synchronous version of `tar.Pack`. ### class tar.Unpack A writable stream that unpacks a tar archive onto the file system. All the normal writable stream stuff is supported. `write()` and `end()` methods, `'drain'` events, etc. Note that all directories that are created will be forced to be writable, readable, and listable by their owner, to avoid cases where a directory prevents extraction of child entries by virtue of its mode. `'close'` is emitted when it's done writing stuff to the file system. Most unpack errors will cause a `warn` event to be emitted. If the `cwd` is missing, or not a directory, then an error will be emitted. #### constructor(options) - `cwd` Extract files relative to the specified directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. If provided, this must exist and must be a directory. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being unpacked. Return `true` to unpack the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `newer` Set to true to keep the existing file on disk if it's newer than the file in the archive. - `keep` Do not overwrite existing files. In particular, if a file appears more than once in an archive, later copies will not overwrite earlier copies. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths, paths containing `..`, and extracting through symbolic links. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths, `..` paths are not extracted, and any file whose location would be modified by a symbolic link is not extracted. - `unlink` Unlink files before creating them. Without this option, tar overwrites existing files, which preserves existing hardlinks. With this option, existing hardlinks will be broken, as will any symlink that would affect the location of an extracted file. - `strip` Remove the specified number of leading path elements. Pathnames with fewer elements will be silently skipped. Note that the pathname is edited after applying the filter, but before security checks. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `umask` Filter the modes of entries like `process.umask()`. - `dmode` Default mode for directories - `fmode` Default mode for files - `dirCache` A Map object of which directories exist. - `maxMetaEntrySize` The maximum size of meta entries that is supported. Defaults to 1 MB. - `preserveOwner` If true, tar will set the `uid` and `gid` of extracted entries to the `uid` and `gid` fields in the archive. This defaults to true when run as root, and false otherwise. If false, then files and directories will be set with the owner and group of the user running the process. This is similar to `-p` in `tar(1)`, but ACLs and other system-specific data is never unpacked in this implementation, and modes are set by default already. - `win32` True if on a windows platform. Causes behavior where filenames containing `<|>?` chars are converted to windows-compatible values while being unpacked. - `uid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified user id, regardless of the `uid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `gid` option. - `gid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified group id, regardless of the `gid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `uid` option. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` value for extracted entries. - `transform` Provide a function that takes an `entry` object, and returns a stream, or any falsey value. If a stream is provided, then that stream's data will be written instead of the contents of the archive entry. If a falsey value is provided, then the entry is written to disk as normal. (To exclude items from extraction, use the `filter` option described above.) - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") ### class tar.Unpack.Sync Synchronous version of `tar.Unpack`. Note that using an asynchronous stream type with the `transform` option will cause undefined behavior in sync unpack streams. [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass)-based streams are designed for this use case. ### class tar.Parse A writable stream that parses a tar archive stream. All the standard writable stream stuff is supported. If the archive is gzipped, then tar will detect this and unzip it. Emits `'entry'` events with `tar.ReadEntry` objects, which are themselves readable streams that you can pipe wherever. Each `entry` will not emit until the one before it is flushed through, so make sure to either consume the data (with `on('data', ...)` or `.pipe(...)`) or throw it away with `.resume()` to keep the stream flowing. #### constructor(options) Returns an event emitter that emits `entry` events with `tar.ReadEntry` objects. The following options are supported: - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being listed. Return `true` to emit the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") #### abort(error) Stop all parsing activities. This is called when there are zlib errors. It also emits an unrecoverable warning with the error provided. ### class tar.ReadEntry extends [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass) A representation of an entry that is being read out of a tar archive. It has the following fields: - `extended` The extended metadata object provided to the constructor. - `globalExtended` The global extended metadata object provided to the constructor. - `remain` The number of bytes remaining to be written into the stream. - `blockRemain` The number of 512-byte blocks remaining to be written into the stream. - `ignore` Whether this entry should be ignored. - `meta` True if this represents metadata about the next entry, false if it represents a filesystem object. - All the fields from the header, extended header, and global extended header are added to the ReadEntry object. So it has `path`, `type`, `size, `mode`, and so on. #### constructor(header, extended, globalExtended) Create a new ReadEntry object with the specified header, extended header, and global extended header values. ### class tar.WriteEntry extends [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass) A representation of an entry that is being written from the file system into a tar archive. Emits data for the Header, and for the Pax Extended Header if one is required, as well as any body data. Creating a WriteEntry for a directory does not also create WriteEntry objects for all of the directory contents. It has the following fields: - `path` The path field that will be written to the archive. By default, this is also the path from the cwd to the file system object. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `myuid` If supported, the uid of the user running the current process. - `myuser` The `env.USER` string if set, or `''`. Set as the entry `uname` field if the file's `uid` matches `this.myuid`. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 1 MB. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. - `absolute` The absolute path to the entry on the filesystem. By default, this is `path.resolve(this.cwd, this.path)`, but it can be overridden explicitly. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `win32` True if on a windows platform. Causes behavior where paths replace `\` with `/` and filenames containing the windows-compatible forms of `<|>?:` characters are converted to actual `<|>?:` characters in the archive. - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. #### constructor(path, options) `path` is the path of the entry as it is written in the archive. The following options are supported: - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 1 MB. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. - `absolute` The absolute path to the entry on the filesystem. By default, this is `path.resolve(this.cwd, this.path)`, but it can be overridden explicitly. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `win32` True if on a windows platform. Causes behavior where paths replace `\` with `/`. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. - `umask` Set to restrict the modes on the entries in the archive, somewhat like how umask works on file creation. Defaults to `process.umask()` on unix systems, or `0o22` on Windows. #### warn(message, data) If strict, emit an error with the provided message. Othewise, emit a `'warn'` event with the provided message and data. ### class tar.WriteEntry.Sync Synchronous version of tar.WriteEntry ### class tar.WriteEntry.Tar A version of tar.WriteEntry that gets its data from a tar.ReadEntry instead of from the filesystem. #### constructor(readEntry, options) `readEntry` is the entry being read out of another archive. The following options are supported: - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. ### class tar.Header A class for reading and writing header blocks. It has the following fields: - `nullBlock` True if decoding a block which is entirely composed of `0x00` null bytes. (Useful because tar files are terminated by at least 2 null blocks.) - `cksumValid` True if the checksum in the header is valid, false otherwise. - `needPax` True if the values, as encoded, will require a Pax extended header. - `path` The path of the entry. - `mode` The 4 lowest-order octal digits of the file mode. That is, read/write/execute permissions for world, group, and owner, and the setuid, setgid, and sticky bits. - `uid` Numeric user id of the file owner - `gid` Numeric group id of the file owner - `size` Size of the file in bytes - `mtime` Modified time of the file - `cksum` The checksum of the header. This is generated by adding all the bytes of the header block, treating the checksum field itself as all ascii space characters (that is, `0x20`). - `type` The human-readable name of the type of entry this represents, or the alphanumeric key if unknown. - `typeKey` The alphanumeric key for the type of entry this header represents. - `linkpath` The target of Link and SymbolicLink entries. - `uname` Human-readable user name of the file owner - `gname` Human-readable group name of the file owner - `devmaj` The major portion of the device number. Always `0` for files, directories, and links. - `devmin` The minor portion of the device number. Always `0` for files, directories, and links. - `atime` File access time. - `ctime` File change time. #### constructor(data, [offset=0]) `data` is optional. It is either a Buffer that should be interpreted as a tar Header starting at the specified offset and continuing for 512 bytes, or a data object of keys and values to set on the header object, and eventually encode as a tar Header. #### decode(block, offset) Decode the provided buffer starting at the specified offset. Buffer length must be greater than 512 bytes. #### set(data) Set the fields in the data object. #### encode(buffer, offset) Encode the header fields into the buffer at the specified offset. Returns `this.needPax` to indicate whether a Pax Extended Header is required to properly encode the specified data. ### class tar.Pax An object representing a set of key-value pairs in an Pax extended header entry. It has the following fields. Where the same name is used, they have the same semantics as the tar.Header field of the same name. - `global` True if this represents a global extended header, or false if it is for a single entry. - `atime` - `charset` - `comment` - `ctime` - `gid` - `gname` - `linkpath` - `mtime` - `path` - `size` - `uid` - `uname` - `dev` - `ino` - `nlink` #### constructor(object, global) Set the fields set in the object. `global` is a boolean that defaults to false. #### encode() Return a Buffer containing the header and body for the Pax extended header entry, or `null` if there is nothing to encode. #### encodeBody() Return a string representing the body of the pax extended header entry. #### encodeField(fieldName) Return a string representing the key/value encoding for the specified fieldName, or `''` if the field is unset. ### tar.Pax.parse(string, extended, global) Return a new Pax object created by parsing the contents of the string provided. If the `extended` object is set, then also add the fields from that object. (This is necessary because multiple metadata entries can occur in sequence.) ### tar.types A translation table for the `type` field in tar headers. #### tar.types.name.get(code) Get the human-readable name for a given alphanumeric code. #### tar.types.code.get(name) Get the alphanumeric code for a given human-readable name. # Acorn A tiny, fast JavaScript parser written in JavaScript. ## Community Acorn is open source software released under an [MIT license](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn/blob/master/acorn/LICENSE). You are welcome to [report bugs](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn/issues) or create pull requests on [github](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn). For questions and discussion, please use the [Tern discussion forum](https://discuss.ternjs.net). ## Installation The easiest way to install acorn is from [`npm`](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh npm install acorn ``` Alternately, you can download the source and build acorn yourself: ```sh git clone https://github.com/acornjs/acorn.git cd acorn npm install ``` ## Interface **parse**`(input, options)` is the main interface to the library. The `input` parameter is a string, `options` can be undefined or an object setting some of the options listed below. The return value will be an abstract syntax tree object as specified by the [ESTree spec](https://github.com/estree/estree). ```javascript let acorn = require("acorn"); console.log(acorn.parse("1 + 1")); ``` When encountering a syntax error, the parser will raise a `SyntaxError` object with a meaningful message. The error object will have a `pos` property that indicates the string offset at which the error occurred, and a `loc` object that contains a `{line, column}` object referring to that same position. Options can be provided by passing a second argument, which should be an object containing any of these fields: - **ecmaVersion**: Indicates the ECMAScript version to parse. Must be either 3, 5, 6 (2015), 7 (2016), 8 (2017), 9 (2018), 10 (2019) or 11 (2020, partial support). This influences support for strict mode, the set of reserved words, and support for new syntax features. Default is 10. **NOTE**: Only 'stage 4' (finalized) ECMAScript features are being implemented by Acorn. Other proposed new features can be implemented through plugins. - **sourceType**: Indicate the mode the code should be parsed in. Can be either `"script"` or `"module"`. This influences global strict mode and parsing of `import` and `export` declarations. **NOTE**: If set to `"module"`, then static `import` / `export` syntax will be valid, even if `ecmaVersion` is less than 6. - **onInsertedSemicolon**: If given a callback, that callback will be called whenever a missing semicolon is inserted by the parser. The callback will be given the character offset of the point where the semicolon is inserted as argument, and if `locations` is on, also a `{line, column}` object representing this position. - **onTrailingComma**: Like `onInsertedSemicolon`, but for trailing commas. - **allowReserved**: If `false`, using a reserved word will generate an error. Defaults to `true` for `ecmaVersion` 3, `false` for higher versions. When given the value `"never"`, reserved words and keywords can also not be used as property names (as in Internet Explorer's old parser). - **allowReturnOutsideFunction**: By default, a return statement at the top level raises an error. Set this to `true` to accept such code. - **allowImportExportEverywhere**: By default, `import` and `export` declarations can only appear at a program's top level. Setting this option to `true` allows them anywhere where a statement is allowed. - **allowAwaitOutsideFunction**: By default, `await` expressions can only appear inside `async` functions. Setting this option to `true` allows to have top-level `await` expressions. They are still not allowed in non-`async` functions, though. - **allowHashBang**: When this is enabled (off by default), if the code starts with the characters `#!` (as in a shellscript), the first line will be treated as a comment. - **locations**: When `true`, each node has a `loc` object attached with `start` and `end` subobjects, each of which contains the one-based line and zero-based column numbers in `{line, column}` form. Default is `false`. - **onToken**: If a function is passed for this option, each found token will be passed in same format as tokens returned from `tokenizer().getToken()`. If array is passed, each found token is pushed to it. Note that you are not allowed to call the parser from the callback—that will corrupt its internal state. - **onComment**: If a function is passed for this option, whenever a comment is encountered the function will be called with the following parameters: - `block`: `true` if the comment is a block comment, false if it is a line comment. - `text`: The content of the comment. - `start`: Character offset of the start of the comment. - `end`: Character offset of the end of the comment. When the `locations` options is on, the `{line, column}` locations of the comment’s start and end are passed as two additional parameters. If array is passed for this option, each found comment is pushed to it as object in Esprima format: ```javascript { "type": "Line" | "Block", "value": "comment text", "start": Number, "end": Number, // If `locations` option is on: "loc": { "start": {line: Number, column: Number} "end": {line: Number, column: Number} }, // If `ranges` option is on: "range": [Number, Number] } ``` Note that you are not allowed to call the parser from the callback—that will corrupt its internal state. - **ranges**: Nodes have their start and end characters offsets recorded in `start` and `end` properties (directly on the node, rather than the `loc` object, which holds line/column data. To also add a [semi-standardized](https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745678) `range` property holding a `[start, end]` array with the same numbers, set the `ranges` option to `true`. - **program**: It is possible to parse multiple files into a single AST by passing the tree produced by parsing the first file as the `program` option in subsequent parses. This will add the toplevel forms of the parsed file to the "Program" (top) node of an existing parse tree. - **sourceFile**: When the `locations` option is `true`, you can pass this option to add a `source` attribute in every node’s `loc` object. Note that the contents of this option are not examined or processed in any way; you are free to use whatever format you choose. - **directSourceFile**: Like `sourceFile`, but a `sourceFile` property will be added (regardless of the `location` option) directly to the nodes, rather than the `loc` object. - **preserveParens**: If this option is `true`, parenthesized expressions are represented by (non-standard) `ParenthesizedExpression` nodes that have a single `expression` property containing the expression inside parentheses. **parseExpressionAt**`(input, offset, options)` will parse a single expression in a string, and return its AST. It will not complain if there is more of the string left after the expression. **tokenizer**`(input, options)` returns an object with a `getToken` method that can be called repeatedly to get the next token, a `{start, end, type, value}` object (with added `loc` property when the `locations` option is enabled and `range` property when the `ranges` option is enabled). When the token's type is `tokTypes.eof`, you should stop calling the method, since it will keep returning that same token forever. In ES6 environment, returned result can be used as any other protocol-compliant iterable: ```javascript for (let token of acorn.tokenizer(str)) { // iterate over the tokens } // transform code to array of tokens: var tokens = [...acorn.tokenizer(str)]; ``` **tokTypes** holds an object mapping names to the token type objects that end up in the `type` properties of tokens. **getLineInfo**`(input, offset)` can be used to get a `{line, column}` object for a given program string and offset. ### The `Parser` class Instances of the **`Parser`** class contain all the state and logic that drives a parse. It has static methods `parse`, `parseExpressionAt`, and `tokenizer` that match the top-level functions by the same name. When extending the parser with plugins, you need to call these methods on the extended version of the class. To extend a parser with plugins, you can use its static `extend` method. ```javascript var acorn = require("acorn"); var jsx = require("acorn-jsx"); var JSXParser = acorn.Parser.extend(jsx()); JSXParser.parse("foo(<bar/>)"); ``` The `extend` method takes any number of plugin values, and returns a new `Parser` class that includes the extra parser logic provided by the plugins. ## Command line interface The `bin/acorn` utility can be used to parse a file from the command line. It accepts as arguments its input file and the following options: - `--ecma3|--ecma5|--ecma6|--ecma7|--ecma8|--ecma9|--ecma10`: Sets the ECMAScript version to parse. Default is version 9. - `--module`: Sets the parsing mode to `"module"`. Is set to `"script"` otherwise. - `--locations`: Attaches a "loc" object to each node with "start" and "end" subobjects, each of which contains the one-based line and zero-based column numbers in `{line, column}` form. - `--allow-hash-bang`: If the code starts with the characters #! (as in a shellscript), the first line will be treated as a comment. - `--compact`: No whitespace is used in the AST output. - `--silent`: Do not output the AST, just return the exit status. - `--help`: Print the usage information and quit. The utility spits out the syntax tree as JSON data. ## Existing plugins - [`acorn-jsx`](https://github.com/RReverser/acorn-jsx): Parse [Facebook JSX syntax extensions](https://github.com/facebook/jsx) Plugins for ECMAScript proposals: - [`acorn-stage3`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-stage3): Parse most stage 3 proposals, bundling: - [`acorn-class-fields`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-class-fields): Parse [class fields proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-class-fields) - [`acorn-import-meta`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-import-meta): Parse [import.meta proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-import-meta) - [`acorn-private-methods`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-private-methods): parse [private methods, getters and setters proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-private-methods)n # isobject [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/isobject.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/isobject) [![NPM downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/isobject.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/isobject) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jonschlinkert/isobject.svg?style=flat)](https://travis-ci.org/jonschlinkert/isobject) Returns true if the value is an object and not an array or null. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install isobject --save ``` Use [is-plain-object](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-plain-object) if you want only objects that are created by the `Object` constructor. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install isobject ``` Install with [bower](http://bower.io/) ```sh $ bower install isobject ``` ## Usage ```js var isObject = require('isobject'); ``` **True** All of the following return `true`: ```js isObject({}); isObject(Object.create({})); isObject(Object.create(Object.prototype)); isObject(Object.create(null)); isObject({}); isObject(new Foo); isObject(/foo/); ``` **False** All of the following return `false`: ```js isObject(); isObject(function () {}); isObject(1); isObject([]); isObject(undefined); isObject(null); ``` ## Related projects You might also be interested in these projects: [merge-deep](https://www.npmjs.com/package/merge-deep): Recursively merge values in a javascript object. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/merge-deep) * [extend-shallow](https://www.npmjs.com/package/extend-shallow): Extend an object with the properties of additional objects. node.js/javascript util. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/extend-shallow) * [is-plain-object](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-plain-object): Returns true if an object was created by the `Object` constructor. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-plain-object) * [kind-of](https://www.npmjs.com/package/kind-of): Get the native type of a value. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/kind-of) ## Contributing Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/isobject/issues/new). ## Building docs Generate readme and API documentation with [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb): ```sh $ npm install verb && npm run docs ``` Or, if [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb) is installed globally: ```sh $ verb ``` ## Running tests Install dev dependencies: ```sh $ npm install -d && npm test ``` ## Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [github/jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [twitter/jonschlinkert](http://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) ## License Copyright © 2016, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT license](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/isobject/blob/master/LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb), v0.9.0, on April 25, 2016._ # y18n [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) The bare-bones internationalization library used by yargs. Inspired by [i18n](https://www.npmjs.com/package/i18n). ## Examples _simple string translation:_ ```js const __ = require('y18n')().__; console.log(__('my awesome string %s', 'foo')); ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _using tagged template literals_ ```js const __ = require('y18n')().__; const str = 'foo'; console.log(__`my awesome string ${str}`); ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _pluralization support:_ ```js const __n = require('y18n')().__n; console.log(__n('one fish %s', '%d fishes %s', 2, 'foo')); ``` output: `2 fishes foo` ## Deno Example As of `v5` `y18n` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno): ```typescript import y18n from "https://deno.land/x/y18n/deno.ts"; const __ = y18n({ locale: 'pirate', directory: './test/locales' }).__ console.info(__`Hi, ${'Ben'} ${'Coe'}!`) ``` You will need to run with `--allow-read` to load alternative locales. ## JSON Language Files The JSON language files should be stored in a `./locales` folder. File names correspond to locales, e.g., `en.json`, `pirate.json`. When strings are observed for the first time they will be added to the JSON file corresponding to the current locale. ## Methods ### require('y18n')(config) Create an instance of y18n with the config provided, options include: * `directory`: the locale directory, default `./locales`. * `updateFiles`: should newly observed strings be updated in file, default `true`. * `locale`: what locale should be used. * `fallbackToLanguage`: should fallback to a language-only file (e.g. `en.json`) be allowed if a file matching the locale does not exist (e.g. `en_US.json`), default `true`. ### y18n.\_\_(str, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string, `%s` will be replaced with `arg`s. This function can also be used as a tag for a template literal. You can use it like this: <code>__&#96;hello ${'world'}&#96;</code>. This will be equivalent to `__('hello %s', 'world')`. ### y18n.\_\_n(singularString, pluralString, count, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string with appropriate pluralization. If `%d` is provided in the string, the `count` will replace this placeholder. ### y18n.setLocale(str) Set the current locale being used. ### y18n.getLocale() What locale is currently being used? ### y18n.updateLocale(obj) Update the current locale with the key value pairs in `obj`. ## Supported Node.js Versions Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track [Node.js' release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/). Here's [a post on why we think this is important](https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/maintainers-should-consider-following-node-js-release-schedule-ab08ed4de71a). ## License ISC [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/y18n [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/y18n.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: https://github.com/feross/standard # which Like the unix `which` utility. Finds the first instance of a specified executable in the PATH environment variable. Does not cache the results, so `hash -r` is not needed when the PATH changes. ## USAGE ```javascript var which = require('which') // async usage which('node', function (er, resolvedPath) { // er is returned if no "node" is found on the PATH // if it is found, then the absolute path to the exec is returned }) // or promise which('node').then(resolvedPath => { ... }).catch(er => { ... not found ... }) // sync usage // throws if not found var resolved = which.sync('node') // if nothrow option is used, returns null if not found resolved = which.sync('node', {nothrow: true}) // Pass options to override the PATH and PATHEXT environment vars. which('node', { path: someOtherPath }, function (er, resolved) { if (er) throw er console.log('found at %j', resolved) }) ``` ## CLI USAGE Same as the BSD `which(1)` binary. ``` usage: which [-as] program ... ``` ## OPTIONS You may pass an options object as the second argument. - `path`: Use instead of the `PATH` environment variable. - `pathExt`: Use instead of the `PATHEXT` environment variable. - `all`: Return all matches, instead of just the first one. Note that this means the function returns an array of strings instead of a single string. <p align="center"> <img width="250" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yargs/yargs/master/yargs-logo.png"> </p> <h1 align="center"> Yargs </h1> <p align="center"> <b >Yargs be a node.js library fer hearties tryin' ter parse optstrings</b> </p> <br> ![ci](https://github.com/yargs/yargs/workflows/ci/badge.svg) [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Coverage][coverage-image]][coverage-url] [![Conventional Commits][conventional-commits-image]][conventional-commits-url] [![Slack][slack-image]][slack-url] ## Description Yargs helps you build interactive command line tools, by parsing arguments and generating an elegant user interface. It gives you: * commands and (grouped) options (`my-program.js serve --port=5000`). * a dynamically generated help menu based on your arguments: ``` mocha [spec..] Run tests with Mocha Commands mocha inspect [spec..] Run tests with Mocha [default] mocha init <path> create a client-side Mocha setup at <path> Rules & Behavior --allow-uncaught Allow uncaught errors to propagate [boolean] --async-only, -A Require all tests to use a callback (async) or return a Promise [boolean] ``` * bash-completion shortcuts for commands and options. * and [tons more](/docs/api.md). ## Installation Stable version: ```bash npm i yargs ``` Bleeding edge version with the most recent features: ```bash npm i yargs@next ``` ## Usage ### Simple Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node const yargs = require('yargs/yargs') const { hideBin } = require('yargs/helpers') const argv = yargs(hideBin(process.argv)).argv if (argv.ships > 3 && argv.distance < 53.5) { console.log('Plunder more riffiwobbles!') } else { console.log('Retreat from the xupptumblers!') } ``` ```bash $ ./plunder.js --ships=4 --distance=22 Plunder more riffiwobbles! $ ./plunder.js --ships 12 --distance 98.7 Retreat from the xupptumblers! ``` ### Complex Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node const yargs = require('yargs/yargs') const { hideBin } = require('yargs/helpers') yargs(hideBin(process.argv)) .command('serve [port]', 'start the server', (yargs) => { yargs .positional('port', { describe: 'port to bind on', default: 5000 }) }, (argv) => { if (argv.verbose) console.info(`start server on :${argv.port}`) serve(argv.port) }) .option('verbose', { alias: 'v', type: 'boolean', description: 'Run with verbose logging' }) .argv ``` Run the example above with `--help` to see the help for the application. ## Supported Platforms ### TypeScript yargs has type definitions at [@types/yargs][type-definitions]. ``` npm i @types/yargs --save-dev ``` See usage examples in [docs](/docs/typescript.md). ### Deno As of `v16`, `yargs` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno): ```typescript import yargs from 'https://deno.land/x/yargs/deno.ts' import { Arguments } from 'https://deno.land/x/yargs/deno-types.ts' yargs(Deno.args) .command('download <files...>', 'download a list of files', (yargs: any) => { return yargs.positional('files', { describe: 'a list of files to do something with' }) }, (argv: Arguments) => { console.info(argv) }) .strictCommands() .demandCommand(1) .argv ``` ### ESM As of `v16`,`yargs` supports ESM imports: ```js import yargs from 'yargs' import { hideBin } from 'yargs/helpers' yargs(hideBin(process.argv)) .command('curl <url>', 'fetch the contents of the URL', () => {}, (argv) => { console.info(argv) }) .demandCommand(1) .argv ``` ### Usage in Browser See examples of using yargs in the browser in [docs](/docs/browser.md). ## Community Having problems? want to contribute? join our [community slack](http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com). ## Documentation ### Table of Contents * [Yargs' API](/docs/api.md) * [Examples](/docs/examples.md) * [Parsing Tricks](/docs/tricks.md) * [Stop the Parser](/docs/tricks.md#stop) * [Negating Boolean Arguments](/docs/tricks.md#negate) * [Numbers](/docs/tricks.md#numbers) * [Arrays](/docs/tricks.md#arrays) * [Objects](/docs/tricks.md#objects) * [Quotes](/docs/tricks.md#quotes) * [Advanced Topics](/docs/advanced.md) * [Composing Your App Using Commands](/docs/advanced.md#commands) * [Building Configurable CLI Apps](/docs/advanced.md#configuration) * [Customizing Yargs' Parser](/docs/advanced.md#customizing) * [Bundling yargs](/docs/bundling.md) * [Contributing](/contributing.md) ## Supported Node.js Versions Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track [Node.js' release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/). Here's [a post on why we think this is important](https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/maintainers-should-consider-following-node-js-release-schedule-ab08ed4de71a). [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: http://standardjs.com/ [conventional-commits-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg [conventional-commits-url]: https://conventionalcommits.org/ [slack-image]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com/badge.svg [slack-url]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com [type-definitions]: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/master/types/yargs [coverage-image]: https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/yargs [coverage-url]: https://github.com/yargs/yargs/blob/master/.nycrc ### Esrecurse [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/estools/esrecurse.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/estools/esrecurse) Esrecurse ([esrecurse](https://github.com/estools/esrecurse)) is [ECMAScript](https://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) recursive traversing functionality. ### Example Usage The following code will output all variables declared at the root of a file. ```javascript esrecurse.visit(ast, { XXXStatement: function (node) { this.visit(node.left); // do something... this.visit(node.right); } }); ``` We can use `Visitor` instance. ```javascript var visitor = new esrecurse.Visitor({ XXXStatement: function (node) { this.visit(node.left); // do something... this.visit(node.right); } }); visitor.visit(ast); ``` We can inherit `Visitor` instance easily. ```javascript class Derived extends esrecurse.Visitor { constructor() { super(null); } XXXStatement(node) { } } ``` ```javascript function DerivedVisitor() { esrecurse.Visitor.call(/* this for constructor */ this /* visitor object automatically becomes this. */); } util.inherits(DerivedVisitor, esrecurse.Visitor); DerivedVisitor.prototype.XXXStatement = function (node) { this.visit(node.left); // do something... this.visit(node.right); }; ``` And you can invoke default visiting operation inside custom visit operation. ```javascript function DerivedVisitor() { esrecurse.Visitor.call(/* this for constructor */ this /* visitor object automatically becomes this. */); } util.inherits(DerivedVisitor, esrecurse.Visitor); DerivedVisitor.prototype.XXXStatement = function (node) { // do something... this.visitChildren(node); }; ``` The `childVisitorKeys` option does customize the behaviour of `this.visitChildren(node)`. We can use user-defined node types. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; esrecurse.visit( ast, { Literal: function (node) { // do something... } }, { // Extending the existing traversing rules. childVisitorKeys: { // TargetNodeName: [ 'keys', 'containing', 'the', 'other', '**node**' ] TestExpression: ['argument'] } } ); ``` We can use the `fallback` option as well. If the `fallback` option is `"iteration"`, `esrecurse` would visit all enumerable properties of unknown nodes. Please note circular references cause the stack overflow. AST might have circular references in additional properties for some purpose (e.g. `node.parent`). ```javascript esrecurse.visit( ast, { Literal: function (node) { // do something... } }, { fallback: 'iteration' } ); ``` If the `fallback` option is a function, `esrecurse` calls this function to determine the enumerable properties of unknown nodes. Please note circular references cause the stack overflow. AST might have circular references in additional properties for some purpose (e.g. `node.parent`). ```javascript esrecurse.visit( ast, { Literal: function (node) { // do something... } }, { fallback: function (node) { return Object.keys(node).filter(function(key) { return key !== 'argument' }); } } ); ``` ### License Copyright (C) 2014 [Yusuke Suzuki](https://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](https://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. # isarray `Array#isArray` for older browsers. [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/juliangruber/isarray.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/juliangruber/isarray) [![downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/isarray.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/isarray) [![browser support](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/isarray.png) ](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/isarray) ## Usage ```js var isArray = require('isarray'); console.log(isArray([])); // => true console.log(isArray({})); // => false ``` ## Installation With [npm](http://npmjs.org) do ```bash $ npm install isarray ``` Then bundle for the browser with [browserify](https://github.com/substack/browserify). With [component](http://component.io) do ```bash $ component install juliangruber/isarray ``` ## License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2013 Julian Gruber &lt;[email protected]&gt; Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # is-core-module <sup>[![Version Badge][2]][1]</sup> [![github actions][actions-image]][actions-url] [![coverage][codecov-image]][codecov-url] [![dependency status][5]][6] [![dev dependency status][7]][8] [![License][license-image]][license-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url] [![npm badge][11]][1] Is this specifier a node.js core module? Optionally provide a node version to check; defaults to the current node version. ## Example ```js var isCore = require('is-core-module'); var assert = require('assert'); assert(isCore('fs')); assert(!isCore('butts')); ``` ## Tests Clone the repo, `npm install`, and run `npm test` [1]: https://npmjs.org/package/is-core-module [2]: https://versionbadg.es/inspect-js/is-core-module.svg [5]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/is-core-module.svg [6]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/is-core-module [7]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/is-core-module/dev-status.svg [8]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/is-core-module#info=devDependencies [11]: https://nodei.co/npm/is-core-module.png?downloads=true&stars=true [license-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/l/is-core-module.svg [license-url]: LICENSE [downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/is-core-module.svg [downloads-url]: https://npm-stat.com/charts.html?package=is-core-module [codecov-image]: https://codecov.io/gh/inspect-js/is-core-module/branch/main/graphs/badge.svg [codecov-url]: https://app.codecov.io/gh/inspect-js/is-core-module/ [actions-image]: https://img.shields.io/endpoint?url=https://github-actions-badge-u3jn4tfpocch.runkit.sh/inspect-js/is-core-module [actions-url]: https://github.com/inspect-js/is-core-module/actions <img align="right" alt="Ajv logo" width="160" src="https://ajv.js.org/images/ajv_logo.png"> # Ajv: Another JSON Schema Validator The fastest JSON Schema validator for Node.js and browser. Supports draft-04/06/07. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/ajv-validator/ajv.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/ajv-validator/ajv) [![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/ajv.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv) [![npm (beta)](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/ajv/beta)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv/v/7.0.0-beta.0) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/ajv.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/ajv-validator/ajv/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/ajv-validator/ajv?branch=master) [![Gitter](https://img.shields.io/gitter/room/ajv-validator/ajv.svg)](https://gitter.im/ajv-validator/ajv) [![GitHub Sponsors](https://img.shields.io/badge/$-sponsors-brightgreen)](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) ## Ajv v7 beta is released [Ajv version 7.0.0-beta.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/tree/v7-beta) is released with these changes: - to reduce the mistakes in JSON schemas and unexpected validation results, [strict mode](./docs/strict-mode.md) is added - it prohibits ignored or ambiguous JSON Schema elements. - to make code injection from untrusted schemas impossible, [code generation](./docs/codegen.md) is fully re-written to be safe. - to simplify Ajv extensions, the new keyword API that is used by pre-defined keywords is available to user-defined keywords - it is much easier to define any keywords now, especially with subschemas. - schemas are compiled to ES6 code (ES5 code generation is supported with an option). - to improve reliability and maintainability the code is migrated to TypeScript. **Please note**: - the support for JSON-Schema draft-04 is removed - if you have schemas using "id" attributes you have to replace them with "\$id" (or continue using version 6 that will be supported until 02/28/2021). - all formats are separated to ajv-formats package - they have to be explicitely added if you use them. See [release notes](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v7.0.0-beta.0) for the details. To install the new version: ```bash npm install ajv@beta ``` See [Getting started with v7](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/tree/v7-beta#usage) for code example. ## Mozilla MOSS grant and OpenJS Foundation [<img src="https://www.poberezkin.com/images/mozilla.png" width="240" height="68">](https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/moss/) &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; [<img src="https://www.poberezkin.com/images/openjs.png" width="220" height="68">](https://openjsf.org/blog/2020/08/14/ajv-joins-openjs-foundation-as-an-incubation-project/) Ajv has been awarded a grant from Mozilla’s [Open Source Support (MOSS) program](https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/moss/) in the “Foundational Technology” track! It will sponsor the development of Ajv support of [JSON Schema version 2019-09](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-handrews-json-schema-02) and of [JSON Type Definition](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ucarion-json-type-definition-04). Ajv also joined [OpenJS Foundation](https://openjsf.org/) – having this support will help ensure the longevity and stability of Ajv for all its users. This [blog post](https://www.poberezkin.com/posts/2020-08-14-ajv-json-validator-mozilla-open-source-grant-openjs-foundation.html) has more details. I am looking for the long term maintainers of Ajv – working with [ReadySet](https://www.thereadyset.co/), also sponsored by Mozilla, to establish clear guidelines for the role of a "maintainer" and the contribution standards, and to encourage a wider, more inclusive, contribution from the community. ## Please [sponsor Ajv development](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) Since I asked to support Ajv development 40 people and 6 organizations contributed via GitHub and OpenCollective - this support helped receiving the MOSS grant! Your continuing support is very important - the funds will be used to develop and maintain Ajv once the next major version is released. Please sponsor Ajv via: - [GitHub sponsors page](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) (GitHub will match it) - [Ajv Open Collective️](https://opencollective.com/ajv) Thank you. #### Open Collective sponsors <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/individuals.svg?width=890"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/0/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/0/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/1/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/1/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/2/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/2/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/3/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/3/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/4/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/4/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/5/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/5/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/6/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/6/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/7/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/7/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/8/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/8/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/9/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/9/avatar.svg"></a> ## Using version 6 [JSON Schema draft-07](http://json-schema.org/latest/json-schema-validation.html) is published. [Ajv version 6.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v6.0.0) that supports draft-07 is released. It may require either migrating your schemas or updating your code (to continue using draft-04 and v5 schemas, draft-06 schemas will be supported without changes). __Please note__: To use Ajv with draft-06 schemas you need to explicitly add the meta-schema to the validator instance: ```javascript ajv.addMetaSchema(require('ajv/lib/refs/json-schema-draft-06.json')); ``` To use Ajv with draft-04 schemas in addition to explicitly adding meta-schema you also need to use option schemaId: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({schemaId: 'id'}); // If you want to use both draft-04 and draft-06/07 schemas: // var ajv = new Ajv({schemaId: 'auto'}); ajv.addMetaSchema(require('ajv/lib/refs/json-schema-draft-04.json')); ``` ## Contents - [Performance](#performance) - [Features](#features) - [Getting started](#getting-started) - [Frequently Asked Questions](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/FAQ.md) - [Using in browser](#using-in-browser) - [Ajv and Content Security Policies (CSP)](#ajv-and-content-security-policies-csp) - [Command line interface](#command-line-interface) - Validation - [Keywords](#validation-keywords) - [Annotation keywords](#annotation-keywords) - [Formats](#formats) - [Combining schemas with $ref](#ref) - [$data reference](#data-reference) - NEW: [$merge and $patch keywords](#merge-and-patch-keywords) - [Defining custom keywords](#defining-custom-keywords) - [Asynchronous schema compilation](#asynchronous-schema-compilation) - [Asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation) - [Security considerations](#security-considerations) - [Security contact](#security-contact) - [Untrusted schemas](#untrusted-schemas) - [Circular references in objects](#circular-references-in-javascript-objects) - [Trusted schemas](#security-risks-of-trusted-schemas) - [ReDoS attack](#redos-attack) - Modifying data during validation - [Filtering data](#filtering-data) - [Assigning defaults](#assigning-defaults) - [Coercing data types](#coercing-data-types) - API - [Methods](#api) - [Options](#options) - [Validation errors](#validation-errors) - [Plugins](#plugins) - [Related packages](#related-packages) - [Some packages using Ajv](#some-packages-using-ajv) - [Tests, Contributing, Changes history](#tests) - [Support, Code of conduct, License](#open-source-software-support) ## Performance Ajv generates code using [doT templates](https://github.com/olado/doT) to turn JSON Schemas into super-fast validation functions that are efficient for v8 optimization. Currently Ajv is the fastest and the most standard compliant validator according to these benchmarks: - [json-schema-benchmark](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark) - 50% faster than the second place - [jsck benchmark](https://github.com/pandastrike/jsck#benchmarks) - 20-190% faster - [z-schema benchmark](https://rawgit.com/zaggino/z-schema/master/benchmark/results.html) - [themis benchmark](https://cdn.rawgit.com/playlyfe/themis/master/benchmark/results.html) Performance of different validators by [json-schema-benchmark](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark): [![performance](https://chart.googleapis.com/chart?chxt=x,y&cht=bhs&chco=76A4FB&chls=2.0&chbh=32,4,1&chs=600x416&chxl=-1:|djv|ajv|json-schema-validator-generator|jsen|is-my-json-valid|themis|z-schema|jsck|skeemas|json-schema-library|tv4&chd=t:100,98,72.1,66.8,50.1,15.1,6.1,3.8,1.2,0.7,0.2)](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark/blob/master/README.md#performance) ## Features - Ajv implements full JSON Schema [draft-06/07](http://json-schema.org/) and draft-04 standards: - all validation keywords (see [JSON Schema validation keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md)) - full support of remote refs (remote schemas have to be added with `addSchema` or compiled to be available) - support of circular references between schemas - correct string lengths for strings with unicode pairs (can be turned off) - [formats](#formats) defined by JSON Schema draft-07 standard and custom formats (can be turned off) - [validates schemas against meta-schema](#api-validateschema) - supports [browsers](#using-in-browser) and Node.js 0.10-14.x - [asynchronous loading](#asynchronous-schema-compilation) of referenced schemas during compilation - "All errors" validation mode with [option allErrors](#options) - [error messages with parameters](#validation-errors) describing error reasons to allow creating custom error messages - i18n error messages support with [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n) package - [filtering data](#filtering-data) from additional properties - [assigning defaults](#assigning-defaults) to missing properties and items - [coercing data](#coercing-data-types) to the types specified in `type` keywords - [custom keywords](#defining-custom-keywords) - draft-06/07 keywords `const`, `contains`, `propertyNames` and `if/then/else` - draft-06 boolean schemas (`true`/`false` as a schema to always pass/fail). - keywords `switch`, `patternRequired`, `formatMaximum` / `formatMinimum` and `formatExclusiveMaximum` / `formatExclusiveMinimum` from [JSON Schema extension proposals](https://github.com/json-schema/json-schema/wiki/v5-Proposals) with [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package - [$data reference](#data-reference) to use values from the validated data as values for the schema keywords - [asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation) of custom formats and keywords ## Install ``` npm install ajv ``` ## <a name="usage"></a>Getting started Try it in the Node.js REPL: https://tonicdev.com/npm/ajv The fastest validation call: ```javascript // Node.js require: var Ajv = require('ajv'); // or ESM/TypeScript import import Ajv from 'ajv'; var ajv = new Ajv(); // options can be passed, e.g. {allErrors: true} var validate = ajv.compile(schema); var valid = validate(data); if (!valid) console.log(validate.errors); ``` or with less code ```javascript // ... var valid = ajv.validate(schema, data); if (!valid) console.log(ajv.errors); // ... ``` or ```javascript // ... var valid = ajv.addSchema(schema, 'mySchema') .validate('mySchema', data); if (!valid) console.log(ajv.errorsText()); // ... ``` See [API](#api) and [Options](#options) for more details. Ajv compiles schemas to functions and caches them in all cases (using schema serialized with [fast-json-stable-stringify](https://github.com/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify) or a custom function as a key), so that the next time the same schema is used (not necessarily the same object instance) it won't be compiled again. The best performance is achieved when using compiled functions returned by `compile` or `getSchema` methods (there is no additional function call). __Please note__: every time a validation function or `ajv.validate` are called `errors` property is overwritten. You need to copy `errors` array reference to another variable if you want to use it later (e.g., in the callback). See [Validation errors](#validation-errors) __Note for TypeScript users__: `ajv` provides its own TypeScript declarations out of the box, so you don't need to install the deprecated `@types/ajv` module. ## Using in browser You can require Ajv directly from the code you browserify - in this case Ajv will be a part of your bundle. If you need to use Ajv in several bundles you can create a separate UMD bundle using `npm run bundle` script (thanks to [siddo420](https://github.com/siddo420)). Then you need to load Ajv in the browser: ```html <script src="ajv.min.js"></script> ``` This bundle can be used with different module systems; it creates global `Ajv` if no module system is found. The browser bundle is available on [cdnjs](https://cdnjs.com/libraries/ajv). Ajv is tested with these browsers: [![Sauce Test Status](https://saucelabs.com/browser-matrix/epoberezkin.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/epoberezkin) __Please note__: some frameworks, e.g. Dojo, may redefine global require in such way that is not compatible with CommonJS module format. In such case Ajv bundle has to be loaded before the framework and then you can use global Ajv (see issue [#234](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/234)). ### Ajv and Content Security Policies (CSP) If you're using Ajv to compile a schema (the typical use) in a browser document that is loaded with a Content Security Policy (CSP), that policy will require a `script-src` directive that includes the value `'unsafe-eval'`. :warning: NOTE, however, that `unsafe-eval` is NOT recommended in a secure CSP[[1]](https://developer.chrome.com/extensions/contentSecurityPolicy#relaxing-eval), as it has the potential to open the document to cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. In order to make use of Ajv without easing your CSP, you can [pre-compile a schema using the CLI](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-cli#compile-schemas). This will transpile the schema JSON into a JavaScript file that exports a `validate` function that works simlarly to a schema compiled at runtime. Note that pre-compilation of schemas is performed using [ajv-pack](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-pack) and there are [some limitations to the schema features it can compile](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-pack#limitations). A successfully pre-compiled schema is equivalent to the same schema compiled at runtime. ## Command line interface CLI is available as a separate npm package [ajv-cli](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-cli). It supports: - compiling JSON Schemas to test their validity - BETA: generating standalone module exporting a validation function to be used without Ajv (using [ajv-pack](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-pack)) - migrate schemas to draft-07 (using [json-schema-migrate](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-migrate)) - validating data file(s) against JSON Schema - testing expected validity of data against JSON Schema - referenced schemas - custom meta-schemas - files in JSON, JSON5, YAML, and JavaScript format - all Ajv options - reporting changes in data after validation in [JSON-patch](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6902) format ## Validation keywords Ajv supports all validation keywords from draft-07 of JSON Schema standard: - [type](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#type) - [for numbers](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-numbers) - maximum, minimum, exclusiveMaximum, exclusiveMinimum, multipleOf - [for strings](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-strings) - maxLength, minLength, pattern, format - [for arrays](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-arrays) - maxItems, minItems, uniqueItems, items, additionalItems, [contains](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#contains) - [for objects](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-objects) - maxProperties, minProperties, required, properties, patternProperties, additionalProperties, dependencies, [propertyNames](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#propertynames) - [for all types](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-all-types) - enum, [const](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#const) - [compound keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#compound-keywords) - not, oneOf, anyOf, allOf, [if/then/else](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#ifthenelse) With [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package Ajv also supports validation keywords from [JSON Schema extension proposals](https://github.com/json-schema/json-schema/wiki/v5-Proposals) for JSON Schema standard: - [patternRequired](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#patternrequired-proposed) - like `required` but with patterns that some property should match. - [formatMaximum, formatMinimum, formatExclusiveMaximum, formatExclusiveMinimum](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#formatmaximum--formatminimum-and-exclusiveformatmaximum--exclusiveformatminimum-proposed) - setting limits for date, time, etc. See [JSON Schema validation keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md) for more details. ## Annotation keywords JSON Schema specification defines several annotation keywords that describe schema itself but do not perform any validation. - `title` and `description`: information about the data represented by that schema - `$comment` (NEW in draft-07): information for developers. With option `$comment` Ajv logs or passes the comment string to the user-supplied function. See [Options](#options). - `default`: a default value of the data instance, see [Assigning defaults](#assigning-defaults). - `examples` (NEW in draft-06): an array of data instances. Ajv does not check the validity of these instances against the schema. - `readOnly` and `writeOnly` (NEW in draft-07): marks data-instance as read-only or write-only in relation to the source of the data (database, api, etc.). - `contentEncoding`: [RFC 2045](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2045#section-6.1 ), e.g., "base64". - `contentMediaType`: [RFC 2046](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2046), e.g., "image/png". __Please note__: Ajv does not implement validation of the keywords `examples`, `contentEncoding` and `contentMediaType` but it reserves them. If you want to create a plugin that implements some of them, it should remove these keywords from the instance. ## Formats Ajv implements formats defined by JSON Schema specification and several other formats. It is recommended NOT to use "format" keyword implementations with untrusted data, as they use potentially unsafe regular expressions - see [ReDoS attack](#redos-attack). __Please note__: if you need to use "format" keyword to validate untrusted data, you MUST assess their suitability and safety for your validation scenarios. The following formats are implemented for string validation with "format" keyword: - _date_: full-date according to [RFC3339](http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3339#section-5.6). - _time_: time with optional time-zone. - _date-time_: date-time from the same source (time-zone is mandatory). `date`, `time` and `date-time` validate ranges in `full` mode and only regexp in `fast` mode (see [options](#options)). - _uri_: full URI. - _uri-reference_: URI reference, including full and relative URIs. - _uri-template_: URI template according to [RFC6570](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6570) - _url_ (deprecated): [URL record](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url). - _email_: email address. - _hostname_: host name according to [RFC1034](http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1034#section-3.5). - _ipv4_: IP address v4. - _ipv6_: IP address v6. - _regex_: tests whether a string is a valid regular expression by passing it to RegExp constructor. - _uuid_: Universally Unique IDentifier according to [RFC4122](http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4122). - _json-pointer_: JSON-pointer according to [RFC6901](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901). - _relative-json-pointer_: relative JSON-pointer according to [this draft](http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-luff-relative-json-pointer-00). __Please note__: JSON Schema draft-07 also defines formats `iri`, `iri-reference`, `idn-hostname` and `idn-email` for URLs, hostnames and emails with international characters. Ajv does not implement these formats. If you create Ajv plugin that implements them please make a PR to mention this plugin here. There are two modes of format validation: `fast` and `full`. This mode affects formats `date`, `time`, `date-time`, `uri`, `uri-reference`, and `email`. See [Options](#options) for details. You can add additional formats and replace any of the formats above using [addFormat](#api-addformat) method. The option `unknownFormats` allows changing the default behaviour when an unknown format is encountered. In this case Ajv can either fail schema compilation (default) or ignore it (default in versions before 5.0.0). You also can allow specific format(s) that will be ignored. See [Options](#options) for details. You can find regular expressions used for format validation and the sources that were used in [formats.js](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/lib/compile/formats.js). ## <a name="ref"></a>Combining schemas with $ref You can structure your validation logic across multiple schema files and have schemas reference each other using `$ref` keyword. Example: ```javascript var schema = { "$id": "http://example.com/schemas/schema.json", "type": "object", "properties": { "foo": { "$ref": "defs.json#/definitions/int" }, "bar": { "$ref": "defs.json#/definitions/str" } } }; var defsSchema = { "$id": "http://example.com/schemas/defs.json", "definitions": { "int": { "type": "integer" }, "str": { "type": "string" } } }; ``` Now to compile your schema you can either pass all schemas to Ajv instance: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({schemas: [schema, defsSchema]}); var validate = ajv.getSchema('http://example.com/schemas/schema.json'); ``` or use `addSchema` method: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv; var validate = ajv.addSchema(defsSchema) .compile(schema); ``` See [Options](#options) and [addSchema](#api) method. __Please note__: - `$ref` is resolved as the uri-reference using schema $id as the base URI (see the example). - References can be recursive (and mutually recursive) to implement the schemas for different data structures (such as linked lists, trees, graphs, etc.). - You don't have to host your schema files at the URIs that you use as schema $id. These URIs are only used to identify the schemas, and according to JSON Schema specification validators should not expect to be able to download the schemas from these URIs. - The actual location of the schema file in the file system is not used. - You can pass the identifier of the schema as the second parameter of `addSchema` method or as a property name in `schemas` option. This identifier can be used instead of (or in addition to) schema $id. - You cannot have the same $id (or the schema identifier) used for more than one schema - the exception will be thrown. - You can implement dynamic resolution of the referenced schemas using `compileAsync` method. In this way you can store schemas in any system (files, web, database, etc.) and reference them without explicitly adding to Ajv instance. See [Asynchronous schema compilation](#asynchronous-schema-compilation). ## $data reference With `$data` option you can use values from the validated data as the values for the schema keywords. See [proposal](https://github.com/json-schema-org/json-schema-spec/issues/51) for more information about how it works. `$data` reference is supported in the keywords: const, enum, format, maximum/minimum, exclusiveMaximum / exclusiveMinimum, maxLength / minLength, maxItems / minItems, maxProperties / minProperties, formatMaximum / formatMinimum, formatExclusiveMaximum / formatExclusiveMinimum, multipleOf, pattern, required, uniqueItems. The value of "$data" should be a [JSON-pointer](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901) to the data (the root is always the top level data object, even if the $data reference is inside a referenced subschema) or a [relative JSON-pointer](http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-luff-relative-json-pointer-00) (it is relative to the current point in data; if the $data reference is inside a referenced subschema it cannot point to the data outside of the root level for this subschema). Examples. This schema requires that the value in property `smaller` is less or equal than the value in the property larger: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({$data: true}); var schema = { "properties": { "smaller": { "type": "number", "maximum": { "$data": "1/larger" } }, "larger": { "type": "number" } } }; var validData = { smaller: 5, larger: 7 }; ajv.validate(schema, validData); // true ``` This schema requires that the properties have the same format as their field names: ```javascript var schema = { "additionalProperties": { "type": "string", "format": { "$data": "0#" } } }; var validData = { 'date-time': '1963-06-19T08:30:06.283185Z', email: '[email protected]' } ``` `$data` reference is resolved safely - it won't throw even if some property is undefined. If `$data` resolves to `undefined` the validation succeeds (with the exclusion of `const` keyword). If `$data` resolves to incorrect type (e.g. not "number" for maximum keyword) the validation fails. ## $merge and $patch keywords With the package [ajv-merge-patch](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-merge-patch) you can use the keywords `$merge` and `$patch` that allow extending JSON Schemas with patches using formats [JSON Merge Patch (RFC 7396)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7396) and [JSON Patch (RFC 6902)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6902). To add keywords `$merge` and `$patch` to Ajv instance use this code: ```javascript require('ajv-merge-patch')(ajv); ``` Examples. Using `$merge`: ```json { "$merge": { "source": { "type": "object", "properties": { "p": { "type": "string" } }, "additionalProperties": false }, "with": { "properties": { "q": { "type": "number" } } } } } ``` Using `$patch`: ```json { "$patch": { "source": { "type": "object", "properties": { "p": { "type": "string" } }, "additionalProperties": false }, "with": [ { "op": "add", "path": "/properties/q", "value": { "type": "number" } } ] } } ``` The schemas above are equivalent to this schema: ```json { "type": "object", "properties": { "p": { "type": "string" }, "q": { "type": "number" } }, "additionalProperties": false } ``` The properties `source` and `with` in the keywords `$merge` and `$patch` can use absolute or relative `$ref` to point to other schemas previously added to the Ajv instance or to the fragments of the current schema. See the package [ajv-merge-patch](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-merge-patch) for more information. ## Defining custom keywords The advantages of using custom keywords are: - allow creating validation scenarios that cannot be expressed using JSON Schema - simplify your schemas - help bringing a bigger part of the validation logic to your schemas - make your schemas more expressive, less verbose and closer to your application domain - implement custom data processors that modify your data (`modifying` option MUST be used in keyword definition) and/or create side effects while the data is being validated If a keyword is used only for side-effects and its validation result is pre-defined, use option `valid: true/false` in keyword definition to simplify both generated code (no error handling in case of `valid: true`) and your keyword functions (no need to return any validation result). The concerns you have to be aware of when extending JSON Schema standard with custom keywords are the portability and understanding of your schemas. You will have to support these custom keywords on other platforms and to properly document these keywords so that everybody can understand them in your schemas. You can define custom keywords with [addKeyword](#api-addkeyword) method. Keywords are defined on the `ajv` instance level - new instances will not have previously defined keywords. Ajv allows defining keywords with: - validation function - compilation function - macro function - inline compilation function that should return code (as string) that will be inlined in the currently compiled schema. Example. `range` and `exclusiveRange` keywords using compiled schema: ```javascript ajv.addKeyword('range', { type: 'number', compile: function (sch, parentSchema) { var min = sch[0]; var max = sch[1]; return parentSchema.exclusiveRange === true ? function (data) { return data > min && data < max; } : function (data) { return data >= min && data <= max; } } }); var schema = { "range": [2, 4], "exclusiveRange": true }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(2.01)); // true console.log(validate(3.99)); // true console.log(validate(2)); // false console.log(validate(4)); // false ``` Several custom keywords (typeof, instanceof, range and propertyNames) are defined in [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package - they can be used for your schemas and as a starting point for your own custom keywords. See [Defining custom keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/CUSTOM.md) for more details. ## Asynchronous schema compilation During asynchronous compilation remote references are loaded using supplied function. See `compileAsync` [method](#api-compileAsync) and `loadSchema` [option](#options). Example: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ loadSchema: loadSchema }); ajv.compileAsync(schema).then(function (validate) { var valid = validate(data); // ... }); function loadSchema(uri) { return request.json(uri).then(function (res) { if (res.statusCode >= 400) throw new Error('Loading error: ' + res.statusCode); return res.body; }); } ``` __Please note__: [Option](#options) `missingRefs` should NOT be set to `"ignore"` or `"fail"` for asynchronous compilation to work. ## Asynchronous validation Example in Node.js REPL: https://tonicdev.com/esp/ajv-asynchronous-validation You can define custom formats and keywords that perform validation asynchronously by accessing database or some other service. You should add `async: true` in the keyword or format definition (see [addFormat](#api-addformat), [addKeyword](#api-addkeyword) and [Defining custom keywords](#defining-custom-keywords)). If your schema uses asynchronous formats/keywords or refers to some schema that contains them it should have `"$async": true` keyword so that Ajv can compile it correctly. If asynchronous format/keyword or reference to asynchronous schema is used in the schema without `$async` keyword Ajv will throw an exception during schema compilation. __Please note__: all asynchronous subschemas that are referenced from the current or other schemas should have `"$async": true` keyword as well, otherwise the schema compilation will fail. Validation function for an asynchronous custom format/keyword should return a promise that resolves with `true` or `false` (or rejects with `new Ajv.ValidationError(errors)` if you want to return custom errors from the keyword function). Ajv compiles asynchronous schemas to [es7 async functions](http://tc39.github.io/ecmascript-asyncawait/) that can optionally be transpiled with [nodent](https://github.com/MatAtBread/nodent). Async functions are supported in Node.js 7+ and all modern browsers. You can also supply any other transpiler as a function via `processCode` option. See [Options](#options). The compiled validation function has `$async: true` property (if the schema is asynchronous), so you can differentiate these functions if you are using both synchronous and asynchronous schemas. Validation result will be a promise that resolves with validated data or rejects with an exception `Ajv.ValidationError` that contains the array of validation errors in `errors` property. Example: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv; // require('ajv-async')(ajv); ajv.addKeyword('idExists', { async: true, type: 'number', validate: checkIdExists }); function checkIdExists(schema, data) { return knex(schema.table) .select('id') .where('id', data) .then(function (rows) { return !!rows.length; // true if record is found }); } var schema = { "$async": true, "properties": { "userId": { "type": "integer", "idExists": { "table": "users" } }, "postId": { "type": "integer", "idExists": { "table": "posts" } } } }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); validate({ userId: 1, postId: 19 }) .then(function (data) { console.log('Data is valid', data); // { userId: 1, postId: 19 } }) .catch(function (err) { if (!(err instanceof Ajv.ValidationError)) throw err; // data is invalid console.log('Validation errors:', err.errors); }); ``` ### Using transpilers with asynchronous validation functions. [ajv-async](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-async) uses [nodent](https://github.com/MatAtBread/nodent) to transpile async functions. To use another transpiler you should separately install it (or load its bundle in the browser). #### Using nodent ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv; require('ajv-async')(ajv); // in the browser if you want to load ajv-async bundle separately you can: // window.ajvAsync(ajv); var validate = ajv.compile(schema); // transpiled es7 async function validate(data).then(successFunc).catch(errorFunc); ``` #### Using other transpilers ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ processCode: transpileFunc }); var validate = ajv.compile(schema); // transpiled es7 async function validate(data).then(successFunc).catch(errorFunc); ``` See [Options](#options). ## Security considerations JSON Schema, if properly used, can replace data sanitisation. It doesn't replace other API security considerations. It also introduces additional security aspects to consider. ##### Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerabilities via GitHub issues. ##### Untrusted schemas Ajv treats JSON schemas as trusted as your application code. This security model is based on the most common use case, when the schemas are static and bundled together with the application. If your schemas are received from untrusted sources (or generated from untrusted data) there are several scenarios you need to prevent: - compiling schemas can cause stack overflow (if they are too deep) - compiling schemas can be slow (e.g. [#557](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/557)) - validating certain data can be slow It is difficult to predict all the scenarios, but at the very least it may help to limit the size of untrusted schemas (e.g. limit JSON string length) and also the maximum schema object depth (that can be high for relatively small JSON strings). You also may want to mitigate slow regular expressions in `pattern` and `patternProperties` keywords. Regardless the measures you take, using untrusted schemas increases security risks. ##### Circular references in JavaScript objects Ajv does not support schemas and validated data that have circular references in objects. See [issue #802](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/802). An attempt to compile such schemas or validate such data would cause stack overflow (or will not complete in case of asynchronous validation). Depending on the parser you use, untrusted data can lead to circular references. ##### Security risks of trusted schemas Some keywords in JSON Schemas can lead to very slow validation for certain data. These keywords include (but may be not limited to): - `pattern` and `format` for large strings - in some cases using `maxLength` can help mitigate it, but certain regular expressions can lead to exponential validation time even with relatively short strings (see [ReDoS attack](#redos-attack)). - `patternProperties` for large property names - use `propertyNames` to mitigate, but some regular expressions can have exponential evaluation time as well. - `uniqueItems` for large non-scalar arrays - use `maxItems` to mitigate __Please note__: The suggestions above to prevent slow validation would only work if you do NOT use `allErrors: true` in production code (using it would continue validation after validation errors). You can validate your JSON schemas against [this meta-schema](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/lib/refs/json-schema-secure.json) to check that these recommendations are followed: ```javascript const isSchemaSecure = ajv.compile(require('ajv/lib/refs/json-schema-secure.json')); const schema1 = {format: 'email'}; isSchemaSecure(schema1); // false const schema2 = {format: 'email', maxLength: MAX_LENGTH}; isSchemaSecure(schema2); // true ``` __Please note__: following all these recommendation is not a guarantee that validation of untrusted data is safe - it can still lead to some undesirable results. ##### Content Security Policies (CSP) See [Ajv and Content Security Policies (CSP)](#ajv-and-content-security-policies-csp) ## ReDoS attack Certain regular expressions can lead to the exponential evaluation time even with relatively short strings. Please assess the regular expressions you use in the schemas on their vulnerability to this attack - see [safe-regex](https://github.com/substack/safe-regex), for example. __Please note__: some formats that Ajv implements use [regular expressions](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/lib/compile/formats.js) that can be vulnerable to ReDoS attack, so if you use Ajv to validate data from untrusted sources __it is strongly recommended__ to consider the following: - making assessment of "format" implementations in Ajv. - using `format: 'fast'` option that simplifies some of the regular expressions (although it does not guarantee that they are safe). - replacing format implementations provided by Ajv with your own implementations of "format" keyword that either uses different regular expressions or another approach to format validation. Please see [addFormat](#api-addformat) method. - disabling format validation by ignoring "format" keyword with option `format: false` Whatever mitigation you choose, please assume all formats provided by Ajv as potentially unsafe and make your own assessment of their suitability for your validation scenarios. ## Filtering data With [option `removeAdditional`](#options) (added by [andyscott](https://github.com/andyscott)) you can filter data during the validation. This option modifies original data. Example: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ removeAdditional: true }); var schema = { "additionalProperties": false, "properties": { "foo": { "type": "number" }, "bar": { "additionalProperties": { "type": "number" }, "properties": { "baz": { "type": "string" } } } } } var data = { "foo": 0, "additional1": 1, // will be removed; `additionalProperties` == false "bar": { "baz": "abc", "additional2": 2 // will NOT be removed; `additionalProperties` != false }, } var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // { "foo": 0, "bar": { "baz": "abc", "additional2": 2 } ``` If `removeAdditional` option in the example above were `"all"` then both `additional1` and `additional2` properties would have been removed. If the option were `"failing"` then property `additional1` would have been removed regardless of its value and property `additional2` would have been removed only if its value were failing the schema in the inner `additionalProperties` (so in the example above it would have stayed because it passes the schema, but any non-number would have been removed). __Please note__: If you use `removeAdditional` option with `additionalProperties` keyword inside `anyOf`/`oneOf` keywords your validation can fail with this schema, for example: ```json { "type": "object", "oneOf": [ { "properties": { "foo": { "type": "string" } }, "required": [ "foo" ], "additionalProperties": false }, { "properties": { "bar": { "type": "integer" } }, "required": [ "bar" ], "additionalProperties": false } ] } ``` The intention of the schema above is to allow objects with either the string property "foo" or the integer property "bar", but not with both and not with any other properties. With the option `removeAdditional: true` the validation will pass for the object `{ "foo": "abc"}` but will fail for the object `{"bar": 1}`. It happens because while the first subschema in `oneOf` is validated, the property `bar` is removed because it is an additional property according to the standard (because it is not included in `properties` keyword in the same schema). While this behaviour is unexpected (issues [#129](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/129), [#134](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/134)), it is correct. To have the expected behaviour (both objects are allowed and additional properties are removed) the schema has to be refactored in this way: ```json { "type": "object", "properties": { "foo": { "type": "string" }, "bar": { "type": "integer" } }, "additionalProperties": false, "oneOf": [ { "required": [ "foo" ] }, { "required": [ "bar" ] } ] } ``` The schema above is also more efficient - it will compile into a faster function. ## Assigning defaults With [option `useDefaults`](#options) Ajv will assign values from `default` keyword in the schemas of `properties` and `items` (when it is the array of schemas) to the missing properties and items. With the option value `"empty"` properties and items equal to `null` or `""` (empty string) will be considered missing and assigned defaults. This option modifies original data. __Please note__: the default value is inserted in the generated validation code as a literal, so the value inserted in the data will be the deep clone of the default in the schema. Example 1 (`default` in `properties`): ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ useDefaults: true }); var schema = { "type": "object", "properties": { "foo": { "type": "number" }, "bar": { "type": "string", "default": "baz" } }, "required": [ "foo", "bar" ] }; var data = { "foo": 1 }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // { "foo": 1, "bar": "baz" } ``` Example 2 (`default` in `items`): ```javascript var schema = { "type": "array", "items": [ { "type": "number" }, { "type": "string", "default": "foo" } ] } var data = [ 1 ]; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // [ 1, "foo" ] ``` `default` keywords in other cases are ignored: - not in `properties` or `items` subschemas - in schemas inside `anyOf`, `oneOf` and `not` (see [#42](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/42)) - in `if` subschema of `switch` keyword - in schemas generated by custom macro keywords The [`strictDefaults` option](#options) customizes Ajv's behavior for the defaults that Ajv ignores (`true` raises an error, and `"log"` outputs a warning). ## Coercing data types When you are validating user inputs all your data properties are usually strings. The option `coerceTypes` allows you to have your data types coerced to the types specified in your schema `type` keywords, both to pass the validation and to use the correctly typed data afterwards. This option modifies original data. __Please note__: if you pass a scalar value to the validating function its type will be coerced and it will pass the validation, but the value of the variable you pass won't be updated because scalars are passed by value. Example 1: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ coerceTypes: true }); var schema = { "type": "object", "properties": { "foo": { "type": "number" }, "bar": { "type": "boolean" } }, "required": [ "foo", "bar" ] }; var data = { "foo": "1", "bar": "false" }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // { "foo": 1, "bar": false } ``` Example 2 (array coercions): ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ coerceTypes: 'array' }); var schema = { "properties": { "foo": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "number" } }, "bar": { "type": "boolean" } } }; var data = { "foo": "1", "bar": ["false"] }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // { "foo": [1], "bar": false } ``` The coercion rules, as you can see from the example, are different from JavaScript both to validate user input as expected and to have the coercion reversible (to correctly validate cases where different types are defined in subschemas of "anyOf" and other compound keywords). See [Coercion rules](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/COERCION.md) for details. ## API ##### new Ajv(Object options) -&gt; Object Create Ajv instance. ##### .compile(Object schema) -&gt; Function&lt;Object data&gt; Generate validating function and cache the compiled schema for future use. Validating function returns a boolean value. This function has properties `errors` and `schema`. Errors encountered during the last validation are assigned to `errors` property (it is assigned `null` if there was no errors). `schema` property contains the reference to the original schema. The schema passed to this method will be validated against meta-schema unless `validateSchema` option is false. If schema is invalid, an error will be thrown. See [options](#options). ##### <a name="api-compileAsync"></a>.compileAsync(Object schema [, Boolean meta] [, Function callback]) -&gt; Promise Asynchronous version of `compile` method that loads missing remote schemas using asynchronous function in `options.loadSchema`. This function returns a Promise that resolves to a validation function. An optional callback passed to `compileAsync` will be called with 2 parameters: error (or null) and validating function. The returned promise will reject (and the callback will be called with an error) when: - missing schema can't be loaded (`loadSchema` returns a Promise that rejects). - a schema containing a missing reference is loaded, but the reference cannot be resolved. - schema (or some loaded/referenced schema) is invalid. The function compiles schema and loads the first missing schema (or meta-schema) until all missing schemas are loaded. You can asynchronously compile meta-schema by passing `true` as the second parameter. See example in [Asynchronous compilation](#asynchronous-schema-compilation). ##### .validate(Object schema|String key|String ref, data) -&gt; Boolean Validate data using passed schema (it will be compiled and cached). Instead of the schema you can use the key that was previously passed to `addSchema`, the schema id if it was present in the schema or any previously resolved reference. Validation errors will be available in the `errors` property of Ajv instance (`null` if there were no errors). __Please note__: every time this method is called the errors are overwritten so you need to copy them to another variable if you want to use them later. If the schema is asynchronous (has `$async` keyword on the top level) this method returns a Promise. See [Asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation). ##### .addSchema(Array&lt;Object&gt;|Object schema [, String key]) -&gt; Ajv Add schema(s) to validator instance. This method does not compile schemas (but it still validates them). Because of that dependencies can be added in any order and circular dependencies are supported. It also prevents unnecessary compilation of schemas that are containers for other schemas but not used as a whole. Array of schemas can be passed (schemas should have ids), the second parameter will be ignored. Key can be passed that can be used to reference the schema and will be used as the schema id if there is no id inside the schema. If the key is not passed, the schema id will be used as the key. Once the schema is added, it (and all the references inside it) can be referenced in other schemas and used to validate data. Although `addSchema` does not compile schemas, explicit compilation is not required - the schema will be compiled when it is used first time. By default the schema is validated against meta-schema before it is added, and if the schema does not pass validation the exception is thrown. This behaviour is controlled by `validateSchema` option. __Please note__: Ajv uses the [method chaining syntax](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_chaining) for all methods with the prefix `add*` and `remove*`. This allows you to do nice things like the following. ```javascript var validate = new Ajv().addSchema(schema).addFormat(name, regex).getSchema(uri); ``` ##### .addMetaSchema(Array&lt;Object&gt;|Object schema [, String key]) -&gt; Ajv Adds meta schema(s) that can be used to validate other schemas. That function should be used instead of `addSchema` because there may be instance options that would compile a meta schema incorrectly (at the moment it is `removeAdditional` option). There is no need to explicitly add draft-07 meta schema (http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema) - it is added by default, unless option `meta` is set to `false`. You only need to use it if you have a changed meta-schema that you want to use to validate your schemas. See `validateSchema`. ##### <a name="api-validateschema"></a>.validateSchema(Object schema) -&gt; Boolean Validates schema. This method should be used to validate schemas rather than `validate` due to the inconsistency of `uri` format in JSON Schema standard. By default this method is called automatically when the schema is added, so you rarely need to use it directly. If schema doesn't have `$schema` property, it is validated against draft 6 meta-schema (option `meta` should not be false). If schema has `$schema` property, then the schema with this id (that should be previously added) is used to validate passed schema. Errors will be available at `ajv.errors`. ##### .getSchema(String key) -&gt; Function&lt;Object data&gt; Retrieve compiled schema previously added with `addSchema` by the key passed to `addSchema` or by its full reference (id). The returned validating function has `schema` property with the reference to the original schema. ##### .removeSchema([Object schema|String key|String ref|RegExp pattern]) -&gt; Ajv Remove added/cached schema. Even if schema is referenced by other schemas it can be safely removed as dependent schemas have local references. Schema can be removed using: - key passed to `addSchema` - it's full reference (id) - RegExp that should match schema id or key (meta-schemas won't be removed) - actual schema object that will be stable-stringified to remove schema from cache If no parameter is passed all schemas but meta-schemas will be removed and the cache will be cleared. ##### <a name="api-addformat"></a>.addFormat(String name, String|RegExp|Function|Object format) -&gt; Ajv Add custom format to validate strings or numbers. It can also be used to replace pre-defined formats for Ajv instance. Strings are converted to RegExp. Function should return validation result as `true` or `false`. If object is passed it should have properties `validate`, `compare` and `async`: - _validate_: a string, RegExp or a function as described above. - _compare_: an optional comparison function that accepts two strings and compares them according to the format meaning. This function is used with keywords `formatMaximum`/`formatMinimum` (defined in [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package). It should return `1` if the first value is bigger than the second value, `-1` if it is smaller and `0` if it is equal. - _async_: an optional `true` value if `validate` is an asynchronous function; in this case it should return a promise that resolves with a value `true` or `false`. - _type_: an optional type of data that the format applies to. It can be `"string"` (default) or `"number"` (see https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/291#issuecomment-259923858). If the type of data is different, the validation will pass. Custom formats can be also added via `formats` option. ##### <a name="api-addkeyword"></a>.addKeyword(String keyword, Object definition) -&gt; Ajv Add custom validation keyword to Ajv instance. Keyword should be different from all standard JSON Schema keywords and different from previously defined keywords. There is no way to redefine keywords or to remove keyword definition from the instance. Keyword must start with a letter, `_` or `$`, and may continue with letters, numbers, `_`, `$`, or `-`. It is recommended to use an application-specific prefix for keywords to avoid current and future name collisions. Example Keywords: - `"xyz-example"`: valid, and uses prefix for the xyz project to avoid name collisions. - `"example"`: valid, but not recommended as it could collide with future versions of JSON Schema etc. - `"3-example"`: invalid as numbers are not allowed to be the first character in a keyword Keyword definition is an object with the following properties: - _type_: optional string or array of strings with data type(s) that the keyword applies to. If not present, the keyword will apply to all types. - _validate_: validating function - _compile_: compiling function - _macro_: macro function - _inline_: compiling function that returns code (as string) - _schema_: an optional `false` value used with "validate" keyword to not pass schema - _metaSchema_: an optional meta-schema for keyword schema - _dependencies_: an optional list of properties that must be present in the parent schema - it will be checked during schema compilation - _modifying_: `true` MUST be passed if keyword modifies data - _statements_: `true` can be passed in case inline keyword generates statements (as opposed to expression) - _valid_: pass `true`/`false` to pre-define validation result, the result returned from validation function will be ignored. This option cannot be used with macro keywords. - _$data_: an optional `true` value to support [$data reference](#data-reference) as the value of custom keyword. The reference will be resolved at validation time. If the keyword has meta-schema it would be extended to allow $data and it will be used to validate the resolved value. Supporting $data reference requires that keyword has validating function (as the only option or in addition to compile, macro or inline function). - _async_: an optional `true` value if the validation function is asynchronous (whether it is compiled or passed in _validate_ property); in this case it should return a promise that resolves with a value `true` or `false`. This option is ignored in case of "macro" and "inline" keywords. - _errors_: an optional boolean or string `"full"` indicating whether keyword returns errors. If this property is not set Ajv will determine if the errors were set in case of failed validation. _compile_, _macro_ and _inline_ are mutually exclusive, only one should be used at a time. _validate_ can be used separately or in addition to them to support $data reference. __Please note__: If the keyword is validating data type that is different from the type(s) in its definition, the validation function will not be called (and expanded macro will not be used), so there is no need to check for data type inside validation function or inside schema returned by macro function (unless you want to enforce a specific type and for some reason do not want to use a separate `type` keyword for that). In the same way as standard keywords work, if the keyword does not apply to the data type being validated, the validation of this keyword will succeed. See [Defining custom keywords](#defining-custom-keywords) for more details. ##### .getKeyword(String keyword) -&gt; Object|Boolean Returns custom keyword definition, `true` for pre-defined keywords and `false` if the keyword is unknown. ##### .removeKeyword(String keyword) -&gt; Ajv Removes custom or pre-defined keyword so you can redefine them. While this method can be used to extend pre-defined keywords, it can also be used to completely change their meaning - it may lead to unexpected results. __Please note__: schemas compiled before the keyword is removed will continue to work without changes. To recompile schemas use `removeSchema` method and compile them again. ##### .errorsText([Array&lt;Object&gt; errors [, Object options]]) -&gt; String Returns the text with all errors in a String. Options can have properties `separator` (string used to separate errors, ", " by default) and `dataVar` (the variable name that dataPaths are prefixed with, "data" by default). ## Options Defaults: ```javascript { // validation and reporting options: $data: false, allErrors: false, verbose: false, $comment: false, // NEW in Ajv version 6.0 jsonPointers: false, uniqueItems: true, unicode: true, nullable: false, format: 'fast', formats: {}, unknownFormats: true, schemas: {}, logger: undefined, // referenced schema options: schemaId: '$id', missingRefs: true, extendRefs: 'ignore', // recommended 'fail' loadSchema: undefined, // function(uri: string): Promise {} // options to modify validated data: removeAdditional: false, useDefaults: false, coerceTypes: false, // strict mode options strictDefaults: false, strictKeywords: false, strictNumbers: false, // asynchronous validation options: transpile: undefined, // requires ajv-async package // advanced options: meta: true, validateSchema: true, addUsedSchema: true, inlineRefs: true, passContext: false, loopRequired: Infinity, ownProperties: false, multipleOfPrecision: false, errorDataPath: 'object', // deprecated messages: true, sourceCode: false, processCode: undefined, // function (str: string, schema: object): string {} cache: new Cache, serialize: undefined } ``` ##### Validation and reporting options - _$data_: support [$data references](#data-reference). Draft 6 meta-schema that is added by default will be extended to allow them. If you want to use another meta-schema you need to use $dataMetaSchema method to add support for $data reference. See [API](#api). - _allErrors_: check all rules collecting all errors. Default is to return after the first error. - _verbose_: include the reference to the part of the schema (`schema` and `parentSchema`) and validated data in errors (false by default). - _$comment_ (NEW in Ajv version 6.0): log or pass the value of `$comment` keyword to a function. Option values: - `false` (default): ignore $comment keyword. - `true`: log the keyword value to console. - function: pass the keyword value, its schema path and root schema to the specified function - _jsonPointers_: set `dataPath` property of errors using [JSON Pointers](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901) instead of JavaScript property access notation. - _uniqueItems_: validate `uniqueItems` keyword (true by default). - _unicode_: calculate correct length of strings with unicode pairs (true by default). Pass `false` to use `.length` of strings that is faster, but gives "incorrect" lengths of strings with unicode pairs - each unicode pair is counted as two characters. - _nullable_: support keyword "nullable" from [Open API 3 specification](https://swagger.io/docs/specification/data-models/data-types/). - _format_: formats validation mode. Option values: - `"fast"` (default) - simplified and fast validation (see [Formats](#formats) for details of which formats are available and affected by this option). - `"full"` - more restrictive and slow validation. E.g., 25:00:00 and 2015/14/33 will be invalid time and date in 'full' mode but it will be valid in 'fast' mode. - `false` - ignore all format keywords. - _formats_: an object with custom formats. Keys and values will be passed to `addFormat` method. - _keywords_: an object with custom keywords. Keys and values will be passed to `addKeyword` method. - _unknownFormats_: handling of unknown formats. Option values: - `true` (default) - if an unknown format is encountered the exception is thrown during schema compilation. If `format` keyword value is [$data reference](#data-reference) and it is unknown the validation will fail. - `[String]` - an array of unknown format names that will be ignored. This option can be used to allow usage of third party schemas with format(s) for which you don't have definitions, but still fail if another unknown format is used. If `format` keyword value is [$data reference](#data-reference) and it is not in this array the validation will fail. - `"ignore"` - to log warning during schema compilation and always pass validation (the default behaviour in versions before 5.0.0). This option is not recommended, as it allows to mistype format name and it won't be validated without any error message. This behaviour is required by JSON Schema specification. - _schemas_: an array or object of schemas that will be added to the instance. In case you pass the array the schemas must have IDs in them. When the object is passed the method `addSchema(value, key)` will be called for each schema in this object. - _logger_: sets the logging method. Default is the global `console` object that should have methods `log`, `warn` and `error`. See [Error logging](#error-logging). Option values: - custom logger - it should have methods `log`, `warn` and `error`. If any of these methods is missing an exception will be thrown. - `false` - logging is disabled. ##### Referenced schema options - _schemaId_: this option defines which keywords are used as schema URI. Option value: - `"$id"` (default) - only use `$id` keyword as schema URI (as specified in JSON Schema draft-06/07), ignore `id` keyword (if it is present a warning will be logged). - `"id"` - only use `id` keyword as schema URI (as specified in JSON Schema draft-04), ignore `$id` keyword (if it is present a warning will be logged). - `"auto"` - use both `$id` and `id` keywords as schema URI. If both are present (in the same schema object) and different the exception will be thrown during schema compilation. - _missingRefs_: handling of missing referenced schemas. Option values: - `true` (default) - if the reference cannot be resolved during compilation the exception is thrown. The thrown error has properties `missingRef` (with hash fragment) and `missingSchema` (without it). Both properties are resolved relative to the current base id (usually schema id, unless it was substituted). - `"ignore"` - to log error during compilation and always pass validation. - `"fail"` - to log error and successfully compile schema but fail validation if this rule is checked. - _extendRefs_: validation of other keywords when `$ref` is present in the schema. Option values: - `"ignore"` (default) - when `$ref` is used other keywords are ignored (as per [JSON Reference](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pbryan-zyp-json-ref-03#section-3) standard). A warning will be logged during the schema compilation. - `"fail"` (recommended) - if other validation keywords are used together with `$ref` the exception will be thrown when the schema is compiled. This option is recommended to make sure schema has no keywords that are ignored, which can be confusing. - `true` - validate all keywords in the schemas with `$ref` (the default behaviour in versions before 5.0.0). - _loadSchema_: asynchronous function that will be used to load remote schemas when `compileAsync` [method](#api-compileAsync) is used and some reference is missing (option `missingRefs` should NOT be 'fail' or 'ignore'). This function should accept remote schema uri as a parameter and return a Promise that resolves to a schema. See example in [Asynchronous compilation](#asynchronous-schema-compilation). ##### Options to modify validated data - _removeAdditional_: remove additional properties - see example in [Filtering data](#filtering-data). This option is not used if schema is added with `addMetaSchema` method. Option values: - `false` (default) - not to remove additional properties - `"all"` - all additional properties are removed, regardless of `additionalProperties` keyword in schema (and no validation is made for them). - `true` - only additional properties with `additionalProperties` keyword equal to `false` are removed. - `"failing"` - additional properties that fail schema validation will be removed (where `additionalProperties` keyword is `false` or schema). - _useDefaults_: replace missing or undefined properties and items with the values from corresponding `default` keywords. Default behaviour is to ignore `default` keywords. This option is not used if schema is added with `addMetaSchema` method. See examples in [Assigning defaults](#assigning-defaults). Option values: - `false` (default) - do not use defaults - `true` - insert defaults by value (object literal is used). - `"empty"` - in addition to missing or undefined, use defaults for properties and items that are equal to `null` or `""` (an empty string). - `"shared"` (deprecated) - insert defaults by reference. If the default is an object, it will be shared by all instances of validated data. If you modify the inserted default in the validated data, it will be modified in the schema as well. - _coerceTypes_: change data type of data to match `type` keyword. See the example in [Coercing data types](#coercing-data-types) and [coercion rules](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/COERCION.md). Option values: - `false` (default) - no type coercion. - `true` - coerce scalar data types. - `"array"` - in addition to coercions between scalar types, coerce scalar data to an array with one element and vice versa (as required by the schema). ##### Strict mode options - _strictDefaults_: report ignored `default` keywords in schemas. Option values: - `false` (default) - ignored defaults are not reported - `true` - if an ignored default is present, throw an error - `"log"` - if an ignored default is present, log warning - _strictKeywords_: report unknown keywords in schemas. Option values: - `false` (default) - unknown keywords are not reported - `true` - if an unknown keyword is present, throw an error - `"log"` - if an unknown keyword is present, log warning - _strictNumbers_: validate numbers strictly, failing validation for NaN and Infinity. Option values: - `false` (default) - NaN or Infinity will pass validation for numeric types - `true` - NaN or Infinity will not pass validation for numeric types ##### Asynchronous validation options - _transpile_: Requires [ajv-async](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-async) package. It determines whether Ajv transpiles compiled asynchronous validation function. Option values: - `undefined` (default) - transpile with [nodent](https://github.com/MatAtBread/nodent) if async functions are not supported. - `true` - always transpile with nodent. - `false` - do not transpile; if async functions are not supported an exception will be thrown. ##### Advanced options - _meta_: add [meta-schema](http://json-schema.org/documentation.html) so it can be used by other schemas (true by default). If an object is passed, it will be used as the default meta-schema for schemas that have no `$schema` keyword. This default meta-schema MUST have `$schema` keyword. - _validateSchema_: validate added/compiled schemas against meta-schema (true by default). `$schema` property in the schema can be http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema or absent (draft-07 meta-schema will be used) or can be a reference to the schema previously added with `addMetaSchema` method. Option values: - `true` (default) - if the validation fails, throw the exception. - `"log"` - if the validation fails, log error. - `false` - skip schema validation. - _addUsedSchema_: by default methods `compile` and `validate` add schemas to the instance if they have `$id` (or `id`) property that doesn't start with "#". If `$id` is present and it is not unique the exception will be thrown. Set this option to `false` to skip adding schemas to the instance and the `$id` uniqueness check when these methods are used. This option does not affect `addSchema` method. - _inlineRefs_: Affects compilation of referenced schemas. Option values: - `true` (default) - the referenced schemas that don't have refs in them are inlined, regardless of their size - that substantially improves performance at the cost of the bigger size of compiled schema functions. - `false` - to not inline referenced schemas (they will be compiled as separate functions). - integer number - to limit the maximum number of keywords of the schema that will be inlined. - _passContext_: pass validation context to custom keyword functions. If this option is `true` and you pass some context to the compiled validation function with `validate.call(context, data)`, the `context` will be available as `this` in your custom keywords. By default `this` is Ajv instance. - _loopRequired_: by default `required` keyword is compiled into a single expression (or a sequence of statements in `allErrors` mode). In case of a very large number of properties in this keyword it may result in a very big validation function. Pass integer to set the number of properties above which `required` keyword will be validated in a loop - smaller validation function size but also worse performance. - _ownProperties_: by default Ajv iterates over all enumerable object properties; when this option is `true` only own enumerable object properties (i.e. found directly on the object rather than on its prototype) are iterated. Contributed by @mbroadst. - _multipleOfPrecision_: by default `multipleOf` keyword is validated by comparing the result of division with parseInt() of that result. It works for dividers that are bigger than 1. For small dividers such as 0.01 the result of the division is usually not integer (even when it should be integer, see issue [#84](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/84)). If you need to use fractional dividers set this option to some positive integer N to have `multipleOf` validated using this formula: `Math.abs(Math.round(division) - division) < 1e-N` (it is slower but allows for float arithmetics deviations). - _errorDataPath_ (deprecated): set `dataPath` to point to 'object' (default) or to 'property' when validating keywords `required`, `additionalProperties` and `dependencies`. - _messages_: Include human-readable messages in errors. `true` by default. `false` can be passed when custom messages are used (e.g. with [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n)). - _sourceCode_: add `sourceCode` property to validating function (for debugging; this code can be different from the result of toString call). - _processCode_: an optional function to process generated code before it is passed to Function constructor. It can be used to either beautify (the validating function is generated without line-breaks) or to transpile code. Starting from version 5.0.0 this option replaced options: - `beautify` that formatted the generated function using [js-beautify](https://github.com/beautify-web/js-beautify). If you want to beautify the generated code pass a function calling `require('js-beautify').js_beautify` as `processCode: code => js_beautify(code)`. - `transpile` that transpiled asynchronous validation function. You can still use `transpile` option with [ajv-async](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-async) package. See [Asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation) for more information. - _cache_: an optional instance of cache to store compiled schemas using stable-stringified schema as a key. For example, set-associative cache [sacjs](https://github.com/epoberezkin/sacjs) can be used. If not passed then a simple hash is used which is good enough for the common use case (a limited number of statically defined schemas). Cache should have methods `put(key, value)`, `get(key)`, `del(key)` and `clear()`. - _serialize_: an optional function to serialize schema to cache key. Pass `false` to use schema itself as a key (e.g., if WeakMap used as a cache). By default [fast-json-stable-stringify](https://github.com/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify) is used. ## Validation errors In case of validation failure, Ajv assigns the array of errors to `errors` property of validation function (or to `errors` property of Ajv instance when `validate` or `validateSchema` methods were called). In case of [asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation), the returned promise is rejected with exception `Ajv.ValidationError` that has `errors` property. ### Error objects Each error is an object with the following properties: - _keyword_: validation keyword. - _dataPath_: the path to the part of the data that was validated. By default `dataPath` uses JavaScript property access notation (e.g., `".prop[1].subProp"`). When the option `jsonPointers` is true (see [Options](#options)) `dataPath` will be set using JSON pointer standard (e.g., `"/prop/1/subProp"`). - _schemaPath_: the path (JSON-pointer as a URI fragment) to the schema of the keyword that failed validation. - _params_: the object with the additional information about error that can be used to create custom error messages (e.g., using [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n) package). See below for parameters set by all keywords. - _message_: the standard error message (can be excluded with option `messages` set to false). - _schema_: the schema of the keyword (added with `verbose` option). - _parentSchema_: the schema containing the keyword (added with `verbose` option) - _data_: the data validated by the keyword (added with `verbose` option). __Please note__: `propertyNames` keyword schema validation errors have an additional property `propertyName`, `dataPath` points to the object. After schema validation for each property name, if it is invalid an additional error is added with the property `keyword` equal to `"propertyNames"`. ### Error parameters Properties of `params` object in errors depend on the keyword that failed validation. - `maxItems`, `minItems`, `maxLength`, `minLength`, `maxProperties`, `minProperties` - property `limit` (number, the schema of the keyword). - `additionalItems` - property `limit` (the maximum number of allowed items in case when `items` keyword is an array of schemas and `additionalItems` is false). - `additionalProperties` - property `additionalProperty` (the property not used in `properties` and `patternProperties` keywords). - `dependencies` - properties: - `property` (dependent property), - `missingProperty` (required missing dependency - only the first one is reported currently) - `deps` (required dependencies, comma separated list as a string), - `depsCount` (the number of required dependencies). - `format` - property `format` (the schema of the keyword). - `maximum`, `minimum` - properties: - `limit` (number, the schema of the keyword), - `exclusive` (boolean, the schema of `exclusiveMaximum` or `exclusiveMinimum`), - `comparison` (string, comparison operation to compare the data to the limit, with the data on the left and the limit on the right; can be "<", "<=", ">", ">=") - `multipleOf` - property `multipleOf` (the schema of the keyword) - `pattern` - property `pattern` (the schema of the keyword) - `required` - property `missingProperty` (required property that is missing). - `propertyNames` - property `propertyName` (an invalid property name). - `patternRequired` (in ajv-keywords) - property `missingPattern` (required pattern that did not match any property). - `type` - property `type` (required type(s), a string, can be a comma-separated list) - `uniqueItems` - properties `i` and `j` (indices of duplicate items). - `const` - property `allowedValue` pointing to the value (the schema of the keyword). - `enum` - property `allowedValues` pointing to the array of values (the schema of the keyword). - `$ref` - property `ref` with the referenced schema URI. - `oneOf` - property `passingSchemas` (array of indices of passing schemas, null if no schema passes). - custom keywords (in case keyword definition doesn't create errors) - property `keyword` (the keyword name). ### Error logging Using the `logger` option when initiallizing Ajv will allow you to define custom logging. Here you can build upon the exisiting logging. The use of other logging packages is supported as long as the package or its associated wrapper exposes the required methods. If any of the required methods are missing an exception will be thrown. - **Required Methods**: `log`, `warn`, `error` ```javascript var otherLogger = new OtherLogger(); var ajv = new Ajv({ logger: { log: console.log.bind(console), warn: function warn() { otherLogger.logWarn.apply(otherLogger, arguments); }, error: function error() { otherLogger.logError.apply(otherLogger, arguments); console.error.apply(console, arguments); } } }); ``` ## Plugins Ajv can be extended with plugins that add custom keywords, formats or functions to process generated code. When such plugin is published as npm package it is recommended that it follows these conventions: - it exports a function - this function accepts ajv instance as the first parameter and returns the same instance to allow chaining - this function can accept an optional configuration as the second parameter If you have published a useful plugin please submit a PR to add it to the next section. ## Related packages - [ajv-async](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-async) - plugin to configure async validation mode - [ajv-bsontype](https://github.com/BoLaMN/ajv-bsontype) - plugin to validate mongodb's bsonType formats - [ajv-cli](https://github.com/jessedc/ajv-cli) - command line interface - [ajv-errors](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-errors) - plugin for custom error messages - [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n) - internationalised error messages - [ajv-istanbul](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-istanbul) - plugin to instrument generated validation code to measure test coverage of your schemas - [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) - plugin with custom validation keywords (select, typeof, etc.) - [ajv-merge-patch](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-merge-patch) - plugin with keywords $merge and $patch - [ajv-pack](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-pack) - produces a compact module exporting validation functions - [ajv-formats-draft2019](https://github.com/luzlab/ajv-formats-draft2019) - format validators for draft2019 that aren't already included in ajv (ie. `idn-hostname`, `idn-email`, `iri`, `iri-reference` and `duration`). ## Some packages using Ajv - [webpack](https://github.com/webpack/webpack) - a module bundler. Its main purpose is to bundle JavaScript files for usage in a browser - [jsonscript-js](https://github.com/JSONScript/jsonscript-js) - the interpreter for [JSONScript](http://www.jsonscript.org) - scripted processing of existing endpoints and services - [osprey-method-handler](https://github.com/mulesoft-labs/osprey-method-handler) - Express middleware for validating requests and responses based on a RAML method object, used in [osprey](https://github.com/mulesoft/osprey) - validating API proxy generated from a RAML definition - [har-validator](https://github.com/ahmadnassri/har-validator) - HTTP Archive (HAR) validator - [jsoneditor](https://github.com/josdejong/jsoneditor) - a web-based tool to view, edit, format, and validate JSON http://jsoneditoronline.org - [JSON Schema Lint](https://github.com/nickcmaynard/jsonschemalint) - a web tool to validate JSON/YAML document against a single JSON Schema http://jsonschemalint.com - [objection](https://github.com/vincit/objection.js) - SQL-friendly ORM for Node.js - [table](https://github.com/gajus/table) - formats data into a string table - [ripple-lib](https://github.com/ripple/ripple-lib) - a JavaScript API for interacting with [Ripple](https://ripple.com) in Node.js and the browser - [restbase](https://github.com/wikimedia/restbase) - distributed storage with REST API & dispatcher for backend services built to provide a low-latency & high-throughput API for Wikipedia / Wikimedia content - [hippie-swagger](https://github.com/CacheControl/hippie-swagger) - [Hippie](https://github.com/vesln/hippie) wrapper that provides end to end API testing with swagger validation - [react-form-controlled](https://github.com/seeden/react-form-controlled) - React controlled form components with validation - [rabbitmq-schema](https://github.com/tjmehta/rabbitmq-schema) - a schema definition module for RabbitMQ graphs and messages - [@query/schema](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@query/schema) - stream filtering with a URI-safe query syntax parsing to JSON Schema - [chai-ajv-json-schema](https://github.com/peon374/chai-ajv-json-schema) - chai plugin to us JSON Schema with expect in mocha tests - [grunt-jsonschema-ajv](https://github.com/SignpostMarv/grunt-jsonschema-ajv) - Grunt plugin for validating files against JSON Schema - [extract-text-webpack-plugin](https://github.com/webpack-contrib/extract-text-webpack-plugin) - extract text from bundle into a file - [electron-builder](https://github.com/electron-userland/electron-builder) - a solution to package and build a ready for distribution Electron app - [addons-linter](https://github.com/mozilla/addons-linter) - Mozilla Add-ons Linter - [gh-pages-generator](https://github.com/epoberezkin/gh-pages-generator) - multi-page site generator converting markdown files to GitHub pages - [ESLint](https://github.com/eslint/eslint) - the pluggable linting utility for JavaScript and JSX ## Tests ``` npm install git submodule update --init npm test ``` ## Contributing All validation functions are generated using doT templates in [dot](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/tree/master/lib/dot) folder. Templates are precompiled so doT is not a run-time dependency. `npm run build` - compiles templates to [dotjs](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/tree/master/lib/dotjs) folder. `npm run watch` - automatically compiles templates when files in dot folder change Please see [Contributing guidelines](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) ## Changes history See https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases __Please note__: [Changes in version 7.0.0-beta](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v7.0.0-beta.0) [Version 6.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v6.0.0). ## Code of conduct Please review and follow the [Code of conduct](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). Please report any unacceptable behaviour to [email protected] - it will be reviewed by the project team. ## Open-source software support Ajv is a part of [Tidelift subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-ajv?utm_source=npm-ajv&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=readme) - it provides a centralised support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## License [MIT](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/LICENSE) # fs-minipass Filesystem streams based on [minipass](http://npm.im/minipass). 4 classes are exported: - ReadStream - ReadStreamSync - WriteStream - WriteStreamSync When using `ReadStreamSync`, all of the data is made available immediately upon consuming the stream. Nothing is buffered in memory when the stream is constructed. If the stream is piped to a writer, then it will synchronously `read()` and emit data into the writer as fast as the writer can consume it. (That is, it will respect backpressure.) If you call `stream.read()` then it will read the entire file and return the contents. When using `WriteStreamSync`, every write is flushed to the file synchronously. If your writes all come in a single tick, then it'll write it all out in a single tick. It's as synchronous as you are. The async versions work much like their node builtin counterparts, with the exception of introducing significantly less Stream machinery overhead. ## USAGE It's just streams, you pipe them or read() them or write() to them. ```js const fsm = require('fs-minipass') const readStream = new fsm.ReadStream('file.txt') const writeStream = new fsm.WriteStream('output.txt') writeStream.write('some file header or whatever\n') readStream.pipe(writeStream) ``` ## ReadStream(path, options) Path string is required, but somewhat irrelevant if an open file descriptor is passed in as an option. Options: - `fd` Pass in a numeric file descriptor, if the file is already open. - `readSize` The size of reads to do, defaults to 16MB - `size` The size of the file, if known. Prevents zero-byte read() call at the end. - `autoClose` Set to `false` to prevent the file descriptor from being closed when the file is done being read. ## WriteStream(path, options) Path string is required, but somewhat irrelevant if an open file descriptor is passed in as an option. Options: - `fd` Pass in a numeric file descriptor, if the file is already open. - `mode` The mode to create the file with. Defaults to `0o666`. - `start` The position in the file to start reading. If not specified, then the file will start writing at position zero, and be truncated by default. - `autoClose` Set to `false` to prevent the file descriptor from being closed when the stream is ended. - `flags` Flags to use when opening the file. Irrelevant if `fd` is passed in, since file won't be opened in that case. Defaults to `'a'` if a `pos` is specified, or `'w'` otherwise. # AssemblyScript Loader A convenient loader for [AssemblyScript](https://assemblyscript.org) modules. Demangles module exports to a friendly object structure compatible with TypeScript definitions and provides useful utility to read/write data from/to memory. [Documentation](https://assemblyscript.org/loader.html) nearvote Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [AssemblyScript] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install [Node.js] ≥ 12 Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `assembly/index.ts`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard AssemblyScript tests using [as-pect]. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [AssemblyScript]: https://www.assemblyscript.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [as-pect]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli # jsdiff [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/kpdecker/jsdiff.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/kpdecker/jsdiff) [![Sauce Test Status](https://saucelabs.com/buildstatus/jsdiff)](https://saucelabs.com/u/jsdiff) A javascript text differencing implementation. Based on the algorithm proposed in ["An O(ND) Difference Algorithm and its Variations" (Myers, 1986)](http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.4.6927). ## Installation ```bash npm install diff --save ``` ## API * `Diff.diffChars(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing character by character. Returns a list of change objects (See below). Options * `ignoreCase`: `true` to ignore casing difference. Defaults to `false`. * `Diff.diffWords(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing word by word, ignoring whitespace. Returns a list of change objects (See below). Options * `ignoreCase`: Same as in `diffChars`. * `Diff.diffWordsWithSpace(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing word by word, treating whitespace as significant. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffLines(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing line by line. Options * `ignoreWhitespace`: `true` to ignore leading and trailing whitespace. This is the same as `diffTrimmedLines` * `newlineIsToken`: `true` to treat newline characters as separate tokens. This allows for changes to the newline structure to occur independently of the line content and to be treated as such. In general this is the more human friendly form of `diffLines` and `diffLines` is better suited for patches and other computer friendly output. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffTrimmedLines(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing line by line, ignoring leading and trailing whitespace. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffSentences(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing sentence by sentence. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffCss(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing CSS tokens. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffJson(oldObj, newObj[, options])` - diffs two JSON objects, comparing the fields defined on each. The order of fields, etc does not matter in this comparison. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffArrays(oldArr, newArr[, options])` - diffs two arrays, comparing each item for strict equality (===). Options * `comparator`: `function(left, right)` for custom equality checks Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.createTwoFilesPatch(oldFileName, newFileName, oldStr, newStr, oldHeader, newHeader)` - creates a unified diff patch. Parameters: * `oldFileName` : String to be output in the filename section of the patch for the removals * `newFileName` : String to be output in the filename section of the patch for the additions * `oldStr` : Original string value * `newStr` : New string value * `oldHeader` : Additional information to include in the old file header * `newHeader` : Additional information to include in the new file header * `options` : An object with options. Currently, only `context` is supported and describes how many lines of context should be included. * `Diff.createPatch(fileName, oldStr, newStr, oldHeader, newHeader)` - creates a unified diff patch. Just like Diff.createTwoFilesPatch, but with oldFileName being equal to newFileName. * `Diff.structuredPatch(oldFileName, newFileName, oldStr, newStr, oldHeader, newHeader, options)` - returns an object with an array of hunk objects. This method is similar to createTwoFilesPatch, but returns a data structure suitable for further processing. Parameters are the same as createTwoFilesPatch. The data structure returned may look like this: ```js { oldFileName: 'oldfile', newFileName: 'newfile', oldHeader: 'header1', newHeader: 'header2', hunks: [{ oldStart: 1, oldLines: 3, newStart: 1, newLines: 3, lines: [' line2', ' line3', '-line4', '+line5', '\\ No newline at end of file'], }] } ``` * `Diff.applyPatch(source, patch[, options])` - applies a unified diff patch. Return a string containing new version of provided data. `patch` may be a string diff or the output from the `parsePatch` or `structuredPatch` methods. The optional `options` object may have the following keys: - `fuzzFactor`: Number of lines that are allowed to differ before rejecting a patch. Defaults to 0. - `compareLine(lineNumber, line, operation, patchContent)`: Callback used to compare to given lines to determine if they should be considered equal when patching. Defaults to strict equality but may be overridden to provide fuzzier comparison. Should return false if the lines should be rejected. * `Diff.applyPatches(patch, options)` - applies one or more patches. This method will iterate over the contents of the patch and apply to data provided through callbacks. The general flow for each patch index is: - `options.loadFile(index, callback)` is called. The caller should then load the contents of the file and then pass that to the `callback(err, data)` callback. Passing an `err` will terminate further patch execution. - `options.patched(index, content, callback)` is called once the patch has been applied. `content` will be the return value from `applyPatch`. When it's ready, the caller should call `callback(err)` callback. Passing an `err` will terminate further patch execution. Once all patches have been applied or an error occurs, the `options.complete(err)` callback is made. * `Diff.parsePatch(diffStr)` - Parses a patch into structured data Return a JSON object representation of the a patch, suitable for use with the `applyPatch` method. This parses to the same structure returned by `Diff.structuredPatch`. * `convertChangesToXML(changes)` - converts a list of changes to a serialized XML format All methods above which accept the optional `callback` method will run in sync mode when that parameter is omitted and in async mode when supplied. This allows for larger diffs without blocking the event loop. This may be passed either directly as the final parameter or as the `callback` field in the `options` object. ### Change Objects Many of the methods above return change objects. These objects consist of the following fields: * `value`: Text content * `added`: True if the value was inserted into the new string * `removed`: True if the value was removed from the old string Note that some cases may omit a particular flag field. Comparison on the flag fields should always be done in a truthy or falsy manner. ## Examples Basic example in Node ```js require('colors'); const Diff = require('diff'); const one = 'beep boop'; const other = 'beep boob blah'; const diff = Diff.diffChars(one, other); diff.forEach((part) => { // green for additions, red for deletions // grey for common parts const color = part.added ? 'green' : part.removed ? 'red' : 'grey'; process.stderr.write(part.value[color]); }); console.log(); ``` Running the above program should yield <img src="images/node_example.png" alt="Node Example"> Basic example in a web page ```html <pre id="display"></pre> <script src="diff.js"></script> <script> const one = 'beep boop', other = 'beep boob blah', color = ''; let span = null; const diff = Diff.diffChars(one, other), display = document.getElementById('display'), fragment = document.createDocumentFragment(); diff.forEach((part) => { // green for additions, red for deletions // grey for common parts const color = part.added ? 'green' : part.removed ? 'red' : 'grey'; span = document.createElement('span'); span.style.color = color; span.appendChild(document .createTextNode(part.value)); fragment.appendChild(span); }); display.appendChild(fragment); </script> ``` Open the above .html file in a browser and you should see <img src="images/web_example.png" alt="Node Example"> **[Full online demo](http://kpdecker.github.com/jsdiff)** ## Compatibility [![Sauce Test Status](https://saucelabs.com/browser-matrix/jsdiff.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/jsdiff) jsdiff supports all ES3 environments with some known issues on IE8 and below. Under these browsers some diff algorithms such as word diff and others may fail due to lack of support for capturing groups in the `split` operation. ## License See [LICENSE](https://github.com/kpdecker/jsdiff/blob/master/LICENSE). ![](cow.png) Moo! ==== Moo is a highly-optimised tokenizer/lexer generator. Use it to tokenize your strings, before parsing 'em with a parser like [nearley](https://github.com/hardmath123/nearley) or whatever else you're into. * [Fast](#is-it-fast) * [Convenient](#usage) * uses [Regular Expressions](#on-regular-expressions) * tracks [Line Numbers](#line-numbers) * handles [Keywords](#keywords) * supports [States](#states) * custom [Errors](#errors) * is even [Iterable](#iteration) * has no dependencies * 4KB minified + gzipped * Moo! Is it fast? ----------- Yup! Flying-cows-and-singed-steak fast. Moo is the fastest JS tokenizer around. It's **~2–10x** faster than most other tokenizers; it's a **couple orders of magnitude** faster than some of the slower ones. Define your tokens **using regular expressions**. Moo will compile 'em down to a **single RegExp for performance**. It uses the new ES6 **sticky flag** where possible to make things faster; otherwise it falls back to an almost-as-efficient workaround. (For more than you ever wanted to know about this, read [adventures in the land of substrings and RegExps](http://mrale.ph/blog/2016/11/23/making-less-dart-faster.html).) You _might_ be able to go faster still by writing your lexer by hand rather than using RegExps, but that's icky. Oh, and it [avoids parsing RegExps by itself](https://hackernoon.com/the-madness-of-parsing-real-world-javascript-regexps-d9ee336df983#.2l8qu3l76). Because that would be horrible. Usage ----- First, you need to do the needful: `$ npm install moo`, or whatever will ship this code to your computer. Alternatively, grab the `moo.js` file by itself and slap it into your web page via a `<script>` tag; moo is completely standalone. Then you can start roasting your very own lexer/tokenizer: ```js const moo = require('moo') let lexer = moo.compile({ WS: /[ \t]+/, comment: /\/\/.*?$/, number: /0|[1-9][0-9]*/, string: /"(?:\\["\\]|[^\n"\\])*"/, lparen: '(', rparen: ')', keyword: ['while', 'if', 'else', 'moo', 'cows'], NL: { match: /\n/, lineBreaks: true }, }) ``` And now throw some text at it: ```js lexer.reset('while (10) cows\nmoo') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'keyword', value: 'while' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'WS', value: ' ' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'lparen', value: '(' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'number', value: '10' } // ... ``` When you reach the end of Moo's internal buffer, next() will return `undefined`. You can always `reset()` it and feed it more data when that happens. On Regular Expressions ---------------------- RegExps are nifty for making tokenizers, but they can be a bit of a pain. Here are some things to be aware of: * You often want to use **non-greedy quantifiers**: e.g. `*?` instead of `*`. Otherwise your tokens will be longer than you expect: ```js let lexer = moo.compile({ string: /".*"/, // greedy quantifier * // ... }) lexer.reset('"foo" "bar"') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'string', value: 'foo" "bar' } ``` Better: ```js let lexer = moo.compile({ string: /".*?"/, // non-greedy quantifier *? // ... }) lexer.reset('"foo" "bar"') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'string', value: 'foo' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'space', value: ' ' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'string', value: 'bar' } ``` * The **order of your rules** matters. Earlier ones will take precedence. ```js moo.compile({ identifier: /[a-z0-9]+/, number: /[0-9]+/, }).reset('42').next() // -> { type: 'identifier', value: '42' } moo.compile({ number: /[0-9]+/, identifier: /[a-z0-9]+/, }).reset('42').next() // -> { type: 'number', value: '42' } ``` * Moo uses **multiline RegExps**. This has a few quirks: for example, the **dot `/./` doesn't include newlines**. Use `[^]` instead if you want to match newlines too. * Since an excluding character ranges like `/[^ ]/` (which matches anything but a space) _will_ include newlines, you have to be careful not to include them by accident! In particular, the whitespace metacharacter `\s` includes newlines. Line Numbers ------------ Moo tracks detailed information about the input for you. It will track line numbers, as long as you **apply the `lineBreaks: true` option to any rules which might contain newlines**. Moo will try to warn you if you forget to do this. Note that this is `false` by default, for performance reasons: counting the number of lines in a matched token has a small cost. For optimal performance, only match newlines inside a dedicated token: ```js newline: {match: '\n', lineBreaks: true}, ``` ### Token Info ### Token objects (returned from `next()`) have the following attributes: * **`type`**: the name of the group, as passed to compile. * **`text`**: the string that was matched. * **`value`**: the string that was matched, transformed by your `value` function (if any). * **`offset`**: the number of bytes from the start of the buffer where the match starts. * **`lineBreaks`**: the number of line breaks found in the match. (Always zero if this rule has `lineBreaks: false`.) * **`line`**: the line number of the beginning of the match, starting from 1. * **`col`**: the column where the match begins, starting from 1. ### Value vs. Text ### The `value` is the same as the `text`, unless you provide a [value transform](#transform). ```js const moo = require('moo') const lexer = moo.compile({ ws: /[ \t]+/, string: {match: /"(?:\\["\\]|[^\n"\\])*"/, value: s => s.slice(1, -1)}, }) lexer.reset('"test"') lexer.next() /* { value: 'test', text: '"test"', ... } */ ``` ### Reset ### Calling `reset()` on your lexer will empty its internal buffer, and set the line, column, and offset counts back to their initial value. If you don't want this, you can `save()` the state, and later pass it as the second argument to `reset()` to explicitly control the internal state of the lexer. ```js    lexer.reset('some line\n') let info = lexer.save() // -> { line: 10 } lexer.next() // -> { line: 10 } lexer.next() // -> { line: 11 } // ... lexer.reset('a different line\n', info) lexer.next() // -> { line: 10 } ``` Keywords -------- Moo makes it convenient to define literals. ```js moo.compile({ lparen: '(', rparen: ')', keyword: ['while', 'if', 'else', 'moo', 'cows'], }) ``` It'll automatically compile them into regular expressions, escaping them where necessary. **Keywords** should be written using the `keywords` transform. ```js moo.compile({ IDEN: {match: /[a-zA-Z]+/, type: moo.keywords({ KW: ['while', 'if', 'else', 'moo', 'cows'], })}, SPACE: {match: /\s+/, lineBreaks: true}, }) ``` ### Why? ### You need to do this to ensure the **longest match** principle applies, even in edge cases. Imagine trying to parse the input `className` with the following rules: ```js keyword: ['class'], identifier: /[a-zA-Z]+/, ``` You'll get _two_ tokens — `['class', 'Name']` -- which is _not_ what you want! If you swap the order of the rules, you'll fix this example; but now you'll lex `class` wrong (as an `identifier`). The keywords helper checks matches against the list of keywords; if any of them match, it uses the type `'keyword'` instead of `'identifier'` (for this example). ### Keyword Types ### Keywords can also have **individual types**. ```js let lexer = moo.compile({ name: {match: /[a-zA-Z]+/, type: moo.keywords({ 'kw-class': 'class', 'kw-def': 'def', 'kw-if': 'if', })}, // ... }) lexer.reset('def foo') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'kw-def', value: 'def' } lexer.next() // space lexer.next() // -> { type: 'name', value: 'foo' } ``` You can use [itt](https://github.com/nathan/itt)'s iterator adapters to make constructing keyword objects easier: ```js itt(['class', 'def', 'if']) .map(k => ['kw-' + k, k]) .toObject() ``` States ------ Moo allows you to define multiple lexer **states**. Each state defines its own separate set of token rules. Your lexer will start off in the first state given to `moo.states({})`. Rules can be annotated with `next`, `push`, and `pop`, to change the current state after that token is matched. A "stack" of past states is kept, which is used by `push` and `pop`. * **`next: 'bar'`** moves to the state named `bar`. (The stack is not changed.) * **`push: 'bar'`** moves to the state named `bar`, and pushes the old state onto the stack. * **`pop: 1`** removes one state from the top of the stack, and moves to that state. (Only `1` is supported.) Only rules from the current state can be matched. You need to copy your rule into all the states you want it to be matched in. For example, to tokenize JS-style string interpolation such as `a${{c: d}}e`, you might use: ```js let lexer = moo.states({ main: { strstart: {match: '`', push: 'lit'}, ident: /\w+/, lbrace: {match: '{', push: 'main'}, rbrace: {match: '}', pop: true}, colon: ':', space: {match: /\s+/, lineBreaks: true}, }, lit: { interp: {match: '${', push: 'main'}, escape: /\\./, strend: {match: '`', pop: true}, const: {match: /(?:[^$`]|\$(?!\{))+/, lineBreaks: true}, }, }) // <= `a${{c: d}}e` // => strstart const interp lbrace ident colon space ident rbrace rbrace const strend ``` The `rbrace` rule is annotated with `pop`, so it moves from the `main` state into either `lit` or `main`, depending on the stack. Errors ------ If none of your rules match, Moo will throw an Error; since it doesn't know what else to do. If you prefer, you can have moo return an error token instead of throwing an exception. The error token will contain the whole of the rest of the buffer. ```js moo.compile({ // ... myError: moo.error, }) moo.reset('invalid') moo.next() // -> { type: 'myError', value: 'invalid', text: 'invalid', offset: 0, lineBreaks: 0, line: 1, col: 1 } moo.next() // -> undefined ``` You can have a token type that both matches tokens _and_ contains error values. ```js moo.compile({ // ... myError: {match: /[\$?`]/, error: true}, }) ``` ### Formatting errors ### If you want to throw an error from your parser, you might find `formatError` helpful. Call it with the offending token: ```js throw new Error(lexer.formatError(token, "invalid syntax")) ``` It returns a string with a pretty error message. ``` Error: invalid syntax at line 2 col 15: totally valid `syntax` ^ ``` Iteration --------- Iterators: we got 'em. ```js for (let here of lexer) { // here = { type: 'number', value: '123', ... } } ``` Create an array of tokens. ```js let tokens = Array.from(lexer); ``` Use [itt](https://github.com/nathan/itt)'s iteration tools with Moo. ```js for (let [here, next] = itt(lexer).lookahead()) { // pass a number if you need more tokens // enjoy! } ``` Transform --------- Moo doesn't allow capturing groups, but you can supply a transform function, `value()`, which will be called on the value before storing it in the Token object. ```js moo.compile({ STRING: [ {match: /"""[^]*?"""/, lineBreaks: true, value: x => x.slice(3, -3)}, {match: /"(?:\\["\\rn]|[^"\\])*?"/, lineBreaks: true, value: x => x.slice(1, -1)}, {match: /'(?:\\['\\rn]|[^'\\])*?'/, lineBreaks: true, value: x => x.slice(1, -1)}, ], // ... }) ``` Contributing ------------ Do check the [FAQ](https://github.com/tjvr/moo/issues?q=label%3Aquestion). Before submitting an issue, [remember...](https://github.com/tjvr/moo/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md) # json-schema-traverse Traverse JSON Schema passing each schema object to callback [![build](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/workflows/build/badge.svg)](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/actions?query=workflow%3Abuild) [![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/json-schema-traverse)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/json-schema-traverse) [![coverage](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse?branch=master) ## Install ``` npm install json-schema-traverse ``` ## Usage ```javascript const traverse = require('json-schema-traverse'); const schema = { properties: { foo: {type: 'string'}, bar: {type: 'integer'} } }; traverse(schema, {cb}); // cb is called 3 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. {type: 'string'} // 3. {type: 'integer'} // Or: traverse(schema, {cb: {pre, post}}); // pre is called 3 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. {type: 'string'} // 3. {type: 'integer'} // // post is called 3 times with: // 1. {type: 'string'} // 2. {type: 'integer'} // 3. root schema ``` Callback function `cb` is called for each schema object (not including draft-06 boolean schemas), including the root schema, in pre-order traversal. Schema references ($ref) are not resolved, they are passed as is. Alternatively, you can pass a `{pre, post}` object as `cb`, and then `pre` will be called before traversing child elements, and `post` will be called after all child elements have been traversed. Callback is passed these parameters: - _schema_: the current schema object - _JSON pointer_: from the root schema to the current schema object - _root schema_: the schema passed to `traverse` object - _parent JSON pointer_: from the root schema to the parent schema object (see below) - _parent keyword_: the keyword inside which this schema appears (e.g. `properties`, `anyOf`, etc.) - _parent schema_: not necessarily parent object/array; in the example above the parent schema for `{type: 'string'}` is the root schema - _index/property_: index or property name in the array/object containing multiple schemas; in the example above for `{type: 'string'}` the property name is `'foo'` ## Traverse objects in all unknown keywords ```javascript const traverse = require('json-schema-traverse'); const schema = { mySchema: { minimum: 1, maximum: 2 } }; traverse(schema, {allKeys: true, cb}); // cb is called 2 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. mySchema ``` Without option `allKeys: true` callback will be called only with root schema. ## Enterprise support json-schema-traverse package is a part of [Tidelift enterprise subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-json-schema-traverse?utm_source=npm-json-schema-traverse&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo) - it provides a centralised commercial support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerability via GitHub issues. ## License [MIT](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/blob/master/LICENSE) # isexe Minimal module to check if a file is executable, and a normal file. Uses `fs.stat` and tests against the `PATHEXT` environment variable on Windows. ## USAGE ```javascript var isexe = require('isexe') isexe('some-file-name', function (err, isExe) { if (err) { console.error('probably file does not exist or something', err) } else if (isExe) { console.error('this thing can be run') } else { console.error('cannot be run') } }) // same thing but synchronous, throws errors var isExe = isexe.sync('some-file-name') // treat errors as just "not executable" isexe('maybe-missing-file', { ignoreErrors: true }, callback) var isExe = isexe.sync('maybe-missing-file', { ignoreErrors: true }) ``` ## API ### `isexe(path, [options], [callback])` Check if the path is executable. If no callback provided, and a global `Promise` object is available, then a Promise will be returned. Will raise whatever errors may be raised by `fs.stat`, unless `options.ignoreErrors` is set to true. ### `isexe.sync(path, [options])` Same as `isexe` but returns the value and throws any errors raised. ### Options * `ignoreErrors` Treat all errors as "no, this is not executable", but don't raise them. * `uid` Number to use as the user id * `gid` Number to use as the group id * `pathExt` List of path extensions to use instead of `PATHEXT` environment variable on Windows. # type-check [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/type-check.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/type-check) <a name="type-check" /> `type-check` is a library which allows you to check the types of JavaScript values at runtime with a Haskell like type syntax. It is great for checking external input, for testing, or even for adding a bit of safety to your internal code. It is a major component of [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn). MIT license. Version 0.4.0. Check out the [demo](http://gkz.github.io/type-check/). For updates on `type-check`, [follow me on twitter](https://twitter.com/gkzahariev). npm install type-check ## Quick Examples ```js // Basic types: var typeCheck = require('type-check').typeCheck; typeCheck('Number', 1); // true typeCheck('Number', 'str'); // false typeCheck('Error', new Error); // true typeCheck('Undefined', undefined); // true // Comment typeCheck('count::Number', 1); // true // One type OR another type: typeCheck('Number | String', 2); // true typeCheck('Number | String', 'str'); // true // Wildcard, matches all types: typeCheck('*', 2) // true // Array, all elements of a single type: typeCheck('[Number]', [1, 2, 3]); // true typeCheck('[Number]', [1, 'str', 3]); // false // Tuples, or fixed length arrays with elements of different types: typeCheck('(String, Number)', ['str', 2]); // true typeCheck('(String, Number)', ['str']); // false typeCheck('(String, Number)', ['str', 2, 5]); // false // Object properties: typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Boolean}', {x: 2, y: false}); // true typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Boolean}', {x: 2}); // false typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Maybe Boolean}', {x: 2}); // true typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Boolean}', {x: 2, y: false, z: 3}); // false typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Boolean, ...}', {x: 2, y: false, z: 3}); // true // A particular type AND object properties: typeCheck('RegExp{source: String, ...}', /re/i); // true typeCheck('RegExp{source: String, ...}', {source: 're'}); // false // Custom types: var opt = {customTypes: {Even: { typeOf: 'Number', validate: function(x) { return x % 2 === 0; }}}}; typeCheck('Even', 2, opt); // true // Nested: var type = '{a: (String, [Number], {y: Array, ...}), b: Error{message: String, ...}}' typeCheck(type, {a: ['hi', [1, 2, 3], {y: [1, 'ms']}], b: new Error('oh no')}); // true ``` Check out the [type syntax format](#syntax) and [guide](#guide). ## Usage `require('type-check');` returns an object that exposes four properties. `VERSION` is the current version of the library as a string. `typeCheck`, `parseType`, and `parsedTypeCheck` are functions. ```js // typeCheck(type, input, options); typeCheck('Number', 2); // true // parseType(type); var parsedType = parseType('Number'); // object // parsedTypeCheck(parsedType, input, options); parsedTypeCheck(parsedType, 2); // true ``` ### typeCheck(type, input, options) `typeCheck` checks a JavaScript value `input` against `type` written in the [type format](#type-format) (and taking account the optional `options`) and returns whether the `input` matches the `type`. ##### arguments * type - `String` - the type written in the [type format](#type-format) which to check against * input - `*` - any JavaScript value, which is to be checked against the type * options - `Maybe Object` - an optional parameter specifying additional options, currently the only available option is specifying [custom types](#custom-types) ##### returns `Boolean` - whether the input matches the type ##### example ```js typeCheck('Number', 2); // true ``` ### parseType(type) `parseType` parses string `type` written in the [type format](#type-format) into an object representing the parsed type. ##### arguments * type - `String` - the type written in the [type format](#type-format) which to parse ##### returns `Object` - an object in the parsed type format representing the parsed type ##### example ```js parseType('Number'); // [{type: 'Number'}] ``` ### parsedTypeCheck(parsedType, input, options) `parsedTypeCheck` checks a JavaScript value `input` against parsed `type` in the parsed type format (and taking account the optional `options`) and returns whether the `input` matches the `type`. Use this in conjunction with `parseType` if you are going to use a type more than once. ##### arguments * type - `Object` - the type in the parsed type format which to check against * input - `*` - any JavaScript value, which is to be checked against the type * options - `Maybe Object` - an optional parameter specifying additional options, currently the only available option is specifying [custom types](#custom-types) ##### returns `Boolean` - whether the input matches the type ##### example ```js parsedTypeCheck([{type: 'Number'}], 2); // true var parsedType = parseType('String'); parsedTypeCheck(parsedType, 'str'); // true ``` <a name="type-format" /> ## Type Format ### Syntax White space is ignored. The root node is a __Types__. * __Identifier__ = `[\$\w]+` - a group of any lower or upper case letters, numbers, underscores, or dollar signs - eg. `String` * __Type__ = an `Identifier`, an `Identifier` followed by a `Structure`, just a `Structure`, or a wildcard `*` - eg. `String`, `Object{x: Number}`, `{x: Number}`, `Array{0: String, 1: Boolean, length: Number}`, `*` * __Types__ = optionally a comment (an `Identifier` followed by a `::`), optionally the identifier `Maybe`, one or more `Type`, separated by `|` - eg. `Number`, `String | Date`, `Maybe Number`, `Maybe Boolean | String` * __Structure__ = `Fields`, or a `Tuple`, or an `Array` - eg. `{x: Number}`, `(String, Number)`, `[Date]` * __Fields__ = a `{`, followed one or more `Field` separated by a comma `,` (trailing comma `,` is permitted), optionally an `...` (always preceded by a comma `,`), followed by a `}` - eg. `{x: Number, y: String}`, `{k: Function, ...}` * __Field__ = an `Identifier`, followed by a colon `:`, followed by `Types` - eg. `x: Date | String`, `y: Boolean` * __Tuple__ = a `(`, followed by one or more `Types` separated by a comma `,` (trailing comma `,` is permitted), followed by a `)` - eg `(Date)`, `(Number, Date)` * __Array__ = a `[` followed by exactly one `Types` followed by a `]` - eg. `[Boolean]`, `[Boolean | Null]` ### Guide `type-check` uses `Object.toString` to find out the basic type of a value. Specifically, ```js {}.toString.call(VALUE).slice(8, -1) {}.toString.call(true).slice(8, -1) // 'Boolean' ``` A basic type, eg. `Number`, uses this check. This is much more versatile than using `typeof` - for example, with `document`, `typeof` produces `'object'` which isn't that useful, and our technique produces `'HTMLDocument'`. You may check for multiple types by separating types with a `|`. The checker proceeds from left to right, and passes if the value is any of the types - eg. `String | Boolean` first checks if the value is a string, and then if it is a boolean. If it is none of those, then it returns false. Adding a `Maybe` in front of a list of multiple types is the same as also checking for `Null` and `Undefined` - eg. `Maybe String` is equivalent to `Undefined | Null | String`. You may add a comment to remind you of what the type is for by following an identifier with a `::` before a type (or multiple types). The comment is simply thrown out. The wildcard `*` matches all types. There are three types of structures for checking the contents of a value: 'fields', 'tuple', and 'array'. If used by itself, a 'fields' structure will pass with any type of object as long as it is an instance of `Object` and the properties pass - this allows for duck typing - eg. `{x: Boolean}`. To check if the properties pass, and the value is of a certain type, you can specify the type - eg. `Error{message: String}`. If you want to make a field optional, you can simply use `Maybe` - eg. `{x: Boolean, y: Maybe String}` will still pass if `y` is undefined (or null). If you don't care if the value has properties beyond what you have specified, you can use the 'etc' operator `...` - eg. `{x: Boolean, ...}` will match an object with an `x` property that is a boolean, and with zero or more other properties. For an array, you must specify one or more types (separated by `|`) - it will pass for something of any length as long as each element passes the types provided - eg. `[Number]`, `[Number | String]`. A tuple checks for a fixed number of elements, each of a potentially different type. Each element is separated by a comma - eg. `(String, Number)`. An array and tuple structure check that the value is of type `Array` by default, but if another type is specified, they will check for that instead - eg. `Int32Array[Number]`. You can use the wildcard `*` to search for any type at all. Check out the [type precedence](https://github.com/zaboco/type-precedence) library for type-check. ## Options Options is an object. It is an optional parameter to the `typeCheck` and `parsedTypeCheck` functions. The only current option is `customTypes`. <a name="custom-types" /> ### Custom Types __Example:__ ```js var options = { customTypes: { Even: { typeOf: 'Number', validate: function(x) { return x % 2 === 0; } } } }; typeCheck('Even', 2, options); // true typeCheck('Even', 3, options); // false ``` `customTypes` allows you to set up custom types for validation. The value of this is an object. The keys of the object are the types you will be matching. Each value of the object will be an object having a `typeOf` property - a string, and `validate` property - a function. The `typeOf` property is the type the value should be (optional - if not set only `validate` will be used), and `validate` is a function which should return true if the value is of that type. `validate` receives one parameter, which is the value that we are checking. ## Technical About `type-check` is written in [LiveScript](http://livescript.net/) - a language that compiles to JavaScript. It also uses the [prelude.ls](http://preludels.com/) library. # assemblyscript-regex A regex engine for AssemblyScript. [AssemblyScript](https://www.assemblyscript.org/) is a new language, based on TypeScript, that runs on WebAssembly. AssemblyScript has a lightweight standard library, but lacks support for Regular Expression. The project fills that gap! This project exposes an API that mirrors the JavaScript [RegExp](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/RegExp) class: ```javascript const regex = new RegExp("fo*", "g"); const str = "table football, foul"; let match: Match | null = regex.exec(str); while (match != null) { // first iteration // match.index = 6 // match.matches[0] = "foo" // second iteration // match.index = 16 // match.matches[0] = "fo" match = regex.exec(str); } ``` ## Project status The initial focus of this implementation has been feature support and functionality over performance. It currently supports a sufficient number of regex features to be considered useful, including most character classes, common assertions, groups, alternations, capturing groups and quantifiers. The next phase of development will focussed on more extensive testing and performance. The project currently has reasonable unit test coverage, focussed on positive and negative test cases on a per-feature basis. It also includes a more exhaustive test suite with test cases borrowed from another regex library. ### Feature support Based on the classfication within the [MDN cheatsheet](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Regular_Expressions/Cheatsheet) **Character sets** - [x] . - [x] \d - [x] \D - [x] \w - [x] \W - [x] \s - [x] \S - [x] \t - [x] \r - [x] \n - [x] \v - [x] \f - [ ] [\b] - [ ] \0 - [ ] \cX - [x] \xhh - [x] \uhhhh - [ ] \u{hhhh} or \u{hhhhh} - [x] \ **Assertions** - [x] ^ - [x] $ - [ ] \b - [ ] \B **Other assertions** - [ ] x(?=y) Lookahead assertion - [ ] x(?!y) Negative lookahead assertion - [ ] (?<=y)x Lookbehind assertion - [ ] (?<!y)x Negative lookbehind assertion **Groups and ranges** - [x] x|y - [x] [xyz][a-c] - [x] [^xyz][^a-c] - [x] (x) capturing group - [ ] \n back reference - [ ] (?<Name>x) named capturing group - [x] (?:x) Non-capturing group **Quantifiers** - [x] x\* - [x] x+ - [x] x? - [x] x{n} - [x] x{n,} - [x] x{n,m} - [ ] x\*? / x+? / ... **RegExp** - [x] global - [ ] sticky - [x] case insensitive - [x] multiline - [x] dotAll - [ ] unicode ### Development This project is open source, MIT licenced and your contributions are very much welcomed. To get started, check out the repository and install dependencies: ``` $ npm install ``` A few general points about the tools and processes this project uses: - This project uses prettier for code formatting and eslint to provide additional syntactic checks. These are both run on `npm test` and as part of the CI build. - The unit tests are executed using [as-pect](https://github.com/jtenner/as-pect) - a native AssemblyScript test runner - The specification tests are within the `spec` folder. The `npm run test:generate` target transforms these tests into as-pect tests which execute as part of the standard build / test cycle - In order to support improved debugging you can execute this library as TypeScript (rather than WebAssembly), via the `npm run tsrun` target. # Optionator <a name="optionator" /> Optionator is a JavaScript/Node.js option parsing and help generation library used by [eslint](http://eslint.org), [Grasp](http://graspjs.com), [LiveScript](http://livescript.net), [esmangle](https://github.com/estools/esmangle), [escodegen](https://github.com/estools/escodegen), and [many more](https://www.npmjs.com/browse/depended/optionator). For an online demo, check out the [Grasp online demo](http://www.graspjs.com/#demo). [About](#about) &middot; [Usage](#usage) &middot; [Settings Format](#settings-format) &middot; [Argument Format](#argument-format) ## Why? The problem with other option parsers, such as `yargs` or `minimist`, is they just accept all input, valid or not. With Optionator, if you mistype an option, it will give you an error (with a suggestion for what you meant). If you give the wrong type of argument for an option, it will give you an error rather than supplying the wrong input to your application. $ cmd --halp Invalid option '--halp' - perhaps you meant '--help'? $ cmd --count str Invalid value for option 'count' - expected type Int, received value: str. Other helpful features include reformatting the help text based on the size of the console, so that it fits even if the console is narrow, and accepting not just an array (eg. process.argv), but a string or object as well, making things like testing much easier. ## About Optionator uses [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) and [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) behind the scenes to cast and verify input according the specified types. MIT license. Version 0.9.1 npm install optionator For updates on Optionator, [follow me on twitter](https://twitter.com/gkzahariev). Optionator is a Node.js module, but can be used in the browser as well if packed with webpack/browserify. ## Usage `require('optionator');` returns a function. It has one property, `VERSION`, the current version of the library as a string. This function is called with an object specifying your options and other information, see the [settings format section](#settings-format). This in turn returns an object with three properties, `parse`, `parseArgv`, `generateHelp`, and `generateHelpForOption`, which are all functions. ```js var optionator = require('optionator')({ prepend: 'Usage: cmd [options]', append: 'Version 1.0.0', options: [{ option: 'help', alias: 'h', type: 'Boolean', description: 'displays help' }, { option: 'count', alias: 'c', type: 'Int', description: 'number of things', example: 'cmd --count 2' }] }); var options = optionator.parseArgv(process.argv); if (options.help) { console.log(optionator.generateHelp()); } ... ``` ### parse(input, parseOptions) `parse` processes the `input` according to your settings, and returns an object with the results. ##### arguments * input - `[String] | Object | String` - the input you wish to parse * parseOptions - `{slice: Int}` - all options optional - `slice` specifies how much to slice away from the beginning if the input is an array or string - by default `0` for string, `2` for array (works with `process.argv`) ##### returns `Object` - the parsed options, each key is a camelCase version of the option name (specified in dash-case), and each value is the processed value for that option. Positional values are in an array under the `_` key. ##### example ```js parse(['node', 't.js', '--count', '2', 'positional']); // {count: 2, _: ['positional']} parse('--count 2 positional'); // {count: 2, _: ['positional']} parse({count: 2, _:['positional']}); // {count: 2, _: ['positional']} ``` ### parseArgv(input) `parseArgv` works exactly like `parse`, but only for array input and it slices off the first two elements. ##### arguments * input - `[String]` - the input you wish to parse ##### returns See "returns" section in "parse" ##### example ```js parseArgv(process.argv); ``` ### generateHelp(helpOptions) `generateHelp` produces help text based on your settings. ##### arguments * helpOptions - `{showHidden: Boolean, interpolate: Object}` - all options optional - `showHidden` specifies whether to show options with `hidden: true` specified, by default it is `false` - `interpolate` specify data to be interpolated in `prepend` and `append` text, `{{key}}` is the format - eg. `generateHelp({interpolate:{version: '0.4.2'}})`, will change this `append` text: `Version {{version}}` to `Version 0.4.2` ##### returns `String` - the generated help text ##### example ```js generateHelp(); /* "Usage: cmd [options] positional -h, --help displays help -c, --count Int number of things Version 1.0.0 "*/ ``` ### generateHelpForOption(optionName) `generateHelpForOption` produces expanded help text for the specified with `optionName` option. If an `example` was specified for the option, it will be displayed, and if a `longDescription` was specified, it will display that instead of the `description`. ##### arguments * optionName - `String` - the name of the option to display ##### returns `String` - the generated help text for the option ##### example ```js generateHelpForOption('count'); /* "-c, --count Int description: number of things example: cmd --count 2 "*/ ``` ## Settings Format When your `require('optionator')`, you get a function that takes in a settings object. This object has the type: { prepend: String, append: String, options: [{heading: String} | { option: String, alias: [String] | String, type: String, enum: [String], default: String, restPositional: Boolean, required: Boolean, overrideRequired: Boolean, dependsOn: [String] | String, concatRepeatedArrays: Boolean | (Boolean, Object), mergeRepeatedObjects: Boolean, description: String, longDescription: String, example: [String] | String }], helpStyle: { aliasSeparator: String, typeSeparator: String, descriptionSeparator: String, initialIndent: Int, secondaryIndent: Int, maxPadFactor: Number }, mutuallyExclusive: [[String | [String]]], concatRepeatedArrays: Boolean | (Boolean, Object), // deprecated, set in defaults object mergeRepeatedObjects: Boolean, // deprecated, set in defaults object positionalAnywhere: Boolean, typeAliases: Object, defaults: Object } All of the properties are optional (the `Maybe` has been excluded for brevities sake), except for having either `heading: String` or `option: String` in each object in the `options` array. ### Top Level Properties * `prepend` is an optional string to be placed before the options in the help text * `append` is an optional string to be placed after the options in the help text * `options` is a required array specifying your options and headings, the options and headings will be displayed in the order specified * `helpStyle` is an optional object which enables you to change the default appearance of some aspects of the help text * `mutuallyExclusive` is an optional array of arrays of either strings or arrays of strings. The top level array is a list of rules, each rule is a list of elements - each element can be either a string (the name of an option), or a list of strings (a group of option names) - there will be an error if more than one element is present * `concatRepeatedArrays` see description under the "Option Properties" heading - use at the top level is deprecated, if you want to set this for all options, use the `defaults` property * `mergeRepeatedObjects` see description under the "Option Properties" heading - use at the top level is deprecated, if you want to set this for all options, use the `defaults` property * `positionalAnywhere` is an optional boolean (defaults to `true`) - when `true` it allows positional arguments anywhere, when `false`, all arguments after the first positional one are taken to be positional as well, even if they look like a flag. For example, with `positionalAnywhere: false`, the arguments `--flag --boom 12 --crack` would have two positional arguments: `12` and `--crack` * `typeAliases` is an optional object, it allows you to set aliases for types, eg. `{Path: 'String'}` would allow you to use the type `Path` as an alias for the type `String` * `defaults` is an optional object following the option properties format, which specifies default values for all options. A default will be overridden if manually set. For example, you can do `default: { type: "String" }` to set the default type of all options to `String`, and then override that default in an individual option by setting the `type` property #### Heading Properties * `heading` a required string, the name of the heading #### Option Properties * `option` the required name of the option - use dash-case, without the leading dashes * `alias` is an optional string or array of strings which specify any aliases for the option * `type` is a required string in the [type check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) [format](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#type-format), this will be used to cast the inputted value and validate it * `enum` is an optional array of strings, each string will be parsed by [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) - the argument value must be one of the resulting values - each potential value must validate against the specified `type` * `default` is a optional string, which will be parsed by [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) and used as the default value if none is set - the value must validate against the specified `type` * `restPositional` is an optional boolean - if set to `true`, everything after the option will be taken to be a positional argument, even if it looks like a named argument * `required` is an optional boolean - if set to `true`, the option parsing will fail if the option is not defined * `overrideRequired` is a optional boolean - if set to `true` and the option is used, and there is another option which is required but not set, it will override the need for the required option and there will be no error - this is useful if you have required options and want to use `--help` or `--version` flags * `concatRepeatedArrays` is an optional boolean or tuple with boolean and options object (defaults to `false`) - when set to `true` and an option contains an array value and is repeated, the subsequent values for the flag will be appended rather than overwriting the original value - eg. option `g` of type `[String]`: `-g a -g b -g c,d` will result in `['a','b','c','d']` You can supply an options object by giving the following value: `[true, options]`. The one currently supported option is `oneValuePerFlag`, this only allows one array value per flag. This is useful if your potential values contain a comma. * `mergeRepeatedObjects` is an optional boolean (defaults to `false`) - when set to `true` and an option contains an object value and is repeated, the subsequent values for the flag will be merged rather than overwriting the original value - eg. option `g` of type `Object`: `-g a:1 -g b:2 -g c:3,d:4` will result in `{a: 1, b: 2, c: 3, d: 4}` * `dependsOn` is an optional string or array of strings - if simply a string (the name of another option), it will make sure that that other option is set, if an array of strings, depending on whether `'and'` or `'or'` is first, it will either check whether all (`['and', 'option-a', 'option-b']`), or at least one (`['or', 'option-a', 'option-b']`) other options are set * `description` is an optional string, which will be displayed next to the option in the help text * `longDescription` is an optional string, it will be displayed instead of the `description` when `generateHelpForOption` is used * `example` is an optional string or array of strings with example(s) for the option - these will be displayed when `generateHelpForOption` is used #### Help Style Properties * `aliasSeparator` is an optional string, separates multiple names from each other - default: ' ,' * `typeSeparator` is an optional string, separates the type from the names - default: ' ' * `descriptionSeparator` is an optional string , separates the description from the padded name and type - default: ' ' * `initialIndent` is an optional int - the amount of indent for options - default: 2 * `secondaryIndent` is an optional int - the amount of indent if wrapped fully (in addition to the initial indent) - default: 4 * `maxPadFactor` is an optional number - affects the default level of padding for the names/type, it is multiplied by the average of the length of the names/type - default: 1.5 ## Argument Format At the highest level there are two types of arguments: named, and positional. Name arguments of any length are prefixed with `--` (eg. `--go`), and those of one character may be prefixed with either `--` or `-` (eg. `-g`). There are two types of named arguments: boolean flags (eg. `--problemo`, `-p`) which take no value and result in a `true` if they are present, the falsey `undefined` if they are not present, or `false` if present and explicitly prefixed with `no` (eg. `--no-problemo`). Named arguments with values (eg. `--tseries 800`, `-t 800`) are the other type. If the option has a type `Boolean` it will automatically be made into a boolean flag. Any other type results in a named argument that takes a value. For more information about how to properly set types to get the value you want, take a look at the [type check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) and [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) pages. You can group single character arguments that use a single `-`, however all except the last must be boolean flags (which take no value). The last may be a boolean flag, or an argument which takes a value - eg. `-ba 2` is equivalent to `-b -a 2`. Positional arguments are all those values which do not fall under the above - they can be anywhere, not just at the end. For example, in `cmd -b one -a 2 two` where `b` is a boolean flag, and `a` has the type `Number`, there are two positional arguments, `one` and `two`. Everything after an `--` is positional, even if it looks like a named argument. You may optionally use `=` to separate option names from values, for example: `--count=2`. If you specify the option `NUM`, then any argument using a single `-` followed by a number will be valid and will set the value of `NUM`. Eg. `-2` will be parsed into `NUM: 2`. If duplicate named arguments are present, the last one will be taken. ## Technical About `optionator` is written in [LiveScript](http://livescript.net/) - a language that compiles to JavaScript. It uses [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) to cast arguments to their specified type, and uses [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) to validate values. It also uses the [prelude.ls](http://preludels.com/) library. # balanced-match Match balanced string pairs, like `{` and `}` or `<b>` and `</b>`. Supports regular expressions as well! [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/juliangruber/balanced-match.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/juliangruber/balanced-match) [![downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/balanced-match.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/balanced-match) [![testling badge](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/balanced-match.png)](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/balanced-match) ## Example Get the first matching pair of braces: ```js var balanced = require('balanced-match'); console.log(balanced('{', '}', 'pre{in{nested}}post')); console.log(balanced('{', '}', 'pre{first}between{second}post')); console.log(balanced(/\s+\{\s+/, /\s+\}\s+/, 'pre { in{nest} } post')); ``` The matches are: ```bash $ node example.js { start: 3, end: 14, pre: 'pre', body: 'in{nested}', post: 'post' } { start: 3, end: 9, pre: 'pre', body: 'first', post: 'between{second}post' } { start: 3, end: 17, pre: 'pre', body: 'in{nest}', post: 'post' } ``` ## API ### var m = balanced(a, b, str) For the first non-nested matching pair of `a` and `b` in `str`, return an object with those keys: * **start** the index of the first match of `a` * **end** the index of the matching `b` * **pre** the preamble, `a` and `b` not included * **body** the match, `a` and `b` not included * **post** the postscript, `a` and `b` not included If there's no match, `undefined` will be returned. If the `str` contains more `a` than `b` / there are unmatched pairs, the first match that was closed will be used. For example, `{{a}` will match `['{', 'a', '']` and `{a}}` will match `['', 'a', '}']`. ### var r = balanced.range(a, b, str) For the first non-nested matching pair of `a` and `b` in `str`, return an array with indexes: `[ <a index>, <b index> ]`. If there's no match, `undefined` will be returned. If the `str` contains more `a` than `b` / there are unmatched pairs, the first match that was closed will be used. For example, `{{a}` will match `[ 1, 3 ]` and `{a}}` will match `[0, 2]`. ## Installation With [npm](https://npmjs.org) do: ```bash npm install balanced-match ``` ## Security contact information To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. ## License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2013 Julian Gruber &lt;[email protected]&gt; Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
Ni3l55_wehave-metabuild
README.md crowdfund Cargo.toml build.sh deploy.sh src crowdfund.rs lib.rs fake-usdc-ft Cargo.toml build.sh deploy.sh src lib.rs frontend README.md next.config.js package-lock.json package.json public vercel.svg src components Content Index.js CrowdFundModal index.js Drawer Index.js Govern Index.js Markets Index.js Navbar Index.js Portfolio Index.js Trade Index.js utils near-wallet.js nft-storage.js pages _app.js _document.js index.js style style.css utils createEmotionCache.js theme.js CROWDFUNDS ITEMS ITEM TOKENS GOVERNANCE ft Cargo.toml README.md build.sh deploy.sh src lib.rs integration-tests Cargo.toml src tests.rs ARRANGE ACT item-dao Cargo.toml build.sh deploy.sh src lib.rs neardev dev-account.env nft Cargo.toml README.md src lib.rs package.json
Hello NEAR! ================================= A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract unit tests with the `cargo test`. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/develop/welcome [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://docs.near.org/develop/prerequisites#rust-and-wasm [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html Hello NEAR! ================================= A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract unit tests with the `cargo test`. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/develop/welcome [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://docs.near.org/develop/prerequisites#rust-and-wasm [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html This is a [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/) project bootstrapped with [`create-next-app`](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/tree/canary/packages/create-next-app). ## Getting Started First, run the development server: ```bash npm run dev # or yarn dev ``` Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) with your browser to see the result. You can start editing the page by modifying `pages/index.js`. The page auto-updates as you edit the file. [API routes](https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introduction) can be accessed on [http://localhost:3000/api/hello](http://localhost:3000/api/hello). This endpoint can be edited in `pages/api/hello.js`. The `pages/api` directory is mapped to `/api/*`. Files in this directory are treated as [API routes](https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introduction) instead of React pages. ## Learn More To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources: - [Next.js Documentation](https://nextjs.org/docs) - learn about Next.js features and API. - [Learn Next.js](https://nextjs.org/learn) - an interactive Next.js tutorial. You can check out [the Next.js GitHub repository](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/) - your feedback and contributions are welcome! ## Deploy on Vercel The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the [Vercel Platform](https://vercel.com/new?utm_medium=default-template&filter=next.js&utm_source=create-next-app&utm_campaign=create-next-app-readme) from the creators of Next.js. Check out our [Next.js deployment documentation](https://nextjs.org/docs/deployment) for more details. # wehave-metabuild Repository for the WeHave submission of the NEAR Metabuild hackathon. WeHave is a platform for tokenizing exclusive items. You can crowdfund, own, trade and govern exclusive items. People can own an NEP-141 (fungible) token that represents their share of the item. We continued upon our submission from NEARCON, where we won the Future of Finance track! This repository contains 4 smart contracts. Explained in more detail below, but a quick summary: there's one for crowdfunding, one for keeping a collection of the item tokens, then there's the token of an item itself, and also a DAO for governing the item. A frontend is also included, which is connected to all of the smart contracts, on the testnet. Project & Code explanation ========================== Basic process: Crowdfunding --> Tokenize by minting NFT --> Item Token created + item DAO created --> NFT actually minted 1. The crowdfunding smart contract code lives in the `/crowdfund` folder. It accepts USDC payments, and triggers adding an item to the collection of item tokens (collection = NFT) when a crowdfund goal has been reached. 2. The collection/NFT smart contract code lives in the `/nft` folder. It's a customized NFT which acts as an item token/DAO factory. If you mint, a new custom NEP-141 item token AND lightweight DAO gets created. (MINT = new tokenization of physical item). 3. The custom NEP-141 item token smart contract code lives in the `/ft` folder. When created, it takes the shares of the crowdfund. The supply is immediately distributed amongst the crowdfunders respectively. 4. There's a fake usdc contract in `/fake-usdc-ft` used for testing. You can ignore this. 5. The smart contract integration tests live in the `/integration-tests` directory. 6. The frontend code lives in the `/frontend` folder. Deployments =========== The project is live at `app-wehave-io.vercel.app`. Crowdfunding is deployed at `crowdfunds3-wehave.testnet`. NFT collection is deployed at `items3-wehave.testnet`. Item tokens get deployed automatically at `item{number}.items3-wehave.testnet` with number being an identifier of the item. DAO of an item gets deployed automatically at `dao-item{number}.items3-wehave.testnet` Quick Start =========== If you haven't installed dependencies during setup: npm install Build the smart contracts: npm run build To integration test the smart contracts: npm run test:integration For running the frontend: cd frontend && npm run dev
PinkDiamond1_Three0
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md README.md StyleGuide.md contract Cargo.toml README.md compile.js controller Cargo.toml src lib.rs types.rs hosting Cargo.toml src lib.rs project Cargo.toml src lib.rs types.rs storage Cargo.toml src approval.rs enumeration.rs events.rs filesys.rs internal.rs lib.rs metadata.rs mint.rs nft_core.rs royalty.rs tests.rs token Cargo.toml src events.rs ft_core.rs internal.rs lib.rs metadata.rs storage.rs jest.config.json package.json src 404.html ReactAppEnv.d.ts __mocks__ fileMock.ts assets code.svg favicon favicon.svg icon_wht_nm.svg near_icon_nm.svg nohosting.svg nostorage.svg notfound.svg notoken.svg nousers.svg undraw_add_notes_re_ln36.svg wave.svg wip.svg components auth-components index.ts core index.ts db-components controls index.ts index.ts hosting-components index.ts storage-components FileManager.css index.ts token-components index.ts config.ts global.css index.html services NEAR.ts Web3Storage.ts database config index.ts identities NearIdentityProvider.ts identityProvider.d.ts index.ts index.ts orbitDB.d.ts utils.ts views db-views index.ts jsonview.d.ts index.ts tsconfig.json
Three0-Rust Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html Three0 ================== Three0 is a completely decentralized BaaS (Backed-As-A-Service) providing easy to use tools to build Web3 dApps through a Web2 lens. Three0 offers 4 main services - Database, Authentication, Storage, and Hosting. Currently this project contains the Database and Authentication services and will soon be implementing the Storage and Hosting services. Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Clone this repository 3. Install dependencies: `npm install` 4. Run the local development server: `npm run dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `npm`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== This [React] app was initialized with [create-near-app] 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `npm run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `npm run dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `npm install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: npm install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `three0.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `three0.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account three0.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'three0.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: npm run deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [React]: https://reactjs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages Additional Notes ================ ## NEAR Kurtosis - To use your own NEAR Kurtosis instance create a `.env` folder in the `.near` directory and set the `KURTOSIS_URL` variable to the URL of your own Kurtosis instance. - To use the NEAR CLI for the localnet mode (Three0's Kurtosis Instance) set the `NEAR_ENV` environment variable to `localnet` before running any `near` commands. This will ensure that the NEAR CLI uses the localnet node URL and keys. - To change back to testnet set the `NEAR_ENV` environment variable to `testnet` before running any `near` commands. - We at Three0 use our own cloud NEAR Kurtosis instance to develop. If you wish to use the `testnet` to develop change ``` case 'production': case 'testnet': return { ... } case 'development': case 'localnet': return { ... } ``` to ``` case 'production': case 'development': case 'testnet': return { ... } case 'localnet': return { ... } ```
piorot_near-submission
README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json package.json scripts 1.dev-deploy.sh 2.use-contract.sh 3.cleanup.sh README.md src as_types.d.ts simple __tests__ as-pect.d.ts index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts singleton __tests__ as-pect.d.ts index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts tsconfig.json utils.ts
## Setting up your terminal The scripts in this folder are designed to help you demonstrate the behavior of the contract(s) in this project. It uses the following setup: ```sh # set your terminal up to have 2 windows, A and B like this: ┌─────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ A │ B │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘ ``` ### Terminal **A** *This window is used to compile, deploy and control the contract* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment export OWNER= # any account you control # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 # export OWNER=sherif.testnet ``` - Commands _helper scripts_ ```sh 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts ``` ### Terminal **B** *This window is used to render the contract account storage* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 ``` - Commands ```sh # monitor contract storage using near-account-utils # https://github.com/near-examples/near-account-utils watch -d -n 1 yarn storage $CONTRACT ``` --- ## OS Support ### Linux - The `watch` command is supported natively on Linux - To learn more about any of these shell commands take a look at [explainshell.com](https://explainshell.com) ### MacOS - Consider `brew info visionmedia-watch` (or `brew install watch`) ### Windows - Consider this article: [What is the Windows analog of the Linux watch command?](https://superuser.com/questions/191063/what-is-the-windows-analog-of-the-linuo-watch-command#191068) # `near-sdk-as` Starter Kit This is a good project to use as a starting point for your AssemblyScript project. ## Samples This repository includes a complete project structure for AssemblyScript contracts targeting the NEAR platform. The example here is very basic. It's a simple contract demonstrating the following concepts: - a single contract - the difference between `view` vs. `change` methods - basic contract storage There are 2 AssemblyScript contracts in this project, each in their own folder: - **simple** in the `src/simple` folder - **singleton** in the `src/singleton` folder ### Simple We say that an AssemblyScript contract is written in the "simple style" when the `index.ts` file (the contract entry point) includes a series of exported functions. In this case, all exported functions become public contract methods. ```ts // return the string 'hello world' export function helloWorld(): string {} // read the given key from account (contract) storage export function read(key: string): string {} // write the given value at the given key to account (contract) storage export function write(key: string, value: string): string {} // private helper method used by read() and write() above private storageReport(): string {} ``` ### Singleton We say that an AssemblyScript contract is written in the "singleton style" when the `index.ts` file (the contract entry point) has a single exported class (the name of the class doesn't matter) that is decorated with `@nearBindgen`. In this case, all methods on the class become public contract methods unless marked `private`. Also, all instance variables are stored as a serialized instance of the class under a special storage key named `STATE`. AssemblyScript uses JSON for storage serialization (as opposed to Rust contracts which use a custom binary serialization format called borsh). ```ts @nearBindgen export class Contract { // return the string 'hello world' helloWorld(): string {} // read the given key from account (contract) storage read(key: string): string {} // write the given value at the given key to account (contract) storage @mutateState() write(key: string, value: string): string {} // private helper method used by read() and write() above private storageReport(): string {} } ``` ## Usage ### Getting started (see below for video recordings of each of the following steps) INSTALL `NEAR CLI` first like this: `npm i -g near-cli` 1. clone this repo to a local folder 2. run `yarn` 3. run `./scripts/1.dev-deploy.sh` 3. run `./scripts/2.use-contract.sh` 4. run `./scripts/2.use-contract.sh` (yes, run it to see changes) 5. run `./scripts/3.cleanup.sh` ### Videos **`1.dev-deploy.sh`** This video shows the build and deployment of the contract. [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/409575.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/409575) **`2.use-contract.sh`** This video shows contract methods being called. You should run the script twice to see the effect it has on contract state. [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/409577.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/409577) **`3.cleanup.sh`** This video shows the cleanup script running. Make sure you add the `BENEFICIARY` environment variable. The script will remind you if you forget. ```sh export BENEFICIARY=<your-account-here> # this account receives contract account balance ``` [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/409580.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/409580) ### Other documentation - See `./scripts/README.md` for documentation about the scripts - Watch this video where Willem Wyndham walks us through refactoring a simple example of a NEAR smart contract written in AssemblyScript https://youtu.be/QP7aveSqRPo ``` There are 2 "styles" of implementing AssemblyScript NEAR contracts: - the contract interface can either be a collection of exported functions - or the contract interface can be the methods of a an exported class We call the second style "Singleton" because there is only one instance of the class which is serialized to the blockchain storage. Rust contracts written for NEAR do this by default with the contract struct. 0:00 noise (to cut) 0:10 Welcome 0:59 Create project starting with "npm init" 2:20 Customize the project for AssemblyScript development 9:25 Import the Counter example and get unit tests passing 18:30 Adapt the Counter example to a Singleton style contract 21:49 Refactoring unit tests to access the new methods 24:45 Review and summary ``` ## The file system ```sh ├── README.md # this file ├── as-pect.config.js # configuration for as-pect (AssemblyScript unit testing) ├── asconfig.json # configuration for AssemblyScript compiler (supports multiple contracts) ├── package.json # NodeJS project manifest ├── scripts │   ├── 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts │   ├── 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise │   ├── 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts │   └── README.md # documentation for helper scripts ├── src │   ├── as_types.d.ts # AssemblyScript headers for type hints │   ├── simple # Contract 1: "Simple example" │   │   ├── __tests__ │   │   │   ├── as-pect.d.ts # as-pect unit testing headers for type hints │   │   │   └── index.unit.spec.ts # unit tests for contract 1 │   │   ├── asconfig.json # configuration for AssemblyScript compiler (one per contract) │   │   └── assembly │   │   └── index.ts # contract code for contract 1 │   ├── singleton # Contract 2: "Singleton-style example" │   │   ├── __tests__ │   │   │   ├── as-pect.d.ts # as-pect unit testing headers for type hints │   │   │   └── index.unit.spec.ts # unit tests for contract 2 │   │   ├── asconfig.json # configuration for AssemblyScript compiler (one per contract) │   │   └── assembly │   │   └── index.ts # contract code for contract 2 │   ├── tsconfig.json # Typescript configuration │   └── utils.ts # common contract utility functions └── yarn.lock # project manifest version lock ``` You may clone this repo to get started OR create everything from scratch. Please note that, in order to create the AssemblyScript and tests folder structure, you may use the command `asp --init` which will create the following folders and files: ``` ./assembly/ ./assembly/tests/ ./assembly/tests/example.spec.ts ./assembly/tests/as-pect.d.ts ```
anbork_svelte-kit-near
README.md jsconfig.json package.json src app.html global.d.ts svelte.config.js
## Start a project ```bash # Install dependencies yarn install # Start sveltekit app yarn dev ```
NEARWEEK_marketing-activation-form
.github ISSUE_TEMPLATE BOUNTY.yml README.md api .eslintrc.js README.md app.js config app.js cron.js near.js trello.js typeform.js ecosystem.config.js middlewares near.js verifyNearSignatureHeader.js modules MarketingRequestForm MarketingRequestFormController.js MarketingRequestFormModel.js MarketingRequestFormRoutes.js package-lock.json package.json prettier.config.js services cronScheduleService.js errorReportingService.js settingsService.js trelloService.js typeformService.js templates marketingRequestFormTemplate.json marketingThemeTemplate.json utilities logger.js setUpNear.js ui .eslintrc.js package.json public index.html manifest.json robots.txt src App.test.js components Header UserMenu UserMenu.styles.js config nearConfig.js redirectPages.js routes.js hooks useAccountSignature.js useDaoContract.js useTypeform.js index.css reportWebVitals.js services apiService.js daoContractService.js signatureService.js setupTests.js store actions clearTemporaryData.js index.js setMarketingFromId.js setNearApi.js setTemporaryData.js setTransactionHash.js helpers getMarketingRequestForm.js getNearApi.js getPageAccordingToState.js isRedirectAfterCreatingProposal.js isRedirectFromWallet.js pathMatched.js index.js initState.js thunks index.js onConnectWallet.js onDisconnect.js onInitApp.js onLoadPage.js onRedirectAfterCreatingProposal.js onRedirectFromWallet.js
# marketing-activation-form # api.marketing-activation-form
LockiStrike_nearvember-task-2
.idea modules.xml vcs.xml as-pect.config.js asconfig.json package-lock.json package.json scripts 1.dev-deploy.sh 2.use-contract.sh 3.cleanup.sh README.md src as_types.d.ts balance as-pect.config.js assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts example.spec.ts history-record.ts index.ts tsconfig.json utils.ts
## Setting up your terminal The scripts in this folder are designed to help you demonstrate the behavior of the contract(s) in this project. It uses the following setup: ```sh # set your terminal up to have 2 windows, A and B like this: ┌─────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ A │ B │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘ ``` ### Terminal **A** *This window is used to compile, deploy and control the contract* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment export OWNER= # any account you control # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 # export OWNER=sherif.testnet ``` - Commands _helper scripts_ ```sh 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts ``` ### Terminal **B** *This window is used to render the contract account storage* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 ``` - Commands ```sh # monitor contract storage using near-account-utils # https://github.com/near-examples/near-account-utils watch -d -n 1 yarn storage $CONTRACT ``` --- ## OS Support ### Linux - The `watch` command is supported natively on Linux - To learn more about any of these shell commands take a look at [explainshell.com](https://explainshell.com) ### MacOS - Consider `brew info visionmedia-watch` (or `brew install watch`) ### Windows - Consider this article: [What is the Windows analog of the Linux watch command?](https://superuser.com/questions/191063/what-is-the-windows-analog-of-the-linuo-watch-command#191068)
phoenixpulsar_testVOTB
README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json package.json scripts 1.dev-deploy.sh 2.use-contract.sh 3.cleanup.sh README.md src as_types.d.ts simple __tests__ as-pect.d.ts index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts singleton __tests__ as-pect.d.ts index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts tsconfig.json utils.ts
# `near-sdk-as` Starter Kit This is a good project to use as a starting point for your AssemblyScript project. ## Samples This repository includes a complete project structure for AssemblyScript contracts targeting the NEAR platform. The example here is very basic. It's a simple contract demonstrating the following concepts: - a single contract - the difference between `view` vs. `change` methods - basic contract storage There are 2 AssemblyScript contracts in this project, each in their own folder: - **simple** in the `src/simple` folder - **singleton** in the `src/singleton` folder ### Simple We say that an AssemblyScript contract is written in the "simple style" when the `index.ts` file (the contract entry point) includes a series of exported functions. In this case, all exported functions become public contract methods. ```ts // return the string 'hello world' export function helloWorld(): string {} // read the given key from account (contract) storage export function read(key: string): string {} // write the given value at the given key to account (contract) storage export function write(key: string, value: string): string {} // private helper method used by read() and write() above private storageReport(): string {} ``` ### Singleton We say that an AssemblyScript contract is written in the "singleton style" when the `index.ts` file (the contract entry point) has a single exported class (the name of the class doesn't matter) that is decorated with `@nearBindgen`. In this case, all methods on the class become public contract methods unless marked `private`. Also, all instance variables are stored as a serialized instance of the class under a special storage key named `STATE`. AssemblyScript uses JSON for storage serialization (as opposed to Rust contracts which use a custom binary serialization format called borsh). ```ts @nearBindgen export class Contract { // return the string 'hello world' helloWorld(): string {} // read the given key from account (contract) storage read(key: string): string {} // write the given value at the given key to account (contract) storage @mutateState() write(key: string, value: string): string {} // private helper method used by read() and write() above private storageReport(): string {} } ``` ## Usage ### Getting started (see below for video recordings of each of the following steps) INSTALL `NEAR CLI` first like this: `npm i -g near-cli` 1. clone this repo to a local folder 2. run `yarn` 3. run `./scripts/1.dev-deploy.sh` 3. run `./scripts/2.use-contract.sh` 4. run `./scripts/2.use-contract.sh` (yes, run it to see changes) 5. run `./scripts/3.cleanup.sh` ### Videos **`1.dev-deploy.sh`** This video shows the build and deployment of the contract. [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/409575.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/409575) **`2.use-contract.sh`** This video shows contract methods being called. You should run the script twice to see the effect it has on contract state. [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/409577.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/409577) **`3.cleanup.sh`** This video shows the cleanup script running. Make sure you add the `BENEFICIARY` environment variable. The script will remind you if you forget. ```sh export BENEFICIARY=<your-account-here> # this account receives contract account balance ``` [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/409580.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/409580) ### Other documentation - See `./scripts/README.md` for documentation about the scripts - Watch this video where Willem Wyndham walks us through refactoring a simple example of a NEAR smart contract written in AssemblyScript https://youtu.be/QP7aveSqRPo ``` There are 2 "styles" of implementing AssemblyScript NEAR contracts: - the contract interface can either be a collection of exported functions - or the contract interface can be the methods of a an exported class We call the second style "Singleton" because there is only one instance of the class which is serialized to the blockchain storage. Rust contracts written for NEAR do this by default with the contract struct. 0:00 noise (to cut) 0:10 Welcome 0:59 Create project starting with "npm init" 2:20 Customize the project for AssemblyScript development 9:25 Import the Counter example and get unit tests passing 18:30 Adapt the Counter example to a Singleton style contract 21:49 Refactoring unit tests to access the new methods 24:45 Review and summary ``` ## The file system ```sh ├── README.md # this file ├── as-pect.config.js # configuration for as-pect (AssemblyScript unit testing) ├── asconfig.json # configuration for AssemblyScript compiler (supports multiple contracts) ├── package.json # NodeJS project manifest ├── scripts │   ├── 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts │   ├── 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise │   ├── 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts │   └── README.md # documentation for helper scripts ├── src │   ├── as_types.d.ts # AssemblyScript headers for type hints │   ├── simple # Contract 1: "Simple example" │   │   ├── __tests__ │   │   │   ├── as-pect.d.ts # as-pect unit testing headers for type hints │   │   │   └── index.unit.spec.ts # unit tests for contract 1 │   │   ├── asconfig.json # configuration for AssemblyScript compiler (one per contract) │   │   └── assembly │   │   └── index.ts # contract code for contract 1 │   ├── singleton # Contract 2: "Singleton-style example" │   │   ├── __tests__ │   │   │   ├── as-pect.d.ts # as-pect unit testing headers for type hints │   │   │   └── index.unit.spec.ts # unit tests for contract 2 │   │   ├── asconfig.json # configuration for AssemblyScript compiler (one per contract) │   │   └── assembly │   │   └── index.ts # contract code for contract 2 │   ├── tsconfig.json # Typescript configuration │   └── utils.ts # common contract utility functions └── yarn.lock # project manifest version lock ``` You may clone this repo to get started OR create everything from scratch. Please note that, in order to create the AssemblyScript and tests folder structure, you may use the command `asp --init` which will create the following folders and files: ``` ./assembly/ ./assembly/tests/ ./assembly/tests/example.spec.ts ./assembly/tests/as-pect.d.ts ``` ## Setting up your terminal The scripts in this folder are designed to help you demonstrate the behavior of the contract(s) in this project. It uses the following setup: ```sh # set your terminal up to have 2 windows, A and B like this: ┌─────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ A │ B │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘ ``` ### Terminal **A** *This window is used to compile, deploy and control the contract* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment export OWNER= # any account you control # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 # export OWNER=sherif.testnet ``` - Commands _helper scripts_ ```sh 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts ``` ### Terminal **B** *This window is used to render the contract account storage* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 ``` - Commands ```sh # monitor contract storage using near-account-utils # https://github.com/near-examples/near-account-utils watch -d -n 1 yarn storage $CONTRACT ``` --- ## OS Support ### Linux - The `watch` command is supported natively on Linux - To learn more about any of these shell commands take a look at [explainshell.com](https://explainshell.com) ### MacOS - Consider `brew info visionmedia-watch` (or `brew install watch`) ### Windows - Consider this article: [What is the Windows analog of the Linux watch command?](https://superuser.com/questions/191063/what-is-the-windows-analog-of-the-linuo-watch-command#191068)
NadiiaOnopriienko4irelabs_testAddAccessKey
__tests__ add_key.ava.ts utils.ts ava.config.cjs.js package.json
NEAR-Edu_near-certification-tools
README.md api Cargo.toml README.md cert Cargo.toml src db.rs lib.rs query.rs common Cargo.toml src lib.rs errors Cargo.toml src lib.rs invalidate-all-certs-for-account Cargo.toml sample_api_payload_invalidate-all-certs-for-account.json src lib.rs invalidate-cert Cargo.toml src lib.rs mint-cert Cargo.toml sample_api_payload_mint-cert.json src lib.rs near-certification-tools Cargo.toml README.md build.sh contract.sh deploy.sh dev_deploy.sh getCliCommands.js init_args.json sample_mint.json src contract.rs contract init.rs invalidate.rs mint.rs nft.rs permissions.rs event.rs lib.rs metadata.rs storage_key.rs utils.rs router Cargo.toml src lib.rs main.rs START OF FIRST QUERY END OF FIRST QUERY START OF SECOND QUERY, IN CASE FIRST QUERY DOESN'T MATCH CONDITIONS END OF SECOND QUERY BINDING CTEs WITH UNION ALL. IF FIRST QUERY (long_period_of_inactivity) DOESN'T RETURN ANY RESULT, RUN SECOND QUERY (most_recent_activity) documentation batch-issuing.md certificate-minting-make-scenario.json web-app .eslintrc.js README.md deployment_notes.md docker-compose.yml helpers caching.ts certificate-designs.ts certificate.ts expiration-date.ts near.ts prisma.ts strings.ts time.ts types.ts jest.config.js next-env.d.ts next.config.js package-lock.json package.json pages _middleware.ts api cert [imageFileName].ts postcss.config.js prettier.config.js prisma seed.ts public certificate-backgrounds Analyst_certificate.svg Architect_certificate.svg Designer_certificate.svg Developer_certificate.svg Entrepreneur_certificate.svg Instructor_certificate.svg Security_certificate.svg near_icon.svg near_university_logo.svg tailwind.config.js test __tests__ expiration-date.test.ts test-helpers client.ts generate-account-activities.ts mock-client.ts tsconfig.json QUERY 1 QUERY 2
# Overview This project will be accessible at https://certificates.near.university. See [deployment_notes.md](deployment_notes.md). ## Frontend The index page will prompt the visitor to log in, after which it will display the list of certificates that they possess. Each cert will display a URL of its image (and eventually links or buttons that allow sharing it on Twitter). ## API Endpoints ### Generating the certificate (minting the NFT) There is also an API endpoint ([/api/mint-cert](/web-app/pages/api/mint-cert.ts)) for generating a cert for a given mainnet address (and the endpoint will only function if a server-side secret is also provided in the payload). See [sample_api_payload_mint-cert.json](/web-app/pages/api/sample_api_payload_mint-cert.json). Airtable and Integromat are connected via a polling function in Integromat. Once every day or so, Integromat can poll Airtable to retrieve all certified developers, only grabbing the most recently added ones (since the last poll). In the Integromat flow, we have all the data from the submissions table that we need to issue a cert (including name, mainnet address, course, etc). The Integromat flow then calls the [HTTP "app"](https://www.integromat.com/en/help/app/http) (Integromat calls each flow step an "app") and uses it to call out to this API endpoint, passing a payload of NCD data that mints a new NFT. The next step in the Integromat flow is to email the recipient of the NCD with a link directly to their wallet where they can see the NFT (and also a link to this frontend). ### Testing posting to the mint-cert API endpoint You can use CURL in the Terminal. Change to the `/web-app` directory, and then: `curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "x-api-key: xxxxxxxx" -d @"pages/api/sample_api_payload_mint-cert.json" "http://localhost:3000/api/mint-cert"` ### Testing posting to the invalidate-all-certs-for-account API endpoint You can use CURL in the Terminal. Change to the `/web-app` directory, and then: `curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "x-api-key: xxxxxxxx" -d @"pages/api/sample_api_payload_invalidate-all-certs-for-account.json" "http://localhost:3000/api/invalidate-all-certs-for-account"` ### Viewing the dynamically-generated png image Visitors can view the image at /api/cert/abcd.svg or /api/cert/abcd.png. See [/web-app/pages/api/cert/[imageFileName].ts](/web-app/pages/api/cert/[imageFileName].ts) ## Getting Started ```bash cp web-app/.env web-app/.env.local # Then edit those values. You'll need to replace the value of NEXT_PUBLIC_CERTIFICATE_CONTRACT_NAME with your own that you saw in the CLI. Ask Ryan for any other secrets. nvm use 17 yarn yarn dev ``` The app is at [http://localhost:3000/api/cert/103216412112497cb6c193152a27c49a.svg](http://localhost:3000/api/cert/103216412112497cb6c193152a27c49a.svg) and [http://localhost:3000/api/mint-cert](http://localhost:3000/api/mint-cert). ## See also - Keep in mind that through commit 2022-01-26 18:25:22 -0500 b44d3a9 there was a folder called "view-contract", where the original idea was to have the dynamic SVG/PNG image generation happen on the NEAR blockchain rather than on a centralized server. But we abandoned that approach due to high gas costs of cross-contract calls. - This is a [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/) project bootstrapped with [`create-next-app`](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/tree/canary/packages/create-next-app). - Solving a TypeScript issue that happens when Render tries to build the project: https://community.render.com/t/deploy-a-github-sub-directory/1156/12 # Helpful tools - https://github.com/fusebit/tunnel - https://reqbin.com/post-online # NEAR Certification Tools This repo contains 2 main parts (which have more specific documentation in those sections): - The [API](api/router) that has the API endpoints fo minting / issuing new certificates and for fetching data needed for image generation as well as the contract which controls the NFT certificates for our NEAR Edu programs. - The [web app](web-app) which implements the frontend for browsing the certificates and generating the NFT images for them. # NEAR Certification Tools - Data Contract This Rust contract provides the foundational data model for certifications, issuing standards-compliant NFTs. # Design Rationale A notable difference between the implementation of this contract and many other NFT projects is that all of the metadata is stored on-chain. This is for the purpose of reducing overhead to client implementation, and also because storage on NEAR is so darn cheap. # Install Rust and Cargo https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/getting-started/installation.html#install-rust-and-cargo ```bash curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh ``` You might want to close and reopen your IDE (e.g. VSC) and install any Rust-related extensions too. # Build ```bash ./build.sh # If you get the error discussed at https://stackoverflow.com/a/70883283/470749, try first running: rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown ``` # Deploy Modify `init_args.json` file to fit your needs, particularly `owner_id`. The `metadata.name` field is what will be the section header of the [Collectibles tab of Wallet](https://wallet.testnet.near.org/?tab=collectibles). It seems reasonable for this to say "NEAR University". It might be worth reviewing the Metadata standard: https://nomicon.io/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Metadata#interface but many fields are probably fine as `null`. You might want something in the `icon` field so that it looks nice in a wallet. The `icon` field controls which image is used at the contract level. See the note in the above Nomicon page about using an optimized SVG in the data URL. https://npm.runkit.com/mini-svg-data-uri looks useful. The Collectibles tab of Wallet lists out NFTs nested within groups, where each group is a contract (and displays its name and icon as mentioned above). Then each NFT within the group has its own name and image (media), but its media is defined in `token_metadata.media`. See [sample_mint.json](sample_mint.json). But now we dynamically generate this media to show a personalized certificate. Also see comment in web-app/pages/api/mint-cert.ts about our decision to omit media_hash. ## Testnet ```bash NEAR_ENV=testnet near login ./dev_deploy.sh ``` Any arguments are forwarded to `near dev-deploy` command. For example, to deploy to a new dev address (ignoring a previously generated address in `neardev/`): ```bash ./dev_deploy.sh --force ``` ## Mainnet (initial deployment) ```bash NEAR_ENV=mainnet ./deploy.sh ACCOUNT_ID ``` ## Mainnet (if you need to redeploy, overwriting the original contract) Temporarily delete the `--initFunction new \` line from `deploy.sh` and then run the command as mentioned above. There is also a `set_metadata` function available if we want to edit contract metadata without redeploying. See [this commit](https://github.com/NEAR-Edu/near-certification-tools/commit/a60e2f339c8e17b72af1d74d0b844c85348abf1a). # Interactions This contract implements the following standards: - [NEP171 v1.0.0 - NFT Core](https://github.com/near/NEPs/blob/master/specs/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Core.md) (Only completely compliant if the `can_transfer` option is `true` during initialization.) - [NEP177 v2.0.0 - NFT Metadata](https://github.com/near/NEPs/blob/cde5f56688bb74bfd01b38b9c8492c0e37c404be/specs/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Metadata.md) - [NEP178 v1.0.0 - NFT Approval Managemenet](https://github.com/near/NEPs/blob/master/specs/Standards/NonFungibleToken/ApprovalManagement.md) - [NEP181 v1.0.0 - NFT Enumeration](https://github.com/near/NEPs/blob/master/specs/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Enumeration.md) This contract also serves as the de-facto standard for NEAR Edu Certification compatible contracts: ## Functions ### `owner_id` Returns the account ID of the contract owner. ### `cert_can_transfer` Returns `true` if the contract allows NFT certifications to be transferred after issue, and `false` otherwise. Note that if NFT transfers are disallows, this causes the contract to be (technically) non-compliant with the NEP171 standard. ### `cert_can_invalidate` Returns `true` if the contract owner is allowed to invalidate existing certifications by setting the `valid` property to `false`. Note that invalidation does not delete an NFT or change its ownership. ### `cert_is_valid` Returns `true` if a particular token's `valid` property is `true`, and `false` otherwise. Invalidated tokens will have this property set to `false`. ### `cert_invalidate` Owner-only. Sets the `valid` property to `false` for a particular token. Panics if the contract does not allow invalidation. ### `nft_mint` Owner-only; non-standard but well-known NFT minting function. ## Metadata Additional metadata is stored in the `extra` field of the standard-compliant NFT metadata. See [`src/metadata.rs`](src/metadata.rs). The 'memo' field at the root (outer) level of [sample_mint.json](sample_mint.json) can be null because its value currently does not get used. In `token_metadata`, 'title', 'description', and 'issued_at' are the only fields we will use. Please ensure that the value for `program` in `certification_metadata` matches the prefix of one of the SVG files in `web-app/public/certificate-backgrounds/`. --- ## Example Interactions ### View certificate metadata After deploying a contract, such as via `./dev-deploy.sh`, you can view certificate metadata by running something like `NEAR_ENV=testnet near view <contract ID> nft_metadata`. Example: ```bash NEAR_ENV=testnet near view dev-1643292007908-55838431863482 nft_metadata ``` ### Issue a certificate You can now issue a certificate by running something like `NEAR_ENV=testnet near call <the contract ID> nft_mint '<a JSON payload similar to as shown in sample_mint.json>' --account-id <whichever account you logged in as>.testnet --deposit 0.2 --gas 300000000000000`. Example: ```bash NEAR_ENV=testnet near call dev-1643292007908-55838431863482 nft_mint "$(<./data-contract/sample_mint.json)" --account-id ryancwalsh.testnet --deposit 0.2 --gas 300000000000000 ``` ### View Certificate Then you can view those details of that certificate on the blockchain by running something like `NEAR_ENV=testnet near view <contract ID> nft_token '{"token_id": "<token ID>"}'`. Example: ```bash NEAR_ENV=testnet near view dev-1643292007908-55838431863482 nft_token '{"token_id": "103216412112497cb6c193152a27c49a"}' ``` ### View all NFTs (from this contract) owned by an account Run something like `NEAR_ENV=testnet near view <the contract ID> nft_tokens_for_owner '{"account_id": "<the account ID>"}'`. See https://nomicon.io/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Enumeration.html#interface . `from_index` defaults to 0 and `limit` defaults to unlimited. Example: ```bash NEAR_ENV=testnet near view dev-1643292007908-55838431863482 nft_tokens_for_owner '{"account_id": "hatchet.testnet"}' ``` ### Invalidate a cert Run something like `NEAR_ENV=testnet near call <the contract ID> cert_invalidate '{ "token_id": "<some token ID>"}' --account-id <whichever account you logged in as>.testnet --depositYocto 1 --gas 300000000000000`. Example: ```bash NEAR_ENV=testnet near call dev-1643292007908-55838431863482 cert_invalidate '{ "token_id": "303216412112497cb6c193152a27c49c"}' --account-id ryancwalsh.testnet --depositYocto 1 --gas 300000000000000 ``` ### Delete a cert (only in rare cases, pre-launch) ```bash NEAR_ENV=testnet near call dev-1649780593510-28371141287670 cert_delete '{ "token_id": "e03216412112497cb6c193152a27c49a"}' --account-id ryancwalsh.testnet --depositYocto 1 --gas 300000000000000 ``` --- # Notes about versions, standards, datetime types and formats, etc There are 3 levels of metadata in this smart contract: the NFT contract level, the NFT token itself, and the CertificationExtraMetadata (which is specific to this project). `data-contract/Cargo.toml` currently says `near-contract-standards = "4.0.0-pre.4"`. `.cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/near-contract-standards-4.0.0-pre.4/src/non_fungible_token/metadata.rs` (or whichever file gets pulled in based on Cargo.toml) then defines NFT_METADATA_SPEC; take note of this version value. The "metadata" part of `data-contract/init_args.json` complies with the standard the defines NFTs: NEP171 (TODO: specify which version here). We must manually set its "spec" field value to match the value of NFT_METADATA_SPEC. The token_metadata part of `data-contract/sample_mint.json` complies with standard NEP177 (TODO: specify which version here). Jacob and Ryan are not sure which version we're using (probably 1.0.0). We think its date fields (issued_at, expires_at, starts_at, updated_at) expect strings of milliseconds. https://discord.com/channels/490367152054992913/542945453533036544/958832442121277440 (https://github.com/near/NEPs/blob/ca5f5a70e7ca2214d38723c756f9b5ae5c3b5e9d/specs/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Metadata.md had contradicting instructions.) `web-app/pages/api/sample_api_payload_mint-cert.json` expects null or a string of format ISO 8601 (see https://day.js.org/docs/en/parse/string) for program_start_date and program_end_date. Our API endpoint then converts them to a string of nanoseconds. # Errors If you get `Smart contract panicked: Unauthorized` when trying to mint an NFT, check what you used for `owner_id` in `init_args.json` and whether you used that in the `--account-id` argument of the CLI call. # API This workspace houses the smart contract which controls the NFT certificates which we issue in the (near-certification-tools)[./near-certification-tools] package. It also contains the API server for interacting with that contract - this includes the following packages: - (router)[./router] - This is the entry point to the API where the axum server gets instantiated and all the routes get combined. - (common)[./common] - This is a collection of functions which most of the routes share. - (errors)[./errors] - This package containes the custom errors and error handling logic for the rest of the packages. - (cert)[./cert] - This package is the handler for getting all the required information about a certificate needed for the image generation (done in the frontend). It queries the smart contract as well as the explorer database to calculate the expiration date for this particular certificate. **Note**: This is also the only route that doesn't require any auth. - (mint-cert)[./mint-cert] - This package is the handler for minting a new certificate. It can only be performed by API key holders. - (invalidate-all-certs-for-account)[./invalidate-all-certs-for-account] - This package is the handler for invalidating all certificates that are tied to a particular account. It can only be performed by API key holders. - (invalidate-cert)[./invalidate-cert] - This package is the handler for invalidating a particular certificate. It can only be performed by API key holders. The following environment variables are required in order for the API to run, those are: - `RPC_URL` - The URL of the RPC API to connect to (usually this is the mainnet URL: https://rpc.mainnet.near.org). - `API_KEY` - The key to use as an authentication method for incoming requests. - `CERTIFICATE_CONTRACT_ACCOUNT_ID` - The account ID of the contract which controls the certificate issuing/invalidating. - `ISSUING_AUTHORITY_ACCOUNT_ID` - The account ID of the authorized issuer/invalidator of certificates. - `ISSUING_AUTHORITY_PRIVATE_KEY` - The private key associated with the issuer/invalidator account. You can run the API server by running the following command: ```shell cargo run --package router ```
near_near-sdk-contract-tools
.github ISSUE_TEMPLATE BOUNTY.yml workflows rust.yml .vscode settings.json Cargo.toml README.md SECURITY.md macros Cargo.toml src approval mod.rs simple_multisig.rs escrow.rs lib.rs migrate.rs owner.rs pause.rs rbac.rs rename.rs standard event.rs fungible_token.rs mod.rs nep141.rs nep145.rs nep148.rs nep171.rs nep177.rs nep178.rs nep181.rs nep297.rs non_fungible_token.rs upgrade.rs rust-toolchain.toml rustfmt.toml src approval mod.rs native_transaction_action.rs simple_multisig.rs escrow.rs fast_account_id.rs hook.rs lib.rs migrate.rs owner.rs pause.rs rbac.rs slot.rs standard mod.rs nep141 error.rs event.rs ext.rs hooks.rs mod.rs nep145 error.rs ext.rs hooks.rs mod.rs nep148.rs nep171 action.rs error.rs event.rs ext.rs hooks.rs mod.rs nep177.rs nep178 action.rs error.rs ext.rs mod.rs nep181.rs nep297.rs upgrade mod.rs raw.rs serialized.rs utils.rs tests macros escrow.rs event.rs migrate.rs mod.rs owner.rs pause.rs standard fungible_token.rs mod.rs nep141.rs nep145.rs nep148.rs nep171 hooks.rs manual_integration.rs mod.rs no_hooks.rs non_fungible_token.rs mod.rs workspaces-tests-utils Cargo.toml src lib.rs workspaces-tests Cargo.toml Makefile.toml README.md src bin basic_adder.rs counter_multisig.rs cross_target.rs escrow.rs fungible_token.rs fungible_token_receiver.rs native_multisig.rs non_fungible_token_full.rs non_fungible_token_nep171.rs non_fungible_token_receiver.rs rbac.rs simple_multisig.rs storage_fee.rs upgrade_bad.rs upgrade_new.rs upgrade_old_borsh.rs upgrade_old_jsonbase64.rs upgrade_old_multisig.rs upgrade_old_raw.rs lib.rs tests counter_multisig.rs escrow.rs fungible_token.rs native_multisig.rs non_fungible_token.rs rbac.rs simple_multisig.rs storage_fee.rs upgrade.rs upgrade_multisig.rs
# near-sdk-contract-tools ## NFT ```rust use near_sdk::near; use near_sdk_contract_tools::nft::*; #[derive(Default, NonFungibleToken)] #[near(contract_state)] pub struct MyNftContract {} #[near] impl MyNftContract { #[init] pub fn new() -> Self { let mut contract = Self {}; contract.set_contract_metadata(&ContractMetadata::new("My NFT", "MNFT", None)); contract } } ``` ## FT ```rust use near_sdk::near; use near_sdk_contract_tools::ft::*; #[derive(Default, FungibleToken)] #[near(contract_state)] pub struct MyFtContract {} #[near] impl MyFtContract { #[init] pub fn new() -> Self { let mut contract = Self {}; contract.set_metadata(&ContractMetadata::new("My Fungible Token", "MYFT", 24)); contract } } ``` ## What is it? This package is a collection of common tools and patterns in NEAR smart contract development: - Storage fee management. - Escrow pattern and derive macro. - Owner pattern and derive macro. - Pause pattern and derive macro. - Role-based access control. - Derive macros for NEP standards: - [NEP-141][nep141] (fungible token), extension [NEP-148][nep148]. - [NEP-145][nep145] (storage management), and integrations for the fungible token and non-fungible token standards. - [NEP-171][nep171] (non-fungible token), extensions [NEP-177][nep177], [NEP-178][nep178], [NEP-181][nep181]. - [NEP-297][nep297] (events). Not to be confused with [`near-contract-standards`](https://crates.io/crates/near-contract-standards), which contains official implementations of standardized NEPs. This crate is intended to be a complement to `near-contract-standards`. You can think of this collection of common tools and patterns (mostly in the form of [derive macros](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/procedural-macros.html#derive-macros)) as a sort of [OpenZeppelin](https://docs.openzeppelin.com/contracts/4.x/) for NEAR. Pro tip: Use the [contract wizard](https://near.org/contractwizard.near/widget/ContractWizardUI) to generate starter code for your next project. ## Installation ```bash cargo add near-sdk-contract-tools ``` ## Examples See also: [the full integration tests](tests/macros/mod.rs). ### Owner ```rust use near_sdk::{near, AccountId, PanicOnDefault}; use near_sdk_contract_tools::{owner::Owner, Owner}; #[derive(Owner, PanicOnDefault)] #[near(contract_state)] struct Contract { // ... } #[near] impl Contract { #[init] pub fn new(owner_id: AccountId) -> Self { let mut contract = Self { // ... }; Owner::init(&mut contract, &owner_id); contract } pub fn owner_only(&self) { Self::require_owner(); // ... } } ``` The `Owner` derive macro exposes the following methods to the blockchain: ```rust, ignore fn own_get_owner(&self) -> Option<AccountId>; fn own_get_proposed_owner(&self) -> Option<AccountId>; fn own_renounce_owner(&mut self); fn own_propose_owner(&mut self, account_id: Option<AccountId>); fn own_accept_owner(&mut self); ``` ### Events The `#[event]` macro can be applied to structs or enums. ```rust use near_sdk_contract_tools::{event, standard::nep297::Event}; #[event(standard = "nft", version = "1.0.0")] pub struct MintEvent { pub owner_id: String, pub token_id: String, } let e = MintEvent { owner_id: "account".to_string(), token_id: "token_1".to_string(), }; // Emits the event to the blockchain e.emit(); ``` ### Fungible Token To create a contract that is compatible with the [NEP-141][nep141], [NEP-145][nep145], and [NEP-148][nep148] standards, that emits standard-compliant ([NEP-297][nep297]) events. ```rust use near_sdk::near; use near_sdk_contract_tools::ft::*; #[derive(Default, FungibleToken)] #[near(contract_state)] struct MyFt {} #[near] impl MyFt { #[init] pub fn new() -> Self { let mut contract = Self {}; contract.set_metadata(&ContractMetadata::new("My Fungible Token", "MYFT", 24)); contract } } ``` Standalone macros for each individual standard also exist. ### Non-fungible Token Use the `NonFungibleToken` derive macro to implement [NEP-145][nep145], [NEP-171][nep171], [NEP-177][nep177], [NEP-178][nep178], and [NEP-181][nep181], with [NEP-297][nep297] events. ```rust use near_sdk::{near, PanicOnDefault}; use near_sdk_contract_tools::nft::*; #[derive(NonFungibleToken, PanicOnDefault)] #[near(contract_state)] pub struct MyNft {} ``` ### Macro Combinations One may wish to combine the features of multiple macros in one contract. All of the macros are written such that they will work in a standalone manner, so this should largely work without issue. However, sometimes it may be desirable for the macros to work in _combination_ with each other. For example, to make a fungible token pausable, use the fungible token hooks to require that a contract be unpaused before making a token transfer: ```rust use near_sdk_contract_tools::{ ft::*, pause::{*, hooks::Pausable}, Pause, }; use near_sdk::{near, PanicOnDefault}; #[derive(FungibleToken, Pause, PanicOnDefault)] #[fungible_token(all_hooks = "Pausable")] #[near(contract_state)] struct Contract {} ``` ### Custom Crates If you are a library developer, have modified a crate that one of the `near-sdk-contract-tools` macros uses (like `serde` or `near-sdk`), or are otherwise using a crate under a different name, you can specify crate names in macros like so: ```rust, ignore #[event( // ... crate = "near_sdk_contract_tools", macros = "near_sdk_contract_tools_macros", serde = "serde", )] // ... #[derive(Owner)] #[owner( // ... near_sdk = "near_sdk", )] ``` ## Other Tips ### [Internal vs. External Methods](https://youtu.be/kJzes_UP5j0?t=2172) Internal methods are not available to be callable via the blockchain. External ones are public and can be called by other contracts. ### [Pull pattern](https://youtu.be/kJzes_UP5j0?t=2213) Proposing ownership (rather than transferring directly) is a generally good practice because it prevents you from accidentally transferring ownership to an account that nobody has access to, bricking the contract. ### [Expand](https://youtu.be/kJzes_UP5j0?t=1790) [`cargo expand`](https://crates.io/crates/cargo-expand) will generate one huge Rust file with all of the macros have been processed: ```text cargo install cargo-expand cargo expand > expanded.rs ``` ### [Slots](https://youtu.be/kJzes_UP5j0?t=2527) See [`src/slot.rs`](src/slot.rs). Slots are thin wrappers over a storage key. ### [`assert_one_yocto()`](https://youtu.be/kJzes_UP5j0?t=2989) `near_sdk::assert_one_yocto()` is a function that requires a full access key (by requiring a deposit of one yoctonear, the smallest possible unit of NEAR). If a user connects their NEAR account to a dapp, the dapp will still not be able to call functions that call `assert_one_yocto()`, since function call access keys are not allowed to transfer native tokens. These function will require a signature from a full access key, usually involving a confirmation screen in the user's wallet. ## Contributing ### Setup Run `git config core.hooksPath hooks/` to set up commit hooks. ### Build and test Install `cargo-make` if it is not installed already: ```text cargo install cargo-make cargo-nextest ``` Run tests: ```text cargo nextest run cargo test --doc cd workspaces-tests cargo make nextest ``` ## Audit Version 1.0.0 of this library has been [audited](./documents/NEAR%20Contract%20Tools%20-%20Final%20-%2005.05.2023.pdf) by [Kudelski Security](https://www.kudelskisecurity.com/). (May 2023) ## Authors - Jacob Lindahl [@sudo_build](https://twitter.com/sudo_build) --- (Formerly known as [`near-contract-tools`](https://crates.io/crates/near-contract-tools).) [nep145]: https://nomicon.io/Standards/StorageManagement [nep141]: https://nomicon.io/Standards/Tokens/FungibleToken/Core [nep148]: https://nomicon.io/Standards/Tokens/FungibleToken/Metadata [nep171]: https://nomicon.io/Standards/NonFungibleToken/NonFungibleToken [nep177]: https://nomicon.io/Standards/Tokens/NonFungibleToken/Metadata [nep178]: https://nomicon.io/Standards/Tokens/NonFungibleToken/ApprovalManagement [nep181]: https://nomicon.io/Standards/Tokens/NonFungibleToken/Enumeration [nep297]: https://nomicon.io/Standards/EventsFormat # `workspaces` tests This package contains tests for the `near-sdk-contract-tools` package using the `workspaces` crate. ## Running the tests 1. Ensure that the Cargo extension `cargo-make` is installed: `cargo install cargo-make` 2. Run `cargo make test` ## Creating a new test If you wish to create a new test in this package, create a new file under the `tests` directory with the name of your test. If your test requires the creation of new smart contracts, follow these steps for each new contract: 1. Create the file in `src/bin/<contract-name>.rs` where `<contract-name>` is the name of the new smart contract. 2. Add an entry to `Cargo.toml` like so: ```toml [[bin]] name = "<contract-name>" ``` 3. The new contract must contain a `main` method, although it will not be used. This is due to [limitations](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/cargo-targets.html#library) on how Cargo handles packages with multiple entry points. Unfortunately, `#![no_main]` does not work for these purposes. Therefore, `src/bin/<contract-name>.rs` must contain the following: ```rust pub fn main() {} ``` 4. Compile the smart contract using the following command: ```text cargo build --target wasm32-unknown-unknown --release --bin <contract-name> ``` 5. Include the compiled contract in the test file: ```rust include_bytes!("../../target/wasm32-unknown-unknown/release/<contract-name>.wasm") ```
near_rust-protobuf
.github ISSUE_TEMPLATE BOUNTY.yml linters .markdown-lint.yml workflows ci.yml .rustfmt.toml BUGREPORTING.md CHANGELOG-before-3.md CHANGELOG.md CONTRIBUTING.md Cargo.toml LICENSE.txt README.md ci-gen Cargo.toml src actions.rs cargo_sync_readme.rs ghwf.rs install_protobuf.rs main.rs yaml.rs ci env-debug.sh install-protobuf.sh doc FAQ.md past-present-future.md google-protobuf-all-protos README.md update.sh proto update.sh protobuf-codegen Cargo.toml LICENSE.txt README.md src bin protoc-gen-rust.rs codegen mod.rs compiler_plugin.rs customize ctx.rs mod.rs rustproto_proto.rs gen all.rs code_writer.rs descriptor.rs enums.rs extensions.rs field accessor.rs elem.rs mod.rs option_kind.rs repeated.rs singular.rs tag.rs type_ext.rs file.rs file_and_mod.rs file_descriptor.rs inside.rs map.rs message.rs mod.rs mod_rs.rs oneof.rs paths.rs protoc_insertion_point.rs rust component.rs ident.rs ident_with_path.rs keywords.rs mod.rs path.rs quote.rs rel_path.rs snippets.rs rust_types_values.rs scope.rs strx.rs well_known_types.rs gen_and_write.rs lib.rs protoc_gen_rust.rs protobuf-examples README.md customize-serde Cargo.toml README.md build.rs src lib.rs dynamic Cargo.toml README.md src main.rs issue-614 Cargo.toml build.rs examples example-issue-614.rs src lib.rs pure-vs-protoc Cargo.toml README.md build.rs src main.rs protos mod.rs vs-prost Cargo.toml README.md build.rs src lib.rs protobuf-json-mapping Cargo.toml README.md src base64.rs float.rs lib.rs parse.rs print.rs rfc_3339.rs well_known_wrapper.rs protobuf-parse Cargo.toml README.md examples file-descriptor-out-compare.rs src bin parse-and-typecheck.rs case_convert.rs lib.rs parse_and_typecheck.rs parser.rs path.rs proto mod.rs proto_path.rs protobuf_abs_path.rs protobuf_ident.rs protobuf_path.rs protobuf_rel_path.rs protoc command.rs mod.rs parse_and_typecheck.rs pure convert mod.rs option_resolver.rs type_resolver.rs mod.rs model.rs parse_and_typecheck.rs parse_dependencies.rs parser.rs rel_path.rs test_against_protobuf_protos.rs which_parser.rs tests bundled_proto_consistent.rs protobuf-support Cargo.toml README.md src json_name.rs lexer float.rs int.rs json_number_lit.rs lexer_impl.rs loc.rs mod.rs num_lit.rs parser_language.rs str_lit.rs token.rs tokenizer.rs lib.rs text_format.rs toposort.rs protobuf Cargo.toml LICENSE.txt README.md benches coded_input_stream.rs coded_output_stream.rs write.rs build.rs regenerate.sh src byteorder.rs cached_size.rs chars.rs coded_input_stream buf_read_iter.rs buf_read_or_reader.rs input_buf.rs input_source.rs mod.rs coded_output_stream buffer.rs mod.rs output_target.rs with.rs descriptor.rs doctest_pb.rs enum_full.rs enum_or_unknown.rs enums.rs error.rs ext.rs fixed.rs lazy.rs lib.rs message.rs message_dyn.rs message_field.rs message_full.rs misc.rs oneof.rs oneof_full.rs owning_ref.rs plugin.rs reflect acc mod.rs v2 map.rs mod.rs repeated.rs singular mod.rs oneof.rs dynamic map.rs mod.rs optional.rs repeated.rs enums generated.rs mod.rs error.rs field dynamic.rs index.rs mod.rs protobuf_field_type.rs runtime_field_type.rs file building.rs dynamic.rs fds.rs generated.rs index.rs mod.rs syntax.rs find_message_or_enum.rs map empty.rs generated.rs mod.rs message generated.rs is_initialized_is_always_true.rs message_ref.rs mod.rs mod.rs name.rs oneof generated.rs mod.rs optional mod.rs protobuf_type_box.rs reflect_eq.rs repeated drain_iter.rs iter.rs mod.rs transmute.rs vec_downcast.rs rt mod.rs v2.rs runtime_type_box.rs runtime_types.rs service index.rs mod.rs type_dynamic.rs types.rs value mod.rs value_box.rs value_ref.rs rt map.rs message.rs mod.rs packed.rs repeated.rs singular.rs unknown_or_group.rs rustproto.rs special.rs text_format mod.rs parse.rs print.rs timestamp.rs unknown.rs varint decode.rs encode.rs generic.rs mod.rs well_known_types any.rs api.rs duration.rs empty.rs field_mask.rs mod.rs source_context.rs struct_.rs timestamp.rs type_.rs wrappers.rs well_known_types_util any.rs duration.rs mod.rs timestamp.rs wire_format.rs zigzag.rs protoc-bin Cargo.toml src bin protoc-bin-print-paths.rs lib.rs test-crates README.md interop cxx compile.sh perftest bytes Cargo.toml benches vs.rs build.rs src lib.rs misc Cargo.toml build.rs src bin read_varint.rs lib.rs vs-cxx Cargo.toml build-perftest-cxx.sh build-perftest-data.sh build-perftest.sh build.rs perftest.rs protobuf-codegen-identical-test Cargo.toml src lib.rs tests diff.rs protobuf-codegen-protoc-test Cargo.toml README.md build.rs src common README.md mod.rs v2 test_all_types.rs test_any.rs test_basic.rs test_default.rs test_dynamic_repeated_get_set.rs test_dynamic_singular_get_set.rs test_enable_lite_runtime.rs test_enum_alias.rs test_enum_nonunique.rs test_enum_unknown_values_preserved.rs test_enum_values.rs test_ext.rs test_fmt_json.rs test_fmt_json_well_known.rs test_fmt_text_format.rs test_generate_accessors.rs test_ident.rs test_import_descriptor.rs test_lite_runtime.rs test_map_field_references_nested.rs test_map_simple.rs test_map_tokio.rs test_message_getter.rs test_nested_issue_476.rs test_oneof_basic.rs test_oneof_recursive.rs test_reflect_basic.rs test_reflect_clear.rs test_reflect_issue_564.rs test_reflect_no_package.rs test_repeated_packed.rs test_root.rs test_service.rs test_singular_concat.rs test_sync.rs test_tokio_bytes.rs test_well_known_types.rs google mod.rs protobuf README.md import-tests.sh include_generated mod.rs interop bin.rs json.rs mod.rs lib.rs v2 README.md test_default_values.rs test_is_initialized.rs test_issue_579.rs test_oneof_default_value.rs test_oneof_group.rs test_reflect_default.rs test_required.rs test_tokio_bytes_default_value.rs test_unknown_suffix.rs v3 README.md test_optional.rs test_zeros_are_not_written.rs test.sh protobuf-codegen-pure-test Cargo.toml README.md build.rs src common mod.rs lib.rs test.sh protobuf-fuzz Cargo.toml build.rs fuzz Cargo.toml fuzz_targets all.rs empty_message.rs empty_message_read.rs map.rs map_read.rs repeated.rs repeated_read.rs singular.rs singular_read.rs src lib.rs protobuf-parse-error-test Cargo.toml src lib.rs protobuf-test-common Cargo.toml src bin varint-encode.rs build.rs cargo.rs dynamic.rs hex.rs interop.rs json_tests.rs lib.rs reflect_tests.rs serialize_deserialize_both.rs serialize_deserialize_dynamic.rs serialize_deserialize_generated.rs text_format_tests.rs protobuf-test Cargo.toml src is_initialized_is_always_true.rs lib.rs
# Test for rust-protobuf Larger tests for rust-protobuf crates. (Small tests are implemented as unit tests inside the respective crates.) # Tests for `protobuf-codegen-pure` crate Tests for codegen with `syntax = "proto2"`. <!-- cargo-sync-readme start --> # How to use serde with rust-protobuf rust-protobuf 3 no longer directly supports serde. Practically, serde is needed mostly to be able to serialize and deserialize JSON, and **rust-protobuf supports JSON directly**, and more correctly according to official protobuf to JSON mapping. For that reason, native serde support was removed from rust-protobuf. This crate is an example how to inject serde annotations into generated code. Annotations are configured from `build.rs`. <!-- cargo-sync-readme end --> # rust-protobuf <!-- https://travis-ci.org/stepancheg/rust-protobuf.png --> [![crates.io version][crates-io-shields]][crates-io] [![docs.rs][docs-rs-shields]][docs-rs] [![GitHub Workflow Status][actions-shields]][actions] [![License][license-shields]][license] [crates-io]: https://crates.io/crates/protobuf [crates-io-shields]: https://img.shields.io/crates/v/protobuf.svg [docs-rs]: https://docs.rs/protobuf [docs-rs-shields]: https://img.shields.io/badge/docs.rs-rustdoc-green.svg [actions]: https://github.com/stepancheg/rust-protobuf/actions?query=workflow%3ACI [actions-shields]: https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/stepancheg/rust-protobuf/CI [license]: https://github.com/stepancheg/rust-protobuf/blob/master/LICENSE.txt [license-shields]: https://img.shields.io/crates/l/protobuf.svg [Protobuf](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/overview) implementation in [Rust](https://www.rust-lang.org/). * Written in pure rust * Generates rust code * Has runtime library support for generated code (Coded{Input|Output}Stream impl) * Supports both Protobuf versions 2 and 3 * and more ## Where is documentation Documentation is [hosted on docs.rs](https://docs.rs/protobuf). ## Versions and branches ### Version 3 Version 3 is current stable version. Compared to version 2 it implements: * runtime reflection * JSON and text format parsing and printing * dynamic messages (messages which can be created from `.proto` file on the fly without code generation) ### Version 2 Version 2 is previous stable version. Only most critical bugfixes will be applied to 2.x version, otherwise it won't be maintained. ### Help The crate **needs help**: * **a new maintainer**, but also * testing * documentation * examples to be used as documentation * feedback on API design * feedback on implementation * pull requests ## Changelog See [CHANGELOG.md](CHANGELOG.md) for a list of changes and compatility issues between versions. ## Related projects * [prost](https://github.com/tokio-rs/prost) — another protobuf implementation in Rust, also has gRPC implementation * [quick-protobuf](https://github.com/tafia/quick-protobuf) — alternative protobuf implementation in Rust * [grpc-rs](https://github.com/pingcap/grpc-rs/) — another gRPC implementation for Rust * [grpc-rust](https://github.com/stepancheg/grpc-rust) — incomplete implementation of gRPC based on this library <!-- cargo-sync-readme start --> # Library to read and write protocol buffers data ## Features This crate has one feature, which is `with-bytes`. `with-bytes` enables `protobuf` crate support for [`bytes` crate](https://github.com/tokio-rs/bytes): when parsing bytes or strings from `bytes::Bytes`, `protobuf` will be able to reference the input instead of allocating subarrays. Note, codegen also need to be instructed to generate `Bytes` or `Chars` for `bytes` or `string` protobuf types instead of default `Vec<u8>` or `String`, just enabling option on this crate is not enough. See `Customize` struct in [`protobuf-codegen` crate](https://docs.rs/protobuf-codegen). ## Accompanying crates * [`protobuf-json-mapping`](https://docs.rs/protobuf-json-mapping) implements JSON parsing and serialization for protobuf messages. * [`protobuf-codegen`](https://docs.rs/protobuf-codegen) can be used to generate rust code from `.proto` crates. * [`protoc-bin-vendored`](https://docs.rs/protoc-bin-vendored) contains `protoc` command packed into the crate. * [`protobuf-parse`](https://docs.rs/protobuf-parse) contains `.proto` file parser. Rarely need to be used directly, but can be used for mechanical processing of `.proto` files. <!-- cargo-sync-readme end --> # rust-protobuf-example Example rust protobuf project (This is an example for the master branch. For protobuf=v2.19 look at the [same directory in v2.19 branch](https://github.com/stepancheg/rust-protobuf/tree/v2.19/protobuf-examples).) ## Motivation Simple and obvious examples for using `rust-protobuf` module were lacking, so this was created. ## Look here Key files to read are: * src/protos/example.proto * src/main.rs * build.rs ## Using Standard rust package: ``` $ cargo build $ cargo run ``` <!-- cargo-sync-readme start --> # Parse `.proto` files Parse `.proto` file definitions, **not** the protobuf text format serialization. Files can be parsed using pure Rust parser (mod `pure`) or using the `protoc` command (mod `protoc`). This crate is not meant to be used directly, but rather through the `protobuf-codegen` crate. If you think this crate might be useful to you, please [consider creating an issue](https://github.com/stepancheg/rust-protobuf/issues/new), until that this crate is considered to have **no stable API**. <!-- cargo-sync-readme end --> # .proto All `.proto` files from protobuf repository. Used in parser tests. Tests for codegen with `syntax = "proto3"`. # rust-protobuf examples This directory contains examples for rust-protobuf version 3. Rust-protobuf 3 is currently alpha version, and will be released in a few weeks. Rust-protobuf version 2 has similar API, but examples won't work as is with version 2. ## Crate references In the examples, protobuf crates are referenced by relative paths: ```toml protobuf = { path = "../../protobuf" } ``` in your project versions should be used instead like: ```toml protobuf = "3.0.0-alpha.8" ``` <!-- cargo-sync-readme start --> # Compare generated code and API between rust-protobuf and prost This document tries to objectively compare rust-protobuf and prost. Use ```rust cargo expand -p protobuf-examples-vs-prost ``` to see the code. Feel free to submit more items here. ## The differences The comparison is * rust-protobuf from master and * prost version 0.9.0, which is the latest released version at the moment of writing. The list is incomplete. ### Use of derives Prost relies on `#[derive(::prost::Message)]` in generated code. * seems to be unnecessary, if code is generated, not written by hand, derive does not help much. * derives also make code harder to understand: something like `cargo expand` is needed, which is not as clear as looking at the generated code. ## Unknown fields rust-protobuf preserves "unknown fields". This improves forward compatibility: when new message is read using old version of schema and then written back, rust-protobuf preserves the unknown fields, and prost discards them. In 99% of the cases, unknown fields are not needed to be preserved. ## Cached size Prost seems to not cache "cached size" of message before serialization. In the worst case, with deeply nested messages, it results in exponential growth serialization time. But deeply nested messages are rare, and API is clearer without it. (Note, serialization can be linear if message sizes are stored in a queue/stack during serialization. rust-protobuf did it [before 2014](https://github.com/stepancheg/rust-protobuf/commit/86fe60cc67e3ea257fcad417bcb039973ace3bfc), see `compute_sizes` function signature. But it was changed to storing cached size because storing cached size is faster. If prost doesn't want to store cached size, perhaps they can at least use similar approach.) ## Default instance For each message, rust-protobuf generates `M::default_instance()` function and `Default for <&M>` (similarly to what C++ and Java generators do). So when fetching an optional field reference, rust-protobuf is able to always provide a reference to a message instance: either a real message or a default instance if a field is unset. Prost doesn't do it. ## Enums In prost, enum fields have type `i32`. In rust-protobuf, `EnumOrUnknown<T>` is used to store enum values. Note it is important to store full `i32` in enum value, not just the enum to preserve unknown values when reading future message with old schema and writing it back. So rust-protobuf is a bit more type-safe, but generated code is somewhat harder to use. ## Reflection Both prost and rust-protobuf can be configured to generate serde annotations. But rust-protobuf fully supports runtime reflection (e. g. find field by name, get field, set field). This is implemented similarly to C++ implementation of protobuf. The drawback is that generated code is quite large (which also affects binary size). However, for prost there's [prost-reflect](https://github.com/andrewhickman/prost-reflect) crate. I don't know what is it's status, seems like it is not mature enough yet: the project started less than two months ago. ## Dynamic messages rust-protobuf supports dynamic messages. For prost, `prost-reflect` implements them. ## JSON Proper [protobuf JSON mapping](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/proto3#json) is supported natively by rust-protobuf. For prost it can be done with `prost-reflect` package. ## Protobuf text format rust-protobuf supports text format printing and parsing. Prost seems to be missing this feature. ## Dependency on `protoc` binary prost depends on `protoc` binary to parse `.proto` files. rust-protobuf can do both: * parse using `protoc` binary * has pure rust parser (and typechecker) of `.proto` files ## gRPC [tonic](https://docs.rs/tonic/latest/tonic/) is a quality pure rust gRPC implementation for prost. [grpc-rs](https://github.com/tikv/grpc-rs) is an implementation for both prost and rust-protobuf. <!-- cargo-sync-readme end --> # Tests for rust-protobuf To execute tests simply execute `cargo test`. If protobuf 3 is installed, command will include test for protobuf 3 generated code. If `--features=with-bytes` flag is specified, tests will include test for `with-bytes` feature, which is not enabled by default. `./test.sh` is to be used from [travis-ci](https://travis-ci.org/stepancheg/rust-protobuf/), and not needed for local development. `cargo test` executes [`build.rs`](https://github.com/stepancheg/rust-protobuf/blob/master/protobuf-codegen-protoc-test/build.rs) script, which generates `.rs` files from `.proto` and `mod.rs` files for certain folder. ## Test contents * `v2` contains tests specific to protobuf 2 * `v3` contains tests specific to protobuf 2 * `google` contains tests `.proto` files taken from Google's protobuf implementation * `common` contains tests which are identical for both versions of protobuf syntax. `common/v2` directory contains sources, and contents of `common/v3` is generated from `common/v2` by copy and replace. <!-- cargo-sync-readme start --> # Protobuf code generator for `protobuf` crate This crate is useful mostly from `build.rs` scripts to generate `.rs` files during the build. # How to generate code There are three main ways to generate `.rs` files from `.proto` files: * using `protoc` command line tool and `protoc-gen-rust` plugin * using this crate `Codegen` with pure rust parser * using this crate `Codegen` with `protoc` parser Which one should you use depends on your needs. If you are using non-cargo build system (like Bazel), you might prefer using `protoc-gen-rust` plugin for `protoc`. If you build with `cargo`, you probably want to use `Codegen` from this crate. # Protoc parser vs pure rust parser There are two protobuf parsers which can be plugged into this crate: * `protoc`-based parser (`protoc` is a command like utility from Google protobuf) * pure rust parser (`protobuf-parse` crate) `protoc`-based parser is expected to parse `.proto` files very correctly: all Google's protobuf implementations rely on it. While there are no known bugs in `protobuf-parse`, it is not tested very well. Also `protobuf-parse` does not implement certain rarely used features of `.proto` parser, mostly complex message options specified in `.proto` files. I never saw anyone using them, but you have been warned. Note `protoc` command can be obtained from [`protoc-bin-vendored`](https://docs.rs/protoc-bin-vendored) crate. # Example ```rust // Use this in build.rs protobuf_codegen::Codegen::new() // Use `protoc` parser, optional. .protoc() // Use `protoc-bin-vendored` bundled protoc command, optional. .protoc_path(&protoc_bin_vendored::protoc_bin_path().unwrap()) // All inputs and imports from the inputs must reside in `includes` directories. .includes(&["src/protos"]) // Inputs must reside in some of include paths. .input("src/protos/apple.proto") .input("src/protos/banana.proto") // Specify output directory relative to Cargo output directory. .cargo_out_dir("protos") .run_from_script(); ``` ## How to use `protoc-gen-rust` If you have to. (Note `protoc` can be invoked programmatically with [protoc crate](https://docs.rs/protoc/%3E=3.0.0-alpha)) 0) Install protobuf for `protoc` binary. On OS X [Homebrew](https://github.com/Homebrew/brew) can be used: ```sh brew install protobuf ``` On Ubuntu, `protobuf-compiler` package can be installed: ```sh apt-get install protobuf-compiler ``` Protobuf is needed only for code generation, `rust-protobuf` runtime does not use C++ protobuf library. 1) Install `protoc-gen-rust` program (which is `protoc` plugin) It can be installed either from source or with `cargo install protobuf-codegen` command. 2) Add `protoc-gen-rust` to $PATH If you installed it with cargo, it should be ```sh PATH="$HOME/.cargo/bin:$PATH" ``` 3) Generate .rs files: ```sh protoc --rust_out . foo.proto ``` This will generate .rs files in current directory. # Customize generate code Sometimes generated code need to be adjusted, e. g. to have custom derives. rust-protobuf provides two options to do that: * generated `.rs` files contain `@@protoc_insertion_point(...)` markers (similar markers inserts Google's protobuf generator for C++ or Java). Simple script `sed` one-liners can be used to replace these markers with custom annotations. * `Codegen::customize_callback` can be used to patch generated code when invoked from `build.rs` script. # Serde rust-protobuf since version 3 no longer directly supports serde. Rust-protobuf 3 fully supports: * runtime reflection * JSON parsing and printing via [`protobuf-json-mapping`](https://docs.rs/protobuf-json-mapping) Which covers the most of serde use cases. If you still need serde, generic customization callback (see above) can be used to insert `#[serde(...)]` annotations. [Example project](https://github.com/stepancheg/rust-protobuf/tree/master/protobuf-examples/customize-serde) in the rust-protobuf repository demonstrates how to do it. <!-- cargo-sync-readme end --> # Dynamic messages Example how to create "dynamic" messages: these are created using only protobuf schema without generated files. 99% of users won't need this. Note this crate does not depend on `protobuf-codegen` crate. # Common tests for v2 and v3 codegen When behavior should be identical. The source is `v2` folder. For `v3` files are copied from `v2` folder with: * `syntax` instruction patched * `optional` field prefix is removed. Files copied from [Google protobuf implementation](https://github.com/google/protobuf/tree/master/src/google/protobuf) <!-- cargo-sync-readme start --> JSON printer and parser which tries to follow [protobuf conventions](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/proto3#json). <!-- cargo-sync-readme end --> <!-- cargo-sync-readme start --> # Supporting code for protobuf crates Code in this crate is used in protobuf crates like `protobuf` or `protobuf-parse`. None of code in this crate has public API. <!-- cargo-sync-readme end -->
Melchizedek4ever_INECvote
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long.js ======= A Long class for representing a 64 bit two's-complement integer value derived from the [Closure Library](https://github.com/google/closure-library) for stand-alone use and extended with unsigned support. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/dcodeIO/long.js.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/dcodeIO/long.js) Background ---------- As of [ECMA-262 5th Edition](http://ecma262-5.com/ELS5_HTML.htm#Section_8.5), "all the positive and negative integers whose magnitude is no greater than 2<sup>53</sup> are representable in the Number type", which is "representing the doubleprecision 64-bit format IEEE 754 values as specified in the IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic". The [maximum safe integer](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Number/MAX_SAFE_INTEGER) in JavaScript is 2<sup>53</sup>-1. Example: 2<sup>64</sup>-1 is 1844674407370955**1615** but in JavaScript it evaluates to 1844674407370955**2000**. Furthermore, bitwise operators in JavaScript "deal only with integers in the range −2<sup>31</sup> through 2<sup>31</sup>−1, inclusive, or in the range 0 through 2<sup>32</sup>−1, inclusive. These operators accept any value of the Number type but first convert each such value to one of 2<sup>32</sup> integer values." In some use cases, however, it is required to be able to reliably work with and perform bitwise operations on the full 64 bits. This is where long.js comes into play. Usage ----- The class is compatible with CommonJS and AMD loaders and is exposed globally as `Long` if neither is available. ```javascript var Long = require("long"); var longVal = new Long(0xFFFFFFFF, 0x7FFFFFFF); console.log(longVal.toString()); ... ``` API --- ### Constructor * new **Long**(low: `number`, high: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`)<br /> Constructs a 64 bit two's-complement integer, given its low and high 32 bit values as *signed* integers. See the from* functions below for more convenient ways of constructing Longs. ### Fields * Long#**low**: `number`<br /> The low 32 bits as a signed value. * Long#**high**: `number`<br /> The high 32 bits as a signed value. * Long#**unsigned**: `boolean`<br /> Whether unsigned or not. ### Constants * Long.**ZERO**: `Long`<br /> Signed zero. * Long.**ONE**: `Long`<br /> Signed one. * Long.**NEG_ONE**: `Long`<br /> Signed negative one. * Long.**UZERO**: `Long`<br /> Unsigned zero. * Long.**UONE**: `Long`<br /> Unsigned one. * Long.**MAX_VALUE**: `Long`<br /> Maximum signed value. * Long.**MIN_VALUE**: `Long`<br /> Minimum signed value. * Long.**MAX_UNSIGNED_VALUE**: `Long`<br /> Maximum unsigned value. ### Utility * Long.**isLong**(obj: `*`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if the specified object is a Long. * Long.**fromBits**(lowBits: `number`, highBits: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Returns a Long representing the 64 bit integer that comes by concatenating the given low and high bits. Each is assumed to use 32 bits. * Long.**fromBytes**(bytes: `number[]`, unsigned?: `boolean`, le?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Creates a Long from its byte representation. * Long.**fromBytesLE**(bytes: `number[]`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Creates a Long from its little endian byte representation. * Long.**fromBytesBE**(bytes: `number[]`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Creates a Long from its big endian byte representation. * Long.**fromInt**(value: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Returns a Long representing the given 32 bit integer value. * Long.**fromNumber**(value: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Returns a Long representing the given value, provided that it is a finite number. Otherwise, zero is returned. * Long.**fromString**(str: `string`, unsigned?: `boolean`, radix?: `number`)<br /> Long.**fromString**(str: `string`, radix: `number`)<br /> Returns a Long representation of the given string, written using the specified radix. * Long.**fromValue**(val: `*`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Converts the specified value to a Long using the appropriate from* function for its type. ### Methods * Long#**add**(addend: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the sum of this and the specified Long. * Long#**and**(other: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise AND of this Long and the specified. * Long#**compare**/**comp**(other: `Long | number | string`): `number`<br /> Compares this Long's value with the specified's. Returns `0` if they are the same, `1` if the this is greater and `-1` if the given one is greater. * Long#**divide**/**div**(divisor: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long divided by the specified. * Long#**equals**/**eq**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value equals the specified's. * Long#**getHighBits**(): `number`<br /> Gets the high 32 bits as a signed integer. * Long#**getHighBitsUnsigned**(): `number`<br /> Gets the high 32 bits as an unsigned integer. * Long#**getLowBits**(): `number`<br /> Gets the low 32 bits as a signed integer. * Long#**getLowBitsUnsigned**(): `number`<br /> Gets the low 32 bits as an unsigned integer. * Long#**getNumBitsAbs**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of bits needed to represent the absolute value of this Long. * Long#**greaterThan**/**gt**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is greater than the specified's. * Long#**greaterThanOrEqual**/**gte**/**ge**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is greater than or equal the specified's. * Long#**isEven**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is even. * Long#**isNegative**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is negative. * Long#**isOdd**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is odd. * Long#**isPositive**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is positive. * Long#**isZero**/**eqz**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value equals zero. * Long#**lessThan**/**lt**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is less than the specified's. * Long#**lessThanOrEqual**/**lte**/**le**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is less than or equal the specified's. * Long#**modulo**/**mod**/**rem**(divisor: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long modulo the specified. * Long#**multiply**/**mul**(multiplier: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the product of this and the specified Long. * Long#**negate**/**neg**(): `Long`<br /> Negates this Long's value. * Long#**not**(): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise NOT of this Long. * Long#**notEquals**/**neq**/**ne**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value differs from the specified's. * Long#**or**(other: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise OR of this Long and the specified. * Long#**shiftLeft**/**shl**(numBits: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long with bits shifted to the left by the given amount. * Long#**shiftRight**/**shr**(numBits: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long with bits arithmetically shifted to the right by the given amount. * Long#**shiftRightUnsigned**/**shru**/**shr_u**(numBits: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long with bits logically shifted to the right by the given amount. * Long#**subtract**/**sub**(subtrahend: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the difference of this and the specified Long. * Long#**toBytes**(le?: `boolean`): `number[]`<br /> Converts this Long to its byte representation. * Long#**toBytesLE**(): `number[]`<br /> Converts this Long to its little endian byte representation. * Long#**toBytesBE**(): `number[]`<br /> Converts this Long to its big endian byte representation. * Long#**toInt**(): `number`<br /> Converts the Long to a 32 bit integer, assuming it is a 32 bit integer. * Long#**toNumber**(): `number`<br /> Converts the Long to a the nearest floating-point representation of this value (double, 53 bit mantissa). * Long#**toSigned**(): `Long`<br /> Converts this Long to signed. * Long#**toString**(radix?: `number`): `string`<br /> Converts the Long to a string written in the specified radix. * Long#**toUnsigned**(): `Long`<br /> Converts this Long to unsigned. * Long#**xor**(other: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise XOR of this Long and the given one. Building -------- To build an UMD bundle to `dist/long.js`, run: ``` $> npm install $> npm run build ``` Running the [tests](./tests): ``` $> npm test ``` # Acorn-JSX [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/acornjs/acorn-jsx.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/acornjs/acorn-jsx) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/acorn-jsx.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/acorn-jsx) This is plugin for [Acorn](http://marijnhaverbeke.nl/acorn/) - a tiny, fast JavaScript parser, written completely in JavaScript. It was created as an experimental alternative, faster [React.js JSX](http://facebook.github.io/react/docs/jsx-in-depth.html) parser. Later, it replaced the [official parser](https://github.com/facebookarchive/esprima) and these days is used by many prominent development tools. ## Transpiler Please note that this tool only parses source code to JSX AST, which is useful for various language tools and services. If you want to transpile your code to regular ES5-compliant JavaScript with source map, check out [Babel](https://babeljs.io/) and [Buble](https://buble.surge.sh/) transpilers which use `acorn-jsx` under the hood. ## Usage Requiring this module provides you with an Acorn plugin that you can use like this: ```javascript var acorn = require("acorn"); var jsx = require("acorn-jsx"); acorn.Parser.extend(jsx()).parse("my(<jsx/>, 'code');"); ``` Note that official spec doesn't support mix of XML namespaces and object-style access in tag names (#27) like in `<namespace:Object.Property />`, so it was deprecated in `[email protected]`. If you still want to opt-in to support of such constructions, you can pass the following option: ```javascript acorn.Parser.extend(jsx({ allowNamespacedObjects: true })) ``` Also, since most apps use pure React transformer, a new option was introduced that allows to prohibit namespaces completely: ```javascript acorn.Parser.extend(jsx({ allowNamespaces: false })) ``` Note that by default `allowNamespaces` is enabled for spec compliancy. ## License This plugin is issued under the [MIT license](./LICENSE). # randexp.js randexp will generate a random string that matches a given RegExp Javascript object. [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/fent/randexp.js.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/fent/randexp.js) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/fent/randexp.js.svg)](https://david-dm.org/fent/randexp.js) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/randexp.js/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/randexp.js) # Usage ```js var RandExp = require('randexp'); // supports grouping and piping new RandExp(/hello+ (world|to you)/).gen(); // => hellooooooooooooooooooo world // sets and ranges and references new RandExp(/<([a-z]\w{0,20})>foo<\1>/).gen(); // => <m5xhdg>foo<m5xhdg> // wildcard new RandExp(/random stuff: .+/).gen(); // => random stuff: l3m;Hf9XYbI [YPaxV>U*4-_F!WXQh9>;rH3i l!8.zoh?[utt1OWFQrE ^~8zEQm]~tK // ignore case new RandExp(/xxx xtreme dragon warrior xxx/i).gen(); // => xxx xtReME dRAGON warRiOR xXX // dynamic regexp shortcut new RandExp('(sun|mon|tue|wednes|thurs|fri|satur)day', 'i'); // is the same as new RandExp(new RegExp('(sun|mon|tue|wednes|thurs|fri|satur)day', 'i')); ``` If you're only going to use `gen()` once with a regexp and want slightly shorter syntax for it ```js var randexp = require('randexp').randexp; randexp(/[1-6]/); // 4 randexp('great|good( job)?|excellent'); // great ``` If you miss the old syntax ```js require('randexp').sugar(); /yes|no|maybe|i don't know/.gen(); // maybe ``` # Motivation Regular expressions are used in every language, every programmer is familiar with them. Regex can be used to easily express complex strings. What better way to generate a random string than with a language you can use to express the string you want? Thanks to [String-Random](http://search.cpan.org/~steve/String-Random-0.22/lib/String/Random.pm) for giving me the idea to make this in the first place and [randexp](https://github.com/benburkert/randexp) for the sweet `.gen()` syntax. # Default Range The default generated character range includes printable ASCII. In order to add or remove characters, a `defaultRange` attribute is exposed. you can `subtract(from, to)` and `add(from, to)` ```js var randexp = new RandExp(/random stuff: .+/); randexp.defaultRange.subtract(32, 126); randexp.defaultRange.add(0, 65535); randexp.gen(); // => random stuff: 湐箻ໜ䫴␩⶛㳸長���邓蕲뤀쑡篷皇硬剈궦佔칗븛뀃匫鴔事좍ﯣ⭼ꝏ䭍詳蒂䥂뽭 ``` # Custom PRNG The default randomness is provided by `Math.random()`. If you need to use a seedable or cryptographic PRNG, you can override `RandExp.prototype.randInt` or `randexp.randInt` (where `randexp` is an instance of `RandExp`). `randInt(from, to)` accepts an inclusive range and returns a randomly selected number within that range. # Infinite Repetitionals Repetitional tokens such as `*`, `+`, and `{3,}` have an infinite max range. In this case, randexp looks at its min and adds 100 to it to get a useable max value. If you want to use another int other than 100 you can change the `max` property in `RandExp.prototype` or the RandExp instance. ```js var randexp = new RandExp(/no{1,}/); randexp.max = 1000000; ``` With `RandExp.sugar()` ```js var regexp = /(hi)*/; regexp.max = 1000000; ``` # Bad Regular Expressions There are some regular expressions which can never match any string. * Ones with badly placed positionals such as `/a^/` and `/$c/m`. Randexp will ignore positional tokens. * Back references to non-existing groups like `/(a)\1\2/`. Randexp will ignore those references, returning an empty string for them. If the group exists only after the reference is used such as in `/\1 (hey)/`, it will too be ignored. * Custom negated character sets with two sets inside that cancel each other out. Example: `/[^\w\W]/`. If you give this to randexp, it will return an empty string for this set since it can't match anything. # Projects based on randexp.js ## JSON-Schema Faker Use generators to populate JSON Schema samples. See: [jsf on github](https://github.com/json-schema-faker/json-schema-faker/) and [jsf demo page](http://json-schema-faker.js.org/). # Install ### Node.js npm install randexp ### Browser Download the [minified version](https://github.com/fent/randexp.js/releases) from the latest release. # Tests Tests are written with [mocha](https://mochajs.org) ```bash npm test ``` # License MIT ### Estraverse [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse) Estraverse ([estraverse](http://github.com/estools/estraverse)) is [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) traversal functions from [esmangle project](http://github.com/estools/esmangle). ### Documentation You can find usage docs at [wiki page](https://github.com/estools/estraverse/wiki/Usage). ### Example Usage The following code will output all variables declared at the root of a file. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'FunctionExpression' || node.type == 'FunctionDeclaration') return estraverse.VisitorOption.Skip; }, leave: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'VariableDeclarator') console.log(node.id.name); } }); ``` We can use `this.skip`, `this.remove` and `this.break` functions instead of using Skip, Remove and Break. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node) { this.break(); } }); ``` And estraverse provides `estraverse.replace` function. When returning node from `enter`/`leave`, current node is replaced with it. ```javascript result = estraverse.replace(tree, { enter: function (node) { // Replace it with replaced. if (node.type === 'Literal') return replaced; } }); ``` By passing `visitor.keys` mapping, we can extend estraverse traversing functionality. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Extending the existing traversing rules. keys: { // TargetNodeName: [ 'keys', 'containing', 'the', 'other', '**node**' ] TestExpression: ['argument'] } }); ``` By passing `visitor.fallback` option, we can control the behavior when encountering unknown nodes. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Iterating the child **nodes** of unknown nodes. fallback: 'iteration' }); ``` When `visitor.fallback` is a function, we can determine which keys to visit on each node. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Skip the `argument` property of each node fallback: function(node) { return Object.keys(node).filter(function(key) { return key !== 'argument'; }); } }); ``` ### License Copyright (C) 2012-2016 [Yusuke Suzuki](http://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](http://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. # levn [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/levn.png)](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/levn) <a name="levn" /> __Light ECMAScript (JavaScript) Value Notation__ Levn is a library which allows you to parse a string into a JavaScript value based on an expected type. It is meant for short amounts of human entered data (eg. config files, command line arguments). Levn aims to concisely describe JavaScript values in text, and allow for the extraction and validation of those values. Levn uses [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) for its type format, and to validate the results. MIT license. Version 0.4.1. __How is this different than JSON?__ levn is meant to be written by humans only, is (due to the previous point) much more concise, can be validated against supplied types, has regex and date literals, and can easily be extended with custom types. On the other hand, it is probably slower and thus less efficient at transporting large amounts of data, which is fine since this is not its purpose. npm install levn For updates on levn, [follow me on twitter](https://twitter.com/gkzahariev). ## Quick Examples ```js var parse = require('levn').parse; parse('Number', '2'); // 2 parse('String', '2'); // '2' parse('String', 'levn'); // 'levn' parse('String', 'a b'); // 'a b' parse('Boolean', 'true'); // true parse('Date', '#2011-11-11#'); // (Date object) parse('Date', '2011-11-11'); // (Date object) parse('RegExp', '/[a-z]/gi'); // /[a-z]/gi parse('RegExp', 're'); // /re/ parse('Int', '2'); // 2 parse('Number | String', 'str'); // 'str' parse('Number | String', '2'); // 2 parse('[Number]', '[1,2,3]'); // [1,2,3] parse('(String, Boolean)', '(hi, false)'); // ['hi', false] parse('{a: String, b: Number}', '{a: str, b: 2}'); // {a: 'str', b: 2} // at the top level, you can ommit surrounding delimiters parse('[Number]', '1,2,3'); // [1,2,3] parse('(String, Boolean)', 'hi, false'); // ['hi', false] parse('{a: String, b: Number}', 'a: str, b: 2'); // {a: 'str', b: 2} // wildcard - auto choose type parse('*', '[hi,(null,[42]),{k: true}]'); // ['hi', [null, [42]], {k: true}] ``` ## Usage `require('levn');` returns an object that exposes three properties. `VERSION` is the current version of the library as a string. `parse` and `parsedTypeParse` are functions. ```js // parse(type, input, options); parse('[Number]', '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3] // parsedTypeParse(parsedType, input, options); var parsedType = require('type-check').parseType('[Number]'); parsedTypeParse(parsedType, '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3] ``` ### parse(type, input, options) `parse` casts the string `input` into a JavaScript value according to the specified `type` in the [type format](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#type-format) (and taking account the optional `options`) and returns the resulting JavaScript value. ##### arguments * type - `String` - the type written in the [type format](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#type-format) which to check against * input - `String` - the value written in the [levn format](#levn-format) * options - `Maybe Object` - an optional parameter specifying additional [options](#options) ##### returns `*` - the resulting JavaScript value ##### example ```js parse('[Number]', '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3] ``` ### parsedTypeParse(parsedType, input, options) `parsedTypeParse` casts the string `input` into a JavaScript value according to the specified `type` which has already been parsed (and taking account the optional `options`) and returns the resulting JavaScript value. You can parse a type using the [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) library's `parseType` function. ##### arguments * type - `Object` - the type in the parsed type format which to check against * input - `String` - the value written in the [levn format](#levn-format) * options - `Maybe Object` - an optional parameter specifying additional [options](#options) ##### returns `*` - the resulting JavaScript value ##### example ```js var parsedType = require('type-check').parseType('[Number]'); parsedTypeParse(parsedType, '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3] ``` ## Levn Format Levn can use the type information you provide to choose the appropriate value to produce from the input. For the same input, it will choose a different output value depending on the type provided. For example, `parse('Number', '2')` will produce the number `2`, but `parse('String', '2')` will produce the string `"2"`. If you do not provide type information, and simply use `*`, levn will parse the input according the unambiguous "explicit" mode, which we will now detail - you can also set the `explicit` option to true manually in the [options](#options). * `"string"`, `'string'` are parsed as a String, eg. `"a msg"` is `"a msg"` * `#date#` is parsed as a Date, eg. `#2011-11-11#` is `new Date('2011-11-11')` * `/regexp/flags` is parsed as a RegExp, eg. `/re/gi` is `/re/gi` * `undefined`, `null`, `NaN`, `true`, and `false` are all their JavaScript equivalents * `[element1, element2, etc]` is an Array, and the casting procedure is recursively applied to each element. Eg. `[1,2,3]` is `[1,2,3]`. * `(element1, element2, etc)` is an tuple, and the casting procedure is recursively applied to each element. Eg. `(1, a)` is `(1, a)` (is `[1, 'a']`). * `{key1: val1, key2: val2, ...}` is an Object, and the casting procedure is recursively applied to each property. Eg. `{a: 1, b: 2}` is `{a: 1, b: 2}`. * Any test which does not fall under the above, and which does not contain special characters (`[``]``(``)``{``}``:``,`) is a string, eg. `$12- blah` is `"$12- blah"`. If you do provide type information, you can make your input more concise as the program already has some information about what it expects. Please see the [type format](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#type-format) section of [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) for more information about how to specify types. There are some rules about what levn can do with the information: * If a String is expected, and only a String, all characters of the input (including any special ones) will become part of the output. Eg. `[({})]` is `"[({})]"`, and `"hi"` is `'"hi"'`. * If a Date is expected, the surrounding `#` can be omitted from date literals. Eg. `2011-11-11` is `new Date('2011-11-11')`. * If a RegExp is expected, no flags need to be specified, and the regex is not using any of the special characters,the opening and closing `/` can be omitted - this will have the affect of setting the source of the regex to the input. Eg. `regex` is `/regex/`. * If an Array is expected, and it is the root node (at the top level), the opening `[` and closing `]` can be omitted. Eg. `1,2,3` is `[1,2,3]`. * If a tuple is expected, and it is the root node (at the top level), the opening `(` and closing `)` can be omitted. Eg. `1, a` is `(1, a)` (is `[1, 'a']`). * If an Object is expected, and it is the root node (at the top level), the opening `{` and closing `}` can be omitted. Eg `a: 1, b: 2` is `{a: 1, b: 2}`. If you list multiple types (eg. `Number | String`), it will first attempt to cast to the first type and then validate - if the validation fails it will move on to the next type and so forth, left to right. You must be careful as some types will succeed with any input, such as String. Thus put String at the end of your list. In non-explicit mode, Date and RegExp will succeed with a large variety of input - also be careful with these and list them near the end if not last in your list. Whitespace between special characters and elements is inconsequential. ## Options Options is an object. It is an optional parameter to the `parse` and `parsedTypeParse` functions. ### Explicit A `Boolean`. By default it is `false`. __Example:__ ```js parse('RegExp', 're', {explicit: false}); // /re/ parse('RegExp', 're', {explicit: true}); // Error: ... does not type check... parse('RegExp | String', 're', {explicit: true}); // 're' ``` `explicit` sets whether to be in explicit mode or not. Using `*` automatically activates explicit mode. For more information, read the [levn format](#levn-format) section. ### customTypes An `Object`. Empty `{}` by default. __Example:__ ```js var options = { customTypes: { Even: { typeOf: 'Number', validate: function (x) { return x % 2 === 0; }, cast: function (x) { return {type: 'Just', value: parseInt(x)}; } } } } parse('Even', '2', options); // 2 parse('Even', '3', options); // Error: Value: "3" does not type check... ``` __Another Example:__ ```js function Person(name, age){ this.name = name; this.age = age; } var options = { customTypes: { Person: { typeOf: 'Object', validate: function (x) { x instanceof Person; }, cast: function (value, options, typesCast) { var name, age; if ({}.toString.call(value).slice(8, -1) !== 'Object') { return {type: 'Nothing'}; } name = typesCast(value.name, [{type: 'String'}], options); age = typesCast(value.age, [{type: 'Numger'}], options); return {type: 'Just', value: new Person(name, age)}; } } } parse('Person', '{name: Laura, age: 25}', options); // Person {name: 'Laura', age: 25} ``` `customTypes` is an object whose keys are the name of the types, and whose values are an object with three properties, `typeOf`, `validate`, and `cast`. For more information about `typeOf` and `validate`, please see the [custom types](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#custom-types) section of type-check. `cast` is a function which receives three arguments, the value under question, options, and the typesCast function. In `cast`, attempt to cast the value into the specified type. If you are successful, return an object in the format `{type: 'Just', value: CAST-VALUE}`, if you know it won't work, return `{type: 'Nothing'}`. You can use the `typesCast` function to cast any child values. Remember to pass `options` to it. In your function you can also check for `options.explicit` and act accordingly. ## Technical About `levn` is written in [LiveScript](http://livescript.net/) - a language that compiles to JavaScript. It uses [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) to both parse types and validate values. It also uses the [prelude.ls](http://preludels.com/) library. # word-wrap [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/word-wrap.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/word-wrap) [![NPM monthly downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/word-wrap.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/word-wrap) [![NPM total downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dt/word-wrap.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/word-wrap) [![Linux Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jonschlinkert/word-wrap.svg?style=flat&label=Travis)](https://travis-ci.org/jonschlinkert/word-wrap) > Wrap words to a specified length. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install --save word-wrap ``` ## Usage ```js var wrap = require('word-wrap'); wrap('Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.'); ``` Results in: ``` Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. ``` ## Options ![image](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/383994/6543728/7a381c08-c4f6-11e4-8b7d-b6ba197569c9.png) ### options.width Type: `Number` Default: `50` The width of the text before wrapping to a new line. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {width: 60}); ``` ### options.indent Type: `String` Default: `` (two spaces) The string to use at the beginning of each line. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {indent: ' '}); ``` ### options.newline Type: `String` Default: `\n` The string to use at the end of each line. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {newline: '\n\n'}); ``` ### options.escape Type: `function` Default: `function(str){return str;}` An escape function to run on each line after splitting them. **Example:** ```js var xmlescape = require('xml-escape'); wrap(str, { escape: function(string){ return xmlescape(string); } }); ``` ### options.trim Type: `Boolean` Default: `false` Trim trailing whitespace from the returned string. This option is included since `.trim()` would also strip the leading indentation from the first line. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {trim: true}); ``` ### options.cut Type: `Boolean` Default: `false` Break a word between any two letters when the word is longer than the specified width. **Example:** ```js wrap(str, {cut: true}); ``` ## About ### Related projects * [common-words](https://www.npmjs.com/package/common-words): Updated list (JSON) of the 100 most common words in the English language. Useful for… [more](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/common-words) | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/common-words "Updated list (JSON) of the 100 most common words in the English language. Useful for excluding these words from arrays.") * [shuffle-words](https://www.npmjs.com/package/shuffle-words): Shuffle the words in a string and optionally the letters in each word using the… [more](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/shuffle-words) | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/shuffle-words "Shuffle the words in a string and optionally the letters in each word using the Fisher-Yates algorithm. Useful for creating test fixtures, benchmarking samples, etc.") * [unique-words](https://www.npmjs.com/package/unique-words): Return the unique words in a string or array. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/unique-words "Return the unique words in a string or array.") * [wordcount](https://www.npmjs.com/package/wordcount): Count the words in a string. Support for english, CJK and Cyrillic. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/wordcount "Count the words in a string. Support for english, CJK and Cyrillic.") ### Contributing Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). ### Contributors | **Commits** | **Contributor** | | --- | --- | | 43 | [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) | | 2 | [lordvlad](https://github.com/lordvlad) | | 2 | [hildjj](https://github.com/hildjj) | | 1 | [danilosampaio](https://github.com/danilosampaio) | | 1 | [2fd](https://github.com/2fd) | | 1 | [toddself](https://github.com/toddself) | | 1 | [wolfgang42](https://github.com/wolfgang42) | | 1 | [zachhale](https://github.com/zachhale) | ### Building docs _(This project's readme.md is generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the [.verb.md](.verb.md) readme template.)_ To generate the readme, run the following command: ```sh $ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb ``` ### Running tests Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command: ```sh $ npm install && npm test ``` ### Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [github/jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [twitter/jonschlinkert](https://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) ### License Copyright © 2017, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), v0.6.0, on June 02, 2017._ # lodash.sortby v4.7.0 The [lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.sortBy` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.sortby ``` In Node.js: ```js var sortBy = require('lodash.sortby'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#sortBy) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.7.0-npm-packages/lodash.sortby) for more details. # ts-mixer [version-badge]: https://badgen.net/npm/v/ts-mixer [version-link]: https://npmjs.com/package/ts-mixer [build-badge]: https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/tannerntannern/ts-mixer/ts-mixer%20CI [build-link]: https://github.com/tannerntannern/ts-mixer/actions [ts-versions]: https://badgen.net/badge/icon/3.8,3.9,4.0,4.1,4.2?icon=typescript&label&list=| [node-versions]: https://badgen.net/badge/node/10%2C12%2C14/blue/?list=| [![npm version][version-badge]][version-link] [![github actions][build-badge]][build-link] [![TS Versions][ts-versions]][build-link] [![Node.js Versions][node-versions]][build-link] [![Minified Size](https://badgen.net/bundlephobia/min/ts-mixer)](https://bundlephobia.com/result?p=ts-mixer) [![Conventional Commits](https://badgen.net/badge/conventional%20commits/1.0.0/yellow)](https://conventionalcommits.org) ## Overview `ts-mixer` brings mixins to TypeScript. "Mixins" to `ts-mixer` are just classes, so you already know how to write them, and you can probably mix classes from your favorite library without trouble. The mixin problem is more nuanced than it appears. I've seen countless code snippets that work for certain situations, but fail in others. `ts-mixer` tries to take the best from all these solutions while accounting for the situations you might not have considered. [Quick start guide](#quick-start) ### Features * mixes plain classes * mixes classes that extend other classes * mixes classes that were mixed with `ts-mixer` * supports static properties * supports protected/private properties (the popular function-that-returns-a-class solution does not) * mixes abstract classes (with caveats [[1](#caveats)]) * mixes generic classes (with caveats [[2](#caveats)]) * supports class, method, and property decorators (with caveats [[3, 6](#caveats)]) * mostly supports the complexity presented by constructor functions (with caveats [[4](#caveats)]) * comes with an `instanceof`-like replacement (with caveats [[5, 6](#caveats)]) * [multiple mixing strategies](#settings) (ES6 proxies vs hard copy) ### Caveats 1. Mixing abstract classes requires a bit of a hack that may break in future versions of TypeScript. See [mixing abstract classes](#mixing-abstract-classes) below. 2. Mixing generic classes requires a more cumbersome notation, but it's still possible. See [mixing generic classes](#mixing-generic-classes) below. 3. Using decorators in mixed classes also requires a more cumbersome notation. See [mixing with decorators](#mixing-with-decorators) below. 4. ES6 made it impossible to use `.apply(...)` on class constructors (or any means of calling them without `new`), which makes it impossible for `ts-mixer` to pass the proper `this` to your constructors. This may or may not be an issue for your code, but there are options to work around it. See [dealing with constructors](#dealing-with-constructors) below. 5. `ts-mixer` does not support `instanceof` for mixins, but it does offer a replacement. See the [hasMixin function](#hasmixin) for more details. 6. Certain features (specifically, `@decorator` and `hasMixin`) make use of ES6 `Map`s, which means you must either use ES6+ or polyfill `Map` to use them. If you don't need these features, you should be fine without. ## Quick Start ### Installation ``` $ npm install ts-mixer ``` or if you prefer [Yarn](https://yarnpkg.com): ``` $ yarn add ts-mixer ``` ### Basic Example ```typescript import { Mixin } from 'ts-mixer'; class Foo { protected makeFoo() { return 'foo'; } } class Bar { protected makeBar() { return 'bar'; } } class FooBar extends Mixin(Foo, Bar) { public makeFooBar() { return this.makeFoo() + this.makeBar(); } } const fooBar = new FooBar(); console.log(fooBar.makeFooBar()); // "foobar" ``` ## Special Cases ### Mixing Abstract Classes Abstract classes, by definition, cannot be constructed, which means they cannot take on the type, `new(...args) => any`, and by extension, are incompatible with `ts-mixer`. BUT, you can "trick" TypeScript into giving you all the benefits of an abstract class without making it technically abstract. The trick is just some strategic `// @ts-ignore`'s: ```typescript import { Mixin } from 'ts-mixer'; // note that Foo is not marked as an abstract class class Foo { // @ts-ignore: "Abstract methods can only appear within an abstract class" public abstract makeFoo(): string; } class Bar { public makeBar() { return 'bar'; } } class FooBar extends Mixin(Foo, Bar) { // we still get all the benefits of abstract classes here, because TypeScript // will still complain if this method isn't implemented public makeFoo() { return 'foo'; } } ``` Do note that while this does work quite well, it is a bit of a hack and I can't promise that it will continue to work in future TypeScript versions. ### Mixing Generic Classes Frustratingly, it is _impossible_ for generic parameters to be referenced in base class expressions. No matter what, you will eventually run into `Base class expressions cannot reference class type parameters.` The way to get around this is to leverage [declaration merging](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/declaration-merging.html), and a slightly different mixing function from ts-mixer: `mix`. It works exactly like `Mixin`, except it's a decorator, which means it doesn't affect the type information of the class being decorated. See it in action below: ```typescript import { mix } from 'ts-mixer'; class Foo<T> { public fooMethod(input: T): T { return input; } } class Bar<T> { public barMethod(input: T): T { return input; } } interface FooBar<T1, T2> extends Foo<T1>, Bar<T2> { } @mix(Foo, Bar) class FooBar<T1, T2> { public fooBarMethod(input1: T1, input2: T2) { return [this.fooMethod(input1), this.barMethod(input2)]; } } ``` Key takeaways from this example: * `interface FooBar<T1, T2> extends Foo<T1>, Bar<T2> { }` makes sure `FooBar` has the typing we want, thanks to declaration merging * `@mix(Foo, Bar)` wires things up "on the JavaScript side", since the interface declaration has nothing to do with runtime behavior. * The reason we have to use the `mix` decorator is that the typing produced by `Mixin(Foo, Bar)` would conflict with the typing of the interface. `mix` has no effect "on the TypeScript side," thus avoiding type conflicts. ### Mixing with Decorators Popular libraries such as [class-validator](https://github.com/typestack/class-validator) and [TypeORM](https://github.com/typeorm/typeorm) use decorators to add functionality. Unfortunately, `ts-mixer` has no way of knowing what these libraries do with the decorators behind the scenes. So if you want these decorators to be "inherited" with classes you plan to mix, you first have to wrap them with a special `decorate` function exported by `ts-mixer`. Here's an example using `class-validator`: ```typescript import { IsBoolean, IsIn, validate } from 'class-validator'; import { Mixin, decorate } from 'ts-mixer'; class Disposable { @decorate(IsBoolean()) // instead of @IsBoolean() isDisposed: boolean = false; } class Statusable { @decorate(IsIn(['red', 'green'])) // instead of @IsIn(['red', 'green']) status: string = 'green'; } class ExtendedObject extends Mixin(Disposable, Statusable) {} const extendedObject = new ExtendedObject(); extendedObject.status = 'blue'; validate(extendedObject).then(errors => { console.log(errors); }); ``` ### Dealing with Constructors As mentioned in the [caveats section](#caveats), ES6 disallowed calling constructor functions without `new`. This means that the only way for `ts-mixer` to mix instance properties is to instantiate each base class separately, then copy the instance properties into a common object. The consequence of this is that constructors mixed by `ts-mixer` will _not_ receive the proper `this`. **This very well may not be an issue for you!** It only means that your constructors need to be "mostly pure" in terms of how they handle `this`. Specifically, your constructors cannot produce [side effects](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Side_effect_%28computer_science%29) involving `this`, _other than adding properties to `this`_ (the most common side effect in JavaScript constructors). If you simply cannot eliminate `this` side effects from your constructor, there is a workaround available: `ts-mixer` will automatically forward constructor parameters to a predesignated init function (`settings.initFunction`) if it's present on the class. Unlike constructors, functions can be called with an arbitrary `this`, so this predesignated init function _will_ have the proper `this`. Here's a basic example: ```typescript import { Mixin, settings } from 'ts-mixer'; settings.initFunction = 'init'; class Person { public static allPeople: Set<Person> = new Set(); protected init() { Person.allPeople.add(this); } } type PartyAffiliation = 'democrat' | 'republican'; class PoliticalParticipant { public static democrats: Set<PoliticalParticipant> = new Set(); public static republicans: Set<PoliticalParticipant> = new Set(); public party: PartyAffiliation; // note that these same args will also be passed to init function public constructor(party: PartyAffiliation) { this.party = party; } protected init(party: PartyAffiliation) { if (party === 'democrat') PoliticalParticipant.democrats.add(this); else PoliticalParticipant.republicans.add(this); } } class Voter extends Mixin(Person, PoliticalParticipant) {} const v1 = new Voter('democrat'); const v2 = new Voter('democrat'); const v3 = new Voter('republican'); const v4 = new Voter('republican'); ``` Note the above `.add(this)` statements. These would not work as expected if they were placed in the constructor instead, since `this` is not the same between the constructor and `init`, as explained above. ## Other Features ### hasMixin As mentioned above, `ts-mixer` does not support `instanceof` for mixins. While it is possible to implement [custom `instanceof` behavior](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Symbol/hasInstance), this library does not do so because it would require modifying the source classes, which is deliberately avoided. You can fill this missing functionality with `hasMixin(instance, mixinClass)` instead. See the below example: ```typescript import { Mixin, hasMixin } from 'ts-mixer'; class Foo {} class Bar {} class FooBar extends Mixin(Foo, Bar) {} const instance = new FooBar(); // doesn't work with instanceof... console.log(instance instanceof FooBar) // true console.log(instance instanceof Foo) // false console.log(instance instanceof Bar) // false // but everything works nicely with hasMixin! console.log(hasMixin(instance, FooBar)) // true console.log(hasMixin(instance, Foo)) // true console.log(hasMixin(instance, Bar)) // true ``` `hasMixin(instance, mixinClass)` will work anywhere that `instance instanceof mixinClass` works. Additionally, like `instanceof`, you get the same [type narrowing benefits](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/advanced-types.html#instanceof-type-guards): ```typescript if (hasMixin(instance, Foo)) { // inferred type of instance is "Foo" } if (hasMixin(instance, Bar)) { // inferred type of instance of "Bar" } ``` ## Settings ts-mixer has multiple strategies for mixing classes which can be configured by modifying `settings` from ts-mixer. For example: ```typescript import { settings, Mixin } from 'ts-mixer'; settings.prototypeStrategy = 'proxy'; // then use `Mixin` as normal... ``` ### `settings.prototypeStrategy` * Determines how ts-mixer will mix class prototypes together * Possible values: - `'copy'` (default) - Copies all methods from the classes being mixed into a new prototype object. (This will include all methods up the prototype chains as well.) This is the default for ES5 compatibility, but it has the downside of stale references. For example, if you mix `Foo` and `Bar` to make `FooBar`, then redefine a method on `Foo`, `FooBar` will not have the latest methods from `Foo`. If this is not a concern for you, `'copy'` is the best value for this setting. - `'proxy'` - Uses an ES6 Proxy to "soft mix" prototypes. Unlike `'copy'`, updates to the base classes _will_ be reflected in the mixed class, which may be desirable. The downside is that method access is not as performant, nor is it ES5 compatible. ### `settings.staticsStrategy` * Determines how static properties are inherited * Possible values: - `'copy'` (default) - Simply copies all properties (minus `prototype`) from the base classes/constructor functions onto the mixed class. Like `settings.prototypeStrategy = 'copy'`, this strategy also suffers from stale references, but shouldn't be a concern if you don't redefine static methods after mixing. - `'proxy'` - Similar to `settings.prototypeStrategy`, proxy's static method access to base classes. Has the same benefits/downsides. ### `settings.initFunction` * If set, `ts-mixer` will automatically call the function with this name upon construction * Possible values: - `null` (default) - disables the behavior - a string - function name to call upon construction * Read more about why you would want this in [dealing with constructors](#dealing-with-constructors) ### `settings.decoratorInheritance` * Determines how decorators are inherited from classes passed to `Mixin(...)` * Possible values: - `'deep'` (default) - Deeply inherits decorators from all given classes and their ancestors - `'direct'` - Only inherits decorators defined directly on the given classes - `'none'` - Skips decorator inheritance # Author Tanner Nielsen <[email protected]> * Website - [tannernielsen.com](http://tannernielsen.com) * Github - [tannerntannern](https://github.com/tannerntannern) # y18n [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Coverage Status][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url] [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) The bare-bones internationalization library used by yargs. Inspired by [i18n](https://www.npmjs.com/package/i18n). ## Examples _simple string translation:_ ```js var __ = require('y18n').__ console.log(__('my awesome string %s', 'foo')) ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _using tagged template literals_ ```js var __ = require('y18n').__ var str = 'foo' console.log(__`my awesome string ${str}`) ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _pluralization support:_ ```js var __n = require('y18n').__n console.log(__n('one fish %s', '%d fishes %s', 2, 'foo')) ``` output: `2 fishes foo` ## JSON Language Files The JSON language files should be stored in a `./locales` folder. File names correspond to locales, e.g., `en.json`, `pirate.json`. When strings are observed for the first time they will be added to the JSON file corresponding to the current locale. ## Methods ### require('y18n')(config) Create an instance of y18n with the config provided, options include: * `directory`: the locale directory, default `./locales`. * `updateFiles`: should newly observed strings be updated in file, default `true`. * `locale`: what locale should be used. * `fallbackToLanguage`: should fallback to a language-only file (e.g. `en.json`) be allowed if a file matching the locale does not exist (e.g. `en_US.json`), default `true`. ### y18n.\_\_(str, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string, `%s` will be replaced with `arg`s. This function can also be used as a tag for a template literal. You can use it like this: <code>__&#96;hello ${'world'}&#96;</code>. This will be equivalent to `__('hello %s', 'world')`. ### y18n.\_\_n(singularString, pluralString, count, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string with appropriate pluralization. If `%d` is provided in the string, the `count` will replace this placeholder. ### y18n.setLocale(str) Set the current locale being used. ### y18n.getLocale() What locale is currently being used? ### y18n.updateLocale(obj) Update the current locale with the key value pairs in `obj`. ## License ISC [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/yargs/y18n [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/yargs/y18n.svg [coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/github/yargs/y18n [coveralls-image]: https://img.shields.io/coveralls/yargs/y18n.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/y18n [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/y18n.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: https://github.com/feross/standard # whatwg-url whatwg-url is a full implementation of the WHATWG [URL Standard](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/). It can be used standalone, but it also exposes a lot of the internal algorithms that are useful for integrating a URL parser into a project like [jsdom](https://github.com/tmpvar/jsdom). ## Specification conformance whatwg-url is currently up to date with the URL spec up to commit [7ae1c69](https://github.com/whatwg/url/commit/7ae1c691c96f0d82fafa24c33aa1e8df9ffbf2bc). For `file:` URLs, whose [origin is left unspecified](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-origin), whatwg-url chooses to use a new opaque origin (which serializes to `"null"`). ## API ### The `URL` and `URLSearchParams` classes The main API is provided by the [`URL`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#url-class) and [`URLSearchParams`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#interface-urlsearchparams) exports, which follows the spec's behavior in all ways (including e.g. `USVString` conversion). Most consumers of this library will want to use these. ### Low-level URL Standard API The following methods are exported for use by places like jsdom that need to implement things like [`HTMLHyperlinkElementUtils`](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#htmlhyperlinkelementutils). They mostly operate on or return an "internal URL" or ["URL record"](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url) type. - [URL parser](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-parser): `parseURL(input, { baseURL, encodingOverride })` - [Basic URL parser](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-basic-url-parser): `basicURLParse(input, { baseURL, encodingOverride, url, stateOverride })` - [URL serializer](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-serializer): `serializeURL(urlRecord, excludeFragment)` - [Host serializer](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-host-serializer): `serializeHost(hostFromURLRecord)` - [Serialize an integer](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#serialize-an-integer): `serializeInteger(number)` - [Origin](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-origin) [serializer](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/origin.html#ascii-serialisation-of-an-origin): `serializeURLOrigin(urlRecord)` - [Set the username](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#set-the-username): `setTheUsername(urlRecord, usernameString)` - [Set the password](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#set-the-password): `setThePassword(urlRecord, passwordString)` - [Cannot have a username/password/port](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#cannot-have-a-username-password-port): `cannotHaveAUsernamePasswordPort(urlRecord)` - [Percent decode](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#percent-decode): `percentDecode(buffer)` The `stateOverride` parameter is one of the following strings: - [`"scheme start"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#scheme-start-state) - [`"scheme"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#scheme-state) - [`"no scheme"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#no-scheme-state) - [`"special relative or authority"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-relative-or-authority-state) - [`"path or authority"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#path-or-authority-state) - [`"relative"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#relative-state) - [`"relative slash"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#relative-slash-state) - [`"special authority slashes"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-authority-slashes-state) - [`"special authority ignore slashes"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-authority-ignore-slashes-state) - [`"authority"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#authority-state) - [`"host"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#host-state) - [`"hostname"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#hostname-state) - [`"port"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#port-state) - [`"file"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#file-state) - [`"file slash"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#file-slash-state) - [`"file host"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#file-host-state) - [`"path start"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#path-start-state) - [`"path"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#path-state) - [`"cannot-be-a-base-URL path"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#cannot-be-a-base-url-path-state) - [`"query"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#query-state) - [`"fragment"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#fragment-state) The URL record type has the following API: - [`scheme`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-scheme) - [`username`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-username) - [`password`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-password) - [`host`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-host) - [`port`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-port) - [`path`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-path) (as an array) - [`query`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-query) - [`fragment`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-fragment) - [`cannotBeABaseURL`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#url-cannot-be-a-base-url-flag) (as a boolean) These properties should be treated with care, as in general changing them will cause the URL record to be in an inconsistent state until the appropriate invocation of `basicURLParse` is used to fix it up. You can see examples of this in the URL Standard, where there are many step sequences like "4. Set context object’s url’s fragment to the empty string. 5. Basic URL parse _input_ with context object’s url as _url_ and fragment state as _state override_." In between those two steps, a URL record is in an unusable state. The return value of "failure" in the spec is represented by `null`. That is, functions like `parseURL` and `basicURLParse` can return _either_ a URL record _or_ `null`. ## Development instructions First, install [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/). Then, fetch the dependencies of whatwg-url, by running from this directory: npm install To run tests: npm test To generate a coverage report: npm run coverage To build and run the live viewer: npm run build npm run build-live-viewer Serve the contents of the `live-viewer` directory using any web server. ## Supporting whatwg-url The jsdom project (including whatwg-url) is a community-driven project maintained by a team of [volunteers](https://github.com/orgs/jsdom/people). You could support us by: - [Getting professional support for whatwg-url](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-whatwg-url?utm_source=npm-whatwg-url&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=readme) as part of a Tidelift subscription. Tidelift helps making open source sustainable for us while giving teams assurances for maintenance, licensing, and security. - Contributing directly to the project. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/rimraf.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/rimraf) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf.svg)](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf) [![devDependency Status](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf/dev-status.svg)](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf#info=devDependencies) The [UNIX command](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rm_(Unix)) `rm -rf` for node. Install with `npm install rimraf`, or just drop rimraf.js somewhere. ## API `rimraf(f, [opts], callback)` The first parameter will be interpreted as a globbing pattern for files. If you want to disable globbing you can do so with `opts.disableGlob` (defaults to `false`). This might be handy, for instance, if you have filenames that contain globbing wildcard characters. The callback will be called with an error if there is one. Certain errors are handled for you: * Windows: `EBUSY` and `ENOTEMPTY` - rimraf will back off a maximum of `opts.maxBusyTries` times before giving up, adding 100ms of wait between each attempt. The default `maxBusyTries` is 3. * `ENOENT` - If the file doesn't exist, rimraf will return successfully, since your desired outcome is already the case. * `EMFILE` - Since `readdir` requires opening a file descriptor, it's possible to hit `EMFILE` if too many file descriptors are in use. In the sync case, there's nothing to be done for this. But in the async case, rimraf will gradually back off with timeouts up to `opts.emfileWait` ms, which defaults to 1000. ## options * unlink, chmod, stat, lstat, rmdir, readdir, unlinkSync, chmodSync, statSync, lstatSync, rmdirSync, readdirSync In order to use a custom file system library, you can override specific fs functions on the options object. If any of these functions are present on the options object, then the supplied function will be used instead of the default fs method. Sync methods are only relevant for `rimraf.sync()`, of course. For example: ```javascript var myCustomFS = require('some-custom-fs') rimraf('some-thing', myCustomFS, callback) ``` * maxBusyTries If an `EBUSY`, `ENOTEMPTY`, or `EPERM` error code is encountered on Windows systems, then rimraf will retry with a linear backoff wait of 100ms longer on each try. The default maxBusyTries is 3. Only relevant for async usage. * emfileWait If an `EMFILE` error is encountered, then rimraf will retry repeatedly with a linear backoff of 1ms longer on each try, until the timeout counter hits this max. The default limit is 1000. If you repeatedly encounter `EMFILE` errors, then consider using [graceful-fs](http://npm.im/graceful-fs) in your program. Only relevant for async usage. * glob Set to `false` to disable [glob](http://npm.im/glob) pattern matching. Set to an object to pass options to the glob module. The default glob options are `{ nosort: true, silent: true }`. Glob version 6 is used in this module. Relevant for both sync and async usage. * disableGlob Set to any non-falsey value to disable globbing entirely. (Equivalent to setting `glob: false`.) ## rimraf.sync It can remove stuff synchronously, too. But that's not so good. Use the async API. It's better. ## CLI If installed with `npm install rimraf -g` it can be used as a global command `rimraf <path> [<path> ...]` which is useful for cross platform support. ## mkdirp If you need to create a directory recursively, check out [mkdirp](https://github.com/substack/node-mkdirp). # <img src="./logo.png" alt="bn.js" width="160" height="160" /> > BigNum in pure javascript [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/indutny/bn.js.png)](http://travis-ci.org/indutny/bn.js) ## Install `npm install --save bn.js` ## Usage ```js const BN = require('bn.js'); var a = new BN('dead', 16); var b = new BN('101010', 2); var res = a.add(b); console.log(res.toString(10)); // 57047 ``` **Note**: decimals are not supported in this library. ## Notation ### Prefixes There are several prefixes to instructions that affect the way the work. Here is the list of them in the order of appearance in the function name: * `i` - perform operation in-place, storing the result in the host object (on which the method was invoked). Might be used to avoid number allocation costs * `u` - unsigned, ignore the sign of operands when performing operation, or always return positive value. Second case applies to reduction operations like `mod()`. In such cases if the result will be negative - modulo will be added to the result to make it positive ### Postfixes * `n` - the argument of the function must be a plain JavaScript Number. Decimals are not supported. * `rn` - both argument and return value of the function are plain JavaScript Numbers. Decimals are not supported. ### Examples * `a.iadd(b)` - perform addition on `a` and `b`, storing the result in `a` * `a.umod(b)` - reduce `a` modulo `b`, returning positive value * `a.iushln(13)` - shift bits of `a` left by 13 ## Instructions Prefixes/postfixes are put in parens at the of the line. `endian` - could be either `le` (little-endian) or `be` (big-endian). ### Utilities * `a.clone()` - clone number * `a.toString(base, length)` - convert to base-string and pad with zeroes * `a.toNumber()` - convert to Javascript Number (limited to 53 bits) * `a.toJSON()` - convert to JSON compatible hex string (alias of `toString(16)`) * `a.toArray(endian, length)` - convert to byte `Array`, and optionally zero pad to length, throwing if already exceeding * `a.toArrayLike(type, endian, length)` - convert to an instance of `type`, which must behave like an `Array` * `a.toBuffer(endian, length)` - convert to Node.js Buffer (if available). For compatibility with browserify and similar tools, use this instead: `a.toArrayLike(Buffer, endian, length)` * `a.bitLength()` - get number of bits occupied * `a.zeroBits()` - return number of less-significant consequent zero bits (example: `1010000` has 4 zero bits) * `a.byteLength()` - return number of bytes occupied * `a.isNeg()` - true if the number is negative * `a.isEven()` - no comments * `a.isOdd()` - no comments * `a.isZero()` - no comments * `a.cmp(b)` - compare numbers and return `-1` (a `<` b), `0` (a `==` b), or `1` (a `>` b) depending on the comparison result (`ucmp`, `cmpn`) * `a.lt(b)` - `a` less than `b` (`n`) * `a.lte(b)` - `a` less than or equals `b` (`n`) * `a.gt(b)` - `a` greater than `b` (`n`) * `a.gte(b)` - `a` greater than or equals `b` (`n`) * `a.eq(b)` - `a` equals `b` (`n`) * `a.toTwos(width)` - convert to two's complement representation, where `width` is bit width * `a.fromTwos(width)` - convert from two's complement representation, where `width` is the bit width * `BN.isBN(object)` - returns true if the supplied `object` is a BN.js instance * `BN.max(a, b)` - return `a` if `a` bigger than `b` * `BN.min(a, b)` - return `a` if `a` less than `b` ### Arithmetics * `a.neg()` - negate sign (`i`) * `a.abs()` - absolute value (`i`) * `a.add(b)` - addition (`i`, `n`, `in`) * `a.sub(b)` - subtraction (`i`, `n`, `in`) * `a.mul(b)` - multiply (`i`, `n`, `in`) * `a.sqr()` - square (`i`) * `a.pow(b)` - raise `a` to the power of `b` * `a.div(b)` - divide (`divn`, `idivn`) * `a.mod(b)` - reduct (`u`, `n`) (but no `umodn`) * `a.divmod(b)` - quotient and modulus obtained by dividing * `a.divRound(b)` - rounded division ### Bit operations * `a.or(b)` - or (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.and(b)` - and (`i`, `u`, `iu`, `andln`) (NOTE: `andln` is going to be replaced with `andn` in future) * `a.xor(b)` - xor (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.setn(b, value)` - set specified bit to `value` * `a.shln(b)` - shift left (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.shrn(b)` - shift right (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.testn(b)` - test if specified bit is set * `a.maskn(b)` - clear bits with indexes higher or equal to `b` (`i`) * `a.bincn(b)` - add `1 << b` to the number * `a.notn(w)` - not (for the width specified by `w`) (`i`) ### Reduction * `a.gcd(b)` - GCD * `a.egcd(b)` - Extended GCD results (`{ a: ..., b: ..., gcd: ... }`) * `a.invm(b)` - inverse `a` modulo `b` ## Fast reduction When doing lots of reductions using the same modulo, it might be beneficial to use some tricks: like [Montgomery multiplication][0], or using special algorithm for [Mersenne Prime][1]. ### Reduction context To enable this tricks one should create a reduction context: ```js var red = BN.red(num); ``` where `num` is just a BN instance. Or: ```js var red = BN.red(primeName); ``` Where `primeName` is either of these [Mersenne Primes][1]: * `'k256'` * `'p224'` * `'p192'` * `'p25519'` Or: ```js var red = BN.mont(num); ``` To reduce numbers with [Montgomery trick][0]. `.mont()` is generally faster than `.red(num)`, but slower than `BN.red(primeName)`. ### Converting numbers Before performing anything in reduction context - numbers should be converted to it. Usually, this means that one should: * Convert inputs to reducted ones * Operate on them in reduction context * Convert outputs back from the reduction context Here is how one may convert numbers to `red`: ```js var redA = a.toRed(red); ``` Where `red` is a reduction context created using instructions above Here is how to convert them back: ```js var a = redA.fromRed(); ``` ### Red instructions Most of the instructions from the very start of this readme have their counterparts in red context: * `a.redAdd(b)`, `a.redIAdd(b)` * `a.redSub(b)`, `a.redISub(b)` * `a.redShl(num)` * `a.redMul(b)`, `a.redIMul(b)` * `a.redSqr()`, `a.redISqr()` * `a.redSqrt()` - square root modulo reduction context's prime * `a.redInvm()` - modular inverse of the number * `a.redNeg()` * `a.redPow(b)` - modular exponentiation ### Number Size Optimized for elliptic curves that work with 256-bit numbers. There is no limitation on the size of the numbers. ## LICENSE This software is licensed under the MIT License. [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montgomery_modular_multiplication [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mersenne_prime [![build status](https://app.travis-ci.com/dankogai/js-base64.svg)](https://app.travis-ci.com/github/dankogai/js-base64) # base64.js Yet another [Base64] transcoder. [Base64]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base64 ## Install ```shell $ npm install --save js-base64 ``` ## Usage ### In Browser Locally… ```html <script src="base64.js"></script> ``` … or Directly from CDN. In which case you don't even need to install. ```html <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/base64.min.js"></script> ``` This good old way loads `Base64` in the global context (`window`). Though `Base64.noConflict()` is made available, you should consider using ES6 Module to avoid tainting `window`. ### As an ES6 Module locally… ```javascript import { Base64 } from 'js-base64'; ``` ```javascript // or if you prefer no Base64 namespace import { encode, decode } from 'js-base64'; ``` or even remotely. ```html <script type="module"> // note jsdelivr.net does not automatically minify .mjs import { Base64 } from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/base64.mjs'; </script> ``` ```html <script type="module"> // or if you prefer no Base64 namespace import { encode, decode } from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/base64.mjs'; </script> ``` ### node.js (commonjs) ```javascript const {Base64} = require('js-base64'); ``` Unlike the case above, the global context is no longer modified. You can also use [esm] to `import` instead of `require`. [esm]: https://github.com/standard-things/esm ```javascript require=require('esm')(module); import {Base64} from 'js-base64'; ``` ## SYNOPSIS ```javascript let latin = 'dankogai'; let utf8 = '小飼弾' let u8s = new Uint8Array([100,97,110,107,111,103,97,105]); Base64.encode(latin); // ZGFua29nYWk= Base64.encode(latin, true)); // ZGFua29nYWk skips padding Base64.encodeURI(latin)); // ZGFua29nYWk Base64.btoa(latin); // ZGFua29nYWk= Base64.btoa(utf8); // raises exception Base64.fromUint8Array(u8s); // ZGFua29nYWk= Base64.fromUint8Array(u8s, true); // ZGFua29nYW which is URI safe Base64.encode(utf8); // 5bCP6aO85by+ Base64.encode(utf8, true) // 5bCP6aO85by- Base64.encodeURI(utf8); // 5bCP6aO85by- ``` ```javascript Base64.decode( 'ZGFua29nYWk=');// dankogai Base64.decode( 'ZGFua29nYWk'); // dankogai Base64.atob( 'ZGFua29nYWk=');// dankogai Base64.atob( '5bCP6aO85by+');// '小飼弾' which is nonsense Base64.toUint8Array('ZGFua29nYWk=');// u8s above Base64.decode( '5bCP6aO85by+');// 小飼弾 // note .decodeURI() is unnecessary since it accepts both flavors Base64.decode( '5bCP6aO85by-');// 小飼弾 ``` ```javascript Base64.isValid(0); // false: 0 is not string Base64.isValid(''); // true: a valid Base64-encoded empty byte Base64.isValid('ZA=='); // true: a valid Base64-encoded 'd' Base64.isValid('Z A='); // true: whitespaces are okay Base64.isValid('ZA'); // true: padding ='s can be omitted Base64.isValid('++'); // true: can be non URL-safe Base64.isValid('--'); // true: or URL-safe Base64.isValid('+-'); // false: can't mix both ``` ### Built-in Extensions By default `Base64` leaves built-in prototypes untouched. But you can extend them as below. ```javascript // you have to explicitly extend String.prototype Base64.extendString(); // once extended, you can do the following 'dankogai'.toBase64(); // ZGFua29nYWk= '小飼弾'.toBase64(); // 5bCP6aO85by+ '小飼弾'.toBase64(true); // 5bCP6aO85by- '小飼弾'.toBase64URI(); // 5bCP6aO85by- ab alias of .toBase64(true) '小飼弾'.toBase64URL(); // 5bCP6aO85by- an alias of .toBase64URI() 'ZGFua29nYWk='.fromBase64(); // dankogai '5bCP6aO85by+'.fromBase64(); // 小飼弾 '5bCP6aO85by-'.fromBase64(); // 小飼弾 '5bCP6aO85by-'.toUint8Array();// u8s above ``` ```javascript // you have to explicitly extend Uint8Array.prototype Base64.extendUint8Array(); // once extended, you can do the following u8s.toBase64(); // 'ZGFua29nYWk=' u8s.toBase64URI(); // 'ZGFua29nYWk' u8s.toBase64URL(); // 'ZGFua29nYWk' an alias of .toBase64URI() ``` ```javascript // extend all at once Base64.extendBuiltins() ``` ## `.decode()` vs `.atob` (and `.encode()` vs `btoa()`) Suppose you have: ``` var pngBase64 = "iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAEAAAABCAQAAAC1HAwCAAAAC0lEQVR42mNkYAAAAAYAAjCB0C8AAAAASUVORK5CYII="; ``` Which is a Base64-encoded 1x1 transparent PNG, **DO NOT USE** `Base64.decode(pngBase64)`.  Use `Base64.atob(pngBase64)` instead.  `Base64.decode()` decodes to UTF-8 string while `Base64.atob()` decodes to bytes, which is compatible to browser built-in `atob()` (Which is absent in node.js).  The same rule applies to the opposite direction. Or even better, `Base64.toUint8Array(pngBase64)`. ### If you really, really need an ES5 version You can transpiles to an ES5 that runs on IEs before 11. Do the following in your shell. ```shell $ make base64.es5.js ``` ## Brief History * Since version 3.3 it is written in TypeScript. Now `base64.mjs` is compiled from `base64.ts` then `base64.js` is generated from `base64.mjs`. * Since version 3.7 `base64.js` is ES5-compatible again (hence IE11-compabile). * Since 3.0 `js-base64` switch to ES2015 module so it is no longer compatible with legacy browsers like IE (see above) Compiler frontend for node.js ============================= Usage ----- For an up to date list of available command line options, see: ``` $> asc --help ``` API --- The API accepts the same options as the CLI but also lets you override stdout and stderr and/or provide a callback. Example: ```js const asc = require("assemblyscript/cli/asc"); asc.ready.then(() => { asc.main([ "myModule.ts", "--binaryFile", "myModule.wasm", "--optimize", "--sourceMap", "--measure" ], { stdout: process.stdout, stderr: process.stderr }, function(err) { if (err) throw err; ... }); }); ``` Available command line options can also be obtained programmatically: ```js const options = require("assemblyscript/cli/asc.json"); ... ``` You can also compile a source string directly, for example in a browser environment: ```js const asc = require("assemblyscript/cli/asc"); asc.ready.then(() => { const { binary, text, stdout, stderr } = asc.compileString(`...`, { optimize: 2 }); }); ... ``` # regexpp [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/regexpp.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/regexpp) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/regexpp.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/regexpp) [![Build Status](https://github.com/mysticatea/regexpp/workflows/CI/badge.svg)](https://github.com/mysticatea/regexpp/actions) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/mysticatea/regexpp/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/mysticatea/regexpp) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/mysticatea/regexpp.svg)](https://david-dm.org/mysticatea/regexpp) A regular expression parser for ECMAScript. ## 💿 Installation ```bash $ npm install regexpp ``` - require Node.js 8 or newer. ## 📖 Usage ```ts import { AST, RegExpParser, RegExpValidator, RegExpVisitor, parseRegExpLiteral, validateRegExpLiteral, visitRegExpAST } from "regexpp" ``` ### parseRegExpLiteral(source, options?) Parse a given regular expression literal then make AST object. This is equivalent to `new RegExpParser(options).parseLiteral(source)`. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string | RegExp`) The source code to parse. - `options?` ([`RegExpParser.Options`]) The options to parse. - **Return:** - The AST of the regular expression. ### validateRegExpLiteral(source, options?) Validate a given regular expression literal. This is equivalent to `new RegExpValidator(options).validateLiteral(source)`. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to validate. - `options?` ([`RegExpValidator.Options`]) The options to validate. ### visitRegExpAST(ast, handlers) Visit each node of a given AST. This is equivalent to `new RegExpVisitor(handlers).visit(ast)`. - **Parameters:** - `ast` ([`AST.Node`]) The AST to visit. - `handlers` ([`RegExpVisitor.Handlers`]) The callbacks. ### RegExpParser #### new RegExpParser(options?) - **Parameters:** - `options?` ([`RegExpParser.Options`]) The options to parse. #### parser.parseLiteral(source, start?, end?) Parse a regular expression literal. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to parse. E.g. `"/abc/g"`. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. - **Return:** - The AST of the regular expression. #### parser.parsePattern(source, start?, end?, uFlag?) Parse a regular expression pattern. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to parse. E.g. `"abc"`. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. - `uFlag?` (`boolean`) The flag to enable Unicode mode. - **Return:** - The AST of the regular expression pattern. #### parser.parseFlags(source, start?, end?) Parse a regular expression flags. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to parse. E.g. `"gim"`. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. - **Return:** - The AST of the regular expression flags. ### RegExpValidator #### new RegExpValidator(options) - **Parameters:** - `options` ([`RegExpValidator.Options`]) The options to validate. #### validator.validateLiteral(source, start, end) Validate a regular expression literal. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to validate. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. #### validator.validatePattern(source, start, end, uFlag) Validate a regular expression pattern. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to validate. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. - `uFlag?` (`boolean`) The flag to enable Unicode mode. #### validator.validateFlags(source, start, end) Validate a regular expression flags. - **Parameters:** - `source` (`string`) The source code to validate. - `start?` (`number`) The start index in the source code. Default is `0`. - `end?` (`number`) The end index in the source code. Default is `source.length`. ### RegExpVisitor #### new RegExpVisitor(handlers) - **Parameters:** - `handlers` ([`RegExpVisitor.Handlers`]) The callbacks. #### visitor.visit(ast) Validate a regular expression literal. - **Parameters:** - `ast` ([`AST.Node`]) The AST to visit. ## 📰 Changelog - [GitHub Releases](https://github.com/mysticatea/regexpp/releases) ## 🍻 Contributing Welcome contributing! Please use GitHub's Issues/PRs. ### Development Tools - `npm test` runs tests and measures coverage. - `npm run build` compiles TypeScript source code to `index.js`, `index.js.map`, and `index.d.ts`. - `npm run clean` removes the temporary files which are created by `npm test` and `npm run build`. - `npm run lint` runs ESLint. - `npm run update:test` updates test fixtures. - `npm run update:ids` updates `src/unicode/ids.ts`. - `npm run watch` runs tests with `--watch` option. [`AST.Node`]: src/ast.ts#L4 [`RegExpParser.Options`]: src/parser.ts#L539 [`RegExpValidator.Options`]: src/validator.ts#L127 [`RegExpVisitor.Handlers`]: src/visitor.ts#L204 # wrappy Callback wrapping utility ## USAGE ```javascript var wrappy = require("wrappy") // var wrapper = wrappy(wrapperFunction) // make sure a cb is called only once // See also: http://npm.im/once for this specific use case var once = wrappy(function (cb) { var called = false return function () { if (called) return called = true return cb.apply(this, arguments) } }) function printBoo () { console.log('boo') } // has some rando property printBoo.iAmBooPrinter = true var onlyPrintOnce = once(printBoo) onlyPrintOnce() // prints 'boo' onlyPrintOnce() // does nothing // random property is retained! assert.equal(onlyPrintOnce.iAmBooPrinter, true) ``` semver(1) -- The semantic versioner for npm =========================================== ## Install ```bash npm install semver ```` ## Usage As a node module: ```js const semver = require('semver') semver.valid('1.2.3') // '1.2.3' semver.valid('a.b.c') // null semver.clean(' =v1.2.3 ') // '1.2.3' semver.satisfies('1.2.3', '1.x || >=2.5.0 || 5.0.0 - 7.2.3') // true semver.gt('1.2.3', '9.8.7') // false semver.lt('1.2.3', '9.8.7') // true semver.minVersion('>=1.0.0') // '1.0.0' semver.valid(semver.coerce('v2')) // '2.0.0' semver.valid(semver.coerce('42.6.7.9.3-alpha')) // '42.6.7' ``` You can also just load the module for the function that you care about, if you'd like to minimize your footprint. ```js // load the whole API at once in a single object const semver = require('semver') // or just load the bits you need // all of them listed here, just pick and choose what you want // classes const SemVer = require('semver/classes/semver') const Comparator = require('semver/classes/comparator') const Range = require('semver/classes/range') // functions for working with versions const semverParse = require('semver/functions/parse') const semverValid = require('semver/functions/valid') const semverClean = require('semver/functions/clean') const semverInc = require('semver/functions/inc') const semverDiff = require('semver/functions/diff') const semverMajor = require('semver/functions/major') const semverMinor = require('semver/functions/minor') const semverPatch = require('semver/functions/patch') const semverPrerelease = require('semver/functions/prerelease') const semverCompare = require('semver/functions/compare') const semverRcompare = require('semver/functions/rcompare') const semverCompareLoose = require('semver/functions/compare-loose') const semverCompareBuild = require('semver/functions/compare-build') const semverSort = require('semver/functions/sort') const semverRsort = require('semver/functions/rsort') // low-level comparators between versions const semverGt = require('semver/functions/gt') const semverLt = require('semver/functions/lt') const semverEq = require('semver/functions/eq') const semverNeq = require('semver/functions/neq') const semverGte = require('semver/functions/gte') const semverLte = require('semver/functions/lte') const semverCmp = require('semver/functions/cmp') const semverCoerce = require('semver/functions/coerce') // working with ranges const semverSatisfies = require('semver/functions/satisfies') const semverMaxSatisfying = require('semver/ranges/max-satisfying') const semverMinSatisfying = require('semver/ranges/min-satisfying') const semverToComparators = require('semver/ranges/to-comparators') const semverMinVersion = require('semver/ranges/min-version') const semverValidRange = require('semver/ranges/valid') const semverOutside = require('semver/ranges/outside') const semverGtr = require('semver/ranges/gtr') const semverLtr = require('semver/ranges/ltr') const semverIntersects = require('semver/ranges/intersects') const simplifyRange = require('semver/ranges/simplify') const rangeSubset = require('semver/ranges/subset') ``` As a command-line utility: ``` $ semver -h A JavaScript implementation of the https://semver.org/ specification Copyright Isaac Z. Schlueter Usage: semver [options] <version> [<version> [...]] Prints valid versions sorted by SemVer precedence Options: -r --range <range> Print versions that match the specified range. -i --increment [<level>] Increment a version by the specified level. Level can be one of: major, minor, patch, premajor, preminor, prepatch, or prerelease. Default level is 'patch'. Only one version may be specified. --preid <identifier> Identifier to be used to prefix premajor, preminor, prepatch or prerelease version increments. -l --loose Interpret versions and ranges loosely -p --include-prerelease Always include prerelease versions in range matching -c --coerce Coerce a string into SemVer if possible (does not imply --loose) --rtl Coerce version strings right to left --ltr Coerce version strings left to right (default) Program exits successfully if any valid version satisfies all supplied ranges, and prints all satisfying versions. If no satisfying versions are found, then exits failure. Versions are printed in ascending order, so supplying multiple versions to the utility will just sort them. ``` ## Versions A "version" is described by the `v2.0.0` specification found at <https://semver.org/>. A leading `"="` or `"v"` character is stripped off and ignored. ## Ranges A `version range` is a set of `comparators` which specify versions that satisfy the range. A `comparator` is composed of an `operator` and a `version`. The set of primitive `operators` is: * `<` Less than * `<=` Less than or equal to * `>` Greater than * `>=` Greater than or equal to * `=` Equal. If no operator is specified, then equality is assumed, so this operator is optional, but MAY be included. For example, the comparator `>=1.2.7` would match the versions `1.2.7`, `1.2.8`, `2.5.3`, and `1.3.9`, but not the versions `1.2.6` or `1.1.0`. Comparators can be joined by whitespace to form a `comparator set`, which is satisfied by the **intersection** of all of the comparators it includes. A range is composed of one or more comparator sets, joined by `||`. A version matches a range if and only if every comparator in at least one of the `||`-separated comparator sets is satisfied by the version. For example, the range `>=1.2.7 <1.3.0` would match the versions `1.2.7`, `1.2.8`, and `1.2.99`, but not the versions `1.2.6`, `1.3.0`, or `1.1.0`. The range `1.2.7 || >=1.2.9 <2.0.0` would match the versions `1.2.7`, `1.2.9`, and `1.4.6`, but not the versions `1.2.8` or `2.0.0`. ### Prerelease Tags If a version has a prerelease tag (for example, `1.2.3-alpha.3`) then it will only be allowed to satisfy comparator sets if at least one comparator with the same `[major, minor, patch]` tuple also has a prerelease tag. For example, the range `>1.2.3-alpha.3` would be allowed to match the version `1.2.3-alpha.7`, but it would *not* be satisfied by `3.4.5-alpha.9`, even though `3.4.5-alpha.9` is technically "greater than" `1.2.3-alpha.3` according to the SemVer sort rules. The version range only accepts prerelease tags on the `1.2.3` version. The version `3.4.5` *would* satisfy the range, because it does not have a prerelease flag, and `3.4.5` is greater than `1.2.3-alpha.7`. The purpose for this behavior is twofold. First, prerelease versions frequently are updated very quickly, and contain many breaking changes that are (by the author's design) not yet fit for public consumption. Therefore, by default, they are excluded from range matching semantics. Second, a user who has opted into using a prerelease version has clearly indicated the intent to use *that specific* set of alpha/beta/rc versions. By including a prerelease tag in the range, the user is indicating that they are aware of the risk. However, it is still not appropriate to assume that they have opted into taking a similar risk on the *next* set of prerelease versions. Note that this behavior can be suppressed (treating all prerelease versions as if they were normal versions, for the purpose of range matching) by setting the `includePrerelease` flag on the options object to any [functions](https://github.com/npm/node-semver#functions) that do range matching. #### Prerelease Identifiers The method `.inc` takes an additional `identifier` string argument that will append the value of the string as a prerelease identifier: ```javascript semver.inc('1.2.3', 'prerelease', 'beta') // '1.2.4-beta.0' ``` command-line example: ```bash $ semver 1.2.3 -i prerelease --preid beta 1.2.4-beta.0 ``` Which then can be used to increment further: ```bash $ semver 1.2.4-beta.0 -i prerelease 1.2.4-beta.1 ``` ### Advanced Range Syntax Advanced range syntax desugars to primitive comparators in deterministic ways. Advanced ranges may be combined in the same way as primitive comparators using white space or `||`. #### Hyphen Ranges `X.Y.Z - A.B.C` Specifies an inclusive set. * `1.2.3 - 2.3.4` := `>=1.2.3 <=2.3.4` If a partial version is provided as the first version in the inclusive range, then the missing pieces are replaced with zeroes. * `1.2 - 2.3.4` := `>=1.2.0 <=2.3.4` If a partial version is provided as the second version in the inclusive range, then all versions that start with the supplied parts of the tuple are accepted, but nothing that would be greater than the provided tuple parts. * `1.2.3 - 2.3` := `>=1.2.3 <2.4.0-0` * `1.2.3 - 2` := `>=1.2.3 <3.0.0-0` #### X-Ranges `1.2.x` `1.X` `1.2.*` `*` Any of `X`, `x`, or `*` may be used to "stand in" for one of the numeric values in the `[major, minor, patch]` tuple. * `*` := `>=0.0.0` (Any non-prerelease version satisfies, unless `includePrerelease` is specified, in which case any version at all satisfies) * `1.x` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0-0` (Matching major version) * `1.2.x` := `>=1.2.0 <1.3.0-0` (Matching major and minor versions) A partial version range is treated as an X-Range, so the special character is in fact optional. * `""` (empty string) := `*` := `>=0.0.0` * `1` := `1.x.x` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0-0` * `1.2` := `1.2.x` := `>=1.2.0 <1.3.0-0` #### Tilde Ranges `~1.2.3` `~1.2` `~1` Allows patch-level changes if a minor version is specified on the comparator. Allows minor-level changes if not. * `~1.2.3` := `>=1.2.3 <1.(2+1).0` := `>=1.2.3 <1.3.0-0` * `~1.2` := `>=1.2.0 <1.(2+1).0` := `>=1.2.0 <1.3.0-0` (Same as `1.2.x`) * `~1` := `>=1.0.0 <(1+1).0.0` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0-0` (Same as `1.x`) * `~0.2.3` := `>=0.2.3 <0.(2+1).0` := `>=0.2.3 <0.3.0-0` * `~0.2` := `>=0.2.0 <0.(2+1).0` := `>=0.2.0 <0.3.0-0` (Same as `0.2.x`) * `~0` := `>=0.0.0 <(0+1).0.0` := `>=0.0.0 <1.0.0-0` (Same as `0.x`) * `~1.2.3-beta.2` := `>=1.2.3-beta.2 <1.3.0-0` Note that prereleases in the `1.2.3` version will be allowed, if they are greater than or equal to `beta.2`. So, `1.2.3-beta.4` would be allowed, but `1.2.4-beta.2` would not, because it is a prerelease of a different `[major, minor, patch]` tuple. #### Caret Ranges `^1.2.3` `^0.2.5` `^0.0.4` Allows changes that do not modify the left-most non-zero element in the `[major, minor, patch]` tuple. In other words, this allows patch and minor updates for versions `1.0.0` and above, patch updates for versions `0.X >=0.1.0`, and *no* updates for versions `0.0.X`. Many authors treat a `0.x` version as if the `x` were the major "breaking-change" indicator. Caret ranges are ideal when an author may make breaking changes between `0.2.4` and `0.3.0` releases, which is a common practice. However, it presumes that there will *not* be breaking changes between `0.2.4` and `0.2.5`. It allows for changes that are presumed to be additive (but non-breaking), according to commonly observed practices. * `^1.2.3` := `>=1.2.3 <2.0.0-0` * `^0.2.3` := `>=0.2.3 <0.3.0-0` * `^0.0.3` := `>=0.0.3 <0.0.4-0` * `^1.2.3-beta.2` := `>=1.2.3-beta.2 <2.0.0-0` Note that prereleases in the `1.2.3` version will be allowed, if they are greater than or equal to `beta.2`. So, `1.2.3-beta.4` would be allowed, but `1.2.4-beta.2` would not, because it is a prerelease of a different `[major, minor, patch]` tuple. * `^0.0.3-beta` := `>=0.0.3-beta <0.0.4-0` Note that prereleases in the `0.0.3` version *only* will be allowed, if they are greater than or equal to `beta`. So, `0.0.3-pr.2` would be allowed. When parsing caret ranges, a missing `patch` value desugars to the number `0`, but will allow flexibility within that value, even if the major and minor versions are both `0`. * `^1.2.x` := `>=1.2.0 <2.0.0-0` * `^0.0.x` := `>=0.0.0 <0.1.0-0` * `^0.0` := `>=0.0.0 <0.1.0-0` A missing `minor` and `patch` values will desugar to zero, but also allow flexibility within those values, even if the major version is zero. * `^1.x` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0-0` * `^0.x` := `>=0.0.0 <1.0.0-0` ### Range Grammar Putting all this together, here is a Backus-Naur grammar for ranges, for the benefit of parser authors: ```bnf range-set ::= range ( logical-or range ) * logical-or ::= ( ' ' ) * '||' ( ' ' ) * range ::= hyphen | simple ( ' ' simple ) * | '' hyphen ::= partial ' - ' partial simple ::= primitive | partial | tilde | caret primitive ::= ( '<' | '>' | '>=' | '<=' | '=' ) partial partial ::= xr ( '.' xr ( '.' xr qualifier ? )? )? xr ::= 'x' | 'X' | '*' | nr nr ::= '0' | ['1'-'9'] ( ['0'-'9'] ) * tilde ::= '~' partial caret ::= '^' partial qualifier ::= ( '-' pre )? ( '+' build )? pre ::= parts build ::= parts parts ::= part ( '.' part ) * part ::= nr | [-0-9A-Za-z]+ ``` ## Functions All methods and classes take a final `options` object argument. All options in this object are `false` by default. The options supported are: - `loose` Be more forgiving about not-quite-valid semver strings. (Any resulting output will always be 100% strict compliant, of course.) For backwards compatibility reasons, if the `options` argument is a boolean value instead of an object, it is interpreted to be the `loose` param. - `includePrerelease` Set to suppress the [default behavior](https://github.com/npm/node-semver#prerelease-tags) of excluding prerelease tagged versions from ranges unless they are explicitly opted into. Strict-mode Comparators and Ranges will be strict about the SemVer strings that they parse. * `valid(v)`: Return the parsed version, or null if it's not valid. * `inc(v, release)`: Return the version incremented by the release type (`major`, `premajor`, `minor`, `preminor`, `patch`, `prepatch`, or `prerelease`), or null if it's not valid * `premajor` in one call will bump the version up to the next major version and down to a prerelease of that major version. `preminor`, and `prepatch` work the same way. * If called from a non-prerelease version, the `prerelease` will work the same as `prepatch`. It increments the patch version, then makes a prerelease. If the input version is already a prerelease it simply increments it. * `prerelease(v)`: Returns an array of prerelease components, or null if none exist. Example: `prerelease('1.2.3-alpha.1') -> ['alpha', 1]` * `major(v)`: Return the major version number. * `minor(v)`: Return the minor version number. * `patch(v)`: Return the patch version number. * `intersects(r1, r2, loose)`: Return true if the two supplied ranges or comparators intersect. * `parse(v)`: Attempt to parse a string as a semantic version, returning either a `SemVer` object or `null`. ### Comparison * `gt(v1, v2)`: `v1 > v2` * `gte(v1, v2)`: `v1 >= v2` * `lt(v1, v2)`: `v1 < v2` * `lte(v1, v2)`: `v1 <= v2` * `eq(v1, v2)`: `v1 == v2` This is true if they're logically equivalent, even if they're not the exact same string. You already know how to compare strings. * `neq(v1, v2)`: `v1 != v2` The opposite of `eq`. * `cmp(v1, comparator, v2)`: Pass in a comparison string, and it'll call the corresponding function above. `"==="` and `"!=="` do simple string comparison, but are included for completeness. Throws if an invalid comparison string is provided. * `compare(v1, v2)`: Return `0` if `v1 == v2`, or `1` if `v1` is greater, or `-1` if `v2` is greater. Sorts in ascending order if passed to `Array.sort()`. * `rcompare(v1, v2)`: The reverse of compare. Sorts an array of versions in descending order when passed to `Array.sort()`. * `compareBuild(v1, v2)`: The same as `compare` but considers `build` when two versions are equal. Sorts in ascending order if passed to `Array.sort()`. `v2` is greater. Sorts in ascending order if passed to `Array.sort()`. * `diff(v1, v2)`: Returns difference between two versions by the release type (`major`, `premajor`, `minor`, `preminor`, `patch`, `prepatch`, or `prerelease`), or null if the versions are the same. ### Comparators * `intersects(comparator)`: Return true if the comparators intersect ### Ranges * `validRange(range)`: Return the valid range or null if it's not valid * `satisfies(version, range)`: Return true if the version satisfies the range. * `maxSatisfying(versions, range)`: Return the highest version in the list that satisfies the range, or `null` if none of them do. * `minSatisfying(versions, range)`: Return the lowest version in the list that satisfies the range, or `null` if none of them do. * `minVersion(range)`: Return the lowest version that can possibly match the given range. * `gtr(version, range)`: Return `true` if version is greater than all the versions possible in the range. * `ltr(version, range)`: Return `true` if version is less than all the versions possible in the range. * `outside(version, range, hilo)`: Return true if the version is outside the bounds of the range in either the high or low direction. The `hilo` argument must be either the string `'>'` or `'<'`. (This is the function called by `gtr` and `ltr`.) * `intersects(range)`: Return true if any of the ranges comparators intersect * `simplifyRange(versions, range)`: Return a "simplified" range that matches the same items in `versions` list as the range specified. Note that it does *not* guarantee that it would match the same versions in all cases, only for the set of versions provided. This is useful when generating ranges by joining together multiple versions with `||` programmatically, to provide the user with something a bit more ergonomic. If the provided range is shorter in string-length than the generated range, then that is returned. * `subset(subRange, superRange)`: Return `true` if the `subRange` range is entirely contained by the `superRange` range. Note that, since ranges may be non-contiguous, a version might not be greater than a range, less than a range, *or* satisfy a range! For example, the range `1.2 <1.2.9 || >2.0.0` would have a hole from `1.2.9` until `2.0.0`, so the version `1.2.10` would not be greater than the range (because `2.0.1` satisfies, which is higher), nor less than the range (since `1.2.8` satisfies, which is lower), and it also does not satisfy the range. If you want to know if a version satisfies or does not satisfy a range, use the `satisfies(version, range)` function. ### Coercion * `coerce(version, options)`: Coerces a string to semver if possible This aims to provide a very forgiving translation of a non-semver string to semver. It looks for the first digit in a string, and consumes all remaining characters which satisfy at least a partial semver (e.g., `1`, `1.2`, `1.2.3`) up to the max permitted length (256 characters). Longer versions are simply truncated (`4.6.3.9.2-alpha2` becomes `4.6.3`). All surrounding text is simply ignored (`v3.4 replaces v3.3.1` becomes `3.4.0`). Only text which lacks digits will fail coercion (`version one` is not valid). The maximum length for any semver component considered for coercion is 16 characters; longer components will be ignored (`10000000000000000.4.7.4` becomes `4.7.4`). The maximum value for any semver component is `Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER || (2**53 - 1)`; higher value components are invalid (`9999999999999999.4.7.4` is likely invalid). If the `options.rtl` flag is set, then `coerce` will return the right-most coercible tuple that does not share an ending index with a longer coercible tuple. For example, `1.2.3.4` will return `2.3.4` in rtl mode, not `4.0.0`. `1.2.3/4` will return `4.0.0`, because the `4` is not a part of any other overlapping SemVer tuple. ### Clean * `clean(version)`: Clean a string to be a valid semver if possible This will return a cleaned and trimmed semver version. If the provided version is not valid a null will be returned. This does not work for ranges. ex. * `s.clean(' = v 2.1.5foo')`: `null` * `s.clean(' = v 2.1.5foo', { loose: true })`: `'2.1.5-foo'` * `s.clean(' = v 2.1.5-foo')`: `null` * `s.clean(' = v 2.1.5-foo', { loose: true })`: `'2.1.5-foo'` * `s.clean('=v2.1.5')`: `'2.1.5'` * `s.clean(' =v2.1.5')`: `2.1.5` * `s.clean(' 2.1.5 ')`: `'2.1.5'` * `s.clean('~1.0.0')`: `null` ## Exported Modules <!-- TODO: Make sure that all of these items are documented (classes aren't, eg), and then pull the module name into the documentation for that specific thing. --> You may pull in just the part of this semver utility that you need, if you are sensitive to packing and tree-shaking concerns. The main `require('semver')` export uses getter functions to lazily load the parts of the API that are used. The following modules are available: * `require('semver')` * `require('semver/classes')` * `require('semver/classes/comparator')` * `require('semver/classes/range')` * `require('semver/classes/semver')` * `require('semver/functions/clean')` * `require('semver/functions/cmp')` * `require('semver/functions/coerce')` * `require('semver/functions/compare')` * `require('semver/functions/compare-build')` * `require('semver/functions/compare-loose')` * `require('semver/functions/diff')` * `require('semver/functions/eq')` * `require('semver/functions/gt')` * `require('semver/functions/gte')` * `require('semver/functions/inc')` * `require('semver/functions/lt')` * `require('semver/functions/lte')` * `require('semver/functions/major')` * `require('semver/functions/minor')` * `require('semver/functions/neq')` * `require('semver/functions/parse')` * `require('semver/functions/patch')` * `require('semver/functions/prerelease')` * `require('semver/functions/rcompare')` * `require('semver/functions/rsort')` * `require('semver/functions/satisfies')` * `require('semver/functions/sort')` * `require('semver/functions/valid')` * `require('semver/ranges/gtr')` * `require('semver/ranges/intersects')` * `require('semver/ranges/ltr')` * `require('semver/ranges/max-satisfying')` * `require('semver/ranges/min-satisfying')` * `require('semver/ranges/min-version')` * `require('semver/ranges/outside')` * `require('semver/ranges/to-comparators')` * `require('semver/ranges/valid')` # axios // helpers The modules found in `helpers/` should be generic modules that are _not_ specific to the domain logic of axios. These modules could theoretically be published to npm on their own and consumed by other modules or apps. Some examples of generic modules are things like: - Browser polyfills - Managing cookies - Parsing HTTP headers [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/esprima.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/esprima) [![npm download](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/esprima.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/esprima) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jquery/esprima/master.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/jquery/esprima) [![Coverage Status](https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/jquery/esprima/master.svg)](https://codecov.io/github/jquery/esprima) **Esprima** ([esprima.org](http://esprima.org), BSD license) is a high performance, standard-compliant [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) parser written in ECMAScript (also popularly known as [JavaScript](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaScript)). Esprima is created and maintained by [Ariya Hidayat](https://twitter.com/ariyahidayat), with the help of [many contributors](https://github.com/jquery/esprima/contributors). ### Features - Full support for ECMAScript 2017 ([ECMA-262 8th Edition](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm)) - Sensible [syntax tree format](https://github.com/estree/estree/blob/master/es5.md) as standardized by [ESTree project](https://github.com/estree/estree) - Experimental support for [JSX](https://facebook.github.io/jsx/), a syntax extension for [React](https://facebook.github.io/react/) - Optional tracking of syntax node location (index-based and line-column) - [Heavily tested](http://esprima.org/test/ci.html) (~1500 [unit tests](https://github.com/jquery/esprima/tree/master/test/fixtures) with [full code coverage](https://codecov.io/github/jquery/esprima)) ### API Esprima can be used to perform [lexical analysis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexical_analysis) (tokenization) or [syntactic analysis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parsing) (parsing) of a JavaScript program. A simple example on Node.js REPL: ```javascript > var esprima = require('esprima'); > var program = 'const answer = 42'; > esprima.tokenize(program); [ { type: 'Keyword', value: 'const' }, { type: 'Identifier', value: 'answer' }, { type: 'Punctuator', value: '=' }, { type: 'Numeric', value: '42' } ] > esprima.parseScript(program); { type: 'Program', body: [ { type: 'VariableDeclaration', declarations: [Object], kind: 'const' } ], sourceType: 'script' } ``` For more information, please read the [complete documentation](http://esprima.org/doc). [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![build status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Test coverage][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url] [![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/eslint/doctrine](https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg)](https://gitter.im/eslint/doctrine?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge) # Doctrine Doctrine is a [JSDoc](http://usejsdoc.org) parser that parses documentation comments from JavaScript (you need to pass in the comment, not a whole JavaScript file). ## Installation You can install Doctrine using [npm](https://npmjs.com): ``` $ npm install doctrine --save-dev ``` Doctrine can also be used in web browsers using [Browserify](http://browserify.org). ## Usage Require doctrine inside of your JavaScript: ```js var doctrine = require("doctrine"); ``` ### parse() The primary method is `parse()`, which accepts two arguments: the JSDoc comment to parse and an optional options object. The available options are: * `unwrap` - set to `true` to delete the leading `/**`, any `*` that begins a line, and the trailing `*/` from the source text. Default: `false`. * `tags` - an array of tags to return. When specified, Doctrine returns only tags in this array. For example, if `tags` is `["param"]`, then only `@param` tags will be returned. Default: `null`. * `recoverable` - set to `true` to keep parsing even when syntax errors occur. Default: `false`. * `sloppy` - set to `true` to allow optional parameters to be specified in brackets (`@param {string} [foo]`). Default: `false`. * `lineNumbers` - set to `true` to add `lineNumber` to each node, specifying the line on which the node is found in the source. Default: `false`. * `range` - set to `true` to add `range` to each node, specifying the start and end index of the node in the original comment. Default: `false`. Here's a simple example: ```js var ast = doctrine.parse( [ "/**", " * This function comment is parsed by doctrine", " * @param {{ok:String}} userName", "*/" ].join('\n'), { unwrap: true }); ``` This example returns the following AST: { "description": "This function comment is parsed by doctrine", "tags": [ { "title": "param", "description": null, "type": { "type": "RecordType", "fields": [ { "type": "FieldType", "key": "ok", "value": { "type": "NameExpression", "name": "String" } } ] }, "name": "userName" } ] } See the [demo page](http://eslint.org/doctrine/demo/) more detail. ## Team These folks keep the project moving and are resources for help: * Nicholas C. Zakas ([@nzakas](https://github.com/nzakas)) - project lead * Yusuke Suzuki ([@constellation](https://github.com/constellation)) - reviewer ## Contributing Issues and pull requests will be triaged and responded to as quickly as possible. We operate under the [ESLint Contributor Guidelines](http://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing), so please be sure to read them before contributing. If you're not sure where to dig in, check out the [issues](https://github.com/eslint/doctrine/issues). ## Frequently Asked Questions ### Can I pass a whole JavaScript file to Doctrine? No. Doctrine can only parse JSDoc comments, so you'll need to pass just the JSDoc comment to Doctrine in order to work. ### License #### doctrine Copyright JS Foundation and other contributors, https://js.foundation Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. #### esprima some of functions is derived from esprima Copyright (C) 2012, 2011 [Ariya Hidayat](http://ariya.ofilabs.com/about) (twitter: [@ariyahidayat](http://twitter.com/ariyahidayat)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. #### closure-compiler some of extensions is derived from closure-compiler Apache License Version 2.0, January 2004 http://www.apache.org/licenses/ ### Where to ask for help? Join our [Chatroom](https://gitter.im/eslint/doctrine) [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/doctrine.svg?style=flat-square [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/doctrine [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/eslint/doctrine/master.svg?style=flat-square [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/eslint/doctrine [coveralls-image]: https://img.shields.io/coveralls/eslint/doctrine/master.svg?style=flat-square [coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/r/eslint/doctrine?branch=master [downloads-image]: http://img.shields.io/npm/dm/doctrine.svg?style=flat-square [downloads-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/doctrine # ShellJS - Unix shell commands for Node.js [![Travis](https://img.shields.io/travis/shelljs/shelljs/master.svg?style=flat-square&label=unix)](https://travis-ci.org/shelljs/shelljs) [![AppVeyor](https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/shelljs/shelljs/master.svg?style=flat-square&label=windows)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/shelljs/shelljs/branch/master) [![Codecov](https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/shelljs/shelljs/master.svg?style=flat-square&label=coverage)](https://codecov.io/gh/shelljs/shelljs) [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/shelljs.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/shelljs) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/shelljs.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/shelljs) ShellJS is a portable **(Windows/Linux/OS X)** implementation of Unix shell commands on top of the Node.js API. You can use it to eliminate your shell script's dependency on Unix while still keeping its familiar and powerful commands. You can also install it globally so you can run it from outside Node projects - say goodbye to those gnarly Bash scripts! ShellJS is proudly tested on every node release since `v4`! The project is [unit-tested](http://travis-ci.org/shelljs/shelljs) and battle-tested in projects like: + [Firebug](http://getfirebug.com/) - Firefox's infamous debugger + [JSHint](http://jshint.com) & [ESLint](http://eslint.org/) - popular JavaScript linters + [Zepto](http://zeptojs.com) - jQuery-compatible JavaScript library for modern browsers + [Yeoman](http://yeoman.io/) - Web application stack and development tool + [Deployd.com](http://deployd.com) - Open source PaaS for quick API backend generation + And [many more](https://npmjs.org/browse/depended/shelljs). If you have feedback, suggestions, or need help, feel free to post in our [issue tracker](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/issues). Think ShellJS is cool? Check out some related projects in our [Wiki page](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/wiki)! Upgrading from an older version? Check out our [breaking changes](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/wiki/Breaking-Changes) page to see what changes to watch out for while upgrading. ## Command line use If you just want cross platform UNIX commands, checkout our new project [shelljs/shx](https://github.com/shelljs/shx), a utility to expose `shelljs` to the command line. For example: ``` $ shx mkdir -p foo $ shx touch foo/bar.txt $ shx rm -rf foo ``` ## Plugin API ShellJS now supports third-party plugins! You can learn more about using plugins and writing your own ShellJS commands in [the wiki](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/wiki/Using-ShellJS-Plugins). ## A quick note about the docs For documentation on all the latest features, check out our [README](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs). To read docs that are consistent with the latest release, check out [the npm page](https://www.npmjs.com/package/shelljs) or [shelljs.org](http://documentup.com/shelljs/shelljs). ## Installing Via npm: ```bash $ npm install [-g] shelljs ``` ## Examples ```javascript var shell = require('shelljs'); if (!shell.which('git')) { shell.echo('Sorry, this script requires git'); shell.exit(1); } // Copy files to release dir shell.rm('-rf', 'out/Release'); shell.cp('-R', 'stuff/', 'out/Release'); // Replace macros in each .js file shell.cd('lib'); shell.ls('*.js').forEach(function (file) { shell.sed('-i', 'BUILD_VERSION', 'v0.1.2', file); shell.sed('-i', /^.*REMOVE_THIS_LINE.*$/, '', file); shell.sed('-i', /.*REPLACE_LINE_WITH_MACRO.*\n/, shell.cat('macro.js'), file); }); shell.cd('..'); // Run external tool synchronously if (shell.exec('git commit -am "Auto-commit"').code !== 0) { shell.echo('Error: Git commit failed'); shell.exit(1); } ``` ## Exclude options If you need to pass a parameter that looks like an option, you can do so like: ```js shell.grep('--', '-v', 'path/to/file'); // Search for "-v", no grep options shell.cp('-R', '-dir', 'outdir'); // If already using an option, you're done ``` ## Global vs. Local We no longer recommend using a global-import for ShellJS (i.e. `require('shelljs/global')`). While still supported for convenience, this pollutes the global namespace, and should therefore only be used with caution. Instead, we recommend a local import (standard for npm packages): ```javascript var shell = require('shelljs'); shell.echo('hello world'); ``` <!-- DO NOT MODIFY BEYOND THIS POINT - IT'S AUTOMATICALLY GENERATED --> ## Command reference All commands run synchronously, unless otherwise stated. All commands accept standard bash globbing characters (`*`, `?`, etc.), compatible with the [node `glob` module](https://github.com/isaacs/node-glob). For less-commonly used commands and features, please check out our [wiki page](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs/wiki). ### cat([options,] file [, file ...]) ### cat([options,] file_array) Available options: + `-n`: number all output lines Examples: ```javascript var str = cat('file*.txt'); var str = cat('file1', 'file2'); var str = cat(['file1', 'file2']); // same as above ``` Returns a string containing the given file, or a concatenated string containing the files if more than one file is given (a new line character is introduced between each file). ### cd([dir]) Changes to directory `dir` for the duration of the script. Changes to home directory if no argument is supplied. ### chmod([options,] octal_mode || octal_string, file) ### chmod([options,] symbolic_mode, file) Available options: + `-v`: output a diagnostic for every file processed + `-c`: like verbose, but report only when a change is made + `-R`: change files and directories recursively Examples: ```javascript chmod(755, '/Users/brandon'); chmod('755', '/Users/brandon'); // same as above chmod('u+x', '/Users/brandon'); chmod('-R', 'a-w', '/Users/brandon'); ``` Alters the permissions of a file or directory by either specifying the absolute permissions in octal form or expressing the changes in symbols. This command tries to mimic the POSIX behavior as much as possible. Notable exceptions: + In symbolic modes, `a-r` and `-r` are identical. No consideration is given to the `umask`. + There is no "quiet" option, since default behavior is to run silent. ### cp([options,] source [, source ...], dest) ### cp([options,] source_array, dest) Available options: + `-f`: force (default behavior) + `-n`: no-clobber + `-u`: only copy if `source` is newer than `dest` + `-r`, `-R`: recursive + `-L`: follow symlinks + `-P`: don't follow symlinks Examples: ```javascript cp('file1', 'dir1'); cp('-R', 'path/to/dir/', '~/newCopy/'); cp('-Rf', '/tmp/*', '/usr/local/*', '/home/tmp'); cp('-Rf', ['/tmp/*', '/usr/local/*'], '/home/tmp'); // same as above ``` Copies files. ### pushd([options,] [dir | '-N' | '+N']) Available options: + `-n`: Suppresses the normal change of directory when adding directories to the stack, so that only the stack is manipulated. + `-q`: Supresses output to the console. Arguments: + `dir`: Sets the current working directory to the top of the stack, then executes the equivalent of `cd dir`. + `+N`: Brings the Nth directory (counting from the left of the list printed by dirs, starting with zero) to the top of the list by rotating the stack. + `-N`: Brings the Nth directory (counting from the right of the list printed by dirs, starting with zero) to the top of the list by rotating the stack. Examples: ```javascript // process.cwd() === '/usr' pushd('/etc'); // Returns /etc /usr pushd('+1'); // Returns /usr /etc ``` Save the current directory on the top of the directory stack and then `cd` to `dir`. With no arguments, `pushd` exchanges the top two directories. Returns an array of paths in the stack. ### popd([options,] ['-N' | '+N']) Available options: + `-n`: Suppress the normal directory change when removing directories from the stack, so that only the stack is manipulated. + `-q`: Supresses output to the console. Arguments: + `+N`: Removes the Nth directory (counting from the left of the list printed by dirs), starting with zero. + `-N`: Removes the Nth directory (counting from the right of the list printed by dirs), starting with zero. Examples: ```javascript echo(process.cwd()); // '/usr' pushd('/etc'); // '/etc /usr' echo(process.cwd()); // '/etc' popd(); // '/usr' echo(process.cwd()); // '/usr' ``` When no arguments are given, `popd` removes the top directory from the stack and performs a `cd` to the new top directory. The elements are numbered from 0, starting at the first directory listed with dirs (i.e., `popd` is equivalent to `popd +0`). Returns an array of paths in the stack. ### dirs([options | '+N' | '-N']) Available options: + `-c`: Clears the directory stack by deleting all of the elements. + `-q`: Supresses output to the console. Arguments: + `+N`: Displays the Nth directory (counting from the left of the list printed by dirs when invoked without options), starting with zero. + `-N`: Displays the Nth directory (counting from the right of the list printed by dirs when invoked without options), starting with zero. Display the list of currently remembered directories. Returns an array of paths in the stack, or a single path if `+N` or `-N` was specified. See also: `pushd`, `popd` ### echo([options,] string [, string ...]) Available options: + `-e`: interpret backslash escapes (default) + `-n`: remove trailing newline from output Examples: ```javascript echo('hello world'); var str = echo('hello world'); echo('-n', 'no newline at end'); ``` Prints `string` to stdout, and returns string with additional utility methods like `.to()`. ### exec(command [, options] [, callback]) Available options: + `async`: Asynchronous execution. If a callback is provided, it will be set to `true`, regardless of the passed value (default: `false`). + `silent`: Do not echo program output to console (default: `false`). + `encoding`: Character encoding to use. Affects the values returned to stdout and stderr, and what is written to stdout and stderr when not in silent mode (default: `'utf8'`). + and any option available to Node.js's [`child_process.exec()`](https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_process_child_process_exec_command_options_callback) Examples: ```javascript var version = exec('node --version', {silent:true}).stdout; var child = exec('some_long_running_process', {async:true}); child.stdout.on('data', function(data) { /* ... do something with data ... */ }); exec('some_long_running_process', function(code, stdout, stderr) { console.log('Exit code:', code); console.log('Program output:', stdout); console.log('Program stderr:', stderr); }); ``` Executes the given `command` _synchronously_, unless otherwise specified. When in synchronous mode, this returns a `ShellString` (compatible with ShellJS v0.6.x, which returns an object of the form `{ code:..., stdout:... , stderr:... }`). Otherwise, this returns the child process object, and the `callback` receives the arguments `(code, stdout, stderr)`. Not seeing the behavior you want? `exec()` runs everything through `sh` by default (or `cmd.exe` on Windows), which differs from `bash`. If you need bash-specific behavior, try out the `{shell: 'path/to/bash'}` option. ### find(path [, path ...]) ### find(path_array) Examples: ```javascript find('src', 'lib'); find(['src', 'lib']); // same as above find('.').filter(function(file) { return file.match(/\.js$/); }); ``` Returns array of all files (however deep) in the given paths. The main difference from `ls('-R', path)` is that the resulting file names include the base directories (e.g., `lib/resources/file1` instead of just `file1`). ### grep([options,] regex_filter, file [, file ...]) ### grep([options,] regex_filter, file_array) Available options: + `-v`: Invert `regex_filter` (only print non-matching lines). + `-l`: Print only filenames of matching files. + `-i`: Ignore case. Examples: ```javascript grep('-v', 'GLOBAL_VARIABLE', '*.js'); grep('GLOBAL_VARIABLE', '*.js'); ``` Reads input string from given files and returns a string containing all lines of the file that match the given `regex_filter`. ### head([{'-n': \<num\>},] file [, file ...]) ### head([{'-n': \<num\>},] file_array) Available options: + `-n <num>`: Show the first `<num>` lines of the files Examples: ```javascript var str = head({'-n': 1}, 'file*.txt'); var str = head('file1', 'file2'); var str = head(['file1', 'file2']); // same as above ``` Read the start of a file. ### ln([options,] source, dest) Available options: + `-s`: symlink + `-f`: force Examples: ```javascript ln('file', 'newlink'); ln('-sf', 'file', 'existing'); ``` Links `source` to `dest`. Use `-f` to force the link, should `dest` already exist. ### ls([options,] [path, ...]) ### ls([options,] path_array) Available options: + `-R`: recursive + `-A`: all files (include files beginning with `.`, except for `.` and `..`) + `-L`: follow symlinks + `-d`: list directories themselves, not their contents + `-l`: list objects representing each file, each with fields containing `ls -l` output fields. See [`fs.Stats`](https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_class_fs_stats) for more info Examples: ```javascript ls('projs/*.js'); ls('-R', '/users/me', '/tmp'); ls('-R', ['/users/me', '/tmp']); // same as above ls('-l', 'file.txt'); // { name: 'file.txt', mode: 33188, nlink: 1, ...} ``` Returns array of files in the given `path`, or files in the current directory if no `path` is provided. ### mkdir([options,] dir [, dir ...]) ### mkdir([options,] dir_array) Available options: + `-p`: full path (and create intermediate directories, if necessary) Examples: ```javascript mkdir('-p', '/tmp/a/b/c/d', '/tmp/e/f/g'); mkdir('-p', ['/tmp/a/b/c/d', '/tmp/e/f/g']); // same as above ``` Creates directories. ### mv([options ,] source [, source ...], dest') ### mv([options ,] source_array, dest') Available options: + `-f`: force (default behavior) + `-n`: no-clobber Examples: ```javascript mv('-n', 'file', 'dir/'); mv('file1', 'file2', 'dir/'); mv(['file1', 'file2'], 'dir/'); // same as above ``` Moves `source` file(s) to `dest`. ### pwd() Returns the current directory. ### rm([options,] file [, file ...]) ### rm([options,] file_array) Available options: + `-f`: force + `-r, -R`: recursive Examples: ```javascript rm('-rf', '/tmp/*'); rm('some_file.txt', 'another_file.txt'); rm(['some_file.txt', 'another_file.txt']); // same as above ``` Removes files. ### sed([options,] search_regex, replacement, file [, file ...]) ### sed([options,] search_regex, replacement, file_array) Available options: + `-i`: Replace contents of `file` in-place. _Note that no backups will be created!_ Examples: ```javascript sed('-i', 'PROGRAM_VERSION', 'v0.1.3', 'source.js'); sed(/.*DELETE_THIS_LINE.*\n/, '', 'source.js'); ``` Reads an input string from `file`s, and performs a JavaScript `replace()` on the input using the given `search_regex` and `replacement` string or function. Returns the new string after replacement. Note: Like unix `sed`, ShellJS `sed` supports capture groups. Capture groups are specified using the `$n` syntax: ```javascript sed(/(\w+)\s(\w+)/, '$2, $1', 'file.txt'); ``` ### set(options) Available options: + `+/-e`: exit upon error (`config.fatal`) + `+/-v`: verbose: show all commands (`config.verbose`) + `+/-f`: disable filename expansion (globbing) Examples: ```javascript set('-e'); // exit upon first error set('+e'); // this undoes a "set('-e')" ``` Sets global configuration variables. ### sort([options,] file [, file ...]) ### sort([options,] file_array) Available options: + `-r`: Reverse the results + `-n`: Compare according to numerical value Examples: ```javascript sort('foo.txt', 'bar.txt'); sort('-r', 'foo.txt'); ``` Return the contents of the `file`s, sorted line-by-line. Sorting multiple files mixes their content (just as unix `sort` does). ### tail([{'-n': \<num\>},] file [, file ...]) ### tail([{'-n': \<num\>},] file_array) Available options: + `-n <num>`: Show the last `<num>` lines of `file`s Examples: ```javascript var str = tail({'-n': 1}, 'file*.txt'); var str = tail('file1', 'file2'); var str = tail(['file1', 'file2']); // same as above ``` Read the end of a `file`. ### tempdir() Examples: ```javascript var tmp = tempdir(); // "/tmp" for most *nix platforms ``` Searches and returns string containing a writeable, platform-dependent temporary directory. Follows Python's [tempfile algorithm](http://docs.python.org/library/tempfile.html#tempfile.tempdir). ### test(expression) Available expression primaries: + `'-b', 'path'`: true if path is a block device + `'-c', 'path'`: true if path is a character device + `'-d', 'path'`: true if path is a directory + `'-e', 'path'`: true if path exists + `'-f', 'path'`: true if path is a regular file + `'-L', 'path'`: true if path is a symbolic link + `'-p', 'path'`: true if path is a pipe (FIFO) + `'-S', 'path'`: true if path is a socket Examples: ```javascript if (test('-d', path)) { /* do something with dir */ }; if (!test('-f', path)) continue; // skip if it's a regular file ``` Evaluates `expression` using the available primaries and returns corresponding value. ### ShellString.prototype.to(file) Examples: ```javascript cat('input.txt').to('output.txt'); ``` Analogous to the redirection operator `>` in Unix, but works with `ShellStrings` (such as those returned by `cat`, `grep`, etc.). _Like Unix redirections, `to()` will overwrite any existing file!_ ### ShellString.prototype.toEnd(file) Examples: ```javascript cat('input.txt').toEnd('output.txt'); ``` Analogous to the redirect-and-append operator `>>` in Unix, but works with `ShellStrings` (such as those returned by `cat`, `grep`, etc.). ### touch([options,] file [, file ...]) ### touch([options,] file_array) Available options: + `-a`: Change only the access time + `-c`: Do not create any files + `-m`: Change only the modification time + `-d DATE`: Parse `DATE` and use it instead of current time + `-r FILE`: Use `FILE`'s times instead of current time Examples: ```javascript touch('source.js'); touch('-c', '/path/to/some/dir/source.js'); touch({ '-r': FILE }, '/path/to/some/dir/source.js'); ``` Update the access and modification times of each `FILE` to the current time. A `FILE` argument that does not exist is created empty, unless `-c` is supplied. This is a partial implementation of [`touch(1)`](http://linux.die.net/man/1/touch). ### uniq([options,] [input, [output]]) Available options: + `-i`: Ignore case while comparing + `-c`: Prefix lines by the number of occurrences + `-d`: Only print duplicate lines, one for each group of identical lines Examples: ```javascript uniq('foo.txt'); uniq('-i', 'foo.txt'); uniq('-cd', 'foo.txt', 'bar.txt'); ``` Filter adjacent matching lines from `input`. ### which(command) Examples: ```javascript var nodeExec = which('node'); ``` Searches for `command` in the system's `PATH`. On Windows, this uses the `PATHEXT` variable to append the extension if it's not already executable. Returns string containing the absolute path to `command`. ### exit(code) Exits the current process with the given exit `code`. ### error() Tests if error occurred in the last command. Returns a truthy value if an error returned, or a falsy value otherwise. **Note**: do not rely on the return value to be an error message. If you need the last error message, use the `.stderr` attribute from the last command's return value instead. ### ShellString(str) Examples: ```javascript var foo = ShellString('hello world'); ``` Turns a regular string into a string-like object similar to what each command returns. This has special methods, like `.to()` and `.toEnd()`. ### env['VAR_NAME'] Object containing environment variables (both getter and setter). Shortcut to `process.env`. ### Pipes Examples: ```javascript grep('foo', 'file1.txt', 'file2.txt').sed(/o/g, 'a').to('output.txt'); echo('files with o\'s in the name:\n' + ls().grep('o')); cat('test.js').exec('node'); // pipe to exec() call ``` Commands can send their output to another command in a pipe-like fashion. `sed`, `grep`, `cat`, `exec`, `to`, and `toEnd` can appear on the right-hand side of a pipe. Pipes can be chained. ## Configuration ### config.silent Example: ```javascript var sh = require('shelljs'); var silentState = sh.config.silent; // save old silent state sh.config.silent = true; /* ... */ sh.config.silent = silentState; // restore old silent state ``` Suppresses all command output if `true`, except for `echo()` calls. Default is `false`. ### config.fatal Example: ```javascript require('shelljs/global'); config.fatal = true; // or set('-e'); cp('this_file_does_not_exist', '/dev/null'); // throws Error here /* more commands... */ ``` If `true`, the script will throw a Javascript error when any shell.js command encounters an error. Default is `false`. This is analogous to Bash's `set -e`. ### config.verbose Example: ```javascript config.verbose = true; // or set('-v'); cd('dir/'); rm('-rf', 'foo.txt', 'bar.txt'); exec('echo hello'); ``` Will print each command as follows: ``` cd dir/ rm -rf foo.txt bar.txt exec echo hello ``` ### config.globOptions Example: ```javascript config.globOptions = {nodir: true}; ``` Use this value for calls to `glob.sync()` instead of the default options. ### config.reset() Example: ```javascript var shell = require('shelljs'); // Make changes to shell.config, and do stuff... /* ... */ shell.config.reset(); // reset to original state // Do more stuff, but with original settings /* ... */ ``` Reset `shell.config` to the defaults: ```javascript { fatal: false, globOptions: {}, maxdepth: 255, noglob: false, silent: false, verbose: false, } ``` ## Team | [![Nate Fischer](https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/5801521?s=130)](https://github.com/nfischer) | [![Brandon Freitag](https://avatars1.githubusercontent.com/u/5988055?v=3&s=130)](http://github.com/freitagbr) | |:---:|:---:| | [Nate Fischer](https://github.com/nfischer) | [Brandon Freitag](http://github.com/freitagbr) | # URI.js URI.js is an [RFC 3986](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3986.txt) compliant, scheme extendable URI parsing/validating/resolving library for all JavaScript environments (browsers, Node.js, etc). It is also compliant with the IRI ([RFC 3987](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt)), IDNA ([RFC 5890](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5890.txt)), IPv6 Address ([RFC 5952](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5952.txt)), IPv6 Zone Identifier ([RFC 6874](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc6874.txt)) specifications. URI.js has an extensive test suite, and works in all (Node.js, web) environments. It weighs in at 6.4kb (gzipped, 17kb deflated). ## API ### Parsing URI.parse("uri://user:[email protected]:123/one/two.three?q1=a1&q2=a2#body"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "uri", // userinfo : "user:pass", // host : "example.com", // port : 123, // path : "/one/two.three", // query : "q1=a1&q2=a2", // fragment : "body" //} ### Serializing URI.serialize({scheme : "http", host : "example.com", fragment : "footer"}) === "http://example.com/#footer" ### Resolving URI.resolve("uri://a/b/c/d?q", "../../g") === "uri://a/g" ### Normalizing URI.normalize("HTTP://ABC.com:80/%7Esmith/home.html") === "http://abc.com/~smith/home.html" ### Comparison URI.equal("example://a/b/c/%7Bfoo%7D", "eXAMPLE://a/./b/../b/%63/%7bfoo%7d") === true ### IP Support //IPv4 normalization URI.normalize("//192.068.001.000") === "//192.68.1.0" //IPv6 normalization URI.normalize("//[2001:0:0DB8::0:0001]") === "//[2001:0:db8::1]" //IPv6 zone identifier support URI.parse("//[2001:db8::7%25en1]"); //returns: //{ // host : "2001:db8::7%en1" //} ### IRI Support //convert IRI to URI URI.serialize(URI.parse("http://examplé.org/rosé")) === "http://xn--exampl-gva.org/ros%C3%A9" //convert URI to IRI URI.serialize(URI.parse("http://xn--exampl-gva.org/ros%C3%A9"), {iri:true}) === "http://examplé.org/rosé" ### Options All of the above functions can accept an additional options argument that is an object that can contain one or more of the following properties: * `scheme` (string) Indicates the scheme that the URI should be treated as, overriding the URI's normal scheme parsing behavior. * `reference` (string) If set to `"suffix"`, it indicates that the URI is in the suffix format, and the validator will use the option's `scheme` property to determine the URI's scheme. * `tolerant` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the parser will relax URI resolving rules. * `absolutePath` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the serializer will not resolve a relative `path` component. * `iri` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the serializer will unescape non-ASCII characters as per [RFC 3987](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt). * `unicodeSupport` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the parser will unescape non-ASCII characters in the parsed output as per [RFC 3987](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt). * `domainHost` (boolean, false) If set to `true`, the library will treat the `host` component as a domain name, and convert IDNs (International Domain Names) as per [RFC 5891](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5891.txt). ## Scheme Extendable URI.js supports inserting custom [scheme](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URI_scheme) dependent processing rules. Currently, URI.js has built in support for the following schemes: * http \[[RFC 2616](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt)\] * https \[[RFC 2818](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2818.txt)\] * ws \[[RFC 6455](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc6455.txt)\] * wss \[[RFC 6455](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc6455.txt)\] * mailto \[[RFC 6068](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc6068.txt)\] * urn \[[RFC 2141](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2141.txt)\] * urn:uuid \[[RFC 4122](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4122.txt)\] ### HTTP/HTTPS Support URI.equal("HTTP://ABC.COM:80", "http://abc.com/") === true URI.equal("https://abc.com", "HTTPS://ABC.COM:443/") === true ### WS/WSS Support URI.parse("wss://example.com/foo?bar=baz"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "wss", // host: "example.com", // resourceName: "/foo?bar=baz", // secure: true, //} URI.equal("WS://ABC.COM:80/chat#one", "ws://abc.com/chat") === true ### Mailto Support URI.parse("mailto:[email protected],[email protected]?subject=SUBSCRIBE&body=Sign%20me%20up!"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "mailto", // to : ["[email protected]", "[email protected]"], // subject : "SUBSCRIBE", // body : "Sign me up!" //} URI.serialize({ scheme : "mailto", to : ["[email protected]"], subject : "REMOVE", body : "Please remove me", headers : { cc : "[email protected]" } }) === "mailto:[email protected][email protected]&subject=REMOVE&body=Please%20remove%20me" ### URN Support URI.parse("urn:example:foo"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "urn", // nid : "example", // nss : "foo", //} #### URN UUID Support URI.parse("urn:uuid:f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6"); //returns: //{ // scheme : "urn", // nid : "uuid", // uuid : "f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6", //} ## Usage To load in a browser, use the following tag: <script type="text/javascript" src="uri-js/dist/es5/uri.all.min.js"></script> To load in a CommonJS/Module environment, first install with npm/yarn by running on the command line: npm install uri-js # OR yarn add uri-js Then, in your code, load it using: const URI = require("uri-js"); If you are writing your code in ES6+ (ESNEXT) or TypeScript, you would load it using: import * as URI from "uri-js"; Or you can load just what you need using named exports: import { parse, serialize, resolve, resolveComponents, normalize, equal, removeDotSegments, pctEncChar, pctDecChars, escapeComponent, unescapeComponent } from "uri-js"; ## Breaking changes ### Breaking changes from 3.x URN parsing has been completely changed to better align with the specification. Scheme is now always `urn`, but has two new properties: `nid` which contains the Namspace Identifier, and `nss` which contains the Namespace Specific String. The `nss` property will be removed by higher order scheme handlers, such as the UUID URN scheme handler. The UUID of a URN can now be found in the `uuid` property. ### Breaking changes from 2.x URI validation has been removed as it was slow, exposed a vulnerabilty, and was generally not useful. ### Breaking changes from 1.x The `errors` array on parsed components is now an `error` string. # base-x [![NPM Package](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/base-x.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/base-x) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/cryptocoinjs/base-x.svg?branch=master&style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/cryptocoinjs/base-x) [![js-standard-style](https://cdn.rawgit.com/feross/standard/master/badge.svg)](https://github.com/feross/standard) Fast base encoding / decoding of any given alphabet using bitcoin style leading zero compression. **WARNING:** This module is **NOT RFC3548** compliant, it cannot be used for base16 (hex), base32, or base64 encoding in a standards compliant manner. ## Example Base58 ``` javascript var BASE58 = '123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz' var bs58 = require('base-x')(BASE58) var decoded = bs58.decode('5Kd3NBUAdUnhyzenEwVLy9pBKxSwXvE9FMPyR4UKZvpe6E3AgLr') console.log(decoded) // => <Buffer 80 ed db dc 11 68 f1 da ea db d3 e4 4c 1e 3f 8f 5a 28 4c 20 29 f7 8a d2 6a f9 85 83 a4 99 de 5b 19> console.log(bs58.encode(decoded)) // => 5Kd3NBUAdUnhyzenEwVLy9pBKxSwXvE9FMPyR4UKZvpe6E3AgLr ``` ### Alphabets See below for a list of commonly recognized alphabets, and their respective base. Base | Alphabet ------------- | ------------- 2 | `01` 8 | `01234567` 11 | `0123456789a` 16 | `0123456789abcdef` 32 | `0123456789ABCDEFGHJKMNPQRSTVWXYZ` 32 | `ybndrfg8ejkmcpqxot1uwisza345h769` (z-base-32) 36 | `0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz` 58 | `123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz` 62 | `0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ` 64 | `ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/` 67 | `ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789-_.!~` ## How it works It encodes octet arrays by doing long divisions on all significant digits in the array, creating a representation of that number in the new base. Then for every leading zero in the input (not significant as a number) it will encode as a single leader character. This is the first in the alphabet and will decode as 8 bits. The other characters depend upon the base. For example, a base58 alphabet packs roughly 5.858 bits per character. This means the encoded string 000f (using a base16, 0-f alphabet) will actually decode to 4 bytes unlike a canonical hex encoding which uniformly packs 4 bits into each character. While unusual, this does mean that no padding is required and it works for bases like 43. ## LICENSE [MIT](LICENSE) A direct derivation of the base58 implementation from [`bitcoin/bitcoin`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/f1e2f2a85962c1664e4e55471061af0eaa798d40/src/base58.cpp), generalized for variable length alphabets. <p align="center"> <a href="https://gulpjs.com"> <img height="257" width="114" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/gulpjs/artwork/master/gulp-2x.png"> </a> </p> # glob-parent [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][npm-url] [![Azure Pipelines Build Status][azure-pipelines-image]][azure-pipelines-url] [![Travis Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![AppVeyor Build Status][appveyor-image]][appveyor-url] [![Coveralls Status][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url] [![Gitter chat][gitter-image]][gitter-url] Extract the non-magic parent path from a glob string. ## Usage ```js var globParent = require('glob-parent'); globParent('path/to/*.js'); // 'path/to' globParent('/root/path/to/*.js'); // '/root/path/to' globParent('/*.js'); // '/' globParent('*.js'); // '.' globParent('**/*.js'); // '.' globParent('path/{to,from}'); // 'path' globParent('path/!(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/?(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/+(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/*(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/@(to|from)'); // 'path' globParent('path/**/*'); // 'path' // if provided a non-glob path, returns the nearest dir globParent('path/foo/bar.js'); // 'path/foo' globParent('path/foo/'); // 'path/foo' globParent('path/foo'); // 'path' (see issue #3 for details) ``` ## API ### `globParent(maybeGlobString, [options])` Takes a string and returns the part of the path before the glob begins. Be aware of Escaping rules and Limitations below. #### options ```js { // Disables the automatic conversion of slashes for Windows flipBackslashes: true } ``` ## Escaping The following characters have special significance in glob patterns and must be escaped if you want them to be treated as regular path characters: - `?` (question mark) unless used as a path segment alone - `*` (asterisk) - `|` (pipe) - `(` (opening parenthesis) - `)` (closing parenthesis) - `{` (opening curly brace) - `}` (closing curly brace) - `[` (opening bracket) - `]` (closing bracket) **Example** ```js globParent('foo/[bar]/') // 'foo' globParent('foo/\\[bar]/') // 'foo/[bar]' ``` ## Limitations ### Braces & Brackets This library attempts a quick and imperfect method of determining which path parts have glob magic without fully parsing/lexing the pattern. There are some advanced use cases that can trip it up, such as nested braces where the outer pair is escaped and the inner one contains a path separator. If you find yourself in the unlikely circumstance of being affected by this or need to ensure higher-fidelity glob handling in your library, it is recommended that you pre-process your input with [expand-braces] and/or [expand-brackets]. ### Windows Backslashes are not valid path separators for globs. If a path with backslashes is provided anyway, for simple cases, glob-parent will replace the path separator for you and return the non-glob parent path (now with forward-slashes, which are still valid as Windows path separators). This cannot be used in conjunction with escape characters. ```js // BAD globParent('C:\\Program Files \\(x86\\)\\*.ext') // 'C:/Program Files /(x86/)' // GOOD globParent('C:/Program Files\\(x86\\)/*.ext') // 'C:/Program Files (x86)' ``` If you are using escape characters for a pattern without path parts (i.e. relative to `cwd`), prefix with `./` to avoid confusing glob-parent. ```js // BAD globParent('foo \\[bar]') // 'foo ' globParent('foo \\[bar]*') // 'foo ' // GOOD globParent('./foo \\[bar]') // 'foo [bar]' globParent('./foo \\[bar]*') // '.' ``` ## License ISC [expand-braces]: https://github.com/jonschlinkert/expand-braces [expand-brackets]: https://github.com/jonschlinkert/expand-brackets [downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/glob-parent.svg [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/glob-parent [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/glob-parent.svg [azure-pipelines-url]: https://dev.azure.com/gulpjs/gulp/_build/latest?definitionId=2&branchName=master [azure-pipelines-image]: https://dev.azure.com/gulpjs/gulp/_apis/build/status/glob-parent?branchName=master [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/gulpjs/glob-parent [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/gulpjs/glob-parent.svg?label=travis-ci [appveyor-url]: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/gulpjs/glob-parent [appveyor-image]: https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/gulpjs/glob-parent.svg?label=appveyor [coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/r/gulpjs/glob-parent [coveralls-image]: https://img.shields.io/coveralls/gulpjs/glob-parent/master.svg [gitter-url]: https://gitter.im/gulpjs/gulp [gitter-image]: https://badges.gitter.im/gulpjs/gulp.svg # lodash.merge v4.6.2 The [Lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.merge` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.merge ``` In Node.js: ```js var merge = require('lodash.merge'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#merge) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.6.2-npm-packages/lodash.merge) for more details. # ESLint Scope ESLint Scope is the [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) scope analyzer used in ESLint. It is a fork of [escope](http://github.com/estools/escope). ## Usage Install: ``` npm i eslint-scope --save ``` Example: ```js var eslintScope = require('eslint-scope'); var espree = require('espree'); var estraverse = require('estraverse'); var ast = espree.parse(code); var scopeManager = eslintScope.analyze(ast); var currentScope = scopeManager.acquire(ast); // global scope estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function(node, parent) { // do stuff if (/Function/.test(node.type)) { currentScope = scopeManager.acquire(node); // get current function scope } }, leave: function(node, parent) { if (/Function/.test(node.type)) { currentScope = currentScope.upper; // set to parent scope } // do stuff } }); ``` ## Contributing Issues and pull requests will be triaged and responded to as quickly as possible. We operate under the [ESLint Contributor Guidelines](http://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing), so please be sure to read them before contributing. If you're not sure where to dig in, check out the [issues](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-scope/issues). ## Build Commands * `npm test` - run all linting and tests * `npm run lint` - run all linting ## License ESLint Scope is licensed under a permissive BSD 2-clause license. # flat-cache > A stupidly simple key/value storage using files to persist the data [![NPM Version](http://img.shields.io/npm/v/flat-cache.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/flat-cache) [![Build Status](https://api.travis-ci.org/royriojas/flat-cache.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/royriojas/flat-cache) ## install ```bash npm i --save flat-cache ``` ## Usage ```js var flatCache = require('flat-cache') // loads the cache, if one does not exists for the given // Id a new one will be prepared to be created var cache = flatCache.load('cacheId'); // sets a key on the cache cache.setKey('key', { foo: 'var' }); // get a key from the cache cache.getKey('key') // { foo: 'var' } // fetch the entire persisted object cache.all() // { 'key': { foo: 'var' } } // remove a key cache.removeKey('key'); // removes a key from the cache // save it to disk cache.save(); // very important, if you don't save no changes will be persisted. // cache.save( true /* noPrune */) // can be used to prevent the removal of non visited keys // loads the cache from a given directory, if one does // not exists for the given Id a new one will be prepared to be created var cache = flatCache.load('cacheId', path.resolve('./path/to/folder')); // The following methods are useful to clear the cache // delete a given cache flatCache.clearCacheById('cacheId') // removes the cacheId document if one exists. // delete all cache flatCache.clearAll(); // remove the cache directory ``` ## Motivation for this module I needed a super simple and dumb **in-memory cache** with optional disk persistance in order to make a script that will beutify files with `esformatter` only execute on the files that were changed since the last run. To make that possible we need to store the `fileSize` and `modificationTime` of the files. So a simple `key/value` storage was needed and Bam! this module was born. ## Important notes - If no directory is especified when the `load` method is called, a folder named `.cache` will be created inside the module directory when `cache.save` is called. If you're committing your `node_modules` to any vcs, you might want to ignore the default `.cache` folder, or specify a custom directory. - The values set on the keys of the cache should be `stringify-able` ones, meaning no circular references - All the changes to the cache state are done to memory - I could have used a timer or `Object.observe` to deliver the changes to disk, but I wanted to keep this module intentionally dumb and simple - Non visited keys are removed when `cache.save()` is called. If this is not desired, you can pass `true` to the save call like: `cache.save( true /* noPrune */ )`. ## License MIT ## Changelog [changelog](./changelog.md) ## Follow Redirects Drop-in replacement for Nodes `http` and `https` that automatically follows redirects. [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/follow-redirects.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/follow-redirects) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/follow-redirects/follow-redirects/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/follow-redirects/follow-redirects?branch=master) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects.svg)](https://david-dm.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/follow-redirects.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/follow-redirects) `follow-redirects` provides [request](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback) and [get](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_get_options_callback) methods that behave identically to those found on the native [http](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback) and [https](https://nodejs.org/api/https.html#https_https_request_options_callback) modules, with the exception that they will seamlessly follow redirects. ```javascript var http = require('follow-redirects').http; var https = require('follow-redirects').https; http.get('http://bit.ly/900913', function (response) { response.on('data', function (chunk) { console.log(chunk); }); }).on('error', function (err) { console.error(err); }); ``` You can inspect the final redirected URL through the `responseUrl` property on the `response`. If no redirection happened, `responseUrl` is the original request URL. ```javascript https.request({ host: 'bitly.com', path: '/UHfDGO', }, function (response) { console.log(response.responseUrl); // 'http://duckduckgo.com/robots.txt' }); ``` ## Options ### Global options Global options are set directly on the `follow-redirects` module: ```javascript var followRedirects = require('follow-redirects'); followRedirects.maxRedirects = 10; followRedirects.maxBodyLength = 20 * 1024 * 1024; // 20 MB ``` The following global options are supported: - `maxRedirects` (default: `21`) – sets the maximum number of allowed redirects; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. - `maxBodyLength` (default: 10MB) – sets the maximum size of the request body; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. ### Per-request options Per-request options are set by passing an `options` object: ```javascript var url = require('url'); var followRedirects = require('follow-redirects'); var options = url.parse('http://bit.ly/900913'); options.maxRedirects = 10; http.request(options); ``` In addition to the [standard HTTP](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback) and [HTTPS options](https://nodejs.org/api/https.html#https_https_request_options_callback), the following per-request options are supported: - `followRedirects` (default: `true`) – whether redirects should be followed. - `maxRedirects` (default: `21`) – sets the maximum number of allowed redirects; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. - `maxBodyLength` (default: 10MB) – sets the maximum size of the request body; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. - `agents` (default: `undefined`) – sets the `agent` option per protocol, since HTTP and HTTPS use different agents. Example value: `{ http: new http.Agent(), https: new https.Agent() }` - `trackRedirects` (default: `false`) – whether to store the redirected response details into the `redirects` array on the response object. ### Advanced usage By default, `follow-redirects` will use the Node.js default implementations of [`http`](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html) and [`https`](https://nodejs.org/api/https.html). To enable features such as caching and/or intermediate request tracking, you might instead want to wrap `follow-redirects` around custom protocol implementations: ```javascript var followRedirects = require('follow-redirects').wrap({ http: require('your-custom-http'), https: require('your-custom-https'), }); ``` Such custom protocols only need an implementation of the `request` method. ## Browserify Usage Due to the way `XMLHttpRequest` works, the `browserify` versions of `http` and `https` already follow redirects. If you are *only* targeting the browser, then this library has little value for you. If you want to write cross platform code for node and the browser, `follow-redirects` provides a great solution for making the native node modules behave the same as they do in browserified builds in the browser. To avoid bundling unnecessary code you should tell browserify to swap out `follow-redirects` with the standard modules when bundling. To make this easier, you need to change how you require the modules: ```javascript var http = require('follow-redirects/http'); var https = require('follow-redirects/https'); ``` You can then replace `follow-redirects` in your browserify configuration like so: ```javascript "browser": { "follow-redirects/http" : "http", "follow-redirects/https" : "https" } ``` The `browserify-http` module has not kept pace with node development, and no long behaves identically to the native module when running in the browser. If you are experiencing problems, you may want to check out [browserify-http-2](https://www.npmjs.com/package/http-browserify-2). It is more actively maintained and attempts to address a few of the shortcomings of `browserify-http`. In that case, your browserify config should look something like this: ```javascript "browser": { "follow-redirects/http" : "browserify-http-2/http", "follow-redirects/https" : "browserify-http-2/https" } ``` ## Contributing Pull Requests are always welcome. Please [file an issue](https://github.com/follow-redirects/follow-redirects/issues) detailing your proposal before you invest your valuable time. Additional features and bug fixes should be accompanied by tests. You can run the test suite locally with a simple `npm test` command. ## Debug Logging `follow-redirects` uses the excellent [debug](https://www.npmjs.com/package/debug) for logging. To turn on logging set the environment variable `DEBUG=follow-redirects` for debug output from just this module. When running the test suite it is sometimes advantageous to set `DEBUG=*` to see output from the express server as well. ## Authors - Olivier Lalonde ([email protected]) - James Talmage ([email protected]) - [Ruben Verborgh](https://ruben.verborgh.org/) ## License [https://github.com/follow-redirects/follow-redirects/blob/master/LICENSE](MIT License) # AssemblyScript Rtrace A tiny utility to sanitize the AssemblyScript runtime. Records allocations and frees performed by the runtime and emits an error if something is off. Also checks for leaks. Instructions ------------ Compile your module that uses the full or half runtime with `-use ASC_RTRACE=1 --explicitStart` and include an instance of this module as the import named `rtrace`. ```js const rtrace = new Rtrace({ onerror(err, info) { // handle error }, oninfo(msg) { // print message, optional }, getMemory() { // obtain the module's memory, // e.g. with --explicitStart: return instance.exports.memory; } }); const { module, instance } = await WebAssembly.instantiate(..., rtrace.install({ ...imports... }) ); instance.exports._start(); ... if (rtrace.active) { let leakCount = rtr.check(); if (leakCount) { // handle error } } ``` Note that references in globals which are not cleared before collection is performed appear as leaks, including their inner members. A TypedArray would leak itself and its backing ArrayBuffer in this case for example. This is perfectly normal and clearing all globals avoids this. blockvote Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [AssemblyScript] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install [Node.js] ≥ 12 Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `assembly/index.ts`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard AssemblyScript tests using [as-pect]. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [AssemblyScript]: https://www.assemblyscript.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [as-pect]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli # Punycode.js [![Build status](https://travis-ci.org/bestiejs/punycode.js.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/bestiejs/punycode.js) [![Code coverage status](http://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/bestiejs/punycode.js.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/bestiejs/punycode.js) [![Dependency status](https://gemnasium.com/bestiejs/punycode.js.svg)](https://gemnasium.com/bestiejs/punycode.js) Punycode.js is a robust Punycode converter that fully complies to [RFC 3492](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3492) and [RFC 5891](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5891). This JavaScript library is the result of comparing, optimizing and documenting different open-source implementations of the Punycode algorithm: * [The C example code from RFC 3492](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3492#appendix-C) * [`punycode.c` by _Markus W. Scherer_ (IBM)](http://opensource.apple.com/source/ICU/ICU-400.42/icuSources/common/punycode.c) * [`punycode.c` by _Ben Noordhuis_](https://github.com/bnoordhuis/punycode/blob/master/punycode.c) * [JavaScript implementation by _some_](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/183485/can-anyone-recommend-a-good-free-javascript-for-punycode-to-unicode-conversion/301287#301287) * [`punycode.js` by _Ben Noordhuis_](https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/426298c8c1c0d5b5224ac3658c41e7c2a3fe9377/lib/punycode.js) (note: [not fully compliant](https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/2072)) This project was [bundled](https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/master/lib/punycode.js) with Node.js from [v0.6.2+](https://github.com/joyent/node/compare/975f1930b1...61e796decc) until [v7](https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/7941) (soft-deprecated). The current version supports recent versions of Node.js only. It provides a CommonJS module and an ES6 module. For the old version that offers the same functionality with broader support, including Rhino, Ringo, Narwhal, and web browsers, see [v1.4.1](https://github.com/bestiejs/punycode.js/releases/tag/v1.4.1). ## Installation Via [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```bash npm install punycode --save ``` In [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/): ```js const punycode = require('punycode'); ``` ## API ### `punycode.decode(string)` Converts a Punycode string of ASCII symbols to a string of Unicode symbols. ```js // decode domain name parts punycode.decode('maana-pta'); // 'mañana' punycode.decode('--dqo34k'); // '☃-⌘' ``` ### `punycode.encode(string)` Converts a string of Unicode symbols to a Punycode string of ASCII symbols. ```js // encode domain name parts punycode.encode('mañana'); // 'maana-pta' punycode.encode('☃-⌘'); // '--dqo34k' ``` ### `punycode.toUnicode(input)` Converts a Punycode string representing a domain name or an email address to Unicode. Only the Punycoded parts of the input will be converted, i.e. it doesn’t matter if you call it on a string that has already been converted to Unicode. ```js // decode domain names punycode.toUnicode('xn--maana-pta.com'); // → 'mañana.com' punycode.toUnicode('xn----dqo34k.com'); // → '☃-⌘.com' // decode email addresses punycode.toUnicode('джумла@xn--p-8sbkgc5ag7bhce.xn--ba-lmcq'); // → 'джумла@джpумлатест.bрфa' ``` ### `punycode.toASCII(input)` Converts a lowercased Unicode string representing a domain name or an email address to Punycode. Only the non-ASCII parts of the input will be converted, i.e. it doesn’t matter if you call it with a domain that’s already in ASCII. ```js // encode domain names punycode.toASCII('mañana.com'); // → 'xn--maana-pta.com' punycode.toASCII('☃-⌘.com'); // → 'xn----dqo34k.com' // encode email addresses punycode.toASCII('джумла@джpумлатест.bрфa'); // → 'джумла@xn--p-8sbkgc5ag7bhce.xn--ba-lmcq' ``` ### `punycode.ucs2` #### `punycode.ucs2.decode(string)` Creates an array containing the numeric code point values of each Unicode symbol in the string. While [JavaScript uses UCS-2 internally](https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/javascript-encoding), this function will convert a pair of surrogate halves (each of which UCS-2 exposes as separate characters) into a single code point, matching UTF-16. ```js punycode.ucs2.decode('abc'); // → [0x61, 0x62, 0x63] // surrogate pair for U+1D306 TETRAGRAM FOR CENTRE: punycode.ucs2.decode('\uD834\uDF06'); // → [0x1D306] ``` #### `punycode.ucs2.encode(codePoints)` Creates a string based on an array of numeric code point values. ```js punycode.ucs2.encode([0x61, 0x62, 0x63]); // → 'abc' punycode.ucs2.encode([0x1D306]); // → '\uD834\uDF06' ``` ### `punycode.version` A string representing the current Punycode.js version number. ## Author | [![twitter/mathias](https://gravatar.com/avatar/24e08a9ea84deb17ae121074d0f17125?s=70)](https://twitter.com/mathias "Follow @mathias on Twitter") | |---| | [Mathias Bynens](https://mathiasbynens.be/) | ## License Punycode.js is available under the [MIT](https://mths.be/mit) license. # which-module > Find the module object for something that was require()d [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/nexdrew/which-module.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/nexdrew/which-module) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/nexdrew/which-module/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/nexdrew/which-module?branch=master) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) Find the `module` object in `require.cache` for something that was `require()`d or `import`ed - essentially a reverse `require()` lookup. Useful for libs that want to e.g. lookup a filename for a module or submodule that it did not `require()` itself. ## Install and Usage ``` npm install --save which-module ``` ```js const whichModule = require('which-module') console.log(whichModule(require('something'))) // Module { // id: '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/index.js', // exports: [Function], // parent: ..., // filename: '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/index.js', // loaded: true, // children: [], // paths: [ '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/node_modules', // '/path/to/project/node_modules', // '/path/to/node_modules', // '/path/node_modules', // '/node_modules' ] } ``` ## API ### `whichModule(exported)` Return the [`module` object](https://nodejs.org/api/modules.html#modules_the_module_object), if any, that represents the given argument in the `require.cache`. `exported` can be anything that was previously `require()`d or `import`ed as a module, submodule, or dependency - which means `exported` is identical to the `module.exports` returned by this method. If `exported` did not come from the `exports` of a `module` in `require.cache`, then this method returns `null`. ## License ISC © Contributors [![NPM registry](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/as-bignum.svg?style=for-the-badge)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/as-bignum)[![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/master?style=for-the-badge)](https://travis-ci.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum)[![NPM license](https://img.shields.io/badge/license-Apache%202.0-ba68c8.svg?style=for-the-badge)](LICENSE.md) ## WebAssembly fixed length big numbers written on [AssemblyScript](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript) ### Status: Work in progress Provide wide numeric types such as `u128`, `u256`, `i128`, `i256` and fixed points and also its arithmetic operations. Namespace `safe` contain equivalents with overflow/underflow traps. All kind of types pretty useful for economical and cryptographic usages and provide deterministic behavior. ### Install > yarn add as-bignum or > npm i as-bignum ### Usage via AssemblyScript ```ts import { u128 } from "as-bignum"; declare function logF64(value: f64): void; declare function logU128(hi: u64, lo: u64): void; var a = u128.One; var b = u128.from(-32); // same as u128.from<i32>(-32) var c = new u128(0x1, -0xF); var d = u128.from(0x0123456789ABCDEF); // same as u128.from<i64>(0x0123456789ABCDEF) var e = u128.from('0x0123456789ABCDEF01234567'); var f = u128.fromString('11100010101100101', 2); // same as u128.from('0b11100010101100101') var r = d / c + (b << 5) + e; logF64(r.as<f64>()); logU128(r.hi, r.lo); ``` ### Usage via JavaScript/Typescript ```ts TODO ``` ### List of types - [x] [`u128`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/integer/u128.ts) unsigned type (tested) - [ ] [`u256`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/integer/u256.ts) unsigned type (very basic) - [ ] `i128` signed type - [ ] `i256` signed type --- - [x] [`safe.u128`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/integer/safe/u128.ts) unsigned type (tested) - [ ] `safe.u256` unsigned type - [ ] `safe.i128` signed type - [ ] `safe.i256` signed type --- - [ ] [`fp128<Q>`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/fixed/fp128.ts) generic fixed point signed type٭ (very basic for now) - [ ] `fp256<Q>` generic fixed point signed type٭ --- - [ ] `safe.fp128<Q>` generic fixed point signed type٭ - [ ] `safe.fp256<Q>` generic fixed point signed type٭ ٭ _typename_ `Q` _is a type representing count of fractional bits_ <img align="right" alt="Ajv logo" width="160" src="https://ajv.js.org/images/ajv_logo.png"> # Ajv: Another JSON Schema Validator The fastest JSON Schema validator for Node.js and browser. Supports draft-04/06/07. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/ajv-validator/ajv.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/ajv-validator/ajv) [![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/ajv.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv) [![npm (beta)](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/ajv/beta)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv/v/7.0.0-beta.0) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/ajv.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/ajv-validator/ajv/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/ajv-validator/ajv?branch=master) [![Gitter](https://img.shields.io/gitter/room/ajv-validator/ajv.svg)](https://gitter.im/ajv-validator/ajv) [![GitHub Sponsors](https://img.shields.io/badge/$-sponsors-brightgreen)](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) ## Ajv v7 beta is released [Ajv version 7.0.0-beta.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/tree/v7-beta) is released with these changes: - to reduce the mistakes in JSON schemas and unexpected validation results, [strict mode](./docs/strict-mode.md) is added - it prohibits ignored or ambiguous JSON Schema elements. - to make code injection from untrusted schemas impossible, [code generation](./docs/codegen.md) is fully re-written to be safe. - to simplify Ajv extensions, the new keyword API that is used by pre-defined keywords is available to user-defined keywords - it is much easier to define any keywords now, especially with subschemas. - schemas are compiled to ES6 code (ES5 code generation is supported with an option). - to improve reliability and maintainability the code is migrated to TypeScript. **Please note**: - the support for JSON-Schema draft-04 is removed - if you have schemas using "id" attributes you have to replace them with "\$id" (or continue using version 6 that will be supported until 02/28/2021). - all formats are separated to ajv-formats package - they have to be explicitely added if you use them. See [release notes](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v7.0.0-beta.0) for the details. To install the new version: ```bash npm install ajv@beta ``` See [Getting started with v7](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/tree/v7-beta#usage) for code example. ## Mozilla MOSS grant and OpenJS Foundation [<img src="https://www.poberezkin.com/images/mozilla.png" width="240" height="68">](https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/moss/) &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; [<img src="https://www.poberezkin.com/images/openjs.png" width="220" height="68">](https://openjsf.org/blog/2020/08/14/ajv-joins-openjs-foundation-as-an-incubation-project/) Ajv has been awarded a grant from Mozilla’s [Open Source Support (MOSS) program](https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/moss/) in the “Foundational Technology” track! It will sponsor the development of Ajv support of [JSON Schema version 2019-09](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-handrews-json-schema-02) and of [JSON Type Definition](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ucarion-json-type-definition-04). Ajv also joined [OpenJS Foundation](https://openjsf.org/) – having this support will help ensure the longevity and stability of Ajv for all its users. This [blog post](https://www.poberezkin.com/posts/2020-08-14-ajv-json-validator-mozilla-open-source-grant-openjs-foundation.html) has more details. I am looking for the long term maintainers of Ajv – working with [ReadySet](https://www.thereadyset.co/), also sponsored by Mozilla, to establish clear guidelines for the role of a "maintainer" and the contribution standards, and to encourage a wider, more inclusive, contribution from the community. ## Please [sponsor Ajv development](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) Since I asked to support Ajv development 40 people and 6 organizations contributed via GitHub and OpenCollective - this support helped receiving the MOSS grant! Your continuing support is very important - the funds will be used to develop and maintain Ajv once the next major version is released. Please sponsor Ajv via: - [GitHub sponsors page](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) (GitHub will match it) - [Ajv Open Collective️](https://opencollective.com/ajv) Thank you. #### Open Collective sponsors <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/individuals.svg?width=890"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/0/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/0/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/1/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/1/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/2/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/2/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/3/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/3/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/4/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/4/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/5/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/5/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/6/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/6/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/7/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/7/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/8/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/8/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/9/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/9/avatar.svg"></a> ## Using version 6 [JSON Schema draft-07](http://json-schema.org/latest/json-schema-validation.html) is published. [Ajv version 6.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v6.0.0) that supports draft-07 is released. It may require either migrating your schemas or updating your code (to continue using draft-04 and v5 schemas, draft-06 schemas will be supported without changes). __Please note__: To use Ajv with draft-06 schemas you need to explicitly add the meta-schema to the validator instance: ```javascript ajv.addMetaSchema(require('ajv/lib/refs/json-schema-draft-06.json')); ``` To use Ajv with draft-04 schemas in addition to explicitly adding meta-schema you also need to use option schemaId: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({schemaId: 'id'}); // If you want to use both draft-04 and draft-06/07 schemas: // var ajv = new Ajv({schemaId: 'auto'}); ajv.addMetaSchema(require('ajv/lib/refs/json-schema-draft-04.json')); ``` ## Contents - [Performance](#performance) - [Features](#features) - [Getting started](#getting-started) - [Frequently Asked Questions](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/FAQ.md) - [Using in browser](#using-in-browser) - [Ajv and Content Security Policies (CSP)](#ajv-and-content-security-policies-csp) - [Command line interface](#command-line-interface) - Validation - [Keywords](#validation-keywords) - [Annotation keywords](#annotation-keywords) - [Formats](#formats) - [Combining schemas with $ref](#ref) - [$data reference](#data-reference) - NEW: [$merge and $patch keywords](#merge-and-patch-keywords) - [Defining custom keywords](#defining-custom-keywords) - [Asynchronous schema compilation](#asynchronous-schema-compilation) - [Asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation) - [Security considerations](#security-considerations) - [Security contact](#security-contact) - [Untrusted schemas](#untrusted-schemas) - [Circular references in objects](#circular-references-in-javascript-objects) - [Trusted schemas](#security-risks-of-trusted-schemas) - [ReDoS attack](#redos-attack) - Modifying data during validation - [Filtering data](#filtering-data) - [Assigning defaults](#assigning-defaults) - [Coercing data types](#coercing-data-types) - API - [Methods](#api) - [Options](#options) - [Validation errors](#validation-errors) - [Plugins](#plugins) - [Related packages](#related-packages) - [Some packages using Ajv](#some-packages-using-ajv) - [Tests, Contributing, Changes history](#tests) - [Support, Code of conduct, License](#open-source-software-support) ## Performance Ajv generates code using [doT templates](https://github.com/olado/doT) to turn JSON Schemas into super-fast validation functions that are efficient for v8 optimization. Currently Ajv is the fastest and the most standard compliant validator according to these benchmarks: - [json-schema-benchmark](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark) - 50% faster than the second place - [jsck benchmark](https://github.com/pandastrike/jsck#benchmarks) - 20-190% faster - [z-schema benchmark](https://rawgit.com/zaggino/z-schema/master/benchmark/results.html) - [themis benchmark](https://cdn.rawgit.com/playlyfe/themis/master/benchmark/results.html) Performance of different validators by [json-schema-benchmark](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark): [![performance](https://chart.googleapis.com/chart?chxt=x,y&cht=bhs&chco=76A4FB&chls=2.0&chbh=32,4,1&chs=600x416&chxl=-1:|djv|ajv|json-schema-validator-generator|jsen|is-my-json-valid|themis|z-schema|jsck|skeemas|json-schema-library|tv4&chd=t:100,98,72.1,66.8,50.1,15.1,6.1,3.8,1.2,0.7,0.2)](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark/blob/master/README.md#performance) ## Features - Ajv implements full JSON Schema [draft-06/07](http://json-schema.org/) and draft-04 standards: - all validation keywords (see [JSON Schema validation keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md)) - full support of remote refs (remote schemas have to be added with `addSchema` or compiled to be available) - support of circular references between schemas - correct string lengths for strings with unicode pairs (can be turned off) - [formats](#formats) defined by JSON Schema draft-07 standard and custom formats (can be turned off) - [validates schemas against meta-schema](#api-validateschema) - supports [browsers](#using-in-browser) and Node.js 0.10-14.x - [asynchronous loading](#asynchronous-schema-compilation) of referenced schemas during compilation - "All errors" validation mode with [option allErrors](#options) - [error messages with parameters](#validation-errors) describing error reasons to allow creating custom error messages - i18n error messages support with [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n) package - [filtering data](#filtering-data) from additional properties - [assigning defaults](#assigning-defaults) to missing properties and items - [coercing data](#coercing-data-types) to the types specified in `type` keywords - [custom keywords](#defining-custom-keywords) - draft-06/07 keywords `const`, `contains`, `propertyNames` and `if/then/else` - draft-06 boolean schemas (`true`/`false` as a schema to always pass/fail). - keywords `switch`, `patternRequired`, `formatMaximum` / `formatMinimum` and `formatExclusiveMaximum` / `formatExclusiveMinimum` from [JSON Schema extension proposals](https://github.com/json-schema/json-schema/wiki/v5-Proposals) with [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package - [$data reference](#data-reference) to use values from the validated data as values for the schema keywords - [asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation) of custom formats and keywords ## Install ``` npm install ajv ``` ## <a name="usage"></a>Getting started Try it in the Node.js REPL: https://tonicdev.com/npm/ajv The fastest validation call: ```javascript // Node.js require: var Ajv = require('ajv'); // or ESM/TypeScript import import Ajv from 'ajv'; var ajv = new Ajv(); // options can be passed, e.g. {allErrors: true} var validate = ajv.compile(schema); var valid = validate(data); if (!valid) console.log(validate.errors); ``` or with less code ```javascript // ... var valid = ajv.validate(schema, data); if (!valid) console.log(ajv.errors); // ... ``` or ```javascript // ... var valid = ajv.addSchema(schema, 'mySchema') .validate('mySchema', data); if (!valid) console.log(ajv.errorsText()); // ... ``` See [API](#api) and [Options](#options) for more details. Ajv compiles schemas to functions and caches them in all cases (using schema serialized with [fast-json-stable-stringify](https://github.com/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify) or a custom function as a key), so that the next time the same schema is used (not necessarily the same object instance) it won't be compiled again. The best performance is achieved when using compiled functions returned by `compile` or `getSchema` methods (there is no additional function call). __Please note__: every time a validation function or `ajv.validate` are called `errors` property is overwritten. You need to copy `errors` array reference to another variable if you want to use it later (e.g., in the callback). See [Validation errors](#validation-errors) __Note for TypeScript users__: `ajv` provides its own TypeScript declarations out of the box, so you don't need to install the deprecated `@types/ajv` module. ## Using in browser You can require Ajv directly from the code you browserify - in this case Ajv will be a part of your bundle. If you need to use Ajv in several bundles you can create a separate UMD bundle using `npm run bundle` script (thanks to [siddo420](https://github.com/siddo420)). Then you need to load Ajv in the browser: ```html <script src="ajv.min.js"></script> ``` This bundle can be used with different module systems; it creates global `Ajv` if no module system is found. The browser bundle is available on [cdnjs](https://cdnjs.com/libraries/ajv). Ajv is tested with these browsers: [![Sauce Test Status](https://saucelabs.com/browser-matrix/epoberezkin.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/epoberezkin) __Please note__: some frameworks, e.g. Dojo, may redefine global require in such way that is not compatible with CommonJS module format. In such case Ajv bundle has to be loaded before the framework and then you can use global Ajv (see issue [#234](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/234)). ### Ajv and Content Security Policies (CSP) If you're using Ajv to compile a schema (the typical use) in a browser document that is loaded with a Content Security Policy (CSP), that policy will require a `script-src` directive that includes the value `'unsafe-eval'`. :warning: NOTE, however, that `unsafe-eval` is NOT recommended in a secure CSP[[1]](https://developer.chrome.com/extensions/contentSecurityPolicy#relaxing-eval), as it has the potential to open the document to cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. In order to make use of Ajv without easing your CSP, you can [pre-compile a schema using the CLI](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-cli#compile-schemas). This will transpile the schema JSON into a JavaScript file that exports a `validate` function that works simlarly to a schema compiled at runtime. Note that pre-compilation of schemas is performed using [ajv-pack](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-pack) and there are [some limitations to the schema features it can compile](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-pack#limitations). A successfully pre-compiled schema is equivalent to the same schema compiled at runtime. ## Command line interface CLI is available as a separate npm package [ajv-cli](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-cli). It supports: - compiling JSON Schemas to test their validity - BETA: generating standalone module exporting a validation function to be used without Ajv (using [ajv-pack](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-pack)) - migrate schemas to draft-07 (using [json-schema-migrate](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-migrate)) - validating data file(s) against JSON Schema - testing expected validity of data against JSON Schema - referenced schemas - custom meta-schemas - files in JSON, JSON5, YAML, and JavaScript format - all Ajv options - reporting changes in data after validation in [JSON-patch](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6902) format ## Validation keywords Ajv supports all validation keywords from draft-07 of JSON Schema standard: - [type](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#type) - [for numbers](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-numbers) - maximum, minimum, exclusiveMaximum, exclusiveMinimum, multipleOf - [for strings](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-strings) - maxLength, minLength, pattern, format - [for arrays](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-arrays) - maxItems, minItems, uniqueItems, items, additionalItems, [contains](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#contains) - [for objects](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-objects) - maxProperties, minProperties, required, properties, patternProperties, additionalProperties, dependencies, [propertyNames](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#propertynames) - [for all types](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#keywords-for-all-types) - enum, [const](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#const) - [compound keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#compound-keywords) - not, oneOf, anyOf, allOf, [if/then/else](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#ifthenelse) With [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package Ajv also supports validation keywords from [JSON Schema extension proposals](https://github.com/json-schema/json-schema/wiki/v5-Proposals) for JSON Schema standard: - [patternRequired](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#patternrequired-proposed) - like `required` but with patterns that some property should match. - [formatMaximum, formatMinimum, formatExclusiveMaximum, formatExclusiveMinimum](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md#formatmaximum--formatminimum-and-exclusiveformatmaximum--exclusiveformatminimum-proposed) - setting limits for date, time, etc. See [JSON Schema validation keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/KEYWORDS.md) for more details. ## Annotation keywords JSON Schema specification defines several annotation keywords that describe schema itself but do not perform any validation. - `title` and `description`: information about the data represented by that schema - `$comment` (NEW in draft-07): information for developers. With option `$comment` Ajv logs or passes the comment string to the user-supplied function. See [Options](#options). - `default`: a default value of the data instance, see [Assigning defaults](#assigning-defaults). - `examples` (NEW in draft-06): an array of data instances. Ajv does not check the validity of these instances against the schema. - `readOnly` and `writeOnly` (NEW in draft-07): marks data-instance as read-only or write-only in relation to the source of the data (database, api, etc.). - `contentEncoding`: [RFC 2045](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2045#section-6.1 ), e.g., "base64". - `contentMediaType`: [RFC 2046](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2046), e.g., "image/png". __Please note__: Ajv does not implement validation of the keywords `examples`, `contentEncoding` and `contentMediaType` but it reserves them. If you want to create a plugin that implements some of them, it should remove these keywords from the instance. ## Formats Ajv implements formats defined by JSON Schema specification and several other formats. It is recommended NOT to use "format" keyword implementations with untrusted data, as they use potentially unsafe regular expressions - see [ReDoS attack](#redos-attack). __Please note__: if you need to use "format" keyword to validate untrusted data, you MUST assess their suitability and safety for your validation scenarios. The following formats are implemented for string validation with "format" keyword: - _date_: full-date according to [RFC3339](http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3339#section-5.6). - _time_: time with optional time-zone. - _date-time_: date-time from the same source (time-zone is mandatory). `date`, `time` and `date-time` validate ranges in `full` mode and only regexp in `fast` mode (see [options](#options)). - _uri_: full URI. - _uri-reference_: URI reference, including full and relative URIs. - _uri-template_: URI template according to [RFC6570](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6570) - _url_ (deprecated): [URL record](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url). - _email_: email address. - _hostname_: host name according to [RFC1034](http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1034#section-3.5). - _ipv4_: IP address v4. - _ipv6_: IP address v6. - _regex_: tests whether a string is a valid regular expression by passing it to RegExp constructor. - _uuid_: Universally Unique IDentifier according to [RFC4122](http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4122). - _json-pointer_: JSON-pointer according to [RFC6901](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901). - _relative-json-pointer_: relative JSON-pointer according to [this draft](http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-luff-relative-json-pointer-00). __Please note__: JSON Schema draft-07 also defines formats `iri`, `iri-reference`, `idn-hostname` and `idn-email` for URLs, hostnames and emails with international characters. Ajv does not implement these formats. If you create Ajv plugin that implements them please make a PR to mention this plugin here. There are two modes of format validation: `fast` and `full`. This mode affects formats `date`, `time`, `date-time`, `uri`, `uri-reference`, and `email`. See [Options](#options) for details. You can add additional formats and replace any of the formats above using [addFormat](#api-addformat) method. The option `unknownFormats` allows changing the default behaviour when an unknown format is encountered. In this case Ajv can either fail schema compilation (default) or ignore it (default in versions before 5.0.0). You also can allow specific format(s) that will be ignored. See [Options](#options) for details. You can find regular expressions used for format validation and the sources that were used in [formats.js](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/lib/compile/formats.js). ## <a name="ref"></a>Combining schemas with $ref You can structure your validation logic across multiple schema files and have schemas reference each other using `$ref` keyword. Example: ```javascript var schema = { "$id": "http://example.com/schemas/schema.json", "type": "object", "properties": { "foo": { "$ref": "defs.json#/definitions/int" }, "bar": { "$ref": "defs.json#/definitions/str" } } }; var defsSchema = { "$id": "http://example.com/schemas/defs.json", "definitions": { "int": { "type": "integer" }, "str": { "type": "string" } } }; ``` Now to compile your schema you can either pass all schemas to Ajv instance: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({schemas: [schema, defsSchema]}); var validate = ajv.getSchema('http://example.com/schemas/schema.json'); ``` or use `addSchema` method: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv; var validate = ajv.addSchema(defsSchema) .compile(schema); ``` See [Options](#options) and [addSchema](#api) method. __Please note__: - `$ref` is resolved as the uri-reference using schema $id as the base URI (see the example). - References can be recursive (and mutually recursive) to implement the schemas for different data structures (such as linked lists, trees, graphs, etc.). - You don't have to host your schema files at the URIs that you use as schema $id. These URIs are only used to identify the schemas, and according to JSON Schema specification validators should not expect to be able to download the schemas from these URIs. - The actual location of the schema file in the file system is not used. - You can pass the identifier of the schema as the second parameter of `addSchema` method or as a property name in `schemas` option. This identifier can be used instead of (or in addition to) schema $id. - You cannot have the same $id (or the schema identifier) used for more than one schema - the exception will be thrown. - You can implement dynamic resolution of the referenced schemas using `compileAsync` method. In this way you can store schemas in any system (files, web, database, etc.) and reference them without explicitly adding to Ajv instance. See [Asynchronous schema compilation](#asynchronous-schema-compilation). ## $data reference With `$data` option you can use values from the validated data as the values for the schema keywords. See [proposal](https://github.com/json-schema-org/json-schema-spec/issues/51) for more information about how it works. `$data` reference is supported in the keywords: const, enum, format, maximum/minimum, exclusiveMaximum / exclusiveMinimum, maxLength / minLength, maxItems / minItems, maxProperties / minProperties, formatMaximum / formatMinimum, formatExclusiveMaximum / formatExclusiveMinimum, multipleOf, pattern, required, uniqueItems. The value of "$data" should be a [JSON-pointer](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901) to the data (the root is always the top level data object, even if the $data reference is inside a referenced subschema) or a [relative JSON-pointer](http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-luff-relative-json-pointer-00) (it is relative to the current point in data; if the $data reference is inside a referenced subschema it cannot point to the data outside of the root level for this subschema). Examples. This schema requires that the value in property `smaller` is less or equal than the value in the property larger: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({$data: true}); var schema = { "properties": { "smaller": { "type": "number", "maximum": { "$data": "1/larger" } }, "larger": { "type": "number" } } }; var validData = { smaller: 5, larger: 7 }; ajv.validate(schema, validData); // true ``` This schema requires that the properties have the same format as their field names: ```javascript var schema = { "additionalProperties": { "type": "string", "format": { "$data": "0#" } } }; var validData = { 'date-time': '1963-06-19T08:30:06.283185Z', email: '[email protected]' } ``` `$data` reference is resolved safely - it won't throw even if some property is undefined. If `$data` resolves to `undefined` the validation succeeds (with the exclusion of `const` keyword). If `$data` resolves to incorrect type (e.g. not "number" for maximum keyword) the validation fails. ## $merge and $patch keywords With the package [ajv-merge-patch](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-merge-patch) you can use the keywords `$merge` and `$patch` that allow extending JSON Schemas with patches using formats [JSON Merge Patch (RFC 7396)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7396) and [JSON Patch (RFC 6902)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6902). To add keywords `$merge` and `$patch` to Ajv instance use this code: ```javascript require('ajv-merge-patch')(ajv); ``` Examples. Using `$merge`: ```json { "$merge": { "source": { "type": "object", "properties": { "p": { "type": "string" } }, "additionalProperties": false }, "with": { "properties": { "q": { "type": "number" } } } } } ``` Using `$patch`: ```json { "$patch": { "source": { "type": "object", "properties": { "p": { "type": "string" } }, "additionalProperties": false }, "with": [ { "op": "add", "path": "/properties/q", "value": { "type": "number" } } ] } } ``` The schemas above are equivalent to this schema: ```json { "type": "object", "properties": { "p": { "type": "string" }, "q": { "type": "number" } }, "additionalProperties": false } ``` The properties `source` and `with` in the keywords `$merge` and `$patch` can use absolute or relative `$ref` to point to other schemas previously added to the Ajv instance or to the fragments of the current schema. See the package [ajv-merge-patch](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-merge-patch) for more information. ## Defining custom keywords The advantages of using custom keywords are: - allow creating validation scenarios that cannot be expressed using JSON Schema - simplify your schemas - help bringing a bigger part of the validation logic to your schemas - make your schemas more expressive, less verbose and closer to your application domain - implement custom data processors that modify your data (`modifying` option MUST be used in keyword definition) and/or create side effects while the data is being validated If a keyword is used only for side-effects and its validation result is pre-defined, use option `valid: true/false` in keyword definition to simplify both generated code (no error handling in case of `valid: true`) and your keyword functions (no need to return any validation result). The concerns you have to be aware of when extending JSON Schema standard with custom keywords are the portability and understanding of your schemas. You will have to support these custom keywords on other platforms and to properly document these keywords so that everybody can understand them in your schemas. You can define custom keywords with [addKeyword](#api-addkeyword) method. Keywords are defined on the `ajv` instance level - new instances will not have previously defined keywords. Ajv allows defining keywords with: - validation function - compilation function - macro function - inline compilation function that should return code (as string) that will be inlined in the currently compiled schema. Example. `range` and `exclusiveRange` keywords using compiled schema: ```javascript ajv.addKeyword('range', { type: 'number', compile: function (sch, parentSchema) { var min = sch[0]; var max = sch[1]; return parentSchema.exclusiveRange === true ? function (data) { return data > min && data < max; } : function (data) { return data >= min && data <= max; } } }); var schema = { "range": [2, 4], "exclusiveRange": true }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(2.01)); // true console.log(validate(3.99)); // true console.log(validate(2)); // false console.log(validate(4)); // false ``` Several custom keywords (typeof, instanceof, range and propertyNames) are defined in [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package - they can be used for your schemas and as a starting point for your own custom keywords. See [Defining custom keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/CUSTOM.md) for more details. ## Asynchronous schema compilation During asynchronous compilation remote references are loaded using supplied function. See `compileAsync` [method](#api-compileAsync) and `loadSchema` [option](#options). Example: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ loadSchema: loadSchema }); ajv.compileAsync(schema).then(function (validate) { var valid = validate(data); // ... }); function loadSchema(uri) { return request.json(uri).then(function (res) { if (res.statusCode >= 400) throw new Error('Loading error: ' + res.statusCode); return res.body; }); } ``` __Please note__: [Option](#options) `missingRefs` should NOT be set to `"ignore"` or `"fail"` for asynchronous compilation to work. ## Asynchronous validation Example in Node.js REPL: https://tonicdev.com/esp/ajv-asynchronous-validation You can define custom formats and keywords that perform validation asynchronously by accessing database or some other service. You should add `async: true` in the keyword or format definition (see [addFormat](#api-addformat), [addKeyword](#api-addkeyword) and [Defining custom keywords](#defining-custom-keywords)). If your schema uses asynchronous formats/keywords or refers to some schema that contains them it should have `"$async": true` keyword so that Ajv can compile it correctly. If asynchronous format/keyword or reference to asynchronous schema is used in the schema without `$async` keyword Ajv will throw an exception during schema compilation. __Please note__: all asynchronous subschemas that are referenced from the current or other schemas should have `"$async": true` keyword as well, otherwise the schema compilation will fail. Validation function for an asynchronous custom format/keyword should return a promise that resolves with `true` or `false` (or rejects with `new Ajv.ValidationError(errors)` if you want to return custom errors from the keyword function). Ajv compiles asynchronous schemas to [es7 async functions](http://tc39.github.io/ecmascript-asyncawait/) that can optionally be transpiled with [nodent](https://github.com/MatAtBread/nodent). Async functions are supported in Node.js 7+ and all modern browsers. You can also supply any other transpiler as a function via `processCode` option. See [Options](#options). The compiled validation function has `$async: true` property (if the schema is asynchronous), so you can differentiate these functions if you are using both synchronous and asynchronous schemas. Validation result will be a promise that resolves with validated data or rejects with an exception `Ajv.ValidationError` that contains the array of validation errors in `errors` property. Example: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv; // require('ajv-async')(ajv); ajv.addKeyword('idExists', { async: true, type: 'number', validate: checkIdExists }); function checkIdExists(schema, data) { return knex(schema.table) .select('id') .where('id', data) .then(function (rows) { return !!rows.length; // true if record is found }); } var schema = { "$async": true, "properties": { "userId": { "type": "integer", "idExists": { "table": "users" } }, "postId": { "type": "integer", "idExists": { "table": "posts" } } } }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); validate({ userId: 1, postId: 19 }) .then(function (data) { console.log('Data is valid', data); // { userId: 1, postId: 19 } }) .catch(function (err) { if (!(err instanceof Ajv.ValidationError)) throw err; // data is invalid console.log('Validation errors:', err.errors); }); ``` ### Using transpilers with asynchronous validation functions. [ajv-async](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-async) uses [nodent](https://github.com/MatAtBread/nodent) to transpile async functions. To use another transpiler you should separately install it (or load its bundle in the browser). #### Using nodent ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv; require('ajv-async')(ajv); // in the browser if you want to load ajv-async bundle separately you can: // window.ajvAsync(ajv); var validate = ajv.compile(schema); // transpiled es7 async function validate(data).then(successFunc).catch(errorFunc); ``` #### Using other transpilers ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ processCode: transpileFunc }); var validate = ajv.compile(schema); // transpiled es7 async function validate(data).then(successFunc).catch(errorFunc); ``` See [Options](#options). ## Security considerations JSON Schema, if properly used, can replace data sanitisation. It doesn't replace other API security considerations. It also introduces additional security aspects to consider. ##### Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerabilities via GitHub issues. ##### Untrusted schemas Ajv treats JSON schemas as trusted as your application code. This security model is based on the most common use case, when the schemas are static and bundled together with the application. If your schemas are received from untrusted sources (or generated from untrusted data) there are several scenarios you need to prevent: - compiling schemas can cause stack overflow (if they are too deep) - compiling schemas can be slow (e.g. [#557](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/557)) - validating certain data can be slow It is difficult to predict all the scenarios, but at the very least it may help to limit the size of untrusted schemas (e.g. limit JSON string length) and also the maximum schema object depth (that can be high for relatively small JSON strings). You also may want to mitigate slow regular expressions in `pattern` and `patternProperties` keywords. Regardless the measures you take, using untrusted schemas increases security risks. ##### Circular references in JavaScript objects Ajv does not support schemas and validated data that have circular references in objects. See [issue #802](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/802). An attempt to compile such schemas or validate such data would cause stack overflow (or will not complete in case of asynchronous validation). Depending on the parser you use, untrusted data can lead to circular references. ##### Security risks of trusted schemas Some keywords in JSON Schemas can lead to very slow validation for certain data. These keywords include (but may be not limited to): - `pattern` and `format` for large strings - in some cases using `maxLength` can help mitigate it, but certain regular expressions can lead to exponential validation time even with relatively short strings (see [ReDoS attack](#redos-attack)). - `patternProperties` for large property names - use `propertyNames` to mitigate, but some regular expressions can have exponential evaluation time as well. - `uniqueItems` for large non-scalar arrays - use `maxItems` to mitigate __Please note__: The suggestions above to prevent slow validation would only work if you do NOT use `allErrors: true` in production code (using it would continue validation after validation errors). You can validate your JSON schemas against [this meta-schema](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/lib/refs/json-schema-secure.json) to check that these recommendations are followed: ```javascript const isSchemaSecure = ajv.compile(require('ajv/lib/refs/json-schema-secure.json')); const schema1 = {format: 'email'}; isSchemaSecure(schema1); // false const schema2 = {format: 'email', maxLength: MAX_LENGTH}; isSchemaSecure(schema2); // true ``` __Please note__: following all these recommendation is not a guarantee that validation of untrusted data is safe - it can still lead to some undesirable results. ##### Content Security Policies (CSP) See [Ajv and Content Security Policies (CSP)](#ajv-and-content-security-policies-csp) ## ReDoS attack Certain regular expressions can lead to the exponential evaluation time even with relatively short strings. Please assess the regular expressions you use in the schemas on their vulnerability to this attack - see [safe-regex](https://github.com/substack/safe-regex), for example. __Please note__: some formats that Ajv implements use [regular expressions](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/lib/compile/formats.js) that can be vulnerable to ReDoS attack, so if you use Ajv to validate data from untrusted sources __it is strongly recommended__ to consider the following: - making assessment of "format" implementations in Ajv. - using `format: 'fast'` option that simplifies some of the regular expressions (although it does not guarantee that they are safe). - replacing format implementations provided by Ajv with your own implementations of "format" keyword that either uses different regular expressions or another approach to format validation. Please see [addFormat](#api-addformat) method. - disabling format validation by ignoring "format" keyword with option `format: false` Whatever mitigation you choose, please assume all formats provided by Ajv as potentially unsafe and make your own assessment of their suitability for your validation scenarios. ## Filtering data With [option `removeAdditional`](#options) (added by [andyscott](https://github.com/andyscott)) you can filter data during the validation. This option modifies original data. Example: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ removeAdditional: true }); var schema = { "additionalProperties": false, "properties": { "foo": { "type": "number" }, "bar": { "additionalProperties": { "type": "number" }, "properties": { "baz": { "type": "string" } } } } } var data = { "foo": 0, "additional1": 1, // will be removed; `additionalProperties` == false "bar": { "baz": "abc", "additional2": 2 // will NOT be removed; `additionalProperties` != false }, } var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // { "foo": 0, "bar": { "baz": "abc", "additional2": 2 } ``` If `removeAdditional` option in the example above were `"all"` then both `additional1` and `additional2` properties would have been removed. If the option were `"failing"` then property `additional1` would have been removed regardless of its value and property `additional2` would have been removed only if its value were failing the schema in the inner `additionalProperties` (so in the example above it would have stayed because it passes the schema, but any non-number would have been removed). __Please note__: If you use `removeAdditional` option with `additionalProperties` keyword inside `anyOf`/`oneOf` keywords your validation can fail with this schema, for example: ```json { "type": "object", "oneOf": [ { "properties": { "foo": { "type": "string" } }, "required": [ "foo" ], "additionalProperties": false }, { "properties": { "bar": { "type": "integer" } }, "required": [ "bar" ], "additionalProperties": false } ] } ``` The intention of the schema above is to allow objects with either the string property "foo" or the integer property "bar", but not with both and not with any other properties. With the option `removeAdditional: true` the validation will pass for the object `{ "foo": "abc"}` but will fail for the object `{"bar": 1}`. It happens because while the first subschema in `oneOf` is validated, the property `bar` is removed because it is an additional property according to the standard (because it is not included in `properties` keyword in the same schema). While this behaviour is unexpected (issues [#129](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/129), [#134](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/134)), it is correct. To have the expected behaviour (both objects are allowed and additional properties are removed) the schema has to be refactored in this way: ```json { "type": "object", "properties": { "foo": { "type": "string" }, "bar": { "type": "integer" } }, "additionalProperties": false, "oneOf": [ { "required": [ "foo" ] }, { "required": [ "bar" ] } ] } ``` The schema above is also more efficient - it will compile into a faster function. ## Assigning defaults With [option `useDefaults`](#options) Ajv will assign values from `default` keyword in the schemas of `properties` and `items` (when it is the array of schemas) to the missing properties and items. With the option value `"empty"` properties and items equal to `null` or `""` (empty string) will be considered missing and assigned defaults. This option modifies original data. __Please note__: the default value is inserted in the generated validation code as a literal, so the value inserted in the data will be the deep clone of the default in the schema. Example 1 (`default` in `properties`): ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ useDefaults: true }); var schema = { "type": "object", "properties": { "foo": { "type": "number" }, "bar": { "type": "string", "default": "baz" } }, "required": [ "foo", "bar" ] }; var data = { "foo": 1 }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // { "foo": 1, "bar": "baz" } ``` Example 2 (`default` in `items`): ```javascript var schema = { "type": "array", "items": [ { "type": "number" }, { "type": "string", "default": "foo" } ] } var data = [ 1 ]; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // [ 1, "foo" ] ``` `default` keywords in other cases are ignored: - not in `properties` or `items` subschemas - in schemas inside `anyOf`, `oneOf` and `not` (see [#42](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/42)) - in `if` subschema of `switch` keyword - in schemas generated by custom macro keywords The [`strictDefaults` option](#options) customizes Ajv's behavior for the defaults that Ajv ignores (`true` raises an error, and `"log"` outputs a warning). ## Coercing data types When you are validating user inputs all your data properties are usually strings. The option `coerceTypes` allows you to have your data types coerced to the types specified in your schema `type` keywords, both to pass the validation and to use the correctly typed data afterwards. This option modifies original data. __Please note__: if you pass a scalar value to the validating function its type will be coerced and it will pass the validation, but the value of the variable you pass won't be updated because scalars are passed by value. Example 1: ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ coerceTypes: true }); var schema = { "type": "object", "properties": { "foo": { "type": "number" }, "bar": { "type": "boolean" } }, "required": [ "foo", "bar" ] }; var data = { "foo": "1", "bar": "false" }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // { "foo": 1, "bar": false } ``` Example 2 (array coercions): ```javascript var ajv = new Ajv({ coerceTypes: 'array' }); var schema = { "properties": { "foo": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "number" } }, "bar": { "type": "boolean" } } }; var data = { "foo": "1", "bar": ["false"] }; var validate = ajv.compile(schema); console.log(validate(data)); // true console.log(data); // { "foo": [1], "bar": false } ``` The coercion rules, as you can see from the example, are different from JavaScript both to validate user input as expected and to have the coercion reversible (to correctly validate cases where different types are defined in subschemas of "anyOf" and other compound keywords). See [Coercion rules](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/COERCION.md) for details. ## API ##### new Ajv(Object options) -&gt; Object Create Ajv instance. ##### .compile(Object schema) -&gt; Function&lt;Object data&gt; Generate validating function and cache the compiled schema for future use. Validating function returns a boolean value. This function has properties `errors` and `schema`. Errors encountered during the last validation are assigned to `errors` property (it is assigned `null` if there was no errors). `schema` property contains the reference to the original schema. The schema passed to this method will be validated against meta-schema unless `validateSchema` option is false. If schema is invalid, an error will be thrown. See [options](#options). ##### <a name="api-compileAsync"></a>.compileAsync(Object schema [, Boolean meta] [, Function callback]) -&gt; Promise Asynchronous version of `compile` method that loads missing remote schemas using asynchronous function in `options.loadSchema`. This function returns a Promise that resolves to a validation function. An optional callback passed to `compileAsync` will be called with 2 parameters: error (or null) and validating function. The returned promise will reject (and the callback will be called with an error) when: - missing schema can't be loaded (`loadSchema` returns a Promise that rejects). - a schema containing a missing reference is loaded, but the reference cannot be resolved. - schema (or some loaded/referenced schema) is invalid. The function compiles schema and loads the first missing schema (or meta-schema) until all missing schemas are loaded. You can asynchronously compile meta-schema by passing `true` as the second parameter. See example in [Asynchronous compilation](#asynchronous-schema-compilation). ##### .validate(Object schema|String key|String ref, data) -&gt; Boolean Validate data using passed schema (it will be compiled and cached). Instead of the schema you can use the key that was previously passed to `addSchema`, the schema id if it was present in the schema or any previously resolved reference. Validation errors will be available in the `errors` property of Ajv instance (`null` if there were no errors). __Please note__: every time this method is called the errors are overwritten so you need to copy them to another variable if you want to use them later. If the schema is asynchronous (has `$async` keyword on the top level) this method returns a Promise. See [Asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation). ##### .addSchema(Array&lt;Object&gt;|Object schema [, String key]) -&gt; Ajv Add schema(s) to validator instance. This method does not compile schemas (but it still validates them). Because of that dependencies can be added in any order and circular dependencies are supported. It also prevents unnecessary compilation of schemas that are containers for other schemas but not used as a whole. Array of schemas can be passed (schemas should have ids), the second parameter will be ignored. Key can be passed that can be used to reference the schema and will be used as the schema id if there is no id inside the schema. If the key is not passed, the schema id will be used as the key. Once the schema is added, it (and all the references inside it) can be referenced in other schemas and used to validate data. Although `addSchema` does not compile schemas, explicit compilation is not required - the schema will be compiled when it is used first time. By default the schema is validated against meta-schema before it is added, and if the schema does not pass validation the exception is thrown. This behaviour is controlled by `validateSchema` option. __Please note__: Ajv uses the [method chaining syntax](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_chaining) for all methods with the prefix `add*` and `remove*`. This allows you to do nice things like the following. ```javascript var validate = new Ajv().addSchema(schema).addFormat(name, regex).getSchema(uri); ``` ##### .addMetaSchema(Array&lt;Object&gt;|Object schema [, String key]) -&gt; Ajv Adds meta schema(s) that can be used to validate other schemas. That function should be used instead of `addSchema` because there may be instance options that would compile a meta schema incorrectly (at the moment it is `removeAdditional` option). There is no need to explicitly add draft-07 meta schema (http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema) - it is added by default, unless option `meta` is set to `false`. You only need to use it if you have a changed meta-schema that you want to use to validate your schemas. See `validateSchema`. ##### <a name="api-validateschema"></a>.validateSchema(Object schema) -&gt; Boolean Validates schema. This method should be used to validate schemas rather than `validate` due to the inconsistency of `uri` format in JSON Schema standard. By default this method is called automatically when the schema is added, so you rarely need to use it directly. If schema doesn't have `$schema` property, it is validated against draft 6 meta-schema (option `meta` should not be false). If schema has `$schema` property, then the schema with this id (that should be previously added) is used to validate passed schema. Errors will be available at `ajv.errors`. ##### .getSchema(String key) -&gt; Function&lt;Object data&gt; Retrieve compiled schema previously added with `addSchema` by the key passed to `addSchema` or by its full reference (id). The returned validating function has `schema` property with the reference to the original schema. ##### .removeSchema([Object schema|String key|String ref|RegExp pattern]) -&gt; Ajv Remove added/cached schema. Even if schema is referenced by other schemas it can be safely removed as dependent schemas have local references. Schema can be removed using: - key passed to `addSchema` - it's full reference (id) - RegExp that should match schema id or key (meta-schemas won't be removed) - actual schema object that will be stable-stringified to remove schema from cache If no parameter is passed all schemas but meta-schemas will be removed and the cache will be cleared. ##### <a name="api-addformat"></a>.addFormat(String name, String|RegExp|Function|Object format) -&gt; Ajv Add custom format to validate strings or numbers. It can also be used to replace pre-defined formats for Ajv instance. Strings are converted to RegExp. Function should return validation result as `true` or `false`. If object is passed it should have properties `validate`, `compare` and `async`: - _validate_: a string, RegExp or a function as described above. - _compare_: an optional comparison function that accepts two strings and compares them according to the format meaning. This function is used with keywords `formatMaximum`/`formatMinimum` (defined in [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package). It should return `1` if the first value is bigger than the second value, `-1` if it is smaller and `0` if it is equal. - _async_: an optional `true` value if `validate` is an asynchronous function; in this case it should return a promise that resolves with a value `true` or `false`. - _type_: an optional type of data that the format applies to. It can be `"string"` (default) or `"number"` (see https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/291#issuecomment-259923858). If the type of data is different, the validation will pass. Custom formats can be also added via `formats` option. ##### <a name="api-addkeyword"></a>.addKeyword(String keyword, Object definition) -&gt; Ajv Add custom validation keyword to Ajv instance. Keyword should be different from all standard JSON Schema keywords and different from previously defined keywords. There is no way to redefine keywords or to remove keyword definition from the instance. Keyword must start with a letter, `_` or `$`, and may continue with letters, numbers, `_`, `$`, or `-`. It is recommended to use an application-specific prefix for keywords to avoid current and future name collisions. Example Keywords: - `"xyz-example"`: valid, and uses prefix for the xyz project to avoid name collisions. - `"example"`: valid, but not recommended as it could collide with future versions of JSON Schema etc. - `"3-example"`: invalid as numbers are not allowed to be the first character in a keyword Keyword definition is an object with the following properties: - _type_: optional string or array of strings with data type(s) that the keyword applies to. If not present, the keyword will apply to all types. - _validate_: validating function - _compile_: compiling function - _macro_: macro function - _inline_: compiling function that returns code (as string) - _schema_: an optional `false` value used with "validate" keyword to not pass schema - _metaSchema_: an optional meta-schema for keyword schema - _dependencies_: an optional list of properties that must be present in the parent schema - it will be checked during schema compilation - _modifying_: `true` MUST be passed if keyword modifies data - _statements_: `true` can be passed in case inline keyword generates statements (as opposed to expression) - _valid_: pass `true`/`false` to pre-define validation result, the result returned from validation function will be ignored. This option cannot be used with macro keywords. - _$data_: an optional `true` value to support [$data reference](#data-reference) as the value of custom keyword. The reference will be resolved at validation time. If the keyword has meta-schema it would be extended to allow $data and it will be used to validate the resolved value. Supporting $data reference requires that keyword has validating function (as the only option or in addition to compile, macro or inline function). - _async_: an optional `true` value if the validation function is asynchronous (whether it is compiled or passed in _validate_ property); in this case it should return a promise that resolves with a value `true` or `false`. This option is ignored in case of "macro" and "inline" keywords. - _errors_: an optional boolean or string `"full"` indicating whether keyword returns errors. If this property is not set Ajv will determine if the errors were set in case of failed validation. _compile_, _macro_ and _inline_ are mutually exclusive, only one should be used at a time. _validate_ can be used separately or in addition to them to support $data reference. __Please note__: If the keyword is validating data type that is different from the type(s) in its definition, the validation function will not be called (and expanded macro will not be used), so there is no need to check for data type inside validation function or inside schema returned by macro function (unless you want to enforce a specific type and for some reason do not want to use a separate `type` keyword for that). In the same way as standard keywords work, if the keyword does not apply to the data type being validated, the validation of this keyword will succeed. See [Defining custom keywords](#defining-custom-keywords) for more details. ##### .getKeyword(String keyword) -&gt; Object|Boolean Returns custom keyword definition, `true` for pre-defined keywords and `false` if the keyword is unknown. ##### .removeKeyword(String keyword) -&gt; Ajv Removes custom or pre-defined keyword so you can redefine them. While this method can be used to extend pre-defined keywords, it can also be used to completely change their meaning - it may lead to unexpected results. __Please note__: schemas compiled before the keyword is removed will continue to work without changes. To recompile schemas use `removeSchema` method and compile them again. ##### .errorsText([Array&lt;Object&gt; errors [, Object options]]) -&gt; String Returns the text with all errors in a String. Options can have properties `separator` (string used to separate errors, ", " by default) and `dataVar` (the variable name that dataPaths are prefixed with, "data" by default). ## Options Defaults: ```javascript { // validation and reporting options: $data: false, allErrors: false, verbose: false, $comment: false, // NEW in Ajv version 6.0 jsonPointers: false, uniqueItems: true, unicode: true, nullable: false, format: 'fast', formats: {}, unknownFormats: true, schemas: {}, logger: undefined, // referenced schema options: schemaId: '$id', missingRefs: true, extendRefs: 'ignore', // recommended 'fail' loadSchema: undefined, // function(uri: string): Promise {} // options to modify validated data: removeAdditional: false, useDefaults: false, coerceTypes: false, // strict mode options strictDefaults: false, strictKeywords: false, strictNumbers: false, // asynchronous validation options: transpile: undefined, // requires ajv-async package // advanced options: meta: true, validateSchema: true, addUsedSchema: true, inlineRefs: true, passContext: false, loopRequired: Infinity, ownProperties: false, multipleOfPrecision: false, errorDataPath: 'object', // deprecated messages: true, sourceCode: false, processCode: undefined, // function (str: string, schema: object): string {} cache: new Cache, serialize: undefined } ``` ##### Validation and reporting options - _$data_: support [$data references](#data-reference). Draft 6 meta-schema that is added by default will be extended to allow them. If you want to use another meta-schema you need to use $dataMetaSchema method to add support for $data reference. See [API](#api). - _allErrors_: check all rules collecting all errors. Default is to return after the first error. - _verbose_: include the reference to the part of the schema (`schema` and `parentSchema`) and validated data in errors (false by default). - _$comment_ (NEW in Ajv version 6.0): log or pass the value of `$comment` keyword to a function. Option values: - `false` (default): ignore $comment keyword. - `true`: log the keyword value to console. - function: pass the keyword value, its schema path and root schema to the specified function - _jsonPointers_: set `dataPath` property of errors using [JSON Pointers](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901) instead of JavaScript property access notation. - _uniqueItems_: validate `uniqueItems` keyword (true by default). - _unicode_: calculate correct length of strings with unicode pairs (true by default). Pass `false` to use `.length` of strings that is faster, but gives "incorrect" lengths of strings with unicode pairs - each unicode pair is counted as two characters. - _nullable_: support keyword "nullable" from [Open API 3 specification](https://swagger.io/docs/specification/data-models/data-types/). - _format_: formats validation mode. Option values: - `"fast"` (default) - simplified and fast validation (see [Formats](#formats) for details of which formats are available and affected by this option). - `"full"` - more restrictive and slow validation. E.g., 25:00:00 and 2015/14/33 will be invalid time and date in 'full' mode but it will be valid in 'fast' mode. - `false` - ignore all format keywords. - _formats_: an object with custom formats. Keys and values will be passed to `addFormat` method. - _keywords_: an object with custom keywords. Keys and values will be passed to `addKeyword` method. - _unknownFormats_: handling of unknown formats. Option values: - `true` (default) - if an unknown format is encountered the exception is thrown during schema compilation. If `format` keyword value is [$data reference](#data-reference) and it is unknown the validation will fail. - `[String]` - an array of unknown format names that will be ignored. This option can be used to allow usage of third party schemas with format(s) for which you don't have definitions, but still fail if another unknown format is used. If `format` keyword value is [$data reference](#data-reference) and it is not in this array the validation will fail. - `"ignore"` - to log warning during schema compilation and always pass validation (the default behaviour in versions before 5.0.0). This option is not recommended, as it allows to mistype format name and it won't be validated without any error message. This behaviour is required by JSON Schema specification. - _schemas_: an array or object of schemas that will be added to the instance. In case you pass the array the schemas must have IDs in them. When the object is passed the method `addSchema(value, key)` will be called for each schema in this object. - _logger_: sets the logging method. Default is the global `console` object that should have methods `log`, `warn` and `error`. See [Error logging](#error-logging). Option values: - custom logger - it should have methods `log`, `warn` and `error`. If any of these methods is missing an exception will be thrown. - `false` - logging is disabled. ##### Referenced schema options - _schemaId_: this option defines which keywords are used as schema URI. Option value: - `"$id"` (default) - only use `$id` keyword as schema URI (as specified in JSON Schema draft-06/07), ignore `id` keyword (if it is present a warning will be logged). - `"id"` - only use `id` keyword as schema URI (as specified in JSON Schema draft-04), ignore `$id` keyword (if it is present a warning will be logged). - `"auto"` - use both `$id` and `id` keywords as schema URI. If both are present (in the same schema object) and different the exception will be thrown during schema compilation. - _missingRefs_: handling of missing referenced schemas. Option values: - `true` (default) - if the reference cannot be resolved during compilation the exception is thrown. The thrown error has properties `missingRef` (with hash fragment) and `missingSchema` (without it). Both properties are resolved relative to the current base id (usually schema id, unless it was substituted). - `"ignore"` - to log error during compilation and always pass validation. - `"fail"` - to log error and successfully compile schema but fail validation if this rule is checked. - _extendRefs_: validation of other keywords when `$ref` is present in the schema. Option values: - `"ignore"` (default) - when `$ref` is used other keywords are ignored (as per [JSON Reference](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pbryan-zyp-json-ref-03#section-3) standard). A warning will be logged during the schema compilation. - `"fail"` (recommended) - if other validation keywords are used together with `$ref` the exception will be thrown when the schema is compiled. This option is recommended to make sure schema has no keywords that are ignored, which can be confusing. - `true` - validate all keywords in the schemas with `$ref` (the default behaviour in versions before 5.0.0). - _loadSchema_: asynchronous function that will be used to load remote schemas when `compileAsync` [method](#api-compileAsync) is used and some reference is missing (option `missingRefs` should NOT be 'fail' or 'ignore'). This function should accept remote schema uri as a parameter and return a Promise that resolves to a schema. See example in [Asynchronous compilation](#asynchronous-schema-compilation). ##### Options to modify validated data - _removeAdditional_: remove additional properties - see example in [Filtering data](#filtering-data). This option is not used if schema is added with `addMetaSchema` method. Option values: - `false` (default) - not to remove additional properties - `"all"` - all additional properties are removed, regardless of `additionalProperties` keyword in schema (and no validation is made for them). - `true` - only additional properties with `additionalProperties` keyword equal to `false` are removed. - `"failing"` - additional properties that fail schema validation will be removed (where `additionalProperties` keyword is `false` or schema). - _useDefaults_: replace missing or undefined properties and items with the values from corresponding `default` keywords. Default behaviour is to ignore `default` keywords. This option is not used if schema is added with `addMetaSchema` method. See examples in [Assigning defaults](#assigning-defaults). Option values: - `false` (default) - do not use defaults - `true` - insert defaults by value (object literal is used). - `"empty"` - in addition to missing or undefined, use defaults for properties and items that are equal to `null` or `""` (an empty string). - `"shared"` (deprecated) - insert defaults by reference. If the default is an object, it will be shared by all instances of validated data. If you modify the inserted default in the validated data, it will be modified in the schema as well. - _coerceTypes_: change data type of data to match `type` keyword. See the example in [Coercing data types](#coercing-data-types) and [coercion rules](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/COERCION.md). Option values: - `false` (default) - no type coercion. - `true` - coerce scalar data types. - `"array"` - in addition to coercions between scalar types, coerce scalar data to an array with one element and vice versa (as required by the schema). ##### Strict mode options - _strictDefaults_: report ignored `default` keywords in schemas. Option values: - `false` (default) - ignored defaults are not reported - `true` - if an ignored default is present, throw an error - `"log"` - if an ignored default is present, log warning - _strictKeywords_: report unknown keywords in schemas. Option values: - `false` (default) - unknown keywords are not reported - `true` - if an unknown keyword is present, throw an error - `"log"` - if an unknown keyword is present, log warning - _strictNumbers_: validate numbers strictly, failing validation for NaN and Infinity. Option values: - `false` (default) - NaN or Infinity will pass validation for numeric types - `true` - NaN or Infinity will not pass validation for numeric types ##### Asynchronous validation options - _transpile_: Requires [ajv-async](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-async) package. It determines whether Ajv transpiles compiled asynchronous validation function. Option values: - `undefined` (default) - transpile with [nodent](https://github.com/MatAtBread/nodent) if async functions are not supported. - `true` - always transpile with nodent. - `false` - do not transpile; if async functions are not supported an exception will be thrown. ##### Advanced options - _meta_: add [meta-schema](http://json-schema.org/documentation.html) so it can be used by other schemas (true by default). If an object is passed, it will be used as the default meta-schema for schemas that have no `$schema` keyword. This default meta-schema MUST have `$schema` keyword. - _validateSchema_: validate added/compiled schemas against meta-schema (true by default). `$schema` property in the schema can be http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema or absent (draft-07 meta-schema will be used) or can be a reference to the schema previously added with `addMetaSchema` method. Option values: - `true` (default) - if the validation fails, throw the exception. - `"log"` - if the validation fails, log error. - `false` - skip schema validation. - _addUsedSchema_: by default methods `compile` and `validate` add schemas to the instance if they have `$id` (or `id`) property that doesn't start with "#". If `$id` is present and it is not unique the exception will be thrown. Set this option to `false` to skip adding schemas to the instance and the `$id` uniqueness check when these methods are used. This option does not affect `addSchema` method. - _inlineRefs_: Affects compilation of referenced schemas. Option values: - `true` (default) - the referenced schemas that don't have refs in them are inlined, regardless of their size - that substantially improves performance at the cost of the bigger size of compiled schema functions. - `false` - to not inline referenced schemas (they will be compiled as separate functions). - integer number - to limit the maximum number of keywords of the schema that will be inlined. - _passContext_: pass validation context to custom keyword functions. If this option is `true` and you pass some context to the compiled validation function with `validate.call(context, data)`, the `context` will be available as `this` in your custom keywords. By default `this` is Ajv instance. - _loopRequired_: by default `required` keyword is compiled into a single expression (or a sequence of statements in `allErrors` mode). In case of a very large number of properties in this keyword it may result in a very big validation function. Pass integer to set the number of properties above which `required` keyword will be validated in a loop - smaller validation function size but also worse performance. - _ownProperties_: by default Ajv iterates over all enumerable object properties; when this option is `true` only own enumerable object properties (i.e. found directly on the object rather than on its prototype) are iterated. Contributed by @mbroadst. - _multipleOfPrecision_: by default `multipleOf` keyword is validated by comparing the result of division with parseInt() of that result. It works for dividers that are bigger than 1. For small dividers such as 0.01 the result of the division is usually not integer (even when it should be integer, see issue [#84](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/issues/84)). If you need to use fractional dividers set this option to some positive integer N to have `multipleOf` validated using this formula: `Math.abs(Math.round(division) - division) < 1e-N` (it is slower but allows for float arithmetics deviations). - _errorDataPath_ (deprecated): set `dataPath` to point to 'object' (default) or to 'property' when validating keywords `required`, `additionalProperties` and `dependencies`. - _messages_: Include human-readable messages in errors. `true` by default. `false` can be passed when custom messages are used (e.g. with [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n)). - _sourceCode_: add `sourceCode` property to validating function (for debugging; this code can be different from the result of toString call). - _processCode_: an optional function to process generated code before it is passed to Function constructor. It can be used to either beautify (the validating function is generated without line-breaks) or to transpile code. Starting from version 5.0.0 this option replaced options: - `beautify` that formatted the generated function using [js-beautify](https://github.com/beautify-web/js-beautify). If you want to beautify the generated code pass a function calling `require('js-beautify').js_beautify` as `processCode: code => js_beautify(code)`. - `transpile` that transpiled asynchronous validation function. You can still use `transpile` option with [ajv-async](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-async) package. See [Asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation) for more information. - _cache_: an optional instance of cache to store compiled schemas using stable-stringified schema as a key. For example, set-associative cache [sacjs](https://github.com/epoberezkin/sacjs) can be used. If not passed then a simple hash is used which is good enough for the common use case (a limited number of statically defined schemas). Cache should have methods `put(key, value)`, `get(key)`, `del(key)` and `clear()`. - _serialize_: an optional function to serialize schema to cache key. Pass `false` to use schema itself as a key (e.g., if WeakMap used as a cache). By default [fast-json-stable-stringify](https://github.com/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify) is used. ## Validation errors In case of validation failure, Ajv assigns the array of errors to `errors` property of validation function (or to `errors` property of Ajv instance when `validate` or `validateSchema` methods were called). In case of [asynchronous validation](#asynchronous-validation), the returned promise is rejected with exception `Ajv.ValidationError` that has `errors` property. ### Error objects Each error is an object with the following properties: - _keyword_: validation keyword. - _dataPath_: the path to the part of the data that was validated. By default `dataPath` uses JavaScript property access notation (e.g., `".prop[1].subProp"`). When the option `jsonPointers` is true (see [Options](#options)) `dataPath` will be set using JSON pointer standard (e.g., `"/prop/1/subProp"`). - _schemaPath_: the path (JSON-pointer as a URI fragment) to the schema of the keyword that failed validation. - _params_: the object with the additional information about error that can be used to create custom error messages (e.g., using [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n) package). See below for parameters set by all keywords. - _message_: the standard error message (can be excluded with option `messages` set to false). - _schema_: the schema of the keyword (added with `verbose` option). - _parentSchema_: the schema containing the keyword (added with `verbose` option) - _data_: the data validated by the keyword (added with `verbose` option). __Please note__: `propertyNames` keyword schema validation errors have an additional property `propertyName`, `dataPath` points to the object. After schema validation for each property name, if it is invalid an additional error is added with the property `keyword` equal to `"propertyNames"`. ### Error parameters Properties of `params` object in errors depend on the keyword that failed validation. - `maxItems`, `minItems`, `maxLength`, `minLength`, `maxProperties`, `minProperties` - property `limit` (number, the schema of the keyword). - `additionalItems` - property `limit` (the maximum number of allowed items in case when `items` keyword is an array of schemas and `additionalItems` is false). - `additionalProperties` - property `additionalProperty` (the property not used in `properties` and `patternProperties` keywords). - `dependencies` - properties: - `property` (dependent property), - `missingProperty` (required missing dependency - only the first one is reported currently) - `deps` (required dependencies, comma separated list as a string), - `depsCount` (the number of required dependencies). - `format` - property `format` (the schema of the keyword). - `maximum`, `minimum` - properties: - `limit` (number, the schema of the keyword), - `exclusive` (boolean, the schema of `exclusiveMaximum` or `exclusiveMinimum`), - `comparison` (string, comparison operation to compare the data to the limit, with the data on the left and the limit on the right; can be "<", "<=", ">", ">=") - `multipleOf` - property `multipleOf` (the schema of the keyword) - `pattern` - property `pattern` (the schema of the keyword) - `required` - property `missingProperty` (required property that is missing). - `propertyNames` - property `propertyName` (an invalid property name). - `patternRequired` (in ajv-keywords) - property `missingPattern` (required pattern that did not match any property). - `type` - property `type` (required type(s), a string, can be a comma-separated list) - `uniqueItems` - properties `i` and `j` (indices of duplicate items). - `const` - property `allowedValue` pointing to the value (the schema of the keyword). - `enum` - property `allowedValues` pointing to the array of values (the schema of the keyword). - `$ref` - property `ref` with the referenced schema URI. - `oneOf` - property `passingSchemas` (array of indices of passing schemas, null if no schema passes). - custom keywords (in case keyword definition doesn't create errors) - property `keyword` (the keyword name). ### Error logging Using the `logger` option when initiallizing Ajv will allow you to define custom logging. Here you can build upon the exisiting logging. The use of other logging packages is supported as long as the package or its associated wrapper exposes the required methods. If any of the required methods are missing an exception will be thrown. - **Required Methods**: `log`, `warn`, `error` ```javascript var otherLogger = new OtherLogger(); var ajv = new Ajv({ logger: { log: console.log.bind(console), warn: function warn() { otherLogger.logWarn.apply(otherLogger, arguments); }, error: function error() { otherLogger.logError.apply(otherLogger, arguments); console.error.apply(console, arguments); } } }); ``` ## Plugins Ajv can be extended with plugins that add custom keywords, formats or functions to process generated code. When such plugin is published as npm package it is recommended that it follows these conventions: - it exports a function - this function accepts ajv instance as the first parameter and returns the same instance to allow chaining - this function can accept an optional configuration as the second parameter If you have published a useful plugin please submit a PR to add it to the next section. ## Related packages - [ajv-async](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-async) - plugin to configure async validation mode - [ajv-bsontype](https://github.com/BoLaMN/ajv-bsontype) - plugin to validate mongodb's bsonType formats - [ajv-cli](https://github.com/jessedc/ajv-cli) - command line interface - [ajv-errors](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-errors) - plugin for custom error messages - [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n) - internationalised error messages - [ajv-istanbul](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-istanbul) - plugin to instrument generated validation code to measure test coverage of your schemas - [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) - plugin with custom validation keywords (select, typeof, etc.) - [ajv-merge-patch](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-merge-patch) - plugin with keywords $merge and $patch - [ajv-pack](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-pack) - produces a compact module exporting validation functions - [ajv-formats-draft2019](https://github.com/luzlab/ajv-formats-draft2019) - format validators for draft2019 that aren't already included in ajv (ie. `idn-hostname`, `idn-email`, `iri`, `iri-reference` and `duration`). ## Some packages using Ajv - [webpack](https://github.com/webpack/webpack) - a module bundler. Its main purpose is to bundle JavaScript files for usage in a browser - [jsonscript-js](https://github.com/JSONScript/jsonscript-js) - the interpreter for [JSONScript](http://www.jsonscript.org) - scripted processing of existing endpoints and services - [osprey-method-handler](https://github.com/mulesoft-labs/osprey-method-handler) - Express middleware for validating requests and responses based on a RAML method object, used in [osprey](https://github.com/mulesoft/osprey) - validating API proxy generated from a RAML definition - [har-validator](https://github.com/ahmadnassri/har-validator) - HTTP Archive (HAR) validator - [jsoneditor](https://github.com/josdejong/jsoneditor) - a web-based tool to view, edit, format, and validate JSON http://jsoneditoronline.org - [JSON Schema Lint](https://github.com/nickcmaynard/jsonschemalint) - a web tool to validate JSON/YAML document against a single JSON Schema http://jsonschemalint.com - [objection](https://github.com/vincit/objection.js) - SQL-friendly ORM for Node.js - [table](https://github.com/gajus/table) - formats data into a string table - [ripple-lib](https://github.com/ripple/ripple-lib) - a JavaScript API for interacting with [Ripple](https://ripple.com) in Node.js and the browser - [restbase](https://github.com/wikimedia/restbase) - distributed storage with REST API & dispatcher for backend services built to provide a low-latency & high-throughput API for Wikipedia / Wikimedia content - [hippie-swagger](https://github.com/CacheControl/hippie-swagger) - [Hippie](https://github.com/vesln/hippie) wrapper that provides end to end API testing with swagger validation - [react-form-controlled](https://github.com/seeden/react-form-controlled) - React controlled form components with validation - [rabbitmq-schema](https://github.com/tjmehta/rabbitmq-schema) - a schema definition module for RabbitMQ graphs and messages - [@query/schema](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@query/schema) - stream filtering with a URI-safe query syntax parsing to JSON Schema - [chai-ajv-json-schema](https://github.com/peon374/chai-ajv-json-schema) - chai plugin to us JSON Schema with expect in mocha tests - [grunt-jsonschema-ajv](https://github.com/SignpostMarv/grunt-jsonschema-ajv) - Grunt plugin for validating files against JSON Schema - [extract-text-webpack-plugin](https://github.com/webpack-contrib/extract-text-webpack-plugin) - extract text from bundle into a file - [electron-builder](https://github.com/electron-userland/electron-builder) - a solution to package and build a ready for distribution Electron app - [addons-linter](https://github.com/mozilla/addons-linter) - Mozilla Add-ons Linter - [gh-pages-generator](https://github.com/epoberezkin/gh-pages-generator) - multi-page site generator converting markdown files to GitHub pages - [ESLint](https://github.com/eslint/eslint) - the pluggable linting utility for JavaScript and JSX ## Tests ``` npm install git submodule update --init npm test ``` ## Contributing All validation functions are generated using doT templates in [dot](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/tree/master/lib/dot) folder. Templates are precompiled so doT is not a run-time dependency. `npm run build` - compiles templates to [dotjs](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/tree/master/lib/dotjs) folder. `npm run watch` - automatically compiles templates when files in dot folder change Please see [Contributing guidelines](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) ## Changes history See https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases __Please note__: [Changes in version 7.0.0-beta](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v7.0.0-beta.0) [Version 6.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v6.0.0). ## Code of conduct Please review and follow the [Code of conduct](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). Please report any unacceptable behaviour to [email protected] - it will be reviewed by the project team. ## Open-source software support Ajv is a part of [Tidelift subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-ajv?utm_source=npm-ajv&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=readme) - it provides a centralised support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## License [MIT](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/blob/master/LICENSE) Railroad-diagram Generator ========================== This is a small js library for generating railroad diagrams (like what [JSON.org](http://json.org) uses) using SVG. Railroad diagrams are a way of visually representing a grammar in a form that is more readable than using regular expressions or BNF. I think (though I haven't given it a lot of thought yet) that if it's easy to write a context-free grammar for the language, the corresponding railroad diagram will be easy as well. There are several railroad-diagram generators out there, but none of them had the visual appeal I wanted. [Here's an example of how they look!](http://www.xanthir.com/etc/railroad-diagrams/example.html) And [here's an online generator for you to play with and get SVG code from!](http://www.xanthir.com/etc/railroad-diagrams/generator.html) The library now exists in a Python port as well! See the information further down. Details ------- To use the library, just include the js and css files, and then call the Diagram() function. Its arguments are the components of the diagram (Diagram is a special form of Sequence). An alternative to Diagram() is ComplexDiagram() which is used to describe a complex type diagram. Components are either leaves or containers. The leaves: * Terminal(text) or a bare string - represents literal text * NonTerminal(text) - represents an instruction or another production * Comment(text) - a comment * Skip() - an empty line The containers: * Sequence(children) - like simple concatenation in a regex * Choice(index, children) - like | in a regex. The index argument specifies which child is the "normal" choice and should go in the middle * Optional(child, skip) - like ? in a regex. A shorthand for `Choice(1, [Skip(), child])`. If the optional `skip` parameter has the value `"skip"`, it instead puts the Skip() in the straight-line path, for when the "normal" behavior is to omit the item. * OneOrMore(child, repeat) - like + in a regex. The 'repeat' argument is optional, and specifies something that must go between the repetitions. * ZeroOrMore(child, repeat, skip) - like * in a regex. A shorthand for `Optional(OneOrMore(child, repeat))`. The optional `skip` parameter is identical to Optional(). For convenience, each component can be called with or without `new`. If called without `new`, the container components become n-ary; that is, you can say either `new Sequence([A, B])` or just `Sequence(A,B)`. After constructing a Diagram, call `.format(...padding)` on it, specifying 0-4 padding values (just like CSS) for some additional "breathing space" around the diagram (the paddings default to 20px). The result can either be `.toString()`'d for the markup, or `.toSVG()`'d for an `<svg>` element, which can then be immediately inserted to the document. As a convenience, Diagram also has an `.addTo(element)` method, which immediately converts it to SVG and appends it to the referenced element with default paddings. `element` defaults to `document.body`. Options ------- There are a few options you can tweak, at the bottom of the file. Just tweak either until the diagram looks like what you want. You can also change the CSS file - feel free to tweak to your heart's content. Note, though, that if you change the text sizes in the CSS, you'll have to go adjust the metrics for the leaf nodes as well. * VERTICAL_SEPARATION - sets the minimum amount of vertical separation between two items. Note that the stroke width isn't counted when computing the separation; this shouldn't be relevant unless you have a very small separation or very large stroke width. * ARC_RADIUS - the radius of the arcs used in the branching containers like Choice. This has a relatively large effect on the size of non-trivial diagrams. Both tight and loose values look good, depending on what you're going for. * DIAGRAM_CLASS - the class set on the root `<svg>` element of each diagram, for use in the CSS stylesheet. * STROKE_ODD_PIXEL_LENGTH - the default stylesheet uses odd pixel lengths for 'stroke'. Due to rasterization artifacts, they look best when the item has been translated half a pixel in both directions. If you change the styling to use a stroke with even pixel lengths, you'll want to set this variable to `false`. * INTERNAL_ALIGNMENT - when some branches of a container are narrower than others, this determines how they're aligned in the extra space. Defaults to "center", but can be set to "left" or "right". Caveats ------- At this early stage, the generator is feature-complete and works as intended, but still has several TODOs: * The font-sizes are hard-coded right now, and the font handling in general is very dumb - I'm just guessing at some metrics that are probably "good enough" rather than measuring things properly. Python Port ----------- In addition to the canonical JS version, the library now exists as a Python library as well. Using it is basically identical. The config variables are globals in the file, and so may be adjusted either manually or via tweaking from inside your program. The main difference from the JS port is how you extract the string from the Diagram. You'll find a `writeSvg(writerFunc)` method on `Diagram`, which takes a callback of one argument and passes it the string form of the diagram. For example, it can be used like `Diagram(...).writeSvg(sys.stdout.write)` to write to stdout. **Note**: the callback will be called multiple times as it builds up the string, not just once with the whole thing. If you need it all at once, consider something like a `StringIO` as an easy way to collect it into a single string. License ------- This document and all associated files in the github project are licensed under [CC0](http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) ![](http://i.creativecommons.org/p/zero/1.0/80x15.png). This means you can reuse, remix, or otherwise appropriate this project for your own use **without restriction**. (The actual legal meaning can be found at the above link.) Don't ask me for permission to use any part of this project, **just use it**. I would appreciate attribution, but that is not required by the license. # assemblyscript-regex A regex engine for AssemblyScript. [AssemblyScript](https://www.assemblyscript.org/) is a new language, based on TypeScript, that runs on WebAssembly. AssemblyScript has a lightweight standard library, but lacks support for Regular Expression. The project fills that gap! This project exposes an API that mirrors the JavaScript [RegExp](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/RegExp) class: ```javascript const regex = new RegExp("fo*", "g"); const str = "table football, foul"; let match: Match | null = regex.exec(str); while (match != null) { // first iteration // match.index = 6 // match.matches[0] = "foo" // second iteration // match.index = 16 // match.matches[0] = "fo" match = regex.exec(str); } ``` ## Project status The initial focus of this implementation has been feature support and functionality over performance. It currently supports a sufficient number of regex features to be considered useful, including most character classes, common assertions, groups, alternations, capturing groups and quantifiers. The next phase of development will focussed on more extensive testing and performance. The project currently has reasonable unit test coverage, focussed on positive and negative test cases on a per-feature basis. It also includes a more exhaustive test suite with test cases borrowed from another regex library. ### Feature support Based on the classfication within the [MDN cheatsheet](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Regular_Expressions/Cheatsheet) **Character sets** - [x] . - [x] \d - [x] \D - [x] \w - [x] \W - [x] \s - [x] \S - [x] \t - [x] \r - [x] \n - [x] \v - [x] \f - [ ] [\b] - [ ] \0 - [ ] \cX - [x] \xhh - [x] \uhhhh - [ ] \u{hhhh} or \u{hhhhh} - [x] \ **Assertions** - [x] ^ - [x] $ - [ ] \b - [ ] \B **Other assertions** - [ ] x(?=y) Lookahead assertion - [ ] x(?!y) Negative lookahead assertion - [ ] (?<=y)x Lookbehind assertion - [ ] (?<!y)x Negative lookbehind assertion **Groups and ranges** - [x] x|y - [x] [xyz][a-c] - [x] [^xyz][^a-c] - [x] (x) capturing group - [ ] \n back reference - [ ] (?<Name>x) named capturing group - [x] (?:x) Non-capturing group **Quantifiers** - [x] x\* - [x] x+ - [x] x? - [x] x{n} - [x] x{n,} - [x] x{n,m} - [ ] x\*? / x+? / ... **RegExp** - [x] global - [ ] sticky - [x] case insensitive - [x] multiline - [x] dotAll - [ ] unicode ### Development This project is open source, MIT licenced and your contributions are very much welcomed. To get started, check out the repository and install dependencies: ``` $ npm install ``` A few general points about the tools and processes this project uses: - This project uses prettier for code formatting and eslint to provide additional syntactic checks. These are both run on `npm test` and as part of the CI build. - The unit tests are executed using [as-pect](https://github.com/jtenner/as-pect) - a native AssemblyScript test runner - The specification tests are within the `spec` folder. The `npm run test:generate` target transforms these tests into as-pect tests which execute as part of the standard build / test cycle - In order to support improved debugging you can execute this library as TypeScript (rather than WebAssembly), via the `npm run tsrun` target. # flatted [![Downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/flatted.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/flatted) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/WebReflection/flatted/badge.svg?branch=main)](https://coveralls.io/github/WebReflection/flatted?branch=main) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.com/WebReflection/flatted.svg?branch=main)](https://travis-ci.com/WebReflection/flatted) [![License: ISC](https://img.shields.io/badge/License-ISC-yellow.svg)](https://opensource.org/licenses/ISC) ![WebReflection status](https://offline.report/status/webreflection.svg) ![snow flake](./flatted.jpg) <sup>**Social Media Photo by [Matt Seymour](https://unsplash.com/@mattseymour) on [Unsplash](https://unsplash.com/)**</sup> ## Announcement 📣 There is a standard approach to recursion and more data-types than what JSON allows, and it's part of the [Structured Clone polyfill](https://github.com/ungap/structured-clone/#readme). Beside acting as a polyfill, its `@ungap/structured-clone/json` export provides both `stringify` and `parse`, and it's been tested for being faster than *flatted*, but its produced output is also smaller than *flatted* in general. The *@ungap/structured-clone* module is, in short, a drop in replacement for *flatted*, but it's not compatible with *flatted* specialized syntax. However, if recursion, as well as more data-types, are what you are after, or interesting for your projects/use cases, consider switching to this new module whenever you can 👍 - - - A super light (0.5K) and fast circular JSON parser, directly from the creator of [CircularJSON](https://github.com/WebReflection/circular-json/#circularjson). Now available also for **[PHP](./php/flatted.php)**. ```js npm i flatted ``` Usable via [CDN](https://unpkg.com/flatted) or as regular module. ```js // ESM import {parse, stringify, toJSON, fromJSON} from 'flatted'; // CJS const {parse, stringify, toJSON, fromJSON} = require('flatted'); const a = [{}]; a[0].a = a; a.push(a); stringify(a); // [["1","0"],{"a":"0"}] ``` ## toJSON and fromJSON If you'd like to implicitly survive JSON serialization, these two helpers helps: ```js import {toJSON, fromJSON} from 'flatted'; class RecursiveMap extends Map { static fromJSON(any) { return new this(fromJSON(any)); } toJSON() { return toJSON([...this.entries()]); } } const recursive = new RecursiveMap; const same = {}; same.same = same; recursive.set('same', same); const asString = JSON.stringify(recursive); const asMap = RecursiveMap.fromJSON(JSON.parse(asString)); asMap.get('same') === asMap.get('same').same; // true ``` ## Flatted VS JSON As it is for every other specialized format capable of serializing and deserializing circular data, you should never `JSON.parse(Flatted.stringify(data))`, and you should never `Flatted.parse(JSON.stringify(data))`. The only way this could work is to `Flatted.parse(Flatted.stringify(data))`, as it is also for _CircularJSON_ or any other, otherwise there's no granted data integrity. Also please note this project serializes and deserializes only data compatible with JSON, so that sockets, or anything else with internal classes different from those allowed by JSON standard, won't be serialized and unserialized as expected. ### New in V1: Exact same JSON API * Added a [reviver](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON/parse#Syntax) parameter to `.parse(string, reviver)` and revive your own objects. * Added a [replacer](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON/stringify#Syntax) and a `space` parameter to `.stringify(object, replacer, space)` for feature parity with JSON signature. ### Compatibility All ECMAScript engines compatible with `Map`, `Set`, `Object.keys`, and `Array.prototype.reduce` will work, even if polyfilled. ### How does it work ? While stringifying, all Objects, including Arrays, and strings, are flattened out and replaced as unique index. `*` Once parsed, all indexes will be replaced through the flattened collection. <sup><sub>`*` represented as string to avoid conflicts with numbers</sub></sup> ```js // logic example var a = [{one: 1}, {two: '2'}]; a[0].a = a; // a is the main object, will be at index '0' // {one: 1} is the second object, index '1' // {two: '2'} the third, in '2', and it has a string // which will be found at index '3' Flatted.stringify(a); // [["1","2"],{"one":1,"a":"0"},{"two":"3"},"2"] // a[one,two] {one: 1, a} {two: '2'} '2' ``` # inflight Add callbacks to requests in flight to avoid async duplication ## USAGE ```javascript var inflight = require('inflight') // some request that does some stuff function req(key, callback) { // key is any random string. like a url or filename or whatever. // // will return either a falsey value, indicating that the // request for this key is already in flight, or a new callback // which when called will call all callbacks passed to inflightk // with the same key callback = inflight(key, callback) // If we got a falsey value back, then there's already a req going if (!callback) return // this is where you'd fetch the url or whatever // callback is also once()-ified, so it can safely be assigned // to multiple events etc. First call wins. setTimeout(function() { callback(null, key) }, 100) } // only assigns a single setTimeout // when it dings, all cbs get called req('foo', cb1) req('foo', cb2) req('foo', cb3) req('foo', cb4) ``` # tr46.js > An implementation of the [Unicode TR46 specification](http://unicode.org/reports/tr46/). ## Installation [Node.js](http://nodejs.org) `>= 6` is required. To install, type this at the command line: ```shell npm install tr46 ``` ## API ### `toASCII(domainName[, options])` Converts a string of Unicode symbols to a case-folded Punycode string of ASCII symbols. Available options: * [`checkBidi`](#checkBidi) * [`checkHyphens`](#checkHyphens) * [`checkJoiners`](#checkJoiners) * [`processingOption`](#processingOption) * [`useSTD3ASCIIRules`](#useSTD3ASCIIRules) * [`verifyDNSLength`](#verifyDNSLength) ### `toUnicode(domainName[, options])` Converts a case-folded Punycode string of ASCII symbols to a string of Unicode symbols. Available options: * [`checkBidi`](#checkBidi) * [`checkHyphens`](#checkHyphens) * [`checkJoiners`](#checkJoiners) * [`useSTD3ASCIIRules`](#useSTD3ASCIIRules) ## Options ### `checkBidi` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, any bi-directional text within the input will be checked for validation. ### `checkHyphens` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, the positions of any hyphen characters within the input will be checked for validation. ### `checkJoiners` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, any word joiner characters within the input will be checked for validation. ### `processingOption` Type: `String` Default value: `"nontransitional"` When set to `"transitional"`, symbols within the input will be validated according to the older IDNA2003 protocol. When set to `"nontransitional"`, the current IDNA2008 protocol will be used. ### `useSTD3ASCIIRules` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, input will be validated according to [STD3 Rules](http://unicode.org/reports/tr46/#STD3_Rules). ### `verifyDNSLength` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, the length of each DNS label within the input will be checked for validation. # json-schema-traverse Traverse JSON Schema passing each schema object to callback [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/json-schema-traverse.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/json-schema-traverse) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse?branch=master) ## Install ``` npm install json-schema-traverse ``` ## Usage ```javascript const traverse = require('json-schema-traverse'); const schema = { properties: { foo: {type: 'string'}, bar: {type: 'integer'} } }; traverse(schema, {cb}); // cb is called 3 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. {type: 'string'} // 3. {type: 'integer'} // Or: traverse(schema, {cb: {pre, post}}); // pre is called 3 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. {type: 'string'} // 3. {type: 'integer'} // // post is called 3 times with: // 1. {type: 'string'} // 2. {type: 'integer'} // 3. root schema ``` Callback function `cb` is called for each schema object (not including draft-06 boolean schemas), including the root schema, in pre-order traversal. Schema references ($ref) are not resolved, they are passed as is. Alternatively, you can pass a `{pre, post}` object as `cb`, and then `pre` will be called before traversing child elements, and `post` will be called after all child elements have been traversed. Callback is passed these parameters: - _schema_: the current schema object - _JSON pointer_: from the root schema to the current schema object - _root schema_: the schema passed to `traverse` object - _parent JSON pointer_: from the root schema to the parent schema object (see below) - _parent keyword_: the keyword inside which this schema appears (e.g. `properties`, `anyOf`, etc.) - _parent schema_: not necessarily parent object/array; in the example above the parent schema for `{type: 'string'}` is the root schema - _index/property_: index or property name in the array/object containing multiple schemas; in the example above for `{type: 'string'}` the property name is `'foo'` ## Traverse objects in all unknown keywords ```javascript const traverse = require('json-schema-traverse'); const schema = { mySchema: { minimum: 1, maximum: 2 } }; traverse(schema, {allKeys: true, cb}); // cb is called 2 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. mySchema ``` Without option `allKeys: true` callback will be called only with root schema. ## License [MIT](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/blob/master/LICENSE) # fast-levenshtein - Levenshtein algorithm in Javascript [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein.png)](http://travis-ci.org/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein) [![NPM module](https://badge.fury.io/js/fast-levenshtein.png)](https://badge.fury.io/js/fast-levenshtein) [![NPM downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/fast-levenshtein.svg?maxAge=2592000)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/fast-levenshtein) [![Follow on Twitter](https://img.shields.io/twitter/url/http/shields.io.svg?style=social&label=Follow&maxAge=2592000)](https://twitter.com/hiddentao) An efficient Javascript implementation of the [Levenshtein algorithm](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levenshtein_distance) with locale-specific collator support. ## Features * Works in node.js and in the browser. * Better performance than other implementations by not needing to store the whole matrix ([more info](http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/13525/Fast-memory-efficient-Levenshtein-algorithm)). * Locale-sensitive string comparisions if needed. * Comprehensive test suite and performance benchmark. * Small: <1 KB minified and gzipped ## Installation ### node.js Install using [npm](http://npmjs.org/): ```bash $ npm install fast-levenshtein ``` ### Browser Using bower: ```bash $ bower install fast-levenshtein ``` If you are not using any module loader system then the API will then be accessible via the `window.Levenshtein` object. ## Examples **Default usage** ```javascript var levenshtein = require('fast-levenshtein'); var distance = levenshtein.get('back', 'book'); // 2 var distance = levenshtein.get('我愛你', '我叫你'); // 1 ``` **Locale-sensitive string comparisons** It supports using [Intl.Collator](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Collator) for locale-sensitive string comparisons: ```javascript var levenshtein = require('fast-levenshtein'); levenshtein.get('mikailovitch', 'Mikhaïlovitch', { useCollator: true}); // 1 ``` ## Building and Testing To build the code and run the tests: ```bash $ npm install -g grunt-cli $ npm install $ npm run build ``` ## Performance _Thanks to [Titus Wormer](https://github.com/wooorm) for [encouraging me](https://github.com/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein/issues/1) to do this._ Benchmarked against other node.js levenshtein distance modules (on Macbook Air 2012, Core i7, 8GB RAM): ```bash Running suite Implementation comparison [benchmark/speed.js]... >> levenshtein-edit-distance x 234 ops/sec ±3.02% (73 runs sampled) >> levenshtein-component x 422 ops/sec ±4.38% (83 runs sampled) >> levenshtein-deltas x 283 ops/sec ±3.83% (78 runs sampled) >> natural x 255 ops/sec ±0.76% (88 runs sampled) >> levenshtein x 180 ops/sec ±3.55% (86 runs sampled) >> fast-levenshtein x 1,792 ops/sec ±2.72% (95 runs sampled) Benchmark done. Fastest test is fast-levenshtein at 4.2x faster than levenshtein-component ``` You can run this benchmark yourself by doing: ```bash $ npm install $ npm run build $ npm run benchmark ``` ## Contributing If you wish to submit a pull request please update and/or create new tests for any changes you make and ensure the grunt build passes. See [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) for details. ## License MIT - see [LICENSE.md](https://github.com/hiddentao/fast-levenshtein/blob/master/LICENSE.md) blockvote ================== This [React] app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Install dependencies: `yarn install` 3. Run the local development server: `yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `yarn run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `yarn install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: yarn install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `blockvote.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `blockvote.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account blockvote.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'blockvote.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [React]: https://reactjs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages functional-red-black-tree ========================= A [fully persistent](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persistent_data_structure) [red-black tree](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red%E2%80%93black_tree) written 100% in JavaScript. Works both in node.js and in the browser via [browserify](http://browserify.org/). Functional (or fully presistent) data structures allow for non-destructive updates. So if you insert an element into the tree, it returns a new tree with the inserted element rather than destructively updating the existing tree in place. Doing this requires using extra memory, and if one were naive it could cost as much as reallocating the entire tree. Instead, this data structure saves some memory by recycling references to previously allocated subtrees. This requires using only O(log(n)) additional memory per update instead of a full O(n) copy. Some advantages of this is that it is possible to apply insertions and removals to the tree while still iterating over previous versions of the tree. Functional and persistent data structures can also be useful in many geometric algorithms like point location within triangulations or ray queries, and can be used to analyze the history of executing various algorithms. This added power though comes at a cost, since it is generally a bit slower to use a functional data structure than an imperative version. However, if your application needs this behavior then you may consider using this module. # Install npm install functional-red-black-tree # Example Here is an example of some basic usage: ```javascript //Load the library var createTree = require("functional-red-black-tree") //Create a tree var t1 = createTree() //Insert some items into the tree var t2 = t1.insert(1, "foo") var t3 = t2.insert(2, "bar") //Remove something var t4 = t3.remove(1) ``` # API ```javascript var createTree = require("functional-red-black-tree") ``` ## Overview - [Tree methods](#tree-methods) - [`var tree = createTree([compare])`](#var-tree-=-createtreecompare) - [`tree.keys`](#treekeys) - [`tree.values`](#treevalues) - [`tree.length`](#treelength) - [`tree.get(key)`](#treegetkey) - [`tree.insert(key, value)`](#treeinsertkey-value) - [`tree.remove(key)`](#treeremovekey) - [`tree.find(key)`](#treefindkey) - [`tree.ge(key)`](#treegekey) - [`tree.gt(key)`](#treegtkey) - [`tree.lt(key)`](#treeltkey) - [`tree.le(key)`](#treelekey) - [`tree.at(position)`](#treeatposition) - [`tree.begin`](#treebegin) - [`tree.end`](#treeend) - [`tree.forEach(visitor(key,value)[, lo[, hi]])`](#treeforEachvisitorkeyvalue-lo-hi) - [`tree.root`](#treeroot) - [Node properties](#node-properties) - [`node.key`](#nodekey) - [`node.value`](#nodevalue) - [`node.left`](#nodeleft) - [`node.right`](#noderight) - [Iterator methods](#iterator-methods) - [`iter.key`](#iterkey) - [`iter.value`](#itervalue) - [`iter.node`](#iternode) - [`iter.tree`](#itertree) - [`iter.index`](#iterindex) - [`iter.valid`](#itervalid) - [`iter.clone()`](#iterclone) - [`iter.remove()`](#iterremove) - [`iter.update(value)`](#iterupdatevalue) - [`iter.next()`](#iternext) - [`iter.prev()`](#iterprev) - [`iter.hasNext`](#iterhasnext) - [`iter.hasPrev`](#iterhasprev) ## Tree methods ### `var tree = createTree([compare])` Creates an empty functional tree * `compare` is an optional comparison function, same semantics as array.sort() **Returns** An empty tree ordered by `compare` ### `tree.keys` A sorted array of all the keys in the tree ### `tree.values` An array array of all the values in the tree ### `tree.length` The number of items in the tree ### `tree.get(key)` Retrieves the value associated to the given key * `key` is the key of the item to look up **Returns** The value of the first node associated to `key` ### `tree.insert(key, value)` Creates a new tree with the new pair inserted. * `key` is the key of the item to insert * `value` is the value of the item to insert **Returns** A new tree with `key` and `value` inserted ### `tree.remove(key)` Removes the first item with `key` in the tree * `key` is the key of the item to remove **Returns** A new tree with the given item removed if it exists ### `tree.find(key)` Returns an iterator pointing to the first item in the tree with `key`, otherwise `null`. ### `tree.ge(key)` Find the first item in the tree whose key is `>= key` * `key` is the key to search for **Returns** An iterator at the given element. ### `tree.gt(key)` Finds the first item in the tree whose key is `> key` * `key` is the key to search for **Returns** An iterator at the given element ### `tree.lt(key)` Finds the last item in the tree whose key is `< key` * `key` is the key to search for **Returns** An iterator at the given element ### `tree.le(key)` Finds the last item in the tree whose key is `<= key` * `key` is the key to search for **Returns** An iterator at the given element ### `tree.at(position)` Finds an iterator starting at the given element * `position` is the index at which the iterator gets created **Returns** An iterator starting at position ### `tree.begin` An iterator pointing to the first element in the tree ### `tree.end` An iterator pointing to the last element in the tree ### `tree.forEach(visitor(key,value)[, lo[, hi]])` Walks a visitor function over the nodes of the tree in order. * `visitor(key,value)` is a callback that gets executed on each node. If a truthy value is returned from the visitor, then iteration is stopped. * `lo` is an optional start of the range to visit (inclusive) * `hi` is an optional end of the range to visit (non-inclusive) **Returns** The last value returned by the callback ### `tree.root` Returns the root node of the tree ## Node properties Each node of the tree has the following properties: ### `node.key` The key associated to the node ### `node.value` The value associated to the node ### `node.left` The left subtree of the node ### `node.right` The right subtree of the node ## Iterator methods ### `iter.key` The key of the item referenced by the iterator ### `iter.value` The value of the item referenced by the iterator ### `iter.node` The value of the node at the iterator's current position. `null` is iterator is node valid. ### `iter.tree` The tree associated to the iterator ### `iter.index` Returns the position of this iterator in the sequence. ### `iter.valid` Checks if the iterator is valid ### `iter.clone()` Makes a copy of the iterator ### `iter.remove()` Removes the item at the position of the iterator **Returns** A new binary search tree with `iter`'s item removed ### `iter.update(value)` Updates the value of the node in the tree at this iterator **Returns** A new binary search tree with the corresponding node updated ### `iter.next()` Advances the iterator to the next position ### `iter.prev()` Moves the iterator backward one element ### `iter.hasNext` If true, then the iterator is not at the end of the sequence ### `iter.hasPrev` If true, then the iterator is not at the beginning of the sequence # Credits (c) 2013 Mikola Lysenko. MIT License # emoji-regex [![Build status](https://travis-ci.org/mathiasbynens/emoji-regex.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/mathiasbynens/emoji-regex) _emoji-regex_ offers a regular expression to match all emoji symbols (including textual representations of emoji) as per the Unicode Standard. This repository contains a script that generates this regular expression based on [the data from Unicode v12](https://github.com/mathiasbynens/unicode-12.0.0). Because of this, the regular expression can easily be updated whenever new emoji are added to the Unicode standard. ## Installation Via [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```bash npm install emoji-regex ``` In [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/): ```js const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex'); // Note: because the regular expression has the global flag set, this module // exports a function that returns the regex rather than exporting the regular // expression itself, to make it impossible to (accidentally) mutate the // original regular expression. const text = ` \u{231A}: ⌚ default emoji presentation character (Emoji_Presentation) \u{2194}\u{FE0F}: ↔️ default text presentation character rendered as emoji \u{1F469}: 👩 emoji modifier base (Emoji_Modifier_Base) \u{1F469}\u{1F3FF}: 👩🏿 emoji modifier base followed by a modifier `; const regex = emojiRegex(); let match; while (match = regex.exec(text)) { const emoji = match[0]; console.log(`Matched sequence ${ emoji } — code points: ${ [...emoji].length }`); } ``` Console output: ``` Matched sequence ⌚ — code points: 1 Matched sequence ⌚ — code points: 1 Matched sequence ↔️ — code points: 2 Matched sequence ↔️ — code points: 2 Matched sequence 👩 — code points: 1 Matched sequence 👩 — code points: 1 Matched sequence 👩🏿 — code points: 2 Matched sequence 👩🏿 — code points: 2 ``` To match emoji in their textual representation as well (i.e. emoji that are not `Emoji_Presentation` symbols and that aren’t forced to render as emoji by a variation selector), `require` the other regex: ```js const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex/text.js'); ``` Additionally, in environments which support ES2015 Unicode escapes, you may `require` ES2015-style versions of the regexes: ```js const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex/es2015/index.js'); const emojiRegexText = require('emoji-regex/es2015/text.js'); ``` ## Author | [![twitter/mathias](https://gravatar.com/avatar/24e08a9ea84deb17ae121074d0f17125?s=70)](https://twitter.com/mathias "Follow @mathias on Twitter") | |---| | [Mathias Bynens](https://mathiasbynens.be/) | ## License _emoji-regex_ is available under the [MIT](https://mths.be/mit) license. ## assemblyscript-temporal An implementation of temporal within AssemblyScript, with an initial focus on non-timezone-aware classes and functionality. ### Why? AssemblyScript has minimal `Date` support, however, the JS Date API itself is terrible and people tend not to use it that often. As a result libraries like moment / luxon have become staple replacements. However, there is now a [relatively mature TC39 proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal) that adds greatly improved date support to JS. The goal of this project is to implement Temporal for AssemblyScript. ### Usage This library currently supports the following types: #### `PlainDateTime` A `PlainDateTime` represents a calendar date and wall-clock time that does not carry time zone information, e.g. December 7th, 1995 at 3:00 PM (in the Gregorian calendar). For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plaindatetime.html), this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. You can create a `PlainDateTime` from individual components, a string or an object literal: ```javascript datetime = new PlainDateTime(1976, 11, 18, 15, 23, 30, 123, 456, 789); datetime.year; // 2019; datetime.month; // 11; // ... datetime.nanosecond; // 789; datetime = PlainDateTime.from("1976-11-18T12:34:56"); datetime.toString(); // "1976-11-18T12:34:56" datetime = PlainDateTime.from({ year: 1966, month: 3, day: 3 }); datetime.toString(); // "1966-03-03T00:00:00" ``` There are various ways you can manipulate a date: ```javascript // use 'with' to copy a date but with various property values overriden datetime = new PlainDateTime(1976, 11, 18, 15, 23, 30, 123, 456, 789); datetime.with({ year: 2019 }).toString(); // "2019-11-18T15:23:30.123456789" // use 'add' or 'substract' to add / subtract a duration datetime = PlainDateTime.from("2020-01-12T15:00"); datetime.add({ months: 1 }).toString(); // "2020-02-12T15:00:00"); // add / subtract support Duration objects or object literals datetime.add(new Duration(1)).toString(); // "2021-01-12T15:00:00"); ``` You can compare dates and check for equality ```javascript dt1 = PlainDateTime.from("1976-11-18"); dt2 = PlainDateTime.from("2019-10-29"); PlainDateTime.compare(dt1, dt1); // 0 PlainDateTime.compare(dt1, dt2); // -1 dt1.equals(dt1); // true ``` Currently `PlainDateTime` only supports the ISO 8601 (Gregorian) calendar. #### `PlainDate` A `PlainDate` object represents a calendar date that is not associated with a particular time or time zone, e.g. August 24th, 2006. For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plaindate.html), this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. The `PlainDate` API is almost identical to `PlainDateTime`, so see above for API usage examples. #### `PlainTime` A `PlainTime` object represents a wall-clock time that is not associated with a particular date or time zone, e.g. 7:39 PM. For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plaintime.html), this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. The `PlainTime` API is almost identical to `PlainDateTime`, so see above for API usage examples. #### `PlainMonthDay` A date without a year component. This is useful to express things like "Bastille Day is on the 14th of July". For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plainmonthday.html) , this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. ```javascript const monthDay = PlainMonthDay.from({ month: 7, day: 14 }); // => 07-14 const date = monthDay.toPlainDate({ year: 2030 }); // => 2030-07-14 date.dayOfWeek; // => 7 ``` The `PlainMonthDay` API is almost identical to `PlainDateTime`, so see above for more API usage examples. #### `PlainYearMonth` A date without a day component. This is useful to express things like "the October 2020 meeting". For detailed documentation see the [TC39 Temporal proposal website](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/plainyearmonth.html) , this implementation follows the specification as closely as possible. The `PlainYearMonth` API is almost identical to `PlainDateTime`, so see above for API usage examples. #### `now` The `now` object has several methods which give information about the current time and date. ```javascript dateTime = now.plainDateTimeISO(); dateTime.toString(); // 2021-04-01T12:05:47.357 ``` ## Contributing This project is open source, MIT licensed and your contributions are very much welcomed. There is a [brief document that outlines implementation progress and priorities](./development.md). # require-main-filename [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/require-main-filename.png)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/require-main-filename) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/yargs/require-main-filename/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/yargs/require-main-filename?branch=master) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/require-main-filename.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/require-main-filename) `require.main.filename` is great for figuring out the entry point for the current application. This can be combined with a module like [pkg-conf](https://www.npmjs.com/package/pkg-conf) to, _as if by magic_, load top-level configuration. Unfortunately, `require.main.filename` sometimes fails when an application is executed with an alternative process manager, e.g., [iisnode](https://github.com/tjanczuk/iisnode). `require-main-filename` is a shim that addresses this problem. ## Usage ```js var main = require('require-main-filename')() // use main as an alternative to require.main.filename. ``` ## License ISC # brace-expansion [Brace expansion](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Brace-Expansion.html), as known from sh/bash, in JavaScript. [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/juliangruber/brace-expansion.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/juliangruber/brace-expansion) [![downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/brace-expansion.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/brace-expansion) [![Greenkeeper badge](https://badges.greenkeeper.io/juliangruber/brace-expansion.svg)](https://greenkeeper.io/) [![testling badge](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/brace-expansion.png)](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/brace-expansion) ## Example ```js var expand = require('brace-expansion'); expand('file-{a,b,c}.jpg') // => ['file-a.jpg', 'file-b.jpg', 'file-c.jpg'] expand('-v{,,}') // => ['-v', '-v', '-v'] expand('file{0..2}.jpg') // => ['file0.jpg', 'file1.jpg', 'file2.jpg'] expand('file-{a..c}.jpg') // => ['file-a.jpg', 'file-b.jpg', 'file-c.jpg'] expand('file{2..0}.jpg') // => ['file2.jpg', 'file1.jpg', 'file0.jpg'] expand('file{0..4..2}.jpg') // => ['file0.jpg', 'file2.jpg', 'file4.jpg'] expand('file-{a..e..2}.jpg') // => ['file-a.jpg', 'file-c.jpg', 'file-e.jpg'] expand('file{00..10..5}.jpg') // => ['file00.jpg', 'file05.jpg', 'file10.jpg'] expand('{{A..C},{a..c}}') // => ['A', 'B', 'C', 'a', 'b', 'c'] expand('ppp{,config,oe{,conf}}') // => ['ppp', 'pppconfig', 'pppoe', 'pppoeconf'] ``` ## API ```js var expand = require('brace-expansion'); ``` ### var expanded = expand(str) Return an array of all possible and valid expansions of `str`. If none are found, `[str]` is returned. Valid expansions are: ```js /^(.*,)+(.+)?$/ // {a,b,...} ``` A comma separated list of options, like `{a,b}` or `{a,{b,c}}` or `{,a,}`. ```js /^-?\d+\.\.-?\d+(\.\.-?\d+)?$/ // {x..y[..incr]} ``` A numeric sequence from `x` to `y` inclusive, with optional increment. If `x` or `y` start with a leading `0`, all the numbers will be padded to have equal length. Negative numbers and backwards iteration work too. ```js /^-?\d+\.\.-?\d+(\.\.-?\d+)?$/ // {x..y[..incr]} ``` An alphabetic sequence from `x` to `y` inclusive, with optional increment. `x` and `y` must be exactly one character, and if given, `incr` must be a number. For compatibility reasons, the string `${` is not eligible for brace expansion. ## Installation With [npm](https://npmjs.org) do: ```bash npm install brace-expansion ``` ## Contributors - [Julian Gruber](https://github.com/juliangruber) - [Isaac Z. Schlueter](https://github.com/isaacs) ## Sponsors This module is proudly supported by my [Sponsors](https://github.com/juliangruber/sponsors)! Do you want to support modules like this to improve their quality, stability and weigh in on new features? Then please consider donating to my [Patreon](https://www.patreon.com/juliangruber). Not sure how much of my modules you're using? Try [feross/thanks](https://github.com/feross/thanks)! ## License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2013 Julian Gruber &lt;[email protected]&gt; Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # INECvote A voting app built on NEAR blockchain ### Estraverse [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse) Estraverse ([estraverse](http://github.com/estools/estraverse)) is [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) traversal functions from [esmangle project](http://github.com/estools/esmangle). ### Documentation You can find usage docs at [wiki page](https://github.com/estools/estraverse/wiki/Usage). ### Example Usage The following code will output all variables declared at the root of a file. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'FunctionExpression' || node.type == 'FunctionDeclaration') return estraverse.VisitorOption.Skip; }, leave: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'VariableDeclarator') console.log(node.id.name); } }); ``` We can use `this.skip`, `this.remove` and `this.break` functions instead of using Skip, Remove and Break. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node) { this.break(); } }); ``` And estraverse provides `estraverse.replace` function. When returning node from `enter`/`leave`, current node is replaced with it. ```javascript result = estraverse.replace(tree, { enter: function (node) { // Replace it with replaced. if (node.type === 'Literal') return replaced; } }); ``` By passing `visitor.keys` mapping, we can extend estraverse traversing functionality. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Extending the existing traversing rules. keys: { // TargetNodeName: [ 'keys', 'containing', 'the', 'other', '**node**' ] TestExpression: ['argument'] } }); ``` By passing `visitor.fallback` option, we can control the behavior when encountering unknown nodes. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Iterating the child **nodes** of unknown nodes. fallback: 'iteration' }); ``` When `visitor.fallback` is a function, we can determine which keys to visit on each node. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Skip the `argument` property of each node fallback: function(node) { return Object.keys(node).filter(function(key) { return key !== 'argument'; }); } }); ``` ### License Copyright (C) 2012-2016 [Yusuke Suzuki](http://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](http://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. # function-bind <!-- [![build status][travis-svg]][travis-url] [![NPM version][npm-badge-svg]][npm-url] [![Coverage Status][5]][6] [![gemnasium Dependency Status][7]][8] [![Dependency status][deps-svg]][deps-url] [![Dev Dependency status][dev-deps-svg]][dev-deps-url] --> <!-- [![browser support][11]][12] --> Implementation of function.prototype.bind ## Example I mainly do this for unit tests I run on phantomjs. PhantomJS does not have Function.prototype.bind :( ```js Function.prototype.bind = require("function-bind") ``` ## Installation `npm install function-bind` ## Contributors - Raynos ## MIT Licenced [travis-svg]: https://travis-ci.org/Raynos/function-bind.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/Raynos/function-bind [npm-badge-svg]: https://badge.fury.io/js/function-bind.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/function-bind [5]: https://coveralls.io/repos/Raynos/function-bind/badge.png [6]: https://coveralls.io/r/Raynos/function-bind [7]: https://gemnasium.com/Raynos/function-bind.png [8]: https://gemnasium.com/Raynos/function-bind [deps-svg]: https://david-dm.org/Raynos/function-bind.svg [deps-url]: https://david-dm.org/Raynos/function-bind [dev-deps-svg]: https://david-dm.org/Raynos/function-bind/dev-status.svg [dev-deps-url]: https://david-dm.org/Raynos/function-bind#info=devDependencies [11]: https://ci.testling.com/Raynos/function-bind.png [12]: https://ci.testling.com/Raynos/function-bind <table><thead> <tr> <th>Linux</th> <th>OS X</th> <th>Windows</th> <th>Coverage</th> <th>Downloads</th> </tr> </thead><tbody><tr> <td colspan="2" align="center"> <a href="https://travis-ci.org/kaelzhang/node-ignore"> <img src="https://travis-ci.org/kaelzhang/node-ignore.svg?branch=master" alt="Build Status" /></a> </td> <td align="center"> <a href="https://ci.appveyor.com/project/kaelzhang/node-ignore"> <img src="https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/github/kaelzhang/node-ignore?branch=master&svg=true" alt="Windows Build Status" /></a> </td> <td align="center"> <a href="https://codecov.io/gh/kaelzhang/node-ignore"> <img src="https://codecov.io/gh/kaelzhang/node-ignore/branch/master/graph/badge.svg" alt="Coverage Status" /></a> </td> <td align="center"> <a href="https://www.npmjs.org/package/ignore"> <img src="http://img.shields.io/npm/dm/ignore.svg" alt="npm module downloads per month" /></a> </td> </tr></tbody></table> # ignore `ignore` is a manager, filter and parser which implemented in pure JavaScript according to the .gitignore [spec](http://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore). Pay attention that [`minimatch`](https://www.npmjs.org/package/minimatch) does not work in the gitignore way. To filter filenames according to .gitignore file, I recommend this module. ##### Tested on - Linux + Node: `0.8` - `7.x` - Windows + Node: `0.10` - `7.x`, node < `0.10` is not tested due to the lack of support of appveyor. Actually, `ignore` does not rely on any versions of node specially. Since `4.0.0`, ignore will no longer support `node < 6` by default, to use in node < 6, `require('ignore/legacy')`. For details, see [CHANGELOG](https://github.com/kaelzhang/node-ignore/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md). ## Table Of Main Contents - [Usage](#usage) - [`Pathname` Conventions](#pathname-conventions) - [Guide for 2.x -> 3.x](#upgrade-2x---3x) - [Guide for 3.x -> 4.x](#upgrade-3x---4x) - See Also: - [`glob-gitignore`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/glob-gitignore) matches files using patterns and filters them according to gitignore rules. ## Usage ```js import ignore from 'ignore' const ig = ignore().add(['.abc/*', '!.abc/d/']) ``` ### Filter the given paths ```js const paths = [ '.abc/a.js', // filtered out '.abc/d/e.js' // included ] ig.filter(paths) // ['.abc/d/e.js'] ig.ignores('.abc/a.js') // true ``` ### As the filter function ```js paths.filter(ig.createFilter()); // ['.abc/d/e.js'] ``` ### Win32 paths will be handled ```js ig.filter(['.abc\\a.js', '.abc\\d\\e.js']) // if the code above runs on windows, the result will be // ['.abc\\d\\e.js'] ``` ## Why another ignore? - `ignore` is a standalone module, and is much simpler so that it could easy work with other programs, unlike [isaacs](https://npmjs.org/~isaacs)'s [fstream-ignore](https://npmjs.org/package/fstream-ignore) which must work with the modules of the fstream family. - `ignore` only contains utility methods to filter paths according to the specified ignore rules, so - `ignore` never try to find out ignore rules by traversing directories or fetching from git configurations. - `ignore` don't cares about sub-modules of git projects. - Exactly according to [gitignore man page](http://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore), fixes some known matching issues of fstream-ignore, such as: - '`/*.js`' should only match '`a.js`', but not '`abc/a.js`'. - '`**/foo`' should match '`foo`' anywhere. - Prevent re-including a file if a parent directory of that file is excluded. - Handle trailing whitespaces: - `'a '`(one space) should not match `'a '`(two spaces). - `'a \ '` matches `'a '` - All test cases are verified with the result of `git check-ignore`. # Methods ## .add(pattern: string | Ignore): this ## .add(patterns: Array<string | Ignore>): this - **pattern** `String | Ignore` An ignore pattern string, or the `Ignore` instance - **patterns** `Array<String | Ignore>` Array of ignore patterns. Adds a rule or several rules to the current manager. Returns `this` Notice that a line starting with `'#'`(hash) is treated as a comment. Put a backslash (`'\'`) in front of the first hash for patterns that begin with a hash, if you want to ignore a file with a hash at the beginning of the filename. ```js ignore().add('#abc').ignores('#abc') // false ignore().add('\#abc').ignores('#abc') // true ``` `pattern` could either be a line of ignore pattern or a string of multiple ignore patterns, which means we could just `ignore().add()` the content of a ignore file: ```js ignore() .add(fs.readFileSync(filenameOfGitignore).toString()) .filter(filenames) ``` `pattern` could also be an `ignore` instance, so that we could easily inherit the rules of another `Ignore` instance. ## <strike>.addIgnoreFile(path)</strike> REMOVED in `3.x` for now. To upgrade `[email protected]` up to `3.x`, use ```js import fs from 'fs' if (fs.existsSync(filename)) { ignore().add(fs.readFileSync(filename).toString()) } ``` instead. ## .filter(paths: Array<Pathname>): Array<Pathname> ```ts type Pathname = string ``` Filters the given array of pathnames, and returns the filtered array. - **paths** `Array.<Pathname>` The array of `pathname`s to be filtered. ### `Pathname` Conventions: #### 1. `Pathname` should be a `path.relative()`d pathname `Pathname` should be a string that have been `path.join()`ed, or the return value of `path.relative()` to the current directory. ```js // WRONG ig.ignores('./abc') // WRONG, for it will never happen. // If the gitignore rule locates at the root directory, // `'/abc'` should be changed to `'abc'`. // ``` // path.relative('/', '/abc') -> 'abc' // ``` ig.ignores('/abc') // Right ig.ignores('abc') // Right ig.ignores(path.join('./abc')) // path.join('./abc') -> 'abc' ``` In other words, each `Pathname` here should be a relative path to the directory of the gitignore rules. Suppose the dir structure is: ``` /path/to/your/repo |-- a | |-- a.js | |-- .b | |-- .c |-- .DS_store ``` Then the `paths` might be like this: ```js [ 'a/a.js' '.b', '.c/.DS_store' ] ``` Usually, you could use [`glob`](http://npmjs.org/package/glob) with `option.mark = true` to fetch the structure of the current directory: ```js import glob from 'glob' glob('**', { // Adds a / character to directory matches. mark: true }, (err, files) => { if (err) { return console.error(err) } let filtered = ignore().add(patterns).filter(files) console.log(filtered) }) ``` #### 2. filenames and dirnames `node-ignore` does NO `fs.stat` during path matching, so for the example below: ```js ig.add('config/') // `ig` does NOT know if 'config' is a normal file, directory or something ig.ignores('config') // And it returns `false` ig.ignores('config/') // returns `true` ``` Specially for people who develop some library based on `node-ignore`, it is important to understand that. ## .ignores(pathname: Pathname): boolean > new in 3.2.0 Returns `Boolean` whether `pathname` should be ignored. ```js ig.ignores('.abc/a.js') // true ``` ## .createFilter() Creates a filter function which could filter an array of paths with `Array.prototype.filter`. Returns `function(path)` the filter function. ## `options.ignorecase` since 4.0.0 Similar as the `core.ignorecase` option of [git-config](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config), `node-ignore` will be case insensitive if `options.ignorecase` is set to `true` (default value), otherwise case sensitive. ```js const ig = ignore({ ignorecase: false }) ig.add('*.png') ig.ignores('*.PNG') // false ``` **** # Upgrade Guide ## Upgrade 2.x -> 3.x - All `options` of 2.x are unnecessary and removed, so just remove them. - `ignore()` instance is no longer an [`EventEmitter`](nodejs.org/api/events.html), and all events are unnecessary and removed. - `.addIgnoreFile()` is removed, see the [.addIgnoreFile](#addignorefilepath) section for details. ## Upgrade 3.x -> 4.x Since `4.0.0`, `ignore` will no longer support node < 6, to use `ignore` in node < 6: ```js var ignore = require('ignore/legacy') ``` **** # Collaborators - [@whitecolor](https://github.com/whitecolor) *Alex* - [@SamyPesse](https://github.com/SamyPesse) *Samy Pessé* - [@azproduction](https://github.com/azproduction) *Mikhail Davydov* - [@TrySound](https://github.com/TrySound) *Bogdan Chadkin* - [@JanMattner](https://github.com/JanMattner) *Jan Mattner* - [@ntwb](https://github.com/ntwb) *Stephen Edgar* - [@kasperisager](https://github.com/kasperisager) *Kasper Isager* - [@sandersn](https://github.com/sandersn) *Nathan Shively-Sanders* # type-check [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/type-check.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/type-check) <a name="type-check" /> `type-check` is a library which allows you to check the types of JavaScript values at runtime with a Haskell like type syntax. It is great for checking external input, for testing, or even for adding a bit of safety to your internal code. It is a major component of [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn). MIT license. Version 0.4.0. Check out the [demo](http://gkz.github.io/type-check/). For updates on `type-check`, [follow me on twitter](https://twitter.com/gkzahariev). npm install type-check ## Quick Examples ```js // Basic types: var typeCheck = require('type-check').typeCheck; typeCheck('Number', 1); // true typeCheck('Number', 'str'); // false typeCheck('Error', new Error); // true typeCheck('Undefined', undefined); // true // Comment typeCheck('count::Number', 1); // true // One type OR another type: typeCheck('Number | String', 2); // true typeCheck('Number | String', 'str'); // true // Wildcard, matches all types: typeCheck('*', 2) // true // Array, all elements of a single type: typeCheck('[Number]', [1, 2, 3]); // true typeCheck('[Number]', [1, 'str', 3]); // false // Tuples, or fixed length arrays with elements of different types: typeCheck('(String, Number)', ['str', 2]); // true typeCheck('(String, Number)', ['str']); // false typeCheck('(String, Number)', ['str', 2, 5]); // false // Object properties: typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Boolean}', {x: 2, y: false}); // true typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Boolean}', {x: 2}); // false typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Maybe Boolean}', {x: 2}); // true typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Boolean}', {x: 2, y: false, z: 3}); // false typeCheck('{x: Number, y: Boolean, ...}', {x: 2, y: false, z: 3}); // true // A particular type AND object properties: typeCheck('RegExp{source: String, ...}', /re/i); // true typeCheck('RegExp{source: String, ...}', {source: 're'}); // false // Custom types: var opt = {customTypes: {Even: { typeOf: 'Number', validate: function(x) { return x % 2 === 0; }}}}; typeCheck('Even', 2, opt); // true // Nested: var type = '{a: (String, [Number], {y: Array, ...}), b: Error{message: String, ...}}' typeCheck(type, {a: ['hi', [1, 2, 3], {y: [1, 'ms']}], b: new Error('oh no')}); // true ``` Check out the [type syntax format](#syntax) and [guide](#guide). ## Usage `require('type-check');` returns an object that exposes four properties. `VERSION` is the current version of the library as a string. `typeCheck`, `parseType`, and `parsedTypeCheck` are functions. ```js // typeCheck(type, input, options); typeCheck('Number', 2); // true // parseType(type); var parsedType = parseType('Number'); // object // parsedTypeCheck(parsedType, input, options); parsedTypeCheck(parsedType, 2); // true ``` ### typeCheck(type, input, options) `typeCheck` checks a JavaScript value `input` against `type` written in the [type format](#type-format) (and taking account the optional `options`) and returns whether the `input` matches the `type`. ##### arguments * type - `String` - the type written in the [type format](#type-format) which to check against * input - `*` - any JavaScript value, which is to be checked against the type * options - `Maybe Object` - an optional parameter specifying additional options, currently the only available option is specifying [custom types](#custom-types) ##### returns `Boolean` - whether the input matches the type ##### example ```js typeCheck('Number', 2); // true ``` ### parseType(type) `parseType` parses string `type` written in the [type format](#type-format) into an object representing the parsed type. ##### arguments * type - `String` - the type written in the [type format](#type-format) which to parse ##### returns `Object` - an object in the parsed type format representing the parsed type ##### example ```js parseType('Number'); // [{type: 'Number'}] ``` ### parsedTypeCheck(parsedType, input, options) `parsedTypeCheck` checks a JavaScript value `input` against parsed `type` in the parsed type format (and taking account the optional `options`) and returns whether the `input` matches the `type`. Use this in conjunction with `parseType` if you are going to use a type more than once. ##### arguments * type - `Object` - the type in the parsed type format which to check against * input - `*` - any JavaScript value, which is to be checked against the type * options - `Maybe Object` - an optional parameter specifying additional options, currently the only available option is specifying [custom types](#custom-types) ##### returns `Boolean` - whether the input matches the type ##### example ```js parsedTypeCheck([{type: 'Number'}], 2); // true var parsedType = parseType('String'); parsedTypeCheck(parsedType, 'str'); // true ``` <a name="type-format" /> ## Type Format ### Syntax White space is ignored. The root node is a __Types__. * __Identifier__ = `[\$\w]+` - a group of any lower or upper case letters, numbers, underscores, or dollar signs - eg. `String` * __Type__ = an `Identifier`, an `Identifier` followed by a `Structure`, just a `Structure`, or a wildcard `*` - eg. `String`, `Object{x: Number}`, `{x: Number}`, `Array{0: String, 1: Boolean, length: Number}`, `*` * __Types__ = optionally a comment (an `Identifier` followed by a `::`), optionally the identifier `Maybe`, one or more `Type`, separated by `|` - eg. `Number`, `String | Date`, `Maybe Number`, `Maybe Boolean | String` * __Structure__ = `Fields`, or a `Tuple`, or an `Array` - eg. `{x: Number}`, `(String, Number)`, `[Date]` * __Fields__ = a `{`, followed one or more `Field` separated by a comma `,` (trailing comma `,` is permitted), optionally an `...` (always preceded by a comma `,`), followed by a `}` - eg. `{x: Number, y: String}`, `{k: Function, ...}` * __Field__ = an `Identifier`, followed by a colon `:`, followed by `Types` - eg. `x: Date | String`, `y: Boolean` * __Tuple__ = a `(`, followed by one or more `Types` separated by a comma `,` (trailing comma `,` is permitted), followed by a `)` - eg `(Date)`, `(Number, Date)` * __Array__ = a `[` followed by exactly one `Types` followed by a `]` - eg. `[Boolean]`, `[Boolean | Null]` ### Guide `type-check` uses `Object.toString` to find out the basic type of a value. Specifically, ```js {}.toString.call(VALUE).slice(8, -1) {}.toString.call(true).slice(8, -1) // 'Boolean' ``` A basic type, eg. `Number`, uses this check. This is much more versatile than using `typeof` - for example, with `document`, `typeof` produces `'object'` which isn't that useful, and our technique produces `'HTMLDocument'`. You may check for multiple types by separating types with a `|`. The checker proceeds from left to right, and passes if the value is any of the types - eg. `String | Boolean` first checks if the value is a string, and then if it is a boolean. If it is none of those, then it returns false. Adding a `Maybe` in front of a list of multiple types is the same as also checking for `Null` and `Undefined` - eg. `Maybe String` is equivalent to `Undefined | Null | String`. You may add a comment to remind you of what the type is for by following an identifier with a `::` before a type (or multiple types). The comment is simply thrown out. The wildcard `*` matches all types. There are three types of structures for checking the contents of a value: 'fields', 'tuple', and 'array'. If used by itself, a 'fields' structure will pass with any type of object as long as it is an instance of `Object` and the properties pass - this allows for duck typing - eg. `{x: Boolean}`. To check if the properties pass, and the value is of a certain type, you can specify the type - eg. `Error{message: String}`. If you want to make a field optional, you can simply use `Maybe` - eg. `{x: Boolean, y: Maybe String}` will still pass if `y` is undefined (or null). If you don't care if the value has properties beyond what you have specified, you can use the 'etc' operator `...` - eg. `{x: Boolean, ...}` will match an object with an `x` property that is a boolean, and with zero or more other properties. For an array, you must specify one or more types (separated by `|`) - it will pass for something of any length as long as each element passes the types provided - eg. `[Number]`, `[Number | String]`. A tuple checks for a fixed number of elements, each of a potentially different type. Each element is separated by a comma - eg. `(String, Number)`. An array and tuple structure check that the value is of type `Array` by default, but if another type is specified, they will check for that instead - eg. `Int32Array[Number]`. You can use the wildcard `*` to search for any type at all. Check out the [type precedence](https://github.com/zaboco/type-precedence) library for type-check. ## Options Options is an object. It is an optional parameter to the `typeCheck` and `parsedTypeCheck` functions. The only current option is `customTypes`. <a name="custom-types" /> ### Custom Types __Example:__ ```js var options = { customTypes: { Even: { typeOf: 'Number', validate: function(x) { return x % 2 === 0; } } } }; typeCheck('Even', 2, options); // true typeCheck('Even', 3, options); // false ``` `customTypes` allows you to set up custom types for validation. The value of this is an object. The keys of the object are the types you will be matching. Each value of the object will be an object having a `typeOf` property - a string, and `validate` property - a function. The `typeOf` property is the type the value should be (optional - if not set only `validate` will be used), and `validate` is a function which should return true if the value is of that type. `validate` receives one parameter, which is the value that we are checking. ## Technical About `type-check` is written in [LiveScript](http://livescript.net/) - a language that compiles to JavaScript. It also uses the [prelude.ls](http://preludels.com/) library. # lodash.clonedeep v4.5.0 The [lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.cloneDeep` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.clonedeep ``` In Node.js: ```js var cloneDeep = require('lodash.clonedeep'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#cloneDeep) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.5.0-npm-packages/lodash.clonedeep) for more details. # Optionator <a name="optionator" /> Optionator is a JavaScript/Node.js option parsing and help generation library used by [eslint](http://eslint.org), [Grasp](http://graspjs.com), [LiveScript](http://livescript.net), [esmangle](https://github.com/estools/esmangle), [escodegen](https://github.com/estools/escodegen), and [many more](https://www.npmjs.com/browse/depended/optionator). For an online demo, check out the [Grasp online demo](http://www.graspjs.com/#demo). [About](#about) &middot; [Usage](#usage) &middot; [Settings Format](#settings-format) &middot; [Argument Format](#argument-format) ## Why? The problem with other option parsers, such as `yargs` or `minimist`, is they just accept all input, valid or not. With Optionator, if you mistype an option, it will give you an error (with a suggestion for what you meant). If you give the wrong type of argument for an option, it will give you an error rather than supplying the wrong input to your application. $ cmd --halp Invalid option '--halp' - perhaps you meant '--help'? $ cmd --count str Invalid value for option 'count' - expected type Int, received value: str. Other helpful features include reformatting the help text based on the size of the console, so that it fits even if the console is narrow, and accepting not just an array (eg. process.argv), but a string or object as well, making things like testing much easier. ## About Optionator uses [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) and [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) behind the scenes to cast and verify input according the specified types. MIT license. Version 0.9.1 npm install optionator For updates on Optionator, [follow me on twitter](https://twitter.com/gkzahariev). Optionator is a Node.js module, but can be used in the browser as well if packed with webpack/browserify. ## Usage `require('optionator');` returns a function. It has one property, `VERSION`, the current version of the library as a string. This function is called with an object specifying your options and other information, see the [settings format section](#settings-format). This in turn returns an object with three properties, `parse`, `parseArgv`, `generateHelp`, and `generateHelpForOption`, which are all functions. ```js var optionator = require('optionator')({ prepend: 'Usage: cmd [options]', append: 'Version 1.0.0', options: [{ option: 'help', alias: 'h', type: 'Boolean', description: 'displays help' }, { option: 'count', alias: 'c', type: 'Int', description: 'number of things', example: 'cmd --count 2' }] }); var options = optionator.parseArgv(process.argv); if (options.help) { console.log(optionator.generateHelp()); } ... ``` ### parse(input, parseOptions) `parse` processes the `input` according to your settings, and returns an object with the results. ##### arguments * input - `[String] | Object | String` - the input you wish to parse * parseOptions - `{slice: Int}` - all options optional - `slice` specifies how much to slice away from the beginning if the input is an array or string - by default `0` for string, `2` for array (works with `process.argv`) ##### returns `Object` - the parsed options, each key is a camelCase version of the option name (specified in dash-case), and each value is the processed value for that option. Positional values are in an array under the `_` key. ##### example ```js parse(['node', 't.js', '--count', '2', 'positional']); // {count: 2, _: ['positional']} parse('--count 2 positional'); // {count: 2, _: ['positional']} parse({count: 2, _:['positional']}); // {count: 2, _: ['positional']} ``` ### parseArgv(input) `parseArgv` works exactly like `parse`, but only for array input and it slices off the first two elements. ##### arguments * input - `[String]` - the input you wish to parse ##### returns See "returns" section in "parse" ##### example ```js parseArgv(process.argv); ``` ### generateHelp(helpOptions) `generateHelp` produces help text based on your settings. ##### arguments * helpOptions - `{showHidden: Boolean, interpolate: Object}` - all options optional - `showHidden` specifies whether to show options with `hidden: true` specified, by default it is `false` - `interpolate` specify data to be interpolated in `prepend` and `append` text, `{{key}}` is the format - eg. `generateHelp({interpolate:{version: '0.4.2'}})`, will change this `append` text: `Version {{version}}` to `Version 0.4.2` ##### returns `String` - the generated help text ##### example ```js generateHelp(); /* "Usage: cmd [options] positional -h, --help displays help -c, --count Int number of things Version 1.0.0 "*/ ``` ### generateHelpForOption(optionName) `generateHelpForOption` produces expanded help text for the specified with `optionName` option. If an `example` was specified for the option, it will be displayed, and if a `longDescription` was specified, it will display that instead of the `description`. ##### arguments * optionName - `String` - the name of the option to display ##### returns `String` - the generated help text for the option ##### example ```js generateHelpForOption('count'); /* "-c, --count Int description: number of things example: cmd --count 2 "*/ ``` ## Settings Format When your `require('optionator')`, you get a function that takes in a settings object. This object has the type: { prepend: String, append: String, options: [{heading: String} | { option: String, alias: [String] | String, type: String, enum: [String], default: String, restPositional: Boolean, required: Boolean, overrideRequired: Boolean, dependsOn: [String] | String, concatRepeatedArrays: Boolean | (Boolean, Object), mergeRepeatedObjects: Boolean, description: String, longDescription: String, example: [String] | String }], helpStyle: { aliasSeparator: String, typeSeparator: String, descriptionSeparator: String, initialIndent: Int, secondaryIndent: Int, maxPadFactor: Number }, mutuallyExclusive: [[String | [String]]], concatRepeatedArrays: Boolean | (Boolean, Object), // deprecated, set in defaults object mergeRepeatedObjects: Boolean, // deprecated, set in defaults object positionalAnywhere: Boolean, typeAliases: Object, defaults: Object } All of the properties are optional (the `Maybe` has been excluded for brevities sake), except for having either `heading: String` or `option: String` in each object in the `options` array. ### Top Level Properties * `prepend` is an optional string to be placed before the options in the help text * `append` is an optional string to be placed after the options in the help text * `options` is a required array specifying your options and headings, the options and headings will be displayed in the order specified * `helpStyle` is an optional object which enables you to change the default appearance of some aspects of the help text * `mutuallyExclusive` is an optional array of arrays of either strings or arrays of strings. The top level array is a list of rules, each rule is a list of elements - each element can be either a string (the name of an option), or a list of strings (a group of option names) - there will be an error if more than one element is present * `concatRepeatedArrays` see description under the "Option Properties" heading - use at the top level is deprecated, if you want to set this for all options, use the `defaults` property * `mergeRepeatedObjects` see description under the "Option Properties" heading - use at the top level is deprecated, if you want to set this for all options, use the `defaults` property * `positionalAnywhere` is an optional boolean (defaults to `true`) - when `true` it allows positional arguments anywhere, when `false`, all arguments after the first positional one are taken to be positional as well, even if they look like a flag. For example, with `positionalAnywhere: false`, the arguments `--flag --boom 12 --crack` would have two positional arguments: `12` and `--crack` * `typeAliases` is an optional object, it allows you to set aliases for types, eg. `{Path: 'String'}` would allow you to use the type `Path` as an alias for the type `String` * `defaults` is an optional object following the option properties format, which specifies default values for all options. A default will be overridden if manually set. For example, you can do `default: { type: "String" }` to set the default type of all options to `String`, and then override that default in an individual option by setting the `type` property #### Heading Properties * `heading` a required string, the name of the heading #### Option Properties * `option` the required name of the option - use dash-case, without the leading dashes * `alias` is an optional string or array of strings which specify any aliases for the option * `type` is a required string in the [type check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) [format](https://github.com/gkz/type-check#type-format), this will be used to cast the inputted value and validate it * `enum` is an optional array of strings, each string will be parsed by [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) - the argument value must be one of the resulting values - each potential value must validate against the specified `type` * `default` is a optional string, which will be parsed by [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) and used as the default value if none is set - the value must validate against the specified `type` * `restPositional` is an optional boolean - if set to `true`, everything after the option will be taken to be a positional argument, even if it looks like a named argument * `required` is an optional boolean - if set to `true`, the option parsing will fail if the option is not defined * `overrideRequired` is a optional boolean - if set to `true` and the option is used, and there is another option which is required but not set, it will override the need for the required option and there will be no error - this is useful if you have required options and want to use `--help` or `--version` flags * `concatRepeatedArrays` is an optional boolean or tuple with boolean and options object (defaults to `false`) - when set to `true` and an option contains an array value and is repeated, the subsequent values for the flag will be appended rather than overwriting the original value - eg. option `g` of type `[String]`: `-g a -g b -g c,d` will result in `['a','b','c','d']` You can supply an options object by giving the following value: `[true, options]`. The one currently supported option is `oneValuePerFlag`, this only allows one array value per flag. This is useful if your potential values contain a comma. * `mergeRepeatedObjects` is an optional boolean (defaults to `false`) - when set to `true` and an option contains an object value and is repeated, the subsequent values for the flag will be merged rather than overwriting the original value - eg. option `g` of type `Object`: `-g a:1 -g b:2 -g c:3,d:4` will result in `{a: 1, b: 2, c: 3, d: 4}` * `dependsOn` is an optional string or array of strings - if simply a string (the name of another option), it will make sure that that other option is set, if an array of strings, depending on whether `'and'` or `'or'` is first, it will either check whether all (`['and', 'option-a', 'option-b']`), or at least one (`['or', 'option-a', 'option-b']`) other options are set * `description` is an optional string, which will be displayed next to the option in the help text * `longDescription` is an optional string, it will be displayed instead of the `description` when `generateHelpForOption` is used * `example` is an optional string or array of strings with example(s) for the option - these will be displayed when `generateHelpForOption` is used #### Help Style Properties * `aliasSeparator` is an optional string, separates multiple names from each other - default: ' ,' * `typeSeparator` is an optional string, separates the type from the names - default: ' ' * `descriptionSeparator` is an optional string , separates the description from the padded name and type - default: ' ' * `initialIndent` is an optional int - the amount of indent for options - default: 2 * `secondaryIndent` is an optional int - the amount of indent if wrapped fully (in addition to the initial indent) - default: 4 * `maxPadFactor` is an optional number - affects the default level of padding for the names/type, it is multiplied by the average of the length of the names/type - default: 1.5 ## Argument Format At the highest level there are two types of arguments: named, and positional. Name arguments of any length are prefixed with `--` (eg. `--go`), and those of one character may be prefixed with either `--` or `-` (eg. `-g`). There are two types of named arguments: boolean flags (eg. `--problemo`, `-p`) which take no value and result in a `true` if they are present, the falsey `undefined` if they are not present, or `false` if present and explicitly prefixed with `no` (eg. `--no-problemo`). Named arguments with values (eg. `--tseries 800`, `-t 800`) are the other type. If the option has a type `Boolean` it will automatically be made into a boolean flag. Any other type results in a named argument that takes a value. For more information about how to properly set types to get the value you want, take a look at the [type check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) and [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) pages. You can group single character arguments that use a single `-`, however all except the last must be boolean flags (which take no value). The last may be a boolean flag, or an argument which takes a value - eg. `-ba 2` is equivalent to `-b -a 2`. Positional arguments are all those values which do not fall under the above - they can be anywhere, not just at the end. For example, in `cmd -b one -a 2 two` where `b` is a boolean flag, and `a` has the type `Number`, there are two positional arguments, `one` and `two`. Everything after an `--` is positional, even if it looks like a named argument. You may optionally use `=` to separate option names from values, for example: `--count=2`. If you specify the option `NUM`, then any argument using a single `-` followed by a number will be valid and will set the value of `NUM`. Eg. `-2` will be parsed into `NUM: 2`. If duplicate named arguments are present, the last one will be taken. ## Technical About `optionator` is written in [LiveScript](http://livescript.net/) - a language that compiles to JavaScript. It uses [levn](https://github.com/gkz/levn) to cast arguments to their specified type, and uses [type-check](https://github.com/gkz/type-check) to validate values. It also uses the [prelude.ls](http://preludels.com/) library. # cross-spawn [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][npm-url] [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Build status][appveyor-image]][appveyor-url] [![Coverage Status][codecov-image]][codecov-url] [![Dependency status][david-dm-image]][david-dm-url] [![Dev Dependency status][david-dm-dev-image]][david-dm-dev-url] [npm-url]:https://npmjs.org/package/cross-spawn [downloads-image]:https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/cross-spawn.svg [npm-image]:https://img.shields.io/npm/v/cross-spawn.svg [travis-url]:https://travis-ci.org/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn [travis-image]:https://img.shields.io/travis/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn/master.svg [appveyor-url]:https://ci.appveyor.com/project/satazor/node-cross-spawn [appveyor-image]:https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/satazor/node-cross-spawn/master.svg [codecov-url]:https://codecov.io/gh/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn [codecov-image]:https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn/master.svg [david-dm-url]:https://david-dm.org/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn [david-dm-image]:https://img.shields.io/david/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn.svg [david-dm-dev-url]:https://david-dm.org/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn?type=dev [david-dm-dev-image]:https://img.shields.io/david/dev/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn.svg A cross platform solution to node's spawn and spawnSync. ## Installation Node.js version 8 and up: `$ npm install cross-spawn` Node.js version 7 and under: `$ npm install cross-spawn@6` ## Why Node has issues when using spawn on Windows: - It ignores [PATHEXT](https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/2318) - It does not support [shebangs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shebang_(Unix)) - Has problems running commands with [spaces](https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/7367) - Has problems running commands with posix relative paths (e.g.: `./my-folder/my-executable`) - Has an [issue](https://github.com/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn/issues/82) with command shims (files in `node_modules/.bin/`), where arguments with quotes and parenthesis would result in [invalid syntax error](https://github.com/moxystudio/node-cross-spawn/blob/e77b8f22a416db46b6196767bcd35601d7e11d54/test/index.test.js#L149) - No `options.shell` support on node `<v4.8` All these issues are handled correctly by `cross-spawn`. There are some known modules, such as [win-spawn](https://github.com/ForbesLindesay/win-spawn), that try to solve this but they are either broken or provide faulty escaping of shell arguments. ## Usage Exactly the same way as node's [`spawn`](https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_process_child_process_spawn_command_args_options) or [`spawnSync`](https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_process_child_process_spawnsync_command_args_options), so it's a drop in replacement. ```js const spawn = require('cross-spawn'); // Spawn NPM asynchronously const child = spawn('npm', ['list', '-g', '-depth', '0'], { stdio: 'inherit' }); // Spawn NPM synchronously const result = spawn.sync('npm', ['list', '-g', '-depth', '0'], { stdio: 'inherit' }); ``` ## Caveats ### Using `options.shell` as an alternative to `cross-spawn` Starting from node `v4.8`, `spawn` has a `shell` option that allows you run commands from within a shell. This new option solves the [PATHEXT](https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/2318) issue but: - It's not supported in node `<v4.8` - You must manually escape the command and arguments which is very error prone, specially when passing user input - There are a lot of other unresolved issues from the [Why](#why) section that you must take into account If you are using the `shell` option to spawn a command in a cross platform way, consider using `cross-spawn` instead. You have been warned. ### `options.shell` support While `cross-spawn` adds support for `options.shell` in node `<v4.8`, all of its enhancements are disabled. This mimics the Node.js behavior. More specifically, the command and its arguments will not be automatically escaped nor shebang support will be offered. This is by design because if you are using `options.shell` you are probably targeting a specific platform anyway and you don't want things to get into your way. ### Shebangs support While `cross-spawn` handles shebangs on Windows, its support is limited. More specifically, it just supports `#!/usr/bin/env <program>` where `<program>` must not contain any arguments. If you would like to have the shebang support improved, feel free to contribute via a pull-request. Remember to always test your code on Windows! ## Tests `$ npm test` `$ npm test -- --watch` during development ## License Released under the [MIT License](https://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php). # near-sdk-core This package contain a convenient interface for interacting with NEAR's host runtime. To see the functions that are provided by the host node see [`env.ts`](./assembly/env/env.ts). # debug [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/debug-js/debug.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/debug-js/debug) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/debug-js/debug/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/debug-js/debug?branch=master) [![Slack](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/badge.svg)](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/backers/badge.svg)](#backers) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/sponsors/badge.svg)](#sponsors) <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> A tiny JavaScript debugging utility modelled after Node.js core's debugging technique. Works in Node.js and web browsers. ## Installation ```bash $ npm install debug ``` ## Usage `debug` exposes a function; simply pass this function the name of your module, and it will return a decorated version of `console.error` for you to pass debug statements to. This will allow you to toggle the debug output for different parts of your module as well as the module as a whole. Example [_app.js_](./examples/node/app.js): ```js var debug = require('debug')('http') , http = require('http') , name = 'My App'; // fake app debug('booting %o', name); http.createServer(function(req, res){ debug(req.method + ' ' + req.url); res.end('hello\n'); }).listen(3000, function(){ debug('listening'); }); // fake worker of some kind require('./worker'); ``` Example [_worker.js_](./examples/node/worker.js): ```js var a = require('debug')('worker:a') , b = require('debug')('worker:b'); function work() { a('doing lots of uninteresting work'); setTimeout(work, Math.random() * 1000); } work(); function workb() { b('doing some work'); setTimeout(workb, Math.random() * 2000); } workb(); ``` The `DEBUG` environment variable is then used to enable these based on space or comma-delimited names. Here are some examples: <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 04 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091703-a6302cdc-7c38-11e7-8304-7c0b3bc600cd.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 38 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091700-a62a6888-7c38-11e7-800b-db911291ca2b.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 25 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091701-a62ea114-7c38-11e7-826a-2692bedca740.png"> #### Windows command prompt notes ##### CMD On Windows the environment variable is set using the `set` command. ```cmd set DEBUG=*,-not_this ``` Example: ```cmd set DEBUG=* & node app.js ``` ##### PowerShell (VS Code default) PowerShell uses different syntax to set environment variables. ```cmd $env:DEBUG = "*,-not_this" ``` Example: ```cmd $env:DEBUG='app';node app.js ``` Then, run the program to be debugged as usual. npm script example: ```js "windowsDebug": "@powershell -Command $env:DEBUG='*';node app.js", ``` ## Namespace Colors Every debug instance has a color generated for it based on its namespace name. This helps when visually parsing the debug output to identify which debug instance a debug line belongs to. #### Node.js In Node.js, colors are enabled when stderr is a TTY. You also _should_ install the [`supports-color`](https://npmjs.org/supports-color) module alongside debug, otherwise debug will only use a small handful of basic colors. <img width="521" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092181-47f6a9e6-7c3a-11e7-9a14-1928d8a711cd.png"> #### Web Browser Colors are also enabled on "Web Inspectors" that understand the `%c` formatting option. These are WebKit web inspectors, Firefox ([since version 31](https://hacks.mozilla.org/2014/05/editable-box-model-multiple-selection-sublime-text-keys-much-more-firefox-developer-tools-episode-31/)) and the Firebug plugin for Firefox (any version). <img width="524" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092033-b65f9f2e-7c39-11e7-8e32-f6f0d8e865c1.png"> ## Millisecond diff When actively developing an application it can be useful to see when the time spent between one `debug()` call and the next. Suppose for example you invoke `debug()` before requesting a resource, and after as well, the "+NNNms" will show you how much time was spent between calls. <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> When stdout is not a TTY, `Date#toISOString()` is used, making it more useful for logging the debug information as shown below: <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091956-6bd78372-7c39-11e7-8c55-c948396d6edd.png"> ## Conventions If you're using this in one or more of your libraries, you _should_ use the name of your library so that developers may toggle debugging as desired without guessing names. If you have more than one debuggers you _should_ prefix them with your library name and use ":" to separate features. For example "bodyParser" from Connect would then be "connect:bodyParser". If you append a "*" to the end of your name, it will always be enabled regardless of the setting of the DEBUG environment variable. You can then use it for normal output as well as debug output. ## Wildcards The `*` character may be used as a wildcard. Suppose for example your library has debuggers named "connect:bodyParser", "connect:compress", "connect:session", instead of listing all three with `DEBUG=connect:bodyParser,connect:compress,connect:session`, you may simply do `DEBUG=connect:*`, or to run everything using this module simply use `DEBUG=*`. You can also exclude specific debuggers by prefixing them with a "-" character. For example, `DEBUG=*,-connect:*` would include all debuggers except those starting with "connect:". ## Environment Variables When running through Node.js, you can set a few environment variables that will change the behavior of the debug logging: | Name | Purpose | |-----------|-------------------------------------------------| | `DEBUG` | Enables/disables specific debugging namespaces. | | `DEBUG_HIDE_DATE` | Hide date from debug output (non-TTY). | | `DEBUG_COLORS`| Whether or not to use colors in the debug output. | | `DEBUG_DEPTH` | Object inspection depth. | | `DEBUG_SHOW_HIDDEN` | Shows hidden properties on inspected objects. | __Note:__ The environment variables beginning with `DEBUG_` end up being converted into an Options object that gets used with `%o`/`%O` formatters. See the Node.js documentation for [`util.inspect()`](https://nodejs.org/api/util.html#util_util_inspect_object_options) for the complete list. ## Formatters Debug uses [printf-style](https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Printf_format_string) formatting. Below are the officially supported formatters: | Formatter | Representation | |-----------|----------------| | `%O` | Pretty-print an Object on multiple lines. | | `%o` | Pretty-print an Object all on a single line. | | `%s` | String. | | `%d` | Number (both integer and float). | | `%j` | JSON. Replaced with the string '[Circular]' if the argument contains circular references. | | `%%` | Single percent sign ('%'). This does not consume an argument. | ### Custom formatters You can add custom formatters by extending the `debug.formatters` object. For example, if you wanted to add support for rendering a Buffer as hex with `%h`, you could do something like: ```js const createDebug = require('debug') createDebug.formatters.h = (v) => { return v.toString('hex') } // …elsewhere const debug = createDebug('foo') debug('this is hex: %h', new Buffer('hello world')) // foo this is hex: 68656c6c6f20776f726c6421 +0ms ``` ## Browser Support You can build a browser-ready script using [browserify](https://github.com/substack/node-browserify), or just use the [browserify-as-a-service](https://wzrd.in/) [build](https://wzrd.in/standalone/debug@latest), if you don't want to build it yourself. Debug's enable state is currently persisted by `localStorage`. Consider the situation shown below where you have `worker:a` and `worker:b`, and wish to debug both. You can enable this using `localStorage.debug`: ```js localStorage.debug = 'worker:*' ``` And then refresh the page. ```js a = debug('worker:a'); b = debug('worker:b'); setInterval(function(){ a('doing some work'); }, 1000); setInterval(function(){ b('doing some work'); }, 1200); ``` In Chromium-based web browsers (e.g. Brave, Chrome, and Electron), the JavaScript console will—by default—only show messages logged by `debug` if the "Verbose" log level is _enabled_. <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/7143133/152083257-29034707-c42c-4959-8add-3cee850e6fcf.png"> ## Output streams By default `debug` will log to stderr, however this can be configured per-namespace by overriding the `log` method: Example [_stdout.js_](./examples/node/stdout.js): ```js var debug = require('debug'); var error = debug('app:error'); // by default stderr is used error('goes to stderr!'); var log = debug('app:log'); // set this namespace to log via console.log log.log = console.log.bind(console); // don't forget to bind to console! log('goes to stdout'); error('still goes to stderr!'); // set all output to go via console.info // overrides all per-namespace log settings debug.log = console.info.bind(console); error('now goes to stdout via console.info'); log('still goes to stdout, but via console.info now'); ``` ## Extend You can simply extend debugger ```js const log = require('debug')('auth'); //creates new debug instance with extended namespace const logSign = log.extend('sign'); const logLogin = log.extend('login'); log('hello'); // auth hello logSign('hello'); //auth:sign hello logLogin('hello'); //auth:login hello ``` ## Set dynamically You can also enable debug dynamically by calling the `enable()` method : ```js let debug = require('debug'); console.log(1, debug.enabled('test')); debug.enable('test'); console.log(2, debug.enabled('test')); debug.disable(); console.log(3, debug.enabled('test')); ``` print : ``` 1 false 2 true 3 false ``` Usage : `enable(namespaces)` `namespaces` can include modes separated by a colon and wildcards. Note that calling `enable()` completely overrides previously set DEBUG variable : ``` $ DEBUG=foo node -e 'var dbg = require("debug"); dbg.enable("bar"); console.log(dbg.enabled("foo"))' => false ``` `disable()` Will disable all namespaces. The functions returns the namespaces currently enabled (and skipped). This can be useful if you want to disable debugging temporarily without knowing what was enabled to begin with. For example: ```js let debug = require('debug'); debug.enable('foo:*,-foo:bar'); let namespaces = debug.disable(); debug.enable(namespaces); ``` Note: There is no guarantee that the string will be identical to the initial enable string, but semantically they will be identical. ## Checking whether a debug target is enabled After you've created a debug instance, you can determine whether or not it is enabled by checking the `enabled` property: ```javascript const debug = require('debug')('http'); if (debug.enabled) { // do stuff... } ``` You can also manually toggle this property to force the debug instance to be enabled or disabled. ## Usage in child processes Due to the way `debug` detects if the output is a TTY or not, colors are not shown in child processes when `stderr` is piped. A solution is to pass the `DEBUG_COLORS=1` environment variable to the child process. For example: ```javascript worker = fork(WORKER_WRAP_PATH, [workerPath], { stdio: [ /* stdin: */ 0, /* stdout: */ 'pipe', /* stderr: */ 'pipe', 'ipc', ], env: Object.assign({}, process.env, { DEBUG_COLORS: 1 // without this settings, colors won't be shown }), }); worker.stderr.pipe(process.stderr, { end: false }); ``` ## Authors - TJ Holowaychuk - Nathan Rajlich - Andrew Rhyne - Josh Junon ## Backers Support us with a monthly donation and help us continue our activities. 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Copyright (c) 2018-2021 Josh Junon Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # isarray `Array#isArray` for older browsers. [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/juliangruber/isarray.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/juliangruber/isarray) [![downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/isarray.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/isarray) [![browser support](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/isarray.png) ](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/isarray) ## Usage ```js var isArray = require('isarray'); console.log(isArray([])); // => true console.log(isArray({})); // => false ``` ## Installation With [npm](http://npmjs.org) do ```bash $ npm install isarray ``` Then bundle for the browser with [browserify](https://github.com/substack/browserify). With [component](http://component.io) do ```bash $ component install juliangruber/isarray ``` ## License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2013 Julian Gruber &lt;[email protected]&gt; Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. ### Estraverse [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/estools/estraverse) Estraverse ([estraverse](http://github.com/estools/estraverse)) is [ECMAScript](http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) traversal functions from [esmangle project](http://github.com/estools/esmangle). ### Documentation You can find usage docs at [wiki page](https://github.com/estools/estraverse/wiki/Usage). ### Example Usage The following code will output all variables declared at the root of a file. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'FunctionExpression' || node.type == 'FunctionDeclaration') return estraverse.VisitorOption.Skip; }, leave: function (node, parent) { if (node.type == 'VariableDeclarator') console.log(node.id.name); } }); ``` We can use `this.skip`, `this.remove` and `this.break` functions instead of using Skip, Remove and Break. ```javascript estraverse.traverse(ast, { enter: function (node) { this.break(); } }); ``` And estraverse provides `estraverse.replace` function. When returning node from `enter`/`leave`, current node is replaced with it. ```javascript result = estraverse.replace(tree, { enter: function (node) { // Replace it with replaced. if (node.type === 'Literal') return replaced; } }); ``` By passing `visitor.keys` mapping, we can extend estraverse traversing functionality. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Extending the existing traversing rules. keys: { // TargetNodeName: [ 'keys', 'containing', 'the', 'other', '**node**' ] TestExpression: ['argument'] } }); ``` By passing `visitor.fallback` option, we can control the behavior when encountering unknown nodes. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Iterating the child **nodes** of unknown nodes. fallback: 'iteration' }); ``` When `visitor.fallback` is a function, we can determine which keys to visit on each node. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; estraverse.traverse(tree, { enter: function (node) { }, // Skip the `argument` property of each node fallback: function(node) { return Object.keys(node).filter(function(key) { return key !== 'argument'; }); } }); ``` ### License Copyright (C) 2012-2016 [Yusuke Suzuki](http://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](http://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. # eslint-visitor-keys [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) Constants and utilities about visitor keys to traverse AST. ## 💿 Installation Use [npm] to install. ```bash $ npm install eslint-visitor-keys ``` ### Requirements - [Node.js] 4.0.0 or later. ## 📖 Usage ```js const evk = require("eslint-visitor-keys") ``` ### evk.KEYS > type: `{ [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Visitor keys. This keys are frozen. This is an object. Keys are the type of [ESTree] nodes. Their values are an array of property names which have child nodes. For example: ``` console.log(evk.KEYS.AssignmentExpression) // → ["left", "right"] ``` ### evk.getKeys(node) > type: `(node: object) => string[]` Get the visitor keys of a given AST node. This is similar to `Object.keys(node)` of ES Standard, but some keys are excluded: `parent`, `leadingComments`, `trailingComments`, and names which start with `_`. This will be used to traverse unknown nodes. For example: ``` const node = { type: "AssignmentExpression", left: { type: "Identifier", name: "foo" }, right: { type: "Literal", value: 0 } } console.log(evk.getKeys(node)) // → ["type", "left", "right"] ``` ### evk.unionWith(additionalKeys) > type: `(additionalKeys: object) => { [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Make the union set with `evk.KEYS` and the given keys. - The order of keys is, `additionalKeys` is at first, then `evk.KEYS` is concatenated after that. - It removes duplicated keys as keeping the first one. For example: ``` console.log(evk.unionWith({ MethodDefinition: ["decorators"] })) // → { ..., MethodDefinition: ["decorators", "key", "value"], ... } ``` ## 📰 Change log See [GitHub releases](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys/releases). ## 🍻 Contributing Welcome. See [ESLint contribution guidelines](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/). ### Development commands - `npm test` runs tests and measures code coverage. - `npm run lint` checks source codes with ESLint. - `npm run coverage` opens the code coverage report of the previous test with your default browser. - `npm run release` publishes this package to [npm] registory. [npm]: https://www.npmjs.com/ [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/ [ESTree]: https://github.com/estree/estree # balanced-match Match balanced string pairs, like `{` and `}` or `<b>` and `</b>`. Supports regular expressions as well! [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/juliangruber/balanced-match.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/juliangruber/balanced-match) [![downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/balanced-match.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/balanced-match) [![testling badge](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/balanced-match.png)](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/balanced-match) ## Example Get the first matching pair of braces: ```js var balanced = require('balanced-match'); console.log(balanced('{', '}', 'pre{in{nested}}post')); console.log(balanced('{', '}', 'pre{first}between{second}post')); console.log(balanced(/\s+\{\s+/, /\s+\}\s+/, 'pre { in{nest} } post')); ``` The matches are: ```bash $ node example.js { start: 3, end: 14, pre: 'pre', body: 'in{nested}', post: 'post' } { start: 3, end: 9, pre: 'pre', body: 'first', post: 'between{second}post' } { start: 3, end: 17, pre: 'pre', body: 'in{nest}', post: 'post' } ``` ## API ### var m = balanced(a, b, str) For the first non-nested matching pair of `a` and `b` in `str`, return an object with those keys: * **start** the index of the first match of `a` * **end** the index of the matching `b` * **pre** the preamble, `a` and `b` not included * **body** the match, `a` and `b` not included * **post** the postscript, `a` and `b` not included If there's no match, `undefined` will be returned. If the `str` contains more `a` than `b` / there are unmatched pairs, the first match that was closed will be used. For example, `{{a}` will match `['{', 'a', '']` and `{a}}` will match `['', 'a', '}']`. ### var r = balanced.range(a, b, str) For the first non-nested matching pair of `a` and `b` in `str`, return an array with indexes: `[ <a index>, <b index> ]`. If there's no match, `undefined` will be returned. If the `str` contains more `a` than `b` / there are unmatched pairs, the first match that was closed will be used. For example, `{{a}` will match `[ 1, 3 ]` and `{a}}` will match `[0, 2]`. ## Installation With [npm](https://npmjs.org) do: ```bash npm install balanced-match ``` ## Security contact information To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. ## License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2013 Julian Gruber &lt;[email protected]&gt; Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # Visitor utilities for AssemblyScript Compiler transformers ## Example ### List Fields The transformer: ```ts import { ClassDeclaration, FieldDeclaration, MethodDeclaration, } from "../../as"; import { ClassDecorator, registerDecorator } from "../decorator"; import { toString } from "../utils"; class ListMembers extends ClassDecorator { visitFieldDeclaration(node: FieldDeclaration): void { if (!node.name) console.log(toString(node) + "\n"); const name = toString(node.name); const _type = toString(node.type!); this.stdout.write(name + ": " + _type + "\n"); } visitMethodDeclaration(node: MethodDeclaration): void { const name = toString(node.name); if (name == "constructor") { return; } const sig = toString(node.signature); this.stdout.write(name + ": " + sig + "\n"); } visitClassDeclaration(node: ClassDeclaration): void { this.visit(node.members); } get name(): string { return "list"; } } export = registerDecorator(new ListMembers()); ``` assembly/foo.ts: ```ts @list class Foo { a: u8; b: bool; i: i32; } ``` And then compile with `--transform` flag: ``` asc assembly/foo.ts --transform ./dist/examples/list --noEmit ``` Which prints the following to the console: ``` a: u8 b: bool i: i32 ``` A JSON with color names and its values. Based on http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-color/#named-colors. [![NPM](https://nodei.co/npm/color-name.png?mini=true)](https://nodei.co/npm/color-name/) ```js var colors = require('color-name'); colors.red //[255,0,0] ``` <a href="LICENSE"><img src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0c/MIT_logo.svg" width="120"/></a> # lru cache A cache object that deletes the least-recently-used items. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-lru-cache.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-lru-cache) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/isaacs/node-lru-cache/badge.svg?service=github)](https://coveralls.io/github/isaacs/node-lru-cache) ## Installation: ```javascript npm install lru-cache --save ``` ## Usage: ```javascript var LRU = require("lru-cache") , options = { max: 500 , length: function (n, key) { return n * 2 + key.length } , dispose: function (key, n) { n.close() } , maxAge: 1000 * 60 * 60 } , cache = new LRU(options) , otherCache = new LRU(50) // sets just the max size cache.set("key", "value") cache.get("key") // "value" // non-string keys ARE fully supported // but note that it must be THE SAME object, not // just a JSON-equivalent object. var someObject = { a: 1 } cache.set(someObject, 'a value') // Object keys are not toString()-ed cache.set('[object Object]', 'a different value') assert.equal(cache.get(someObject), 'a value') // A similar object with same keys/values won't work, // because it's a different object identity assert.equal(cache.get({ a: 1 }), undefined) cache.reset() // empty the cache ``` If you put more stuff in it, then items will fall out. If you try to put an oversized thing in it, then it'll fall out right away. ## Options * `max` The maximum size of the cache, checked by applying the length function to all values in the cache. Not setting this is kind of silly, since that's the whole purpose of this lib, but it defaults to `Infinity`. Setting it to a non-number or negative number will throw a `TypeError`. Setting it to 0 makes it be `Infinity`. * `maxAge` Maximum age in ms. Items are not pro-actively pruned out as they age, but if you try to get an item that is too old, it'll drop it and return undefined instead of giving it to you. Setting this to a negative value will make everything seem old! Setting it to a non-number will throw a `TypeError`. * `length` Function that is used to calculate the length of stored items. If you're storing strings or buffers, then you probably want to do something like `function(n, key){return n.length}`. The default is `function(){return 1}`, which is fine if you want to store `max` like-sized things. The item is passed as the first argument, and the key is passed as the second argumnet. * `dispose` Function that is called on items when they are dropped from the cache. This can be handy if you want to close file descriptors or do other cleanup tasks when items are no longer accessible. Called with `key, value`. It's called *before* actually removing the item from the internal cache, so if you want to immediately put it back in, you'll have to do that in a `nextTick` or `setTimeout` callback or it won't do anything. * `stale` By default, if you set a `maxAge`, it'll only actually pull stale items out of the cache when you `get(key)`. (That is, it's not pre-emptively doing a `setTimeout` or anything.) If you set `stale:true`, it'll return the stale value before deleting it. If you don't set this, then it'll return `undefined` when you try to get a stale entry, as if it had already been deleted. * `noDisposeOnSet` By default, if you set a `dispose()` method, then it'll be called whenever a `set()` operation overwrites an existing key. If you set this option, `dispose()` will only be called when a key falls out of the cache, not when it is overwritten. * `updateAgeOnGet` When using time-expiring entries with `maxAge`, setting this to `true` will make each item's effective time update to the current time whenever it is retrieved from cache, causing it to not expire. (It can still fall out of cache based on recency of use, of course.) ## API * `set(key, value, maxAge)` * `get(key) => value` Both of these will update the "recently used"-ness of the key. They do what you think. `maxAge` is optional and overrides the cache `maxAge` option if provided. If the key is not found, `get()` will return `undefined`. The key and val can be any value. * `peek(key)` Returns the key value (or `undefined` if not found) without updating the "recently used"-ness of the key. (If you find yourself using this a lot, you *might* be using the wrong sort of data structure, but there are some use cases where it's handy.) * `del(key)` Deletes a key out of the cache. * `reset()` Clear the cache entirely, throwing away all values. * `has(key)` Check if a key is in the cache, without updating the recent-ness or deleting it for being stale. * `forEach(function(value,key,cache), [thisp])` Just like `Array.prototype.forEach`. Iterates over all the keys in the cache, in order of recent-ness. (Ie, more recently used items are iterated over first.) * `rforEach(function(value,key,cache), [thisp])` The same as `cache.forEach(...)` but items are iterated over in reverse order. (ie, less recently used items are iterated over first.) * `keys()` Return an array of the keys in the cache. * `values()` Return an array of the values in the cache. * `length` Return total length of objects in cache taking into account `length` options function. * `itemCount` Return total quantity of objects currently in cache. Note, that `stale` (see options) items are returned as part of this item count. * `dump()` Return an array of the cache entries ready for serialization and usage with 'destinationCache.load(arr)`. * `load(cacheEntriesArray)` Loads another cache entries array, obtained with `sourceCache.dump()`, into the cache. The destination cache is reset before loading new entries * `prune()` Manually iterates over the entire cache proactively pruning old entries # debug [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/visionmedia/debug.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/visionmedia/debug) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/visionmedia/debug/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/visionmedia/debug?branch=master) [![Slack](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/badge.svg)](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/backers/badge.svg)](#backers) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/sponsors/badge.svg)](#sponsors) <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> A tiny JavaScript debugging utility modelled after Node.js core's debugging technique. Works in Node.js and web browsers. ## Installation ```bash $ npm install debug ``` ## Usage `debug` exposes a function; simply pass this function the name of your module, and it will return a decorated version of `console.error` for you to pass debug statements to. This will allow you to toggle the debug output for different parts of your module as well as the module as a whole. Example [_app.js_](./examples/node/app.js): ```js var debug = require('debug')('http') , http = require('http') , name = 'My App'; // fake app debug('booting %o', name); http.createServer(function(req, res){ debug(req.method + ' ' + req.url); res.end('hello\n'); }).listen(3000, function(){ debug('listening'); }); // fake worker of some kind require('./worker'); ``` Example [_worker.js_](./examples/node/worker.js): ```js var a = require('debug')('worker:a') , b = require('debug')('worker:b'); function work() { a('doing lots of uninteresting work'); setTimeout(work, Math.random() * 1000); } work(); function workb() { b('doing some work'); setTimeout(workb, Math.random() * 2000); } workb(); ``` The `DEBUG` environment variable is then used to enable these based on space or comma-delimited names. Here are some examples: <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 04 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091703-a6302cdc-7c38-11e7-8304-7c0b3bc600cd.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 38 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091700-a62a6888-7c38-11e7-800b-db911291ca2b.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 25 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091701-a62ea114-7c38-11e7-826a-2692bedca740.png"> #### Windows note On Windows the environment variable is set using the `set` command. ```cmd set DEBUG=*,-not_this ``` Note that PowerShell uses different syntax to set environment variables. ```cmd $env:DEBUG = "*,-not_this" ``` Then, run the program to be debugged as usual. ## Namespace Colors Every debug instance has a color generated for it based on its namespace name. This helps when visually parsing the debug output to identify which debug instance a debug line belongs to. #### Node.js In Node.js, colors are enabled when stderr is a TTY. You also _should_ install the [`supports-color`](https://npmjs.org/supports-color) module alongside debug, otherwise debug will only use a small handful of basic colors. <img width="521" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092181-47f6a9e6-7c3a-11e7-9a14-1928d8a711cd.png"> #### Web Browser Colors are also enabled on "Web Inspectors" that understand the `%c` formatting option. These are WebKit web inspectors, Firefox ([since version 31](https://hacks.mozilla.org/2014/05/editable-box-model-multiple-selection-sublime-text-keys-much-more-firefox-developer-tools-episode-31/)) and the Firebug plugin for Firefox (any version). <img width="524" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092033-b65f9f2e-7c39-11e7-8e32-f6f0d8e865c1.png"> ## Millisecond diff When actively developing an application it can be useful to see when the time spent between one `debug()` call and the next. Suppose for example you invoke `debug()` before requesting a resource, and after as well, the "+NNNms" will show you how much time was spent between calls. <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> When stdout is not a TTY, `Date#toISOString()` is used, making it more useful for logging the debug information as shown below: <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091956-6bd78372-7c39-11e7-8c55-c948396d6edd.png"> ## Conventions If you're using this in one or more of your libraries, you _should_ use the name of your library so that developers may toggle debugging as desired without guessing names. If you have more than one debuggers you _should_ prefix them with your library name and use ":" to separate features. For example "bodyParser" from Connect would then be "connect:bodyParser". If you append a "*" to the end of your name, it will always be enabled regardless of the setting of the DEBUG environment variable. You can then use it for normal output as well as debug output. ## Wildcards The `*` character may be used as a wildcard. Suppose for example your library has debuggers named "connect:bodyParser", "connect:compress", "connect:session", instead of listing all three with `DEBUG=connect:bodyParser,connect:compress,connect:session`, you may simply do `DEBUG=connect:*`, or to run everything using this module simply use `DEBUG=*`. You can also exclude specific debuggers by prefixing them with a "-" character. For example, `DEBUG=*,-connect:*` would include all debuggers except those starting with "connect:". ## Environment Variables When running through Node.js, you can set a few environment variables that will change the behavior of the debug logging: | Name | Purpose | |-----------|-------------------------------------------------| | `DEBUG` | Enables/disables specific debugging namespaces. | | `DEBUG_HIDE_DATE` | Hide date from debug output (non-TTY). | | `DEBUG_COLORS`| Whether or not to use colors in the debug output. | | `DEBUG_DEPTH` | Object inspection depth. | | `DEBUG_SHOW_HIDDEN` | Shows hidden properties on inspected objects. | __Note:__ The environment variables beginning with `DEBUG_` end up being converted into an Options object that gets used with `%o`/`%O` formatters. See the Node.js documentation for [`util.inspect()`](https://nodejs.org/api/util.html#util_util_inspect_object_options) for the complete list. ## Formatters Debug uses [printf-style](https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Printf_format_string) formatting. Below are the officially supported formatters: | Formatter | Representation | |-----------|----------------| | `%O` | Pretty-print an Object on multiple lines. | | `%o` | Pretty-print an Object all on a single line. | | `%s` | String. | | `%d` | Number (both integer and float). | | `%j` | JSON. Replaced with the string '[Circular]' if the argument contains circular references. | | `%%` | Single percent sign ('%'). This does not consume an argument. | ### Custom formatters You can add custom formatters by extending the `debug.formatters` object. For example, if you wanted to add support for rendering a Buffer as hex with `%h`, you could do something like: ```js const createDebug = require('debug') createDebug.formatters.h = (v) => { return v.toString('hex') } // …elsewhere const debug = createDebug('foo') debug('this is hex: %h', new Buffer('hello world')) // foo this is hex: 68656c6c6f20776f726c6421 +0ms ``` ## Browser Support You can build a browser-ready script using [browserify](https://github.com/substack/node-browserify), or just use the [browserify-as-a-service](https://wzrd.in/) [build](https://wzrd.in/standalone/debug@latest), if you don't want to build it yourself. Debug's enable state is currently persisted by `localStorage`. Consider the situation shown below where you have `worker:a` and `worker:b`, and wish to debug both. You can enable this using `localStorage.debug`: ```js localStorage.debug = 'worker:*' ``` And then refresh the page. ```js a = debug('worker:a'); b = debug('worker:b'); setInterval(function(){ a('doing some work'); }, 1000); setInterval(function(){ b('doing some work'); }, 1200); ``` ## Output streams By default `debug` will log to stderr, however this can be configured per-namespace by overriding the `log` method: Example [_stdout.js_](./examples/node/stdout.js): ```js var debug = require('debug'); var error = debug('app:error'); // by default stderr is used error('goes to stderr!'); var log = debug('app:log'); // set this namespace to log via console.log log.log = console.log.bind(console); // don't forget to bind to console! log('goes to stdout'); error('still goes to stderr!'); // set all output to go via console.info // overrides all per-namespace log settings debug.log = console.info.bind(console); error('now goes to stdout via console.info'); log('still goes to stdout, but via console.info now'); ``` ## Checking whether a debug target is enabled After you've created a debug instance, you can determine whether or not it is enabled by checking the `enabled` property: ```javascript const debug = require('debug')('http'); if (debug.enabled) { // do stuff... } ``` You can also manually toggle this property to force the debug instance to be enabled or disabled. ## Authors - TJ Holowaychuk - Nathan Rajlich - Andrew Rhyne ## Backers Support us with a monthly donation and help us continue our activities. 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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # line-column [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/io-monad/line-column.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/io-monad/line-column) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/io-monad/line-column/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/io-monad/line-column?branch=master) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/line-column.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/js/line-column) Node module to convert efficiently index to/from line-column in a string. ## Install npm install line-column ## Usage ### lineColumn(str, options = {}) Returns a `LineColumnFinder` instance for given string `str`. #### Options | Key | Description | Default | | ------- | ----------- | ------- | | `origin` | The origin value of line number and column number | `1` | ### lineColumn(str, index) This is just a shorthand for `lineColumn(str).fromIndex(index)`. ### LineColumnFinder#fromIndex(index) Find line and column from index in the string. Parameters: - `index` - `number` Index in the string. (0-origin) Returns: - `{ line: x, col: y }` Found line number and column number. - `null` if the given index is out of range. ### LineColumnFinder#toIndex(line, column) Find index from line and column in the string. Parameters: - `line` - `number` Line number in the string. - `column` - `number` Column number in the string. or - `{ line: x, col: y }` - `Object` line and column numbers in the string.<br>A key name `column` can be used instead of `col`. or - `[ line, col ]` - `Array` line and column numbers in the string. Returns: - `number` Found index in the string. - `-1` if the given line or column is out of range. ## Example ```js var lineColumn = require("line-column"); var testString = [ "ABCDEFG\n", // line:0, index:0 "HIJKLMNOPQRSTU\n", // line:1, index:8 "VWXYZ\n", // line:2, index:23 "日本語の文字\n", // line:3, index:29 "English words" // line:4, index:36 ].join(""); // length:49 lineColumn(testString).fromIndex(3) // { line: 1, col: 4 } lineColumn(testString).fromIndex(33) // { line: 4, col: 5 } lineColumn(testString).toIndex(1, 4) // 3 lineColumn(testString).toIndex(4, 5) // 33 // Shorthand of .fromIndex (compatible with find-line-column) lineColumn(testString, 33) // { line:4, col: 5 } // Object or Array is also acceptable lineColumn(testString).toIndex({ line: 4, col: 5 }) // 33 lineColumn(testString).toIndex({ line: 4, column: 5 }) // 33 lineColumn(testString).toIndex([4, 5]) // 33 // You can cache it for the same string. It is so efficient. (See benchmark) var finder = lineColumn(testString); finder.fromIndex(33) // { line: 4, column: 5 } finder.toIndex(4, 5) // 33 // For 0-origin line and column numbers var oneOrigin = lineColumn(testString, { origin: 0 }); oneOrigin.fromIndex(33) // { line: 3, column: 4 } oneOrigin.toIndex(3, 4) // 33 ``` ## Testing npm test ## Benchmark The popular package [find-line-column](https://www.npmjs.com/package/find-line-column) provides the same "index to line-column" feature. Here is some benchmarking on `line-column` vs `find-line-column`. You can run this benchmark by `npm run benchmark`. See [benchmark/](benchmark/) for the source code. ``` long text + line-column (not cached) x 72,989 ops/sec ±0.83% (89 runs sampled) long text + line-column (cached) x 13,074,242 ops/sec ±0.32% (89 runs sampled) long text + find-line-column x 33,887 ops/sec ±0.54% (84 runs sampled) short text + line-column (not cached) x 1,636,766 ops/sec ±0.77% (82 runs sampled) short text + line-column (cached) x 21,699,686 ops/sec ±1.04% (82 runs sampled) short text + find-line-column x 382,145 ops/sec ±1.04% (85 runs sampled) ``` As you might have noticed, even not cached version of `line-column` is 2x - 4x faster than `find-line-column`, and cached version of `line-column` is remarkable 50x - 380x faster. ## Contributing 1. Fork it! 2. Create your feature branch: `git checkout -b my-new-feature` 3. Commit your changes: `git commit -am 'Add some feature'` 4. Push to the branch: `git push origin my-new-feature` 5. Submit a pull request :D ## License MIT (See LICENSE) # prelude.ls [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/prelude-ls.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/gkz/prelude-ls) is a functionally oriented utility library. It is powerful and flexible. Almost all of its functions are curried. It is written in, and is the recommended base library for, <a href="http://livescript.net">LiveScript</a>. See **[the prelude.ls site](http://preludels.com)** for examples, a reference, and more. You can install via npm `npm install prelude-ls` ### Development `make test` to test `make build` to build `lib` from `src` `make build-browser` to build browser versions The AssemblyScript Runtime ========================== The runtime provides the functionality necessary to dynamically allocate and deallocate memory of objects, arrays and buffers, as well as collect garbage that is no longer used. The current implementation is either a Two-Color Mark & Sweep (TCMS) garbage collector that must be called manually when the execution stack is unwound or an Incremental Tri-Color Mark & Sweep (ITCMS) garbage collector that is fully automated with a shadow stack, implemented on top of a Two-Level Segregate Fit (TLSF) memory manager. It's not designed to be the fastest of its kind, but intentionally focuses on simplicity and ease of integration until we can replace it with the real deal, i.e. Wasm GC. Interface --------- ### Garbage collector / `--exportRuntime` * **__new**(size: `usize`, id: `u32` = 0): `usize`<br /> Dynamically allocates a GC object of at least the specified size and returns its address. Alignment is guaranteed to be 16 bytes to fit up to v128 values naturally. GC-allocated objects cannot be used with `__realloc` and `__free`. * **__pin**(ptr: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Pins the object pointed to by `ptr` externally so it and its directly reachable members and indirectly reachable objects do not become garbage collected. * **__unpin**(ptr: `usize`): `void`<br /> Unpins the object pointed to by `ptr` externally so it can become garbage collected. * **__collect**(): `void`<br /> Performs a full garbage collection. ### Internals * **__alloc**(size: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Dynamically allocates a chunk of memory of at least the specified size and returns its address. Alignment is guaranteed to be 16 bytes to fit up to v128 values naturally. * **__realloc**(ptr: `usize`, size: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Dynamically changes the size of a chunk of memory, possibly moving it to a new address. * **__free**(ptr: `usize`): `void`<br /> Frees a dynamically allocated chunk of memory by its address. * **__renew**(ptr: `usize`, size: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Like `__realloc`, but for `__new`ed GC objects. * **__link**(parentPtr: `usize`, childPtr: `usize`, expectMultiple: `bool`): `void`<br /> Introduces a link from a parent object to a child object, i.e. upon `parent.field = child`. * **__visit**(ptr: `usize`, cookie: `u32`): `void`<br /> Concrete visitor implementation called during traversal. Cookie can be used to indicate one of multiple operations. * **__visit_globals**(cookie: `u32`): `void`<br /> Calls `__visit` on each global that is of a managed type. * **__visit_members**(ptr: `usize`, cookie: `u32`): `void`<br /> Calls `__visit` on each member of the object pointed to by `ptr`. * **__typeinfo**(id: `u32`): `RTTIFlags`<br /> Obtains the runtime type information for objects with the specified runtime id. Runtime type information is a set of flags indicating whether a type is managed, an array or similar, and what the relevant alignments when creating an instance externally are etc. * **__instanceof**(ptr: `usize`, classId: `u32`): `bool`<br /> Tests if the object pointed to by `ptr` is an instance of the specified class id. ITCMS / `--runtime incremental` ----- The Incremental Tri-Color Mark & Sweep garbage collector maintains a separate shadow stack of managed values in the background to achieve full automation. Maintaining another stack introduces some overhead compared to the simpler Two-Color Mark & Sweep garbage collector, but makes it independent of whether the execution stack is unwound or not when it is invoked, so the garbage collector can run interleaved with the program. There are several constants one can experiment with to tweak ITCMS's automation: * `--use ASC_GC_GRANULARITY=1024`<br /> How often to interrupt. The default of 1024 means "interrupt each 1024 bytes allocated". * `--use ASC_GC_STEPFACTOR=200`<br /> How long to interrupt. The default of 200% means "run at double the speed of allocations". * `--use ASC_GC_IDLEFACTOR=200`<br /> How long to idle. The default of 200% means "wait for memory to double before kicking in again". * `--use ASC_GC_MARKCOST=1`<br /> How costly it is to mark one object. Budget per interrupt is `GRANULARITY * STEPFACTOR / 100`. * `--use ASC_GC_SWEEPCOST=10`<br /> How costly it is to sweep one object. Budget per interrupt is `GRANULARITY * STEPFACTOR / 100`. TCMS / `--runtime minimal` ---- If automation and low pause times aren't strictly necessary, using the Two-Color Mark & Sweep garbage collector instead by invoking collection manually at appropriate times when the execution stack is unwound may be more performant as it simpler and has less overhead. The execution stack is typically unwound when invoking the collector externally, at a place that is not indirectly called from Wasm. STUB / `--runtime stub` ---- The stub is a maximally minimal runtime substitute, consisting of a simple and fast bump allocator with no means of freeing up memory again, except when freeing the respective most recently allocated object on top of the bump. Useful where memory is not a concern, and/or where it is sufficient to destroy the whole module including any potential garbage after execution. See also: [Garbage collection](https://www.assemblyscript.org/garbage-collection.html) # safe-buffer [![travis][travis-image]][travis-url] [![npm][npm-image]][npm-url] [![downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url] [![javascript style guide][standard-image]][standard-url] [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/feross/safe-buffer/master.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/feross/safe-buffer [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/safe-buffer.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/safe-buffer [downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/safe-buffer.svg [downloads-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/safe-buffer [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code_style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: https://standardjs.com #### Safer Node.js Buffer API **Use the new Node.js Buffer APIs (`Buffer.from`, `Buffer.alloc`, `Buffer.allocUnsafe`, `Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow`) in all versions of Node.js.** **Uses the built-in implementation when available.** ## install ``` npm install safe-buffer ``` ## usage The goal of this package is to provide a safe replacement for the node.js `Buffer`. It's a drop-in replacement for `Buffer`. You can use it by adding one `require` line to the top of your node.js modules: ```js var Buffer = require('safe-buffer').Buffer // Existing buffer code will continue to work without issues: new Buffer('hey', 'utf8') new Buffer([1, 2, 3], 'utf8') new Buffer(obj) new Buffer(16) // create an uninitialized buffer (potentially unsafe) // But you can use these new explicit APIs to make clear what you want: Buffer.from('hey', 'utf8') // convert from many types to a Buffer Buffer.alloc(16) // create a zero-filled buffer (safe) Buffer.allocUnsafe(16) // create an uninitialized buffer (potentially unsafe) ``` ## api ### Class Method: Buffer.from(array) <!-- YAML added: v3.0.0 --> * `array` {Array} Allocates a new `Buffer` using an `array` of octets. ```js const buf = Buffer.from([0x62,0x75,0x66,0x66,0x65,0x72]); // creates a new Buffer containing ASCII bytes // ['b','u','f','f','e','r'] ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `array` is not an `Array`. ### Class Method: Buffer.from(arrayBuffer[, byteOffset[, length]]) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `arrayBuffer` {ArrayBuffer} The `.buffer` property of a `TypedArray` or a `new ArrayBuffer()` * `byteOffset` {Number} Default: `0` * `length` {Number} Default: `arrayBuffer.length - byteOffset` When passed a reference to the `.buffer` property of a `TypedArray` instance, the newly created `Buffer` will share the same allocated memory as the TypedArray. ```js const arr = new Uint16Array(2); arr[0] = 5000; arr[1] = 4000; const buf = Buffer.from(arr.buffer); // shares the memory with arr; console.log(buf); // Prints: <Buffer 88 13 a0 0f> // changing the TypedArray changes the Buffer also arr[1] = 6000; console.log(buf); // Prints: <Buffer 88 13 70 17> ``` The optional `byteOffset` and `length` arguments specify a memory range within the `arrayBuffer` that will be shared by the `Buffer`. ```js const ab = new ArrayBuffer(10); const buf = Buffer.from(ab, 0, 2); console.log(buf.length); // Prints: 2 ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `arrayBuffer` is not an `ArrayBuffer`. ### Class Method: Buffer.from(buffer) <!-- YAML added: v3.0.0 --> * `buffer` {Buffer} Copies the passed `buffer` data onto a new `Buffer` instance. ```js const buf1 = Buffer.from('buffer'); const buf2 = Buffer.from(buf1); buf1[0] = 0x61; console.log(buf1.toString()); // 'auffer' console.log(buf2.toString()); // 'buffer' (copy is not changed) ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `buffer` is not a `Buffer`. ### Class Method: Buffer.from(str[, encoding]) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `str` {String} String to encode. * `encoding` {String} Encoding to use, Default: `'utf8'` Creates a new `Buffer` containing the given JavaScript string `str`. If provided, the `encoding` parameter identifies the character encoding. If not provided, `encoding` defaults to `'utf8'`. ```js const buf1 = Buffer.from('this is a tést'); console.log(buf1.toString()); // prints: this is a tést console.log(buf1.toString('ascii')); // prints: this is a tC)st const buf2 = Buffer.from('7468697320697320612074c3a97374', 'hex'); console.log(buf2.toString()); // prints: this is a tést ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `str` is not a string. ### Class Method: Buffer.alloc(size[, fill[, encoding]]) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `size` {Number} * `fill` {Value} Default: `undefined` * `encoding` {String} Default: `utf8` Allocates a new `Buffer` of `size` bytes. If `fill` is `undefined`, the `Buffer` will be *zero-filled*. ```js const buf = Buffer.alloc(5); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 00 00 00 00 00> ``` The `size` must be less than or equal to the value of `require('buffer').kMaxLength` (on 64-bit architectures, `kMaxLength` is `(2^31)-1`). Otherwise, a [`RangeError`][] is thrown. A zero-length Buffer will be created if a `size` less than or equal to 0 is specified. If `fill` is specified, the allocated `Buffer` will be initialized by calling `buf.fill(fill)`. See [`buf.fill()`][] for more information. ```js const buf = Buffer.alloc(5, 'a'); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 61 61 61 61 61> ``` If both `fill` and `encoding` are specified, the allocated `Buffer` will be initialized by calling `buf.fill(fill, encoding)`. For example: ```js const buf = Buffer.alloc(11, 'aGVsbG8gd29ybGQ=', 'base64'); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 68 65 6c 6c 6f 20 77 6f 72 6c 64> ``` Calling `Buffer.alloc(size)` can be significantly slower than the alternative `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` but ensures that the newly created `Buffer` instance contents will *never contain sensitive data*. A `TypeError` will be thrown if `size` is not a number. ### Class Method: Buffer.allocUnsafe(size) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `size` {Number} Allocates a new *non-zero-filled* `Buffer` of `size` bytes. The `size` must be less than or equal to the value of `require('buffer').kMaxLength` (on 64-bit architectures, `kMaxLength` is `(2^31)-1`). Otherwise, a [`RangeError`][] is thrown. A zero-length Buffer will be created if a `size` less than or equal to 0 is specified. The underlying memory for `Buffer` instances created in this way is *not initialized*. The contents of the newly created `Buffer` are unknown and *may contain sensitive data*. Use [`buf.fill(0)`][] to initialize such `Buffer` instances to zeroes. ```js const buf = Buffer.allocUnsafe(5); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 78 e0 82 02 01> // (octets will be different, every time) buf.fill(0); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 00 00 00 00 00> ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `size` is not a number. Note that the `Buffer` module pre-allocates an internal `Buffer` instance of size `Buffer.poolSize` that is used as a pool for the fast allocation of new `Buffer` instances created using `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` (and the deprecated `new Buffer(size)` constructor) only when `size` is less than or equal to `Buffer.poolSize >> 1` (floor of `Buffer.poolSize` divided by two). The default value of `Buffer.poolSize` is `8192` but can be modified. Use of this pre-allocated internal memory pool is a key difference between calling `Buffer.alloc(size, fill)` vs. `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size).fill(fill)`. Specifically, `Buffer.alloc(size, fill)` will *never* use the internal Buffer pool, while `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size).fill(fill)` *will* use the internal Buffer pool if `size` is less than or equal to half `Buffer.poolSize`. The difference is subtle but can be important when an application requires the additional performance that `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` provides. ### Class Method: Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow(size) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `size` {Number} Allocates a new *non-zero-filled* and non-pooled `Buffer` of `size` bytes. The `size` must be less than or equal to the value of `require('buffer').kMaxLength` (on 64-bit architectures, `kMaxLength` is `(2^31)-1`). Otherwise, a [`RangeError`][] is thrown. A zero-length Buffer will be created if a `size` less than or equal to 0 is specified. The underlying memory for `Buffer` instances created in this way is *not initialized*. The contents of the newly created `Buffer` are unknown and *may contain sensitive data*. Use [`buf.fill(0)`][] to initialize such `Buffer` instances to zeroes. When using `Buffer.allocUnsafe()` to allocate new `Buffer` instances, allocations under 4KB are, by default, sliced from a single pre-allocated `Buffer`. This allows applications to avoid the garbage collection overhead of creating many individually allocated Buffers. This approach improves both performance and memory usage by eliminating the need to track and cleanup as many `Persistent` objects. However, in the case where a developer may need to retain a small chunk of memory from a pool for an indeterminate amount of time, it may be appropriate to create an un-pooled Buffer instance using `Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow()` then copy out the relevant bits. ```js // need to keep around a few small chunks of memory const store = []; socket.on('readable', () => { const data = socket.read(); // allocate for retained data const sb = Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow(10); // copy the data into the new allocation data.copy(sb, 0, 0, 10); store.push(sb); }); ``` Use of `Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow()` should be used only as a last resort *after* a developer has observed undue memory retention in their applications. A `TypeError` will be thrown if `size` is not a number. ### All the Rest The rest of the `Buffer` API is exactly the same as in node.js. [See the docs](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html). ## Related links - [Node.js issue: Buffer(number) is unsafe](https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/4660) - [Node.js Enhancement Proposal: Buffer.from/Buffer.alloc/Buffer.zalloc/Buffer() soft-deprecate](https://github.com/nodejs/node-eps/pull/4) ## Why is `Buffer` unsafe? Today, the node.js `Buffer` constructor is overloaded to handle many different argument types like `String`, `Array`, `Object`, `TypedArrayView` (`Uint8Array`, etc.), `ArrayBuffer`, and also `Number`. The API is optimized for convenience: you can throw any type at it, and it will try to do what you want. Because the Buffer constructor is so powerful, you often see code like this: ```js // Convert UTF-8 strings to hex function toHex (str) { return new Buffer(str).toString('hex') } ``` ***But what happens if `toHex` is called with a `Number` argument?*** ### Remote Memory Disclosure If an attacker can make your program call the `Buffer` constructor with a `Number` argument, then they can make it allocate uninitialized memory from the node.js process. This could potentially disclose TLS private keys, user data, or database passwords. When the `Buffer` constructor is passed a `Number` argument, it returns an **UNINITIALIZED** block of memory of the specified `size`. When you create a `Buffer` like this, you **MUST** overwrite the contents before returning it to the user. From the [node.js docs](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html#buffer_new_buffer_size): > `new Buffer(size)` > > - `size` Number > > The underlying memory for `Buffer` instances created in this way is not initialized. > **The contents of a newly created `Buffer` are unknown and could contain sensitive > data.** Use `buf.fill(0)` to initialize a Buffer to zeroes. (Emphasis our own.) Whenever the programmer intended to create an uninitialized `Buffer` you often see code like this: ```js var buf = new Buffer(16) // Immediately overwrite the uninitialized buffer with data from another buffer for (var i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) { buf[i] = otherBuf[i] } ``` ### Would this ever be a problem in real code? Yes. It's surprisingly common to forget to check the type of your variables in a dynamically-typed language like JavaScript. Usually the consequences of assuming the wrong type is that your program crashes with an uncaught exception. But the failure mode for forgetting to check the type of arguments to the `Buffer` constructor is more catastrophic. Here's an example of a vulnerable service that takes a JSON payload and converts it to hex: ```js // Take a JSON payload {str: "some string"} and convert it to hex var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) { var data = '' req.setEncoding('utf8') req.on('data', function (chunk) { data += chunk }) req.on('end', function () { var body = JSON.parse(data) res.end(new Buffer(body.str).toString('hex')) }) }) server.listen(8080) ``` In this example, an http client just has to send: ```json { "str": 1000 } ``` and it will get back 1,000 bytes of uninitialized memory from the server. This is a very serious bug. It's similar in severity to the [the Heartbleed bug](http://heartbleed.com/) that allowed disclosure of OpenSSL process memory by remote attackers. ### Which real-world packages were vulnerable? #### [`bittorrent-dht`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bittorrent-dht) [Mathias Buus](https://github.com/mafintosh) and I ([Feross Aboukhadijeh](http://feross.org/)) found this issue in one of our own packages, [`bittorrent-dht`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bittorrent-dht). The bug would allow anyone on the internet to send a series of messages to a user of `bittorrent-dht` and get them to reveal 20 bytes at a time of uninitialized memory from the node.js process. Here's [the commit](https://github.com/feross/bittorrent-dht/commit/6c7da04025d5633699800a99ec3fbadf70ad35b8) that fixed it. We released a new fixed version, created a [Node Security Project disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/68), and deprecated all vulnerable versions on npm so users will get a warning to upgrade to a newer version. #### [`ws`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ws) That got us wondering if there were other vulnerable packages. Sure enough, within a short period of time, we found the same issue in [`ws`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ws), the most popular WebSocket implementation in node.js. If certain APIs were called with `Number` parameters instead of `String` or `Buffer` as expected, then uninitialized server memory would be disclosed to the remote peer. These were the vulnerable methods: ```js socket.send(number) socket.ping(number) socket.pong(number) ``` Here's a vulnerable socket server with some echo functionality: ```js server.on('connection', function (socket) { socket.on('message', function (message) { message = JSON.parse(message) if (message.type === 'echo') { socket.send(message.data) // send back the user's message } }) }) ``` `socket.send(number)` called on the server, will disclose server memory. Here's [the release](https://github.com/websockets/ws/releases/tag/1.0.1) where the issue was fixed, with a more detailed explanation. Props to [Arnout Kazemier](https://github.com/3rd-Eden) for the quick fix. Here's the [Node Security Project disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/67). ### What's the solution? It's important that node.js offers a fast way to get memory otherwise performance-critical applications would needlessly get a lot slower. But we need a better way to *signal our intent* as programmers. **When we want uninitialized memory, we should request it explicitly.** Sensitive functionality should not be packed into a developer-friendly API that loosely accepts many different types. This type of API encourages the lazy practice of passing variables in without checking the type very carefully. #### A new API: `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)` The functionality of creating buffers with uninitialized memory should be part of another API. We propose `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)`. This way, it's not part of an API that frequently gets user input of all sorts of different types passed into it. ```js var buf = Buffer.allocUnsafe(16) // careful, uninitialized memory! // Immediately overwrite the uninitialized buffer with data from another buffer for (var i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) { buf[i] = otherBuf[i] } ``` ### How do we fix node.js core? We sent [a PR to node.js core](https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/4514) (merged as `semver-major`) which defends against one case: ```js var str = 16 new Buffer(str, 'utf8') ``` In this situation, it's implied that the programmer intended the first argument to be a string, since they passed an encoding as a second argument. Today, node.js will allocate uninitialized memory in the case of `new Buffer(number, encoding)`, which is probably not what the programmer intended. But this is only a partial solution, since if the programmer does `new Buffer(variable)` (without an `encoding` parameter) there's no way to know what they intended. If `variable` is sometimes a number, then uninitialized memory will sometimes be returned. ### What's the real long-term fix? We could deprecate and remove `new Buffer(number)` and use `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)` when we need uninitialized memory. But that would break 1000s of packages. ~~We believe the best solution is to:~~ ~~1. Change `new Buffer(number)` to return safe, zeroed-out memory~~ ~~2. Create a new API for creating uninitialized Buffers. We propose: `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)`~~ #### Update We now support adding three new APIs: - `Buffer.from(value)` - convert from any type to a buffer - `Buffer.alloc(size)` - create a zero-filled buffer - `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` - create an uninitialized buffer with given size This solves the core problem that affected `ws` and `bittorrent-dht` which is `Buffer(variable)` getting tricked into taking a number argument. This way, existing code continues working and the impact on the npm ecosystem will be minimal. Over time, npm maintainers can migrate performance-critical code to use `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)` instead of `new Buffer(number)`. ### Conclusion We think there's a serious design issue with the `Buffer` API as it exists today. It promotes insecure software by putting high-risk functionality into a convenient API with friendly "developer ergonomics". This wasn't merely a theoretical exercise because we found the issue in some of the most popular npm packages. Fortunately, there's an easy fix that can be applied today. Use `safe-buffer` in place of `buffer`. ```js var Buffer = require('safe-buffer').Buffer ``` Eventually, we hope that node.js core can switch to this new, safer behavior. We believe the impact on the ecosystem would be minimal since it's not a breaking change. Well-maintained, popular packages would be updated to use `Buffer.alloc` quickly, while older, insecure packages would magically become safe from this attack vector. ## links - [Node.js PR: buffer: throw if both length and enc are passed](https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/4514) - [Node Security Project disclosure for `ws`](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/67) - [Node Security Project disclosure for`bittorrent-dht`](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/68) ## credit The original issues in `bittorrent-dht` ([disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/68)) and `ws` ([disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/67)) were discovered by [Mathias Buus](https://github.com/mafintosh) and [Feross Aboukhadijeh](http://feross.org/). Thanks to [Adam Baldwin](https://github.com/evilpacket) for helping disclose these issues and for his work running the [Node Security Project](https://nodesecurity.io/). Thanks to [John Hiesey](https://github.com/jhiesey) for proofreading this README and auditing the code. ## license MIT. Copyright (C) [Feross Aboukhadijeh](http://feross.org) # is-core-module <sup>[![Version Badge][2]][1]</sup> [![github actions][actions-image]][actions-url] [![coverage][codecov-image]][codecov-url] [![dependency status][5]][6] [![dev dependency status][7]][8] [![License][license-image]][license-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url] [![npm badge][11]][1] Is this specifier a node.js core module? Optionally provide a node version to check; defaults to the current node version. ## Example ```js var isCore = require('is-core-module'); var assert = require('assert'); assert(isCore('fs')); assert(!isCore('butts')); ``` ## Tests Clone the repo, `npm install`, and run `npm test` [1]: https://npmjs.org/package/is-core-module [2]: https://versionbadg.es/inspect-js/is-core-module.svg [5]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/is-core-module.svg [6]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/is-core-module [7]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/is-core-module/dev-status.svg [8]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/is-core-module#info=devDependencies [11]: https://nodei.co/npm/is-core-module.png?downloads=true&stars=true [license-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/l/is-core-module.svg [license-url]: LICENSE [downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/is-core-module.svg [downloads-url]: https://npm-stat.com/charts.html?package=is-core-module [codecov-image]: https://codecov.io/gh/inspect-js/is-core-module/branch/main/graphs/badge.svg [codecov-url]: https://app.codecov.io/gh/inspect-js/is-core-module/ [actions-image]: https://img.shields.io/endpoint?url=https://github-actions-badge-u3jn4tfpocch.runkit.sh/inspect-js/is-core-module [actions-url]: https://github.com/inspect-js/is-core-module/actions Standard library ================ Standard library components for use with `tsc` (portable) and `asc` (assembly). Base configurations (.json) and definition files (.d.ts) are relevant to `tsc` only and not used by `asc`. # `asbuild` [![Stars](https://img.shields.io/github/stars/AssemblyScript/asbuild.svg?style=social&maxAge=3600&label=Star)](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/asbuild/stargazers) *A simple build tool for [AssemblyScript](https://assemblyscript.org) projects, similar to `cargo`, etc.* ## 🚩 Table of Contents - [Installing](#-installing) - [Usage](#-usage) - [`asb init`](#asb-init---create-an-empty-project) - [`asb test`](#asb-test---run-as-pect-tests) - [`asb fmt`](#asb-fmt---format-as-files-using-eslint) - [`asb run`](#asb-run---run-a-wasi-binary) - [`asb build`](#asb-build---compile-the-project-using-asc) - [Background](#-background) ## 🔧 Installing Install it globally ``` npm install -g asbuild ``` Or, locally as dev dependencies ``` npm install --save-dev asbuild ``` ## 💡 Usage ``` Build tool for AssemblyScript projects. Usage: asb [command] [options] Commands: asb Alias of build command, to maintain back-ward compatibility [default] asb build Compile a local package and all of its dependencies [aliases: compile, make] asb init [baseDir] Create a new AS package in an given directory asb test Run as-pect tests asb fmt [paths..] This utility formats current module using eslint. [aliases: format, lint] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] ``` ### `asb init` - Create an empty project ``` asb init [baseDir] Create a new AS package in an given directory Positionals: baseDir Create a sample AS project in this directory [string] [default: "."] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] --yes Skip the interactive prompt [boolean] [default: false] ``` ### `asb test` - Run as-pect tests ``` asb test Run as-pect tests USAGE: asb test [options] -- [aspect_options] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] --verbose, --vv Print out arguments passed to as-pect [boolean] [default: false] ``` ### `asb fmt` - Format AS files using ESlint ``` asb fmt [paths..] This utility formats current module using eslint. Positionals: paths Paths to format [array] [default: ["."]] Initialisation: --init Generates recommended eslint config for AS Projects [boolean] Miscellaneous --lint, --dry-run Tries to fix problems without saving the changes to the file system [boolean] [default: false] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help ``` ### `asb run` - Run a WASI binary ``` asb run Run a WASI binary USAGE: asb run [options] [binary path] -- [binary options] Positionals: binary path to Wasm binary [string] [required] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] --preopen, -p comma separated list of directories to open. [default: "."] ``` ### `asb build` - Compile the project using asc ``` asb build Compile a local package and all of its dependencies USAGE: asb build [entry_file] [options] -- [asc_options] Options: --version Show version number [boolean] --help Show help [boolean] --baseDir, -d Base directory of project. [string] [default: "."] --config, -c Path to asconfig file [string] [default: "./asconfig.json"] --wat Output wat file to outDir [boolean] [default: false] --outDir Directory to place built binaries. Default "./build/<target>/" [string] --target Target for compilation [string] [default: "release"] --verbose Print out arguments passed to asc [boolean] [default: false] Examples: asb build Build release of 'assembly/index.ts to build/release/packageName.wasm asb build --target release Build a release binary asb build -- --measure Pass argument to 'asc' ``` #### Defaults ##### Project structure ``` project/ package.json asconfig.json assembly/ index.ts build/ release/ project.wasm debug/ project.wasm ``` - If no entry file passed and no `entry` field is in `asconfig.json`, `project/assembly/index.ts` is assumed. - `asconfig.json` allows for options for different compile targets, e.g. release, debug, etc. `asc` defaults to the release target. - The default build directory is `./build`, and artifacts are placed at `./build/<target>/packageName.wasm`. ##### Workspaces If a `workspace` field is added to a top level `asconfig.json` file, then each path in the array is built and placed into the top level `outDir`. For example, `asconfig.json`: ```json { "workspaces": ["a", "b"] } ``` Running `asb` in the directory below will use the top level build directory to place all the binaries. ``` project/ package.json asconfig.json a/ asconfig.json assembly/ index.ts b/ asconfig.json assembly/ index.ts build/ release/ a.wasm b.wasm debug/ a.wasm b.wasm ``` To see an example in action check out the [test workspace](./tests/build_test) ## 📖 Background Asbuild started as wrapper around `asc` to provide an easier CLI interface and now has been extened to support other commands like `init`, `test` and `fmt` just like `cargo` to become a one stop build tool for AS Projects. ## 📜 License This library is provided under the open-source [MIT license](https://choosealicense.com/licenses/mit/). # minimatch A minimal matching utility. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/minimatch.svg?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/isaacs/minimatch) This is the matching library used internally by npm. It works by converting glob expressions into JavaScript `RegExp` objects. ## Usage ```javascript var minimatch = require("minimatch") minimatch("bar.foo", "*.foo") // true! minimatch("bar.foo", "*.bar") // false! minimatch("bar.foo", "*.+(bar|foo)", { debug: true }) // true, and noisy! ``` ## Features Supports these glob features: * Brace Expansion * Extended glob matching * "Globstar" `**` matching See: * `man sh` * `man bash` * `man 3 fnmatch` * `man 5 gitignore` ## Minimatch Class Create a minimatch object by instantiating the `minimatch.Minimatch` class. ```javascript var Minimatch = require("minimatch").Minimatch var mm = new Minimatch(pattern, options) ``` ### Properties * `pattern` The original pattern the minimatch object represents. * `options` The options supplied to the constructor. * `set` A 2-dimensional array of regexp or string expressions. Each row in the array corresponds to a brace-expanded pattern. Each item in the row corresponds to a single path-part. For example, the pattern `{a,b/c}/d` would expand to a set of patterns like: [ [ a, d ] , [ b, c, d ] ] If a portion of the pattern doesn't have any "magic" in it (that is, it's something like `"foo"` rather than `fo*o?`), then it will be left as a string rather than converted to a regular expression. * `regexp` Created by the `makeRe` method. A single regular expression expressing the entire pattern. This is useful in cases where you wish to use the pattern somewhat like `fnmatch(3)` with `FNM_PATH` enabled. * `negate` True if the pattern is negated. * `comment` True if the pattern is a comment. * `empty` True if the pattern is `""`. ### Methods * `makeRe` Generate the `regexp` member if necessary, and return it. Will return `false` if the pattern is invalid. * `match(fname)` Return true if the filename matches the pattern, or false otherwise. * `matchOne(fileArray, patternArray, partial)` Take a `/`-split filename, and match it against a single row in the `regExpSet`. This method is mainly for internal use, but is exposed so that it can be used by a glob-walker that needs to avoid excessive filesystem calls. All other methods are internal, and will be called as necessary. ### minimatch(path, pattern, options) Main export. Tests a path against the pattern using the options. ```javascript var isJS = minimatch(file, "*.js", { matchBase: true }) ``` ### minimatch.filter(pattern, options) Returns a function that tests its supplied argument, suitable for use with `Array.filter`. Example: ```javascript var javascripts = fileList.filter(minimatch.filter("*.js", {matchBase: true})) ``` ### minimatch.match(list, pattern, options) Match against the list of files, in the style of fnmatch or glob. If nothing is matched, and options.nonull is set, then return a list containing the pattern itself. ```javascript var javascripts = minimatch.match(fileList, "*.js", {matchBase: true})) ``` ### minimatch.makeRe(pattern, options) Make a regular expression object from the pattern. ## Options All options are `false` by default. ### debug Dump a ton of stuff to stderr. ### nobrace Do not expand `{a,b}` and `{1..3}` brace sets. ### noglobstar Disable `**` matching against multiple folder names. ### dot Allow patterns to match filenames starting with a period, even if the pattern does not explicitly have a period in that spot. Note that by default, `a/**/b` will **not** match `a/.d/b`, unless `dot` is set. ### noext Disable "extglob" style patterns like `+(a|b)`. ### nocase Perform a case-insensitive match. ### nonull When a match is not found by `minimatch.match`, return a list containing the pattern itself if this option is set. When not set, an empty list is returned if there are no matches. ### matchBase If set, then patterns without slashes will be matched against the basename of the path if it contains slashes. For example, `a?b` would match the path `/xyz/123/acb`, but not `/xyz/acb/123`. ### nocomment Suppress the behavior of treating `#` at the start of a pattern as a comment. ### nonegate Suppress the behavior of treating a leading `!` character as negation. ### flipNegate Returns from negate expressions the same as if they were not negated. (Ie, true on a hit, false on a miss.) ### partial Compare a partial path to a pattern. As long as the parts of the path that are present are not contradicted by the pattern, it will be treated as a match. This is useful in applications where you're walking through a folder structure, and don't yet have the full path, but want to ensure that you do not walk down paths that can never be a match. For example, ```js minimatch('/a/b', '/a/*/c/d', { partial: true }) // true, might be /a/b/c/d minimatch('/a/b', '/**/d', { partial: true }) // true, might be /a/b/.../d minimatch('/x/y/z', '/a/**/z', { partial: true }) // false, because x !== a ``` ### allowWindowsEscape Windows path separator `\` is by default converted to `/`, which prohibits the usage of `\` as a escape character. This flag skips that behavior and allows using the escape character. ## Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations While strict compliance with the existing standards is a worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between minimatch and other implementations, and are intentional. If the pattern starts with a `!` character, then it is negated. Set the `nonegate` flag to suppress this behavior, and treat leading `!` characters normally. This is perhaps relevant if you wish to start the pattern with a negative extglob pattern like `!(a|B)`. Multiple `!` characters at the start of a pattern will negate the pattern multiple times. If a pattern starts with `#`, then it is treated as a comment, and will not match anything. Use `\#` to match a literal `#` at the start of a line, or set the `nocomment` flag to suppress this behavior. The double-star character `**` is supported by default, unless the `noglobstar` flag is set. This is supported in the manner of bsdglob and bash 4.1, where `**` only has special significance if it is the only thing in a path part. That is, `a/**/b` will match `a/x/y/b`, but `a/**b` will not. If an escaped pattern has no matches, and the `nonull` flag is set, then minimatch.match returns the pattern as-provided, rather than interpreting the character escapes. For example, `minimatch.match([], "\\*a\\?")` will return `"\\*a\\?"` rather than `"*a?"`. This is akin to setting the `nullglob` option in bash, except that it does not resolve escaped pattern characters. If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before any other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern like `+(a|{b),c)}`, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is expanded **first** into the set of `+(a|b)` and `+(a|c)`, and those patterns are checked for validity. Since those two are valid, matching proceeds. binaryen.js =========== **binaryen.js** is a port of [Binaryen](https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen) to the Web, allowing you to generate [WebAssembly](https://webassembly.org) using a JavaScript API. <a href="https://github.com/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/actions?query=workflow%3ABuild"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/Build/master?label=build&logo=github" alt="Build status" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/binaryen"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/binaryen.svg?label=latest&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm version" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/binaryen"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/binaryen/nightly.svg?label=nightly&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm nightly version" /></a> Usage ----- ``` $> npm install binaryen ``` ```js var binaryen = require("binaryen"); // Create a module with a single function var myModule = new binaryen.Module(); myModule.addFunction("add", binaryen.createType([ binaryen.i32, binaryen.i32 ]), binaryen.i32, [ binaryen.i32 ], myModule.block(null, [ myModule.local.set(2, myModule.i32.add( myModule.local.get(0, binaryen.i32), myModule.local.get(1, binaryen.i32) ) ), myModule.return( myModule.local.get(2, binaryen.i32) ) ]) ); myModule.addFunctionExport("add", "add"); // Optimize the module using default passes and levels myModule.optimize(); // Validate the module if (!myModule.validate()) throw new Error("validation error"); // Generate text format and binary var textData = myModule.emitText(); var wasmData = myModule.emitBinary(); // Example usage with the WebAssembly API var compiled = new WebAssembly.Module(wasmData); var instance = new WebAssembly.Instance(compiled, {}); console.log(instance.exports.add(41, 1)); ``` The buildbot also publishes nightly versions once a day if there have been changes. The latest nightly can be installed through ``` $> npm install binaryen@nightly ``` or you can use one of the [previous versions](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/tags) instead if necessary. ### Usage with a CDN * From GitHub via [jsDelivr](https://www.jsdelivr.com):<br /> `https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js@VERSION/index.js` * From npm via [jsDelivr](https://www.jsdelivr.com):<br /> `https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/binaryen@VERSION/index.js` * From npm via [unpkg](https://unpkg.com):<br /> `https://unpkg.com/binaryen@VERSION/index.js` Replace `VERSION` with a [specific version](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/releases) or omit it (not recommended in production) to use master/latest. API --- **Please note** that the Binaryen API is evolving fast and that definitions and documentation provided by the package tend to get out of sync despite our best efforts. It's a bot after all. If you rely on binaryen.js and spot an issue, please consider sending a PR our way by updating [index.d.ts](./index.d.ts) and [README.md](./README.md) to reflect the [current API](https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen/blob/master/src/js/binaryen.js-post.js). <!-- START doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update --> <!-- DON'T EDIT THIS SECTION, INSTEAD RE-RUN doctoc TO UPDATE --> ### Contents - [Types](#types) - [Module construction](#module-construction) - [Module manipulation](#module-manipulation) - [Module validation](#module-validation) - [Module optimization](#module-optimization) - [Module creation](#module-creation) - [Expression construction](#expression-construction) - [Control flow](#control-flow) - [Variable accesses](#variable-accesses) - [Integer operations](#integer-operations) - [Floating point operations](#floating-point-operations) - [Datatype conversions](#datatype-conversions) - [Function calls](#function-calls) - [Linear memory accesses](#linear-memory-accesses) - [Host operations](#host-operations) - [Vector operations 🦄](#vector-operations-) - [Atomic memory accesses 🦄](#atomic-memory-accesses-) - [Atomic read-modify-write operations 🦄](#atomic-read-modify-write-operations-) - [Atomic wait and notify operations 🦄](#atomic-wait-and-notify-operations-) - [Sign extension operations 🦄](#sign-extension-operations-) - [Multi-value operations 🦄](#multi-value-operations-) - [Exception handling operations 🦄](#exception-handling-operations-) - [Reference types operations 🦄](#reference-types-operations-) - [Expression manipulation](#expression-manipulation) - [Relooper](#relooper) - [Source maps](#source-maps) - [Debugging](#debugging) <!-- END doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update --> [Future features](http://webassembly.org/docs/future-features/) 🦄 might not be supported by all runtimes. ### Types * **none**: `Type`<br /> The none type, e.g., `void`. * **i32**: `Type`<br /> 32-bit integer type. * **i64**: `Type`<br /> 64-bit integer type. * **f32**: `Type`<br /> 32-bit float type. * **f64**: `Type`<br /> 64-bit float (double) type. * **v128**: `Type`<br /> 128-bit vector type. 🦄 * **funcref**: `Type`<br /> A function reference. 🦄 * **anyref**: `Type`<br /> Any host reference. 🦄 * **nullref**: `Type`<br /> A null reference. 🦄 * **exnref**: `Type`<br /> An exception reference. 🦄 * **unreachable**: `Type`<br /> Special type indicating unreachable code when obtaining information about an expression. * **auto**: `Type`<br /> Special type used in **Module#block** exclusively. Lets the API figure out a block's result type automatically. * **createType**(types: `Type[]`): `Type`<br /> Creates a multi-value type from an array of types. * **expandType**(type: `Type`): `Type[]`<br /> Expands a multi-value type to an array of types. ### Module construction * new **Module**()<br /> Constructs a new module. * **parseText**(text: `string`): `Module`<br /> Creates a module from Binaryen's s-expression text format (not official stack-style text format). * **readBinary**(data: `Uint8Array`): `Module`<br /> Creates a module from binary data. ### Module manipulation * Module#**addFunction**(name: `string`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`, vars: `Type[]`, body: `ExpressionRef`): `FunctionRef`<br /> Adds a function. `vars` indicate additional locals, in the given order. * Module#**getFunction**(name: `string`): `FunctionRef`<br /> Gets a function, by name, * Module#**removeFunction**(name: `string`): `void`<br /> Removes a function, by name. * Module#**getNumFunctions**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of functions within the module. * Module#**getFunctionByIndex**(index: `number`): `FunctionRef`<br /> Gets the function at the specified index. * Module#**addFunctionImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `void`<br /> Adds a function import. * Module#**addTableImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`): `void`<br /> Adds a table import. There's just one table for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addMemoryImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`): `void`<br /> Adds a memory import. There's just one memory for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addGlobalImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`, globalType: `Type`): `void`<br /> Adds a global variable import. Imported globals must be immutable. * Module#**addFunctionExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a function export. * Module#**addTableExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a table export. There's just one table for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addMemoryExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a memory export. There's just one memory for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addGlobalExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a global variable export. Exported globals must be immutable. * Module#**getNumExports**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of exports witin the module. * Module#**getExportByIndex**(index: `number`): `ExportRef`<br /> Gets the export at the specified index. * Module#**removeExport**(externalName: `string`): `void`<br /> Removes an export, by external name. * Module#**addGlobal**(name: `string`, type: `Type`, mutable: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `GlobalRef`<br /> Adds a global instance variable. * Module#**getGlobal**(name: `string`): `GlobalRef`<br /> Gets a global, by name, * Module#**removeGlobal**(name: `string`): `void`<br /> Removes a global, by name. * Module#**setFunctionTable**(initial: `number`, maximum: `number`, funcs: `string[]`, offset?: `ExpressionRef`): `void`<br /> Sets the contents of the function table. There's just one table for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**getFunctionTable**(): `{ imported: boolean, segments: TableElement[] }`<br /> Gets the contents of the function table. * TableElement#**offset**: `ExpressionRef` * TableElement#**names**: `string[]` * Module#**setMemory**(initial: `number`, maximum: `number`, exportName: `string | null`, segments: `MemorySegment[]`, flags?: `number[]`, shared?: `boolean`): `void`<br /> Sets the memory. There's just one memory for now, using name `"0"`. Providing `exportName` also creates a memory export. * MemorySegment#**offset**: `ExpressionRef` * MemorySegment#**data**: `Uint8Array` * MemorySegment#**passive**: `boolean` * Module#**getNumMemorySegments**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of memory segments within the module. * Module#**getMemorySegmentInfoByIndex**(index: `number`): `MemorySegmentInfo`<br /> Gets information about the memory segment at the specified index. * MemorySegmentInfo#**offset**: `number` * MemorySegmentInfo#**data**: `Uint8Array` * MemorySegmentInfo#**passive**: `boolean` * Module#**setStart**(start: `FunctionRef`): `void`<br /> Sets the start function. * Module#**getFeatures**(): `Features`<br /> Gets the WebAssembly features enabled for this module. Note that the return value may be a bitmask indicating multiple features. Possible feature flags are: * Features.**MVP**: `Features` * Features.**Atomics**: `Features` * Features.**BulkMemory**: `Features` * Features.**MutableGlobals**: `Features` * Features.**NontrappingFPToInt**: `Features` * Features.**SignExt**: `Features` * Features.**SIMD128**: `Features` * Features.**ExceptionHandling**: `Features` * Features.**TailCall**: `Features` * Features.**ReferenceTypes**: `Features` * Features.**Multivalue**: `Features` * Features.**All**: `Features` * Module#**setFeatures**(features: `Features`): `void`<br /> Sets the WebAssembly features enabled for this module. * Module#**addCustomSection**(name: `string`, contents: `Uint8Array`): `void`<br /> Adds a custom section to the binary. * Module#**autoDrop**(): `void`<br /> Enables automatic insertion of `drop` operations where needed. Lets you not worry about dropping when creating your code. * **getFunctionInfo**(ftype: `FunctionRef`: `FunctionInfo`<br /> Obtains information about a function. * FunctionInfo#**name**: `string` * FunctionInfo#**module**: `string | null` (if imported) * FunctionInfo#**base**: `string | null` (if imported) * FunctionInfo#**params**: `Type` * FunctionInfo#**results**: `Type` * FunctionInfo#**vars**: `Type` * FunctionInfo#**body**: `ExpressionRef` * **getGlobalInfo**(global: `GlobalRef`): `GlobalInfo`<br /> Obtains information about a global. * GlobalInfo#**name**: `string` * GlobalInfo#**module**: `string | null` (if imported) * GlobalInfo#**base**: `string | null` (if imported) * GlobalInfo#**type**: `Type` * GlobalInfo#**mutable**: `boolean` * GlobalInfo#**init**: `ExpressionRef` * **getExportInfo**(export_: `ExportRef`): `ExportInfo`<br /> Obtains information about an export. * ExportInfo#**kind**: `ExternalKind` * ExportInfo#**name**: `string` * ExportInfo#**value**: `string` Possible `ExternalKind` values are: * **ExternalFunction**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalTable**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalMemory**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalGlobal**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalEvent**: `ExternalKind` * **getEventInfo**(event: `EventRef`): `EventInfo`<br /> Obtains information about an event. * EventInfo#**name**: `string` * EventInfo#**module**: `string | null` (if imported) * EventInfo#**base**: `string | null` (if imported) * EventInfo#**attribute**: `number` * EventInfo#**params**: `Type` * EventInfo#**results**: `Type` * **getSideEffects**(expr: `ExpressionRef`, features: `FeatureFlags`): `SideEffects`<br /> Gets the side effects of the specified expression. * SideEffects.**None**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Branches**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Calls**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ReadsLocal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**WritesLocal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ReadsGlobal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**WritesGlobal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ReadsMemory**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**WritesMemory**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ImplicitTrap**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**IsAtomic**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Throws**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Any**: `SideEffects` ### Module validation * Module#**validate**(): `boolean`<br /> Validates the module. Returns `true` if valid, otherwise prints validation errors and returns `false`. ### Module optimization * Module#**optimize**(): `void`<br /> Optimizes the module using the default optimization passes. * Module#**optimizeFunction**(func: `FunctionRef | string`): `void`<br /> Optimizes a single function using the default optimization passes. * Module#**runPasses**(passes: `string[]`): `void`<br /> Runs the specified passes on the module. * Module#**runPassesOnFunction**(func: `FunctionRef | string`, passes: `string[]`): `void`<br /> Runs the specified passes on a single function. * **getOptimizeLevel**(): `number`<br /> Gets the currently set optimize level. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-O1`, `-O2` (default), etc. * **setOptimizeLevel**(level: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the optimization level to use. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-O1`, `-O2` (default), etc. * **getShrinkLevel**(): `number`<br /> Gets the currently set shrink level. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-Os` (default), `-Oz`. * **setShrinkLevel**(level: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the shrink level to use. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-Os` (default), `-Oz`. * **getDebugInfo**(): `boolean`<br /> Gets whether generating debug information is currently enabled or not. * **setDebugInfo**(on: `boolean`): `void`<br /> Enables or disables debug information in emitted binaries. * **getLowMemoryUnused**(): `boolean`<br /> Gets whether the low 1K of memory can be considered unused when optimizing. * **setLowMemoryUnused**(on: `boolean`): `void`<br /> Enables or disables whether the low 1K of memory can be considered unused when optimizing. * **getPassArgument**(key: `string`): `string | null`<br /> Gets the value of the specified arbitrary pass argument. * **setPassArgument**(key: `string`, value: `string | null`): `void`<br /> Sets the value of the specified arbitrary pass argument. Removes the respective argument if `value` is `null`. * **clearPassArguments**(): `void`<br /> Clears all arbitrary pass arguments. * **getAlwaysInlineMaxSize**(): `number`<br /> Gets the function size at which we always inline. * **setAlwaysInlineMaxSize**(size: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the function size at which we always inline. * **getFlexibleInlineMaxSize**(): `number`<br /> Gets the function size which we inline when functions are lightweight. * **setFlexibleInlineMaxSize**(size: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the function size which we inline when functions are lightweight. * **getOneCallerInlineMaxSize**(): `number`<br /> Gets the function size which we inline when there is only one caller. * **setOneCallerInlineMaxSize**(size: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the function size which we inline when there is only one caller. ### Module creation * Module#**emitBinary**(): `Uint8Array`<br /> Returns the module in binary format. * Module#**emitBinary**(sourceMapUrl: `string | null`): `BinaryWithSourceMap`<br /> Returns the module in binary format with its source map. If `sourceMapUrl` is `null`, source map generation is skipped. * BinaryWithSourceMap#**binary**: `Uint8Array` * BinaryWithSourceMap#**sourceMap**: `string | null` * Module#**emitText**(): `string`<br /> Returns the module in Binaryen's s-expression text format (not official stack-style text format). * Module#**emitAsmjs**(): `string`<br /> Returns the [asm.js](http://asmjs.org/) representation of the module. * Module#**dispose**(): `void`<br /> Releases the resources held by the module once it isn't needed anymore. ### Expression construction #### [Control flow](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#control-constructs-and-instructions) * Module#**block**(label: `string | null`, children: `ExpressionRef[]`, resultType?: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a block. `resultType` defaults to `none`. * Module#**if**(condition: `ExpressionRef`, ifTrue: `ExpressionRef`, ifFalse?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates an if or if/else combination. * Module#**loop**(label: `string | null`, body: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a loop. * Module#**br**(label: `string`, condition?: `ExpressionRef`, value?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a branch (br) to a label. * Module#**switch**(labels: `string[]`, defaultLabel: `string`, condition: `ExpressionRef`, value?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a switch (br_table). * Module#**nop**(): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a no-operation (nop) instruction. * Module#**return**(value?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` Creates a return. * Module#**unreachable**(): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates an [unreachable](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#unreachable) instruction that will always trap. * Module#**drop**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a [drop](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#type-parametric-operators) of a value. * Module#**select**(condition: `ExpressionRef`, ifTrue: `ExpressionRef`, ifFalse: `ExpressionRef`, type?: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a [select](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#type-parametric-operators) of one of two values. #### [Variable accesses](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#local-variables) * Module#**local.get**(index: `number`, type: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a local.get for the local at the specified index. Note that we must specify the type here as we may not have created the local being accessed yet. * Module#**local.set**(index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a local.set for the local at the specified index. * Module#**local.tee**(index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`, type: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a local.tee for the local at the specified index. A tee differs from a set in that the value remains on the stack. Note that we must specify the type here as we may not have created the local being accessed yet. * Module#**global.get**(name: `string`, type: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a global.get for the global with the specified name. Note that we must specify the type here as we may not have created the global being accessed yet. * Module#**global.set**(name: `string`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a global.set for the global with the specified name. #### [Integer operations](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#32-bit-integer-operators) * Module#i32.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**clz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ctz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**popcnt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**eqz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**div_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**div_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rem_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rem_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**and**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**or**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**xor**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**shl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**shr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**shr_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rotl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rotr**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**le_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**const**(low: `number`, high: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**clz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ctz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**popcnt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**eqz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**div_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**div_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rem_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rem_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**and**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**or**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**xor**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**shl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**shr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**shr_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rotl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rotr**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**le_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Floating point operations](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#floating-point-operators) * Module#f32.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**const_bits**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**ceil**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**floor**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**trunc**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**nearest**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**copysign**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**const_bits**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**ceil**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**floor**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**trunc**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**nearest**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**copysign**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Datatype conversions](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#datatype-conversions-truncations-reinterpretations-promotions-and-demotions) * Module#i32.**trunc_s.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**trunc_s.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**trunc_u.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**trunc_u.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**wrap**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**trunc_s.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**trunc_s.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**trunc_u.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**trunc_u.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f32.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_s.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_s.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_u.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_u.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**demote**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_s.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_s.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_u.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_u.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**promote**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Function calls](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#calls) * Module#**call**(name: `string`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, returnType: `Type`): `ExpressionRef` Creates a call to a function. Note that we must specify the return type here as we may not have created the function being called yet. * Module#**return_call**(name: `string`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, returnType: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Like **call**, but creates a tail-call. 🦄 * Module#**call_indirect**(target: `ExpressionRef`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Similar to **call**, but calls indirectly, i.e., via a function pointer, so an expression replaces the name as the called value. * Module#**return_call_indirect**(target: `ExpressionRef`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Like **call_indirect**, but creates a tail-call. 🦄 #### [Linear memory accesses](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#linear-memory-accesses) * Module#i32.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load8_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load8_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load16_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load16_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**store8**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**store16**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> > * Module#i64.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load8_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load8_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load16_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load16_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load32_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load32_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store8**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store16**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store32**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f32.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Host operations](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#resizing) * Module#**memory.size**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**memory.grow**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Vector operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/simd/blob/master/proposals/simd/SIMD.md) 🦄 * Module#v128.**const**(bytes: `Uint8Array`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**not**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**and**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**or**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**xor**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**andnot**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**bitselect**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`, cond: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i8x16.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**add_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**add_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**sub_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**sub_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**min_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**min_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**max_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**max_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**avgr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**narrow_i16x8_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**narrow_i16x8_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i16x8.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**add_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**add_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**sub_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**sub_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**min_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**min_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**max_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**max_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**avgr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**narrow_i32x4_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**narrow_i32x4_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_low_i8x16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_high_i8x16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_low_i8x16_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_high_i8x16_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**load8x8_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**load8x8_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i32x4.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**min_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**min_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**max_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**max_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**dot_i16x8_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**trunc_sat_f32x4_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**trunc_sat_f32x4_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_low_i16x8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_high_i16x8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_low_i16x8_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_high_i16x8_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**load16x4_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**load16x4_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64x2.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**trunc_sat_f64x2_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**trunc_sat_f64x2_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**load32x2_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**load32x2_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f32x4.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**extract_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**qfma**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**qfms**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**convert_i32x4_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**convert_i32x4_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64x2.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**extract_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**qfma**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**qfms**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**convert_i64x2_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**convert_i64x2_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v8x16.**shuffle**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`, mask: `Uint8Array`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v8x16.**swizzle**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v8x16.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v16x8.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v32x4.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v64x2.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Atomic memory accesses](https://github.com/WebAssembly/threads/blob/master/proposals/threads/Overview.md#atomic-memory-accesses) 🦄 * Module#i32.**atomic.load**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.load8_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.load16_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.store**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.store8**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.store16**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**atomic.load**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.load8_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.load16_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.load32_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store8**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store16**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store32**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Atomic read-modify-write operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/threads/blob/master/proposals/threads/Overview.md#read-modify-write) 🦄 * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Atomic wait and notify operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/threads/blob/master/proposals/threads/Overview.md#wait-and-notify-operators) 🦄 * Module#i32.**atomic.wait**(ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, timeout: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.wait**(ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, timeout: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**atomic.notify**(ptr: `ExpressionRef`, notifyCount: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**atomic.fence**(): `ExpressionRef` #### [Sign extension operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/sign-extension-ops/blob/master/proposals/sign-extension-ops/Overview.md) 🦄 * Module#i32.**extend8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**extend16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**extend8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend32_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Multi-value operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/multi-value/blob/master/proposals/multi-value/Overview.md) 🦄 Note that these are pseudo instructions enabling Binaryen to reason about multiple values on the stack. * Module#**push**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#funcref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#anyref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#nullref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#exnref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#tuple.**make**(elements: `ExpressionRef[]`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#tuple.**extract**(tuple: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Exception handling operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/blob/master/proposals/Exceptions.md) 🦄 * Module#**try**(body: `ExpressionRef`, catchBody: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**throw**(event: `string`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**rethrow**(exnref: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**br_on_exn**(label: `string`, event: `string`, exnref: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#**addEvent**(name: `string`, attribute: `number`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `Event` * Module#**getEvent**(name: `string`): `Event` * Module#**removeEvent**(name: `stirng`): `void` * Module#**addEventImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`, attribute: `number`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `void` * Module#**addEventExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef` #### [Reference types operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/reference-types/blob/master/proposals/reference-types/Overview.md) 🦄 * Module#ref.**null**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#ref.**is_null**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#ref.**func**(name: `string`): `ExpressionRef` ### Expression manipulation * **getExpressionId**(expr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionId`<br /> Gets the id (kind) of the specified expression. Possible values are: * **InvalidId**: `ExpressionId` * **BlockId**: `ExpressionId` * **IfId**: `ExpressionId` * **LoopId**: `ExpressionId` * **BreakId**: `ExpressionId` * **SwitchId**: `ExpressionId` * **CallId**: `ExpressionId` * **CallIndirectId**: `ExpressionId` * **LocalGetId**: `ExpressionId` * **LocalSetId**: `ExpressionId` * **GlobalGetId**: `ExpressionId` * **GlobalSetId**: `ExpressionId` * **LoadId**: `ExpressionId` * **StoreId**: `ExpressionId` * **ConstId**: `ExpressionId` * **UnaryId**: `ExpressionId` * **BinaryId**: `ExpressionId` * **SelectId**: `ExpressionId` * **DropId**: `ExpressionId` * **ReturnId**: `ExpressionId` * **HostId**: `ExpressionId` * **NopId**: `ExpressionId` * **UnreachableId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicCmpxchgId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicRMWId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicWaitId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicNotifyId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicFenceId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDExtractId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDReplaceId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDShuffleId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDTernaryId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDShiftId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDLoadId**: `ExpressionId` * **MemoryInitId**: `ExpressionId` * **DataDropId**: `ExpressionId` * **MemoryCopyId**: `ExpressionId` * **MemoryFillId**: `ExpressionId` * **RefNullId**: `ExpressionId` * **RefIsNullId**: `ExpressionId` * **RefFuncId**: `ExpressionId` * **TryId**: `ExpressionId` * **ThrowId**: `ExpressionId` * **RethrowId**: `ExpressionId` * **BrOnExnId**: `ExpressionId` * **PushId**: `ExpressionId` * **PopId**: `ExpressionId` * **getExpressionType**(expr: `ExpressionRef`): `Type`<br /> Gets the type of the specified expression. * **getExpressionInfo**(expr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionInfo`<br /> Obtains information about an expression, always including: * Info#**id**: `ExpressionId` * Info#**type**: `Type` Additional properties depend on the expression's `id` and are usually equivalent to the respective parameters when creating such an expression: * BlockInfo#**name**: `string` * BlockInfo#**children**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * IfInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef` * IfInfo#**ifTrue**: `ExpressionRef` * IfInfo#**ifFalse**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * LoopInfo#**name**: `string` * LoopInfo#**body**: `ExpressionRef` > * BreakInfo#**name**: `string` * BreakInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef | null` * BreakInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * SwitchInfo#**names**: `string[]` * SwitchInfo#**defaultName**: `string | null` * SwitchInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef` * SwitchInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * CallInfo#**target**: `string` * CallInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * CallImportInfo#**target**: `string` * CallImportInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * CallIndirectInfo#**target**: `ExpressionRef` * CallIndirectInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * LocalGetInfo#**index**: `number` > * LocalSetInfo#**isTee**: `boolean` * LocalSetInfo#**index**: `number` * LocalSetInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * GlobalGetInfo#**name**: `string` > * GlobalSetInfo#**name**: `string` * GlobalSetInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * LoadInfo#**isAtomic**: `boolean` * LoadInfo#**isSigned**: `boolean` * LoadInfo#**offset**: `number` * LoadInfo#**bytes**: `number` * LoadInfo#**align**: `number` * LoadInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` > * StoreInfo#**isAtomic**: `boolean` * StoreInfo#**offset**: `number` * StoreInfo#**bytes**: `number` * StoreInfo#**align**: `number` * StoreInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * StoreInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * ConstInfo#**value**: `number | { low: number, high: number }` > * UnaryInfo#**op**: `number` * UnaryInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * BinaryInfo#**op**: `number` * BinaryInfo#**left**: `ExpressionRef` * BinaryInfo#**right**: `ExpressionRef` > * SelectInfo#**ifTrue**: `ExpressionRef` * SelectInfo#**ifFalse**: `ExpressionRef` * SelectInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef` > * DropInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * ReturnInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * NopInfo > * UnreachableInfo > * HostInfo#**op**: `number` * HostInfo#**nameOperand**: `string | null` * HostInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * AtomicRMWInfo#**op**: `number` * AtomicRMWInfo#**bytes**: `number` * AtomicRMWInfo#**offset**: `number` * AtomicRMWInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicRMWInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**bytes**: `number` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**offset**: `number` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**expected**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**replacement**: `ExpressionRef` > * AtomicWaitInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicWaitInfo#**expected**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicWaitInfo#**timeout**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicWaitInfo#**expectedType**: `Type` > * AtomicNotifyInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicNotifyInfo#**notifyCount**: `ExpressionRef` > * AtomicFenceInfo > * SIMDExtractInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDExtractInfo#**vec**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDExtractInfo#**index**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDReplaceInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDReplaceInfo#**vec**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDReplaceInfo#**index**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDReplaceInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDShuffleInfo#**left**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDShuffleInfo#**right**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDShuffleInfo#**mask**: `Uint8Array` > * SIMDTernaryInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDTernaryInfo#**a**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDTernaryInfo#**b**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDTernaryInfo#**c**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDShiftInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDShiftInfo#**vec**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDShiftInfo#**shift**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDLoadInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDLoadInfo#**offset**: `number` * SIMDLoadInfo#**align**: `number` * SIMDLoadInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` > * MemoryInitInfo#**segment**: `number` * MemoryInitInfo#**dest**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryInitInfo#**offset**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryInitInfo#**size**: `ExpressionRef` > * MemoryDropInfo#**segment**: `number` > * MemoryCopyInfo#**dest**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryCopyInfo#**source**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryCopyInfo#**size**: `ExpressionRef` > * MemoryFillInfo#**dest**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryFillInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryFillInfo#**size**: `ExpressionRef` > * TryInfo#**body**: `ExpressionRef` * TryInfo#**catchBody**: `ExpressionRef` > * RefNullInfo > * RefIsNullInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * RefFuncInfo#**func**: `string` > * ThrowInfo#**event**: `string` * ThrowInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * RethrowInfo#**exnref**: `ExpressionRef` > * BrOnExnInfo#**name**: `string` * BrOnExnInfo#**event**: `string` * BrOnExnInfo#**exnref**: `ExpressionRef` > * PopInfo > * PushInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` * **emitText**(expression: `ExpressionRef`): `string`<br /> Emits the expression in Binaryen's s-expression text format (not official stack-style text format). * **copyExpression**(expression: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a deep copy of an expression. ### Relooper * new **Relooper**()<br /> Constructs a relooper instance. This lets you provide an arbitrary CFG, and the relooper will structure it for WebAssembly. * Relooper#**addBlock**(code: `ExpressionRef`): `RelooperBlockRef`<br /> Adds a new block to the CFG, containing the provided code as its body. * Relooper#**addBranch**(from: `RelooperBlockRef`, to: `RelooperBlockRef`, condition: `ExpressionRef`, code: `ExpressionRef`): `void`<br /> Adds a branch from a block to another block, with a condition (or nothing, if this is the default branch to take from the origin - each block must have one such branch), and optional code to execute on the branch (useful for phis). * Relooper#**addBlockWithSwitch**(code: `ExpressionRef`, condition: `ExpressionRef`): `RelooperBlockRef`<br /> Adds a new block, which ends with a switch/br_table, with provided code and condition (that determines where we go in the switch). * Relooper#**addBranchForSwitch**(from: `RelooperBlockRef`, to: `RelooperBlockRef`, indexes: `number[]`, code: `ExpressionRef`): `void`<br /> Adds a branch from a block ending in a switch, to another block, using an array of indexes that determine where to go, and optional code to execute on the branch. * Relooper#**renderAndDispose**(entry: `RelooperBlockRef`, labelHelper: `number`, module: `Module`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Renders and cleans up the Relooper instance. Call this after you have created all the blocks and branches, giving it the entry block (where control flow begins), a label helper variable (an index of a local we can use, necessary for irreducible control flow), and the module. This returns an expression - normal WebAssembly code - that you can use normally anywhere. ### Source maps * Module#**addDebugInfoFileName**(filename: `string`): `number`<br /> Adds a debug info file name to the module and returns its index. * Module#**getDebugInfoFileName**(index: `number`): `string | null` <br /> Gets the name of the debug info file at the specified index. * Module#**setDebugLocation**(func: `FunctionRef`, expr: `ExpressionRef`, fileIndex: `number`, lineNumber: `number`, columnNumber: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the debug location of the specified `ExpressionRef` within the specified `FunctionRef`. ### Debugging * Module#**interpret**(): `void`<br /> Runs the module in the interpreter, calling the start function. # fast-deep-equal The fastest deep equal with ES6 Map, Set and Typed arrays support. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal) [![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/fast-deep-equal.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/fast-deep-equal) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal?branch=master) ## Install ```bash npm install fast-deep-equal ``` ## Features - ES5 compatible - works in node.js (8+) and browsers (IE9+) - checks equality of Date and RegExp objects by value. ES6 equal (`require('fast-deep-equal/es6')`) also supports: - Maps - Sets - Typed arrays ## Usage ```javascript var equal = require('fast-deep-equal'); console.log(equal({foo: 'bar'}, {foo: 'bar'})); // true ``` To support ES6 Maps, Sets and Typed arrays equality use: ```javascript var equal = require('fast-deep-equal/es6'); console.log(equal(Int16Array([1, 2]), Int16Array([1, 2]))); // true ``` To use with React (avoiding the traversal of React elements' _owner property that contains circular references and is not needed when comparing the elements - borrowed from [react-fast-compare](https://github.com/FormidableLabs/react-fast-compare)): ```javascript var equal = require('fast-deep-equal/react'); var equal = require('fast-deep-equal/es6/react'); ``` ## Performance benchmark Node.js v12.6.0: ``` fast-deep-equal x 261,950 ops/sec ±0.52% (89 runs sampled) fast-deep-equal/es6 x 212,991 ops/sec ±0.34% (92 runs sampled) fast-equals x 230,957 ops/sec ±0.83% (85 runs sampled) nano-equal x 187,995 ops/sec ±0.53% (88 runs sampled) shallow-equal-fuzzy x 138,302 ops/sec ±0.49% (90 runs sampled) underscore.isEqual x 74,423 ops/sec ±0.38% (89 runs sampled) lodash.isEqual x 36,637 ops/sec ±0.72% (90 runs sampled) deep-equal x 2,310 ops/sec ±0.37% (90 runs sampled) deep-eql x 35,312 ops/sec ±0.67% (91 runs sampled) ramda.equals x 12,054 ops/sec ±0.40% (91 runs sampled) util.isDeepStrictEqual x 46,440 ops/sec ±0.43% (90 runs sampled) assert.deepStrictEqual x 456 ops/sec ±0.71% (88 runs sampled) The fastest is fast-deep-equal ``` To run benchmark (requires node.js 6+): ```bash npm run benchmark ``` __Please note__: this benchmark runs against the available test cases. To choose the most performant library for your application, it is recommended to benchmark against your data and to NOT expect this benchmark to reflect the performance difference in your application. ## Enterprise support fast-deep-equal package is a part of [Tidelift enterprise subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-fast-deep-equal?utm_source=npm-fast-deep-equal&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo) - it provides a centralised commercial support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerability via GitHub issues. ## License [MIT](https://github.com/epoberezkin/fast-deep-equal/blob/master/LICENSE) # fast-json-stable-stringify Deterministic `JSON.stringify()` - a faster version of [@substack](https://github.com/substack)'s json-stable-strigify without [jsonify](https://github.com/substack/jsonify). You can also pass in a custom comparison function. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify?branch=master) # example ``` js var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify'); var obj = { c: 8, b: [{z:6,y:5,x:4},7], a: 3 }; console.log(stringify(obj)); ``` output: ``` {"a":3,"b":[{"x":4,"y":5,"z":6},7],"c":8} ``` # methods ``` js var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify') ``` ## var str = stringify(obj, opts) Return a deterministic stringified string `str` from the object `obj`. ## options ### cmp If `opts` is given, you can supply an `opts.cmp` to have a custom comparison function for object keys. Your function `opts.cmp` is called with these parameters: ``` js opts.cmp({ key: akey, value: avalue }, { key: bkey, value: bvalue }) ``` For example, to sort on the object key names in reverse order you could write: ``` js var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify'); var obj = { c: 8, b: [{z:6,y:5,x:4},7], a: 3 }; var s = stringify(obj, function (a, b) { return a.key < b.key ? 1 : -1; }); console.log(s); ``` which results in the output string: ``` {"c":8,"b":[{"z":6,"y":5,"x":4},7],"a":3} ``` Or if you wanted to sort on the object values in reverse order, you could write: ``` var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify'); var obj = { d: 6, c: 5, b: [{z:3,y:2,x:1},9], a: 10 }; var s = stringify(obj, function (a, b) { return a.value < b.value ? 1 : -1; }); console.log(s); ``` which outputs: ``` {"d":6,"c":5,"b":[{"z":3,"y":2,"x":1},9],"a":10} ``` ### cycles Pass `true` in `opts.cycles` to stringify circular property as `__cycle__` - the result will not be a valid JSON string in this case. TypeError will be thrown in case of circular object without this option. # install With [npm](https://npmjs.org) do: ``` npm install fast-json-stable-stringify ``` # benchmark To run benchmark (requires Node.js 6+): ``` node benchmark ``` Results: ``` fast-json-stable-stringify x 17,189 ops/sec ±1.43% (83 runs sampled) json-stable-stringify x 13,634 ops/sec ±1.39% (85 runs sampled) fast-stable-stringify x 20,212 ops/sec ±1.20% (84 runs sampled) faster-stable-stringify x 15,549 ops/sec ±1.12% (84 runs sampled) The fastest is fast-stable-stringify ``` ## Enterprise support fast-json-stable-stringify package is a part of [Tidelift enterprise subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-fast-json-stable-stringify?utm_source=npm-fast-json-stable-stringify&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo) - it provides a centralised commercial support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerability via GitHub issues. # license [MIT](https://github.com/epoberezkin/fast-json-stable-stringify/blob/master/LICENSE) bs58 ==== [![build status](https://travis-ci.org/cryptocoinjs/bs58.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/cryptocoinjs/bs58) JavaScript component to compute base 58 encoding. This encoding is typically used for crypto currencies such as Bitcoin. **Note:** If you're looking for **base 58 check** encoding, see: [https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bs58check](https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bs58check), which depends upon this library. Install ------- npm i --save bs58 API --- ### encode(input) `input` must be a [Buffer](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html) or an `Array`. It returns a `string`. **example**: ```js const bs58 = require('bs58') const bytes = Buffer.from('003c176e659bea0f29a3e9bf7880c112b1b31b4dc826268187', 'hex') const address = bs58.encode(bytes) console.log(address) // => 16UjcYNBG9GTK4uq2f7yYEbuifqCzoLMGS ``` ### decode(input) `input` must be a base 58 encoded string. Returns a [Buffer](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html). **example**: ```js const bs58 = require('bs58') const address = '16UjcYNBG9GTK4uq2f7yYEbuifqCzoLMGS' const bytes = bs58.decode(address) console.log(out.toString('hex')) // => 003c176e659bea0f29a3e9bf7880c112b1b31b4dc826268187 ``` Hack / Test ----------- Uses JavaScript standard style. Read more: [![js-standard-style](https://cdn.rawgit.com/feross/standard/master/badge.svg)](https://github.com/feross/standard) Credits ------- - [Mike Hearn](https://github.com/mikehearn) for original Java implementation - [Stefan Thomas](https://github.com/justmoon) for porting to JavaScript - [Stephan Pair](https://github.com/gasteve) for buffer improvements - [Daniel Cousens](https://github.com/dcousens) for cleanup and merging improvements from bitcoinjs-lib - [Jared Deckard](https://github.com/deckar01) for killing `bigi` as a dependency License ------- MIT # jsdiff [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/kpdecker/jsdiff.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/kpdecker/jsdiff) [![Sauce Test Status](https://saucelabs.com/buildstatus/jsdiff)](https://saucelabs.com/u/jsdiff) A javascript text differencing implementation. Based on the algorithm proposed in ["An O(ND) Difference Algorithm and its Variations" (Myers, 1986)](http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.4.6927). ## Installation ```bash npm install diff --save ``` ## API * `Diff.diffChars(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing character by character. Returns a list of change objects (See below). Options * `ignoreCase`: `true` to ignore casing difference. Defaults to `false`. * `Diff.diffWords(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing word by word, ignoring whitespace. Returns a list of change objects (See below). Options * `ignoreCase`: Same as in `diffChars`. * `Diff.diffWordsWithSpace(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing word by word, treating whitespace as significant. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffLines(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing line by line. Options * `ignoreWhitespace`: `true` to ignore leading and trailing whitespace. This is the same as `diffTrimmedLines` * `newlineIsToken`: `true` to treat newline characters as separate tokens. This allows for changes to the newline structure to occur independently of the line content and to be treated as such. In general this is the more human friendly form of `diffLines` and `diffLines` is better suited for patches and other computer friendly output. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffTrimmedLines(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing line by line, ignoring leading and trailing whitespace. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffSentences(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing sentence by sentence. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffCss(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing CSS tokens. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffJson(oldObj, newObj[, options])` - diffs two JSON objects, comparing the fields defined on each. The order of fields, etc does not matter in this comparison. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffArrays(oldArr, newArr[, options])` - diffs two arrays, comparing each item for strict equality (===). Options * `comparator`: `function(left, right)` for custom equality checks Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.createTwoFilesPatch(oldFileName, newFileName, oldStr, newStr, oldHeader, newHeader)` - creates a unified diff patch. Parameters: * `oldFileName` : String to be output in the filename section of the patch for the removals * `newFileName` : String to be output in the filename section of the patch for the additions * `oldStr` : Original string value * `newStr` : New string value * `oldHeader` : Additional information to include in the old file header * `newHeader` : Additional information to include in the new file header * `options` : An object with options. Currently, only `context` is supported and describes how many lines of context should be included. * `Diff.createPatch(fileName, oldStr, newStr, oldHeader, newHeader)` - creates a unified diff patch. Just like Diff.createTwoFilesPatch, but with oldFileName being equal to newFileName. * `Diff.structuredPatch(oldFileName, newFileName, oldStr, newStr, oldHeader, newHeader, options)` - returns an object with an array of hunk objects. This method is similar to createTwoFilesPatch, but returns a data structure suitable for further processing. Parameters are the same as createTwoFilesPatch. The data structure returned may look like this: ```js { oldFileName: 'oldfile', newFileName: 'newfile', oldHeader: 'header1', newHeader: 'header2', hunks: [{ oldStart: 1, oldLines: 3, newStart: 1, newLines: 3, lines: [' line2', ' line3', '-line4', '+line5', '\\ No newline at end of file'], }] } ``` * `Diff.applyPatch(source, patch[, options])` - applies a unified diff patch. Return a string containing new version of provided data. `patch` may be a string diff or the output from the `parsePatch` or `structuredPatch` methods. The optional `options` object may have the following keys: - `fuzzFactor`: Number of lines that are allowed to differ before rejecting a patch. Defaults to 0. - `compareLine(lineNumber, line, operation, patchContent)`: Callback used to compare to given lines to determine if they should be considered equal when patching. Defaults to strict equality but may be overridden to provide fuzzier comparison. Should return false if the lines should be rejected. * `Diff.applyPatches(patch, options)` - applies one or more patches. This method will iterate over the contents of the patch and apply to data provided through callbacks. The general flow for each patch index is: - `options.loadFile(index, callback)` is called. The caller should then load the contents of the file and then pass that to the `callback(err, data)` callback. Passing an `err` will terminate further patch execution. - `options.patched(index, content, callback)` is called once the patch has been applied. `content` will be the return value from `applyPatch`. When it's ready, the caller should call `callback(err)` callback. Passing an `err` will terminate further patch execution. Once all patches have been applied or an error occurs, the `options.complete(err)` callback is made. * `Diff.parsePatch(diffStr)` - Parses a patch into structured data Return a JSON object representation of the a patch, suitable for use with the `applyPatch` method. This parses to the same structure returned by `Diff.structuredPatch`. * `convertChangesToXML(changes)` - converts a list of changes to a serialized XML format All methods above which accept the optional `callback` method will run in sync mode when that parameter is omitted and in async mode when supplied. This allows for larger diffs without blocking the event loop. This may be passed either directly as the final parameter or as the `callback` field in the `options` object. ### Change Objects Many of the methods above return change objects. These objects consist of the following fields: * `value`: Text content * `added`: True if the value was inserted into the new string * `removed`: True if the value was removed from the old string Note that some cases may omit a particular flag field. Comparison on the flag fields should always be done in a truthy or falsy manner. ## Examples Basic example in Node ```js require('colors'); const Diff = require('diff'); const one = 'beep boop'; const other = 'beep boob blah'; const diff = Diff.diffChars(one, other); diff.forEach((part) => { // green for additions, red for deletions // grey for common parts const color = part.added ? 'green' : part.removed ? 'red' : 'grey'; process.stderr.write(part.value[color]); }); console.log(); ``` Running the above program should yield <img src="images/node_example.png" alt="Node Example"> Basic example in a web page ```html <pre id="display"></pre> <script src="diff.js"></script> <script> const one = 'beep boop', other = 'beep boob blah', color = ''; let span = null; const diff = Diff.diffChars(one, other), display = document.getElementById('display'), fragment = document.createDocumentFragment(); diff.forEach((part) => { // green for additions, red for deletions // grey for common parts const color = part.added ? 'green' : part.removed ? 'red' : 'grey'; span = document.createElement('span'); span.style.color = color; span.appendChild(document .createTextNode(part.value)); fragment.appendChild(span); }); display.appendChild(fragment); </script> ``` Open the above .html file in a browser and you should see <img src="images/web_example.png" alt="Node Example"> **[Full online demo](http://kpdecker.github.com/jsdiff)** ## Compatibility [![Sauce Test Status](https://saucelabs.com/browser-matrix/jsdiff.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/jsdiff) jsdiff supports all ES3 environments with some known issues on IE8 and below. Under these browsers some diff algorithms such as word diff and others may fail due to lack of support for capturing groups in the `split` operation. ## License See [LICENSE](https://github.com/kpdecker/jsdiff/blob/master/LICENSE). iMurmurHash.js ============== An incremental implementation of the MurmurHash3 (32-bit) hashing algorithm for JavaScript based on [Gary Court's implementation](https://github.com/garycourt/murmurhash-js) with [kazuyukitanimura's modifications](https://github.com/kazuyukitanimura/murmurhash-js). This version works significantly faster than the non-incremental version if you need to hash many small strings into a single hash, since string concatenation (to build the single string to pass the non-incremental version) is fairly costly. In one case tested, using the incremental version was about 50% faster than concatenating 5-10 strings and then hashing. Installation ------------ To use iMurmurHash in the browser, [download the latest version](https://raw.github.com/jensyt/imurmurhash-js/master/imurmurhash.min.js) and include it as a script on your site. ```html <script type="text/javascript" src="/scripts/imurmurhash.min.js"></script> <script> // Your code here, access iMurmurHash using the global object MurmurHash3 </script> ``` --- To use iMurmurHash in Node.js, install the module using NPM: ```bash npm install imurmurhash ``` Then simply include it in your scripts: ```javascript MurmurHash3 = require('imurmurhash'); ``` Quick Example ------------- ```javascript // Create the initial hash var hashState = MurmurHash3('string'); // Incrementally add text hashState.hash('more strings'); hashState.hash('even more strings'); // All calls can be chained if desired hashState.hash('and').hash('some').hash('more'); // Get a result hashState.result(); // returns 0xe4ccfe6b ``` Functions --------- ### MurmurHash3 ([string], [seed]) Get a hash state object, optionally initialized with the given _string_ and _seed_. _Seed_ must be a positive integer if provided. Calling this function without the `new` keyword will return a cached state object that has been reset. This is safe to use as long as the object is only used from a single thread and no other hashes are created while operating on this one. If this constraint cannot be met, you can use `new` to create a new state object. For example: ```javascript // Use the cached object, calling the function again will return the same // object (but reset, so the current state would be lost) hashState = MurmurHash3(); ... // Create a new object that can be safely used however you wish. Calling the // function again will simply return a new state object, and no state loss // will occur, at the cost of creating more objects. hashState = new MurmurHash3(); ``` Both methods can be mixed however you like if you have different use cases. --- ### MurmurHash3.prototype.hash (string) Incrementally add _string_ to the hash. This can be called as many times as you want for the hash state object, including after a call to `result()`. Returns `this` so calls can be chained. --- ### MurmurHash3.prototype.result () Get the result of the hash as a 32-bit positive integer. This performs the tail and finalizer portions of the algorithm, but does not store the result in the state object. This means that it is perfectly safe to get results and then continue adding strings via `hash`. ```javascript // Do the whole string at once MurmurHash3('this is a test string').result(); // 0x70529328 // Do part of the string, get a result, then the other part var m = MurmurHash3('this is a'); m.result(); // 0xbfc4f834 m.hash(' test string').result(); // 0x70529328 (same as above) ``` --- ### MurmurHash3.prototype.reset ([seed]) Reset the state object for reuse, optionally using the given _seed_ (defaults to 0 like the constructor). Returns `this` so calls can be chained. --- License (MIT) ------------- Copyright (c) 2013 Gary Court, Jens Taylor Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # set-blocking [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/set-blocking.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/set-blocking) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/set-blocking.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/set-blocking) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/yargs/set-blocking/badge.svg?branch=)](https://coveralls.io/r/yargs/set-blocking?branch=master) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) set blocking `stdio` and `stderr` ensuring that terminal output does not truncate. ```js const setBlocking = require('set-blocking') setBlocking(true) console.log(someLargeStringToOutput) ``` ## Historical Context/Word of Warning This was created as a shim to address the bug discussed in [node #6456](https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/6456). This bug crops up on newer versions of Node.js (`0.12+`), truncating terminal output. You should be mindful of the side-effects caused by using `set-blocking`: * if your module sets blocking to `true`, it will effect other modules consuming your library. In [yargs](https://github.com/yargs/yargs/blob/master/yargs.js#L653) we only call `setBlocking(true)` once we already know we are about to call `process.exit(code)`. * this patch will not apply to subprocesses spawned with `isTTY = true`, this is the [default `spawn()` behavior](https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_process_child_process_spawn_command_args_options). ## License ISC Shims used when bundling asc for browser usage. # ansi-colors [![Donate](https://img.shields.io/badge/Donate-PayPal-green.svg)](https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=W8YFZ425KND68) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/ansi-colors.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ansi-colors) [![NPM monthly downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/ansi-colors.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/ansi-colors) [![NPM total downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dt/ansi-colors.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/ansi-colors) [![Linux Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/doowb/ansi-colors.svg?style=flat&label=Travis)](https://travis-ci.org/doowb/ansi-colors) > Easily add ANSI colors to your text and symbols in the terminal. A faster drop-in replacement for chalk, kleur and turbocolor (without the dependencies and rendering bugs). Please consider following this project's author, [Brian Woodward](https://github.com/doowb), and consider starring the project to show your :heart: and support. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install --save ansi-colors ``` ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/39635445-8a98a3a6-4f8b-11e8-89c1-068c45d4fff8.png) ## Why use this? ansi-colors is _the fastest Node.js library for terminal styling_. A more performant drop-in replacement for chalk, with no dependencies. * _Blazing fast_ - Fastest terminal styling library in node.js, 10-20x faster than chalk! * _Drop-in replacement_ for [chalk](https://github.com/chalk/chalk). * _No dependencies_ (Chalk has 7 dependencies in its tree!) * _Safe_ - Does not modify the `String.prototype` like [colors](https://github.com/Marak/colors.js). * Supports [nested colors](#nested-colors), **and does not have the [nested styling bug](#nested-styling-bug) that is present in [colorette](https://github.com/jorgebucaran/colorette), [chalk](https://github.com/chalk/chalk), and [kleur](https://github.com/lukeed/kleur)**. * Supports [chained colors](#chained-colors). * [Toggle color support](#toggle-color-support) on or off. ## Usage ```js const c = require('ansi-colors'); console.log(c.red('This is a red string!')); console.log(c.green('This is a red string!')); console.log(c.cyan('This is a cyan string!')); console.log(c.yellow('This is a yellow string!')); ``` ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/39653848-a38e67da-4fc0-11e8-89ae-98c65ebe9dcf.png) ## Chained colors ```js console.log(c.bold.red('this is a bold red message')); console.log(c.bold.yellow.italic('this is a bold yellow italicized message')); console.log(c.green.bold.underline('this is a bold green underlined message')); ``` ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/39635780-7617246a-4f8c-11e8-89e9-05216cc54e38.png) ## Nested colors ```js console.log(c.yellow(`foo ${c.red.bold('red')} bar ${c.cyan('cyan')} baz`)); ``` ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/39635817-8ed93d44-4f8c-11e8-8afd-8c3ea35f5fbe.png) ### Nested styling bug `ansi-colors` does not have the nested styling bug found in [colorette](https://github.com/jorgebucaran/colorette), [chalk](https://github.com/chalk/chalk), and [kleur](https://github.com/lukeed/kleur). ```js const { bold, red } = require('ansi-styles'); console.log(bold(`foo ${red.dim('bar')} baz`)); const colorette = require('colorette'); console.log(colorette.bold(`foo ${colorette.red(colorette.dim('bar'))} baz`)); const kleur = require('kleur'); console.log(kleur.bold(`foo ${kleur.red.dim('bar')} baz`)); const chalk = require('chalk'); console.log(chalk.bold(`foo ${chalk.red.dim('bar')} baz`)); ``` **Results in the following** (sans icons and labels) ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/383994/47280326-d2ee0580-d5a3-11e8-9611-ea6010f0a253.png) ## Toggle color support Easily enable/disable colors. ```js const c = require('ansi-colors'); // disable colors manually c.enabled = false; // or use a library to automatically detect support c.enabled = require('color-support').hasBasic; console.log(c.red('I will only be colored red if the terminal supports colors')); ``` ## Strip ANSI codes Use the `.unstyle` method to strip ANSI codes from a string. ```js console.log(c.unstyle(c.blue.bold('foo bar baz'))); //=> 'foo bar baz' ``` ## Available styles **Note** that bright and bright-background colors are not always supported. | Colors | Background Colors | Bright Colors | Bright Background Colors | | ------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------------------ | | black | bgBlack | blackBright | bgBlackBright | | red | bgRed | redBright | bgRedBright | | green | bgGreen | greenBright | bgGreenBright | | yellow | bgYellow | yellowBright | bgYellowBright | | blue | bgBlue | blueBright | bgBlueBright | | magenta | bgMagenta | magentaBright | bgMagentaBright | | cyan | bgCyan | cyanBright | bgCyanBright | | white | bgWhite | whiteBright | bgWhiteBright | | gray | | | | | grey | | | | _(`gray` is the U.S. spelling, `grey` is more commonly used in the Canada and U.K.)_ ### Style modifiers * dim * **bold** * hidden * _italic_ * underline * inverse * ~~strikethrough~~ * reset ## Aliases Create custom aliases for styles. ```js const colors = require('ansi-colors'); colors.alias('primary', colors.yellow); colors.alias('secondary', colors.bold); console.log(colors.primary.secondary('Foo')); ``` ## Themes A theme is an object of custom aliases. ```js const colors = require('ansi-colors'); colors.theme({ danger: colors.red, dark: colors.dim.gray, disabled: colors.gray, em: colors.italic, heading: colors.bold.underline, info: colors.cyan, muted: colors.dim, primary: colors.blue, strong: colors.bold, success: colors.green, underline: colors.underline, warning: colors.yellow }); // Now, we can use our custom styles alongside the built-in styles! console.log(colors.danger.strong.em('Error!')); console.log(colors.warning('Heads up!')); console.log(colors.info('Did you know...')); console.log(colors.success.bold('It worked!')); ``` ## Performance **Libraries tested** * ansi-colors v3.0.4 * chalk v2.4.1 ### Mac > MacBook Pro, Intel Core i7, 2.3 GHz, 16 GB. **Load time** Time it takes to load the first time `require()` is called: * ansi-colors - `1.915ms` * chalk - `12.437ms` **Benchmarks** ``` # All Colors ansi-colors x 173,851 ops/sec ±0.42% (91 runs sampled) chalk x 9,944 ops/sec ±2.53% (81 runs sampled))) # Chained colors ansi-colors x 20,791 ops/sec ±0.60% (88 runs sampled) chalk x 2,111 ops/sec ±2.34% (83 runs sampled) # Nested colors ansi-colors x 59,304 ops/sec ±0.98% (92 runs sampled) chalk x 4,590 ops/sec ±2.08% (82 runs sampled) ``` ### Windows > Windows 10, Intel Core i7-7700k CPU @ 4.2 GHz, 32 GB **Load time** Time it takes to load the first time `require()` is called: * ansi-colors - `1.494ms` * chalk - `11.523ms` **Benchmarks** ``` # All Colors ansi-colors x 193,088 ops/sec ±0.51% (95 runs sampled)) chalk x 9,612 ops/sec ±3.31% (77 runs sampled))) # Chained colors ansi-colors x 26,093 ops/sec ±1.13% (94 runs sampled) chalk x 2,267 ops/sec ±2.88% (80 runs sampled)) # Nested colors ansi-colors x 67,747 ops/sec ±0.49% (93 runs sampled) chalk x 4,446 ops/sec ±3.01% (82 runs sampled)) ``` ## About <details> <summary><strong>Contributing</strong></summary> Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). </details> <details> <summary><strong>Running Tests</strong></summary> Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command: ```sh $ npm install && npm test ``` </details> <details> <summary><strong>Building docs</strong></summary> _(This project's readme.md is generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the [.verb.md](.verb.md) readme template.)_ To generate the readme, run the following command: ```sh $ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb ``` </details> ### Related projects You might also be interested in these projects: * [ansi-wrap](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ansi-wrap): Create ansi colors by passing the open and close codes. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/ansi-wrap "Create ansi colors by passing the open and close codes.") * [strip-color](https://www.npmjs.com/package/strip-color): Strip ANSI color codes from a string. No dependencies. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/strip-color "Strip ANSI color codes from a string. No dependencies.") ### Contributors | **Commits** | **Contributor** | | --- | --- | | 48 | [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) | | 42 | [doowb](https://github.com/doowb) | | 6 | [lukeed](https://github.com/lukeed) | | 2 | [Silic0nS0ldier](https://github.com/Silic0nS0ldier) | | 1 | [dwieeb](https://github.com/dwieeb) | | 1 | [jorgebucaran](https://github.com/jorgebucaran) | | 1 | [madhavarshney](https://github.com/madhavarshney) | | 1 | [chapterjason](https://github.com/chapterjason) | ### Author **Brian Woodward** * [GitHub Profile](https://github.com/doowb) * [Twitter Profile](https://twitter.com/doowb) * [LinkedIn Profile](https://linkedin.com/in/woodwardbrian) ### License Copyright © 2019, [Brian Woodward](https://github.com/doowb). Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), v0.8.0, on July 01, 2019._ # sprintf.js **sprintf.js** is a complete open source JavaScript sprintf implementation for the *browser* and *node.js*. Its prototype is simple: string sprintf(string format , [mixed arg1 [, mixed arg2 [ ,...]]]) The placeholders in the format string are marked by `%` and are followed by one or more of these elements, in this order: * An optional number followed by a `$` sign that selects which argument index to use for the value. If not specified, arguments will be placed in the same order as the placeholders in the input string. * An optional `+` sign that forces to preceed the result with a plus or minus sign on numeric values. By default, only the `-` sign is used on negative numbers. * An optional padding specifier that says what character to use for padding (if specified). Possible values are `0` or any other character precedeed by a `'` (single quote). The default is to pad with *spaces*. * An optional `-` sign, that causes sprintf to left-align the result of this placeholder. The default is to right-align the result. * An optional number, that says how many characters the result should have. If the value to be returned is shorter than this number, the result will be padded. When used with the `j` (JSON) type specifier, the padding length specifies the tab size used for indentation. * An optional precision modifier, consisting of a `.` (dot) followed by a number, that says how many digits should be displayed for floating point numbers. When used with the `g` type specifier, it specifies the number of significant digits. When used on a string, it causes the result to be truncated. * A type specifier that can be any of: * `%` — yields a literal `%` character * `b` — yields an integer as a binary number * `c` — yields an integer as the character with that ASCII value * `d` or `i` — yields an integer as a signed decimal number * `e` — yields a float using scientific notation * `u` — yields an integer as an unsigned decimal number * `f` — yields a float as is; see notes on precision above * `g` — yields a float as is; see notes on precision above * `o` — yields an integer as an octal number * `s` — yields a string as is * `x` — yields an integer as a hexadecimal number (lower-case) * `X` — yields an integer as a hexadecimal number (upper-case) * `j` — yields a JavaScript object or array as a JSON encoded string ## JavaScript `vsprintf` `vsprintf` is the same as `sprintf` except that it accepts an array of arguments, rather than a variable number of arguments: vsprintf("The first 4 letters of the english alphabet are: %s, %s, %s and %s", ["a", "b", "c", "d"]) ## Argument swapping You can also swap the arguments. That is, the order of the placeholders doesn't have to match the order of the arguments. You can do that by simply indicating in the format string which arguments the placeholders refer to: sprintf("%2$s %3$s a %1$s", "cracker", "Polly", "wants") And, of course, you can repeat the placeholders without having to increase the number of arguments. ## Named arguments Format strings may contain replacement fields rather than positional placeholders. Instead of referring to a certain argument, you can now refer to a certain key within an object. Replacement fields are surrounded by rounded parentheses - `(` and `)` - and begin with a keyword that refers to a key: var user = { name: "Dolly" } sprintf("Hello %(name)s", user) // Hello Dolly Keywords in replacement fields can be optionally followed by any number of keywords or indexes: var users = [ {name: "Dolly"}, {name: "Molly"}, {name: "Polly"} ] sprintf("Hello %(users[0].name)s, %(users[1].name)s and %(users[2].name)s", {users: users}) // Hello Dolly, Molly and Polly Note: mixing positional and named placeholders is not (yet) supported ## Computed values You can pass in a function as a dynamic value and it will be invoked (with no arguments) in order to compute the value on-the-fly. sprintf("Current timestamp: %d", Date.now) // Current timestamp: 1398005382890 sprintf("Current date and time: %s", function() { return new Date().toString() }) # AngularJS You can now use `sprintf` and `vsprintf` (also aliased as `fmt` and `vfmt` respectively) in your AngularJS projects. See `demo/`. # Installation ## Via Bower bower install sprintf ## Or as a node.js module npm install sprintf-js ### Usage var sprintf = require("sprintf-js").sprintf, vsprintf = require("sprintf-js").vsprintf sprintf("%2$s %3$s a %1$s", "cracker", "Polly", "wants") vsprintf("The first 4 letters of the english alphabet are: %s, %s, %s and %s", ["a", "b", "c", "d"]) # License **sprintf.js** is licensed under the terms of the 3-clause BSD license. # rechoir [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/tkellen/js-rechoir.png)](http://travis-ci.org/tkellen/js-rechoir) > Require any supported file as a node module. [![NPM](https://nodei.co/npm/rechoir.png)](https://nodei.co/npm/rechoir/) ## What is it? This module, in conjunction with [interpret]-like objects can register any file type the npm ecosystem has a module loader for. This library is a dependency of [Liftoff]. ## API ### prepare(config, filepath, requireFrom) Look for a module loader associated with the provided file and attempt require it. If necessary, run any setup required to inject it into [require.extensions](http://nodejs.org/api/globals.html#globals_require_extensions). `config` An [interpret]-like configuration object. `filepath` A file whose type you'd like to register a module loader for. `requireFrom` An optional path to start searching for the module required to load the requested file. Defaults to the directory of `filepath`. If calling this method is successful (aka: it doesn't throw), you can now require files of the type you requested natively. An error with a `failures` property will be thrown if the module loader(s) configured for a given extension cannot be registered. If a loader is already registered, this will simply return `true`. **Note:** While rechoir will automatically load and register transpilers like `coffee-script`, you must provide a local installation. The transpilers are **not** bundled with this module. #### Usage ```js const config = require('interpret').extensions; const rechoir = require('rechoir'); rechoir.prepare(config, './test/fixtures/test.coffee'); rechoir.prepare(config, './test/fixtures/test.csv'); rechoir.prepare(config, './test/fixtures/test.toml'); console.log(require('./test/fixtures/test.coffee')); console.log(require('./test/fixtures/test.csv')); console.log(require('./test/fixtures/test.toml')); ``` [interpret]: http://github.com/tkellen/js-interpret [Liftoff]: http://github.com/tkellen/js-liftoff # universal-url [![NPM Version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Dependency Monitor][greenkeeper-image]][greenkeeper-url] > WHATWG [`URL`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/API/URL) for Node & Browser. * For Node.js versions `>= 8`, the native implementation will be used. * For Node.js versions `< 8`, a [shim](https://npmjs.com/whatwg-url) will be used. * For web browsers without a native implementation, the same shim will be used. ## Installation [Node.js](http://nodejs.org/) `>= 6` is required. To install, type this at the command line: ```shell npm install universal-url ``` ## Usage ```js const {URL, URLSearchParams} = require('universal-url'); const url = new URL('http://domain/'); const params = new URLSearchParams('?param=value'); ``` Global shim: ```js require('universal-url').shim(); const url = new URL('http://domain/'); const params = new URLSearchParams('?param=value'); ``` ## Browserify/etc The bundled file size of this library can be large for a web browser. If this is a problem, try using [universal-url-lite](https://npmjs.com/universal-url-lite) in your build as an alias for this module. [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/universal-url.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/universal-url [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/stevenvachon/universal-url.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/stevenvachon/universal-url [greenkeeper-image]: https://badges.greenkeeper.io/stevenvachon/universal-url.svg [greenkeeper-url]: https://greenkeeper.io/ # cliui ![ci](https://github.com/yargs/cliui/workflows/ci/badge.svg) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/cliui.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cliui) [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) ![nycrc config on GitHub](https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/cliui) easily create complex multi-column command-line-interfaces. ## Example ```js const ui = require('cliui')() ui.div('Usage: $0 [command] [options]') ui.div({ text: 'Options:', padding: [2, 0, 1, 0] }) ui.div( { text: "-f, --file", width: 20, padding: [0, 4, 0, 4] }, { text: "the file to load." + chalk.green("(if this description is long it wraps).") , width: 20 }, { text: chalk.red("[required]"), align: 'right' } ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` ## Deno/ESM Support As of `v7` `cliui` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno) and [ESM](https://nodejs.org/api/esm.html#esm_ecmascript_modules): ```typescript import cliui from "https://deno.land/x/cliui/deno.ts"; const ui = cliui({}) ui.div('Usage: $0 [command] [options]') ui.div({ text: 'Options:', padding: [2, 0, 1, 0] }) ui.div({ text: "-f, --file", width: 20, padding: [0, 4, 0, 4] }) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` <img width="500" src="screenshot.png"> ## Layout DSL cliui exposes a simple layout DSL: If you create a single `ui.div`, passing a string rather than an object: * `\n`: characters will be interpreted as new rows. * `\t`: characters will be interpreted as new columns. * `\s`: characters will be interpreted as padding. **as an example...** ```js var ui = require('./')({ width: 60 }) ui.div( 'Usage: node ./bin/foo.js\n' + ' <regex>\t provide a regex\n' + ' <glob>\t provide a glob\t [required]' ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` **will output:** ```shell Usage: node ./bin/foo.js <regex> provide a regex <glob> provide a glob [required] ``` ## Methods ```js cliui = require('cliui') ``` ### cliui({width: integer}) Specify the maximum width of the UI being generated. If no width is provided, cliui will try to get the current window's width and use it, and if that doesn't work, width will be set to `80`. ### cliui({wrap: boolean}) Enable or disable the wrapping of text in a column. ### cliui.div(column, column, column) Create a row with any number of columns, a column can either be a string, or an object with the following options: * **text:** some text to place in the column. * **width:** the width of a column. * **align:** alignment, `right` or `center`. * **padding:** `[top, right, bottom, left]`. * **border:** should a border be placed around the div? ### cliui.span(column, column, column) Similar to `div`, except the next row will be appended without a new line being created. ### cliui.resetOutput() Resets the UI elements of the current cliui instance, maintaining the values set for `width` and `wrap`. # fs.realpath A backwards-compatible fs.realpath for Node v6 and above In Node v6, the JavaScript implementation of fs.realpath was replaced with a faster (but less resilient) native implementation. That raises new and platform-specific errors and cannot handle long or excessively symlink-looping paths. This module handles those cases by detecting the new errors and falling back to the JavaScript implementation. On versions of Node prior to v6, it has no effect. ## USAGE ```js var rp = require('fs.realpath') // async version rp.realpath(someLongAndLoopingPath, function (er, real) { // the ELOOP was handled, but it was a bit slower }) // sync version var real = rp.realpathSync(someLongAndLoopingPath) // monkeypatch at your own risk! // This replaces the fs.realpath/fs.realpathSync builtins rp.monkeypatch() // un-do the monkeypatching rp.unmonkeypatch() ``` # get-caller-file [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/stefanpenner/get-caller-file.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/stefanpenner/get-caller-file) [![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/ol2q94g1932cy14a/branch/master?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/embercli/get-caller-file/branch/master) This is a utility, which allows a function to figure out from which file it was invoked. It does so by inspecting v8's stack trace at the time it is invoked. Inspired by http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13227489 *note: this relies on Node/V8 specific APIs, as such other runtimes may not work* ## Installation ```bash yarn add get-caller-file ``` ## Usage Given: ```js // ./foo.js const getCallerFile = require('get-caller-file'); module.exports = function() { return getCallerFile(); // figures out who called it }; ``` ```js // index.js const foo = require('./foo'); foo() // => /full/path/to/this/file/index.js ``` ## Options: * `getCallerFile(position = 2)`: where position is stack frame whos fileName we want. ### esutils [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/estools/esutils.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/estools/esutils) esutils ([esutils](http://github.com/estools/esutils)) is utility box for ECMAScript language tools. ### API ### ast #### ast.isExpression(node) Returns true if `node` is an Expression as defined in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [11](https://es5.github.io/#x11). #### ast.isStatement(node) Returns true if `node` is a Statement as defined in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [12](https://es5.github.io/#x12). #### ast.isIterationStatement(node) Returns true if `node` is an IterationStatement as defined in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [12.6](https://es5.github.io/#x12.6). #### ast.isSourceElement(node) Returns true if `node` is a SourceElement as defined in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [14](https://es5.github.io/#x14). #### ast.trailingStatement(node) Returns `Statement?` if `node` has trailing `Statement`. ```js if (cond) consequent; ``` When taking this `IfStatement`, returns `consequent;` statement. #### ast.isProblematicIfStatement(node) Returns true if `node` is a problematic IfStatement. If `node` is a problematic `IfStatement`, `node` cannot be represented as an one on one JavaScript code. ```js { type: 'IfStatement', consequent: { type: 'WithStatement', body: { type: 'IfStatement', consequent: {type: 'EmptyStatement'} } }, alternate: {type: 'EmptyStatement'} } ``` The above node cannot be represented as a JavaScript code, since the top level `else` alternate belongs to an inner `IfStatement`. ### code #### code.isDecimalDigit(code) Return true if provided code is decimal digit. #### code.isHexDigit(code) Return true if provided code is hexadecimal digit. #### code.isOctalDigit(code) Return true if provided code is octal digit. #### code.isWhiteSpace(code) Return true if provided code is white space. White space characters are formally defined in ECMA262. #### code.isLineTerminator(code) Return true if provided code is line terminator. Line terminator characters are formally defined in ECMA262. #### code.isIdentifierStart(code) Return true if provided code can be the first character of ECMA262 Identifier. They are formally defined in ECMA262. #### code.isIdentifierPart(code) Return true if provided code can be the trailing character of ECMA262 Identifier. They are formally defined in ECMA262. ### keyword #### keyword.isKeywordES5(id, strict) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is a Keyword or Future Reserved Word in ECMA262 edition 5.1. They are formally defined in ECMA262 sections [7.6.1.1](http://es5.github.io/#x7.6.1.1) and [7.6.1.2](http://es5.github.io/#x7.6.1.2), respectively. If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is a Keyword or Future Reserved Word under strict mode. #### keyword.isKeywordES6(id, strict) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is a Keyword or Future Reserved Word in ECMA262 edition 6. They are formally defined in ECMA262 sections [11.6.2.1](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-keywords) and [11.6.2.2](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-future-reserved-words), respectively. If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is a Keyword or Future Reserved Word under strict mode. #### keyword.isReservedWordES5(id, strict) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is a Reserved Word in ECMA262 edition 5.1. They are formally defined in ECMA262 section [7.6.1](http://es5.github.io/#x7.6.1). If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is a Reserved Word under strict mode. #### keyword.isReservedWordES6(id, strict) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is a Reserved Word in ECMA262 edition 6. They are formally defined in ECMA262 section [11.6.2](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-reserved-words). If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is a Reserved Word under strict mode. #### keyword.isRestrictedWord(id) Returns `true` if provided identifier string is one of `eval` or `arguments`. They are restricted in strict mode code throughout ECMA262 edition 5.1 and in ECMA262 edition 6 section [12.1.1](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-identifiers-static-semantics-early-errors). #### keyword.isIdentifierNameES5(id) Return true if provided identifier string is an IdentifierName as specified in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [7.6](https://es5.github.io/#x7.6). #### keyword.isIdentifierNameES6(id) Return true if provided identifier string is an IdentifierName as specified in ECMA262 edition 6 section [11.6](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-names-and-keywords). #### keyword.isIdentifierES5(id, strict) Return true if provided identifier string is an Identifier as specified in ECMA262 edition 5.1 section [7.6](https://es5.github.io/#x7.6). If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is an Identifier under strict mode. #### keyword.isIdentifierES6(id, strict) Return true if provided identifier string is an Identifier as specified in ECMA262 edition 6 section [12.1](http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-identifiers). If the `strict` flag is truthy, this function additionally checks whether `id` is an Identifier under strict mode. ### License Copyright (C) 2013 [Yusuke Suzuki](http://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](http://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. <p align="center"> <img width="250" src="/yargs-logo.png"> </p> <h1 align="center"> Yargs </h1> <p align="center"> <b >Yargs be a node.js library fer hearties tryin' ter parse optstrings</b> </p> <br> [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Coverage][coverage-image]][coverage-url] [![Conventional Commits][conventional-commits-image]][conventional-commits-url] [![Slack][slack-image]][slack-url] ## Description : Yargs helps you build interactive command line tools, by parsing arguments and generating an elegant user interface. It gives you: * commands and (grouped) options (`my-program.js serve --port=5000`). * a dynamically generated help menu based on your arguments. > <img width="400" src="/screen.png"> * bash-completion shortcuts for commands and options. * and [tons more](/docs/api.md). ## Installation Stable version: ```bash npm i yargs ``` Bleeding edge version with the most recent features: ```bash npm i yargs@next ``` ## Usage : ### Simple Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node const {argv} = require('yargs') if (argv.ships > 3 && argv.distance < 53.5) { console.log('Plunder more riffiwobbles!') } else { console.log('Retreat from the xupptumblers!') } ``` ```bash $ ./plunder.js --ships=4 --distance=22 Plunder more riffiwobbles! $ ./plunder.js --ships 12 --distance 98.7 Retreat from the xupptumblers! ``` ### Complex Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node require('yargs') // eslint-disable-line .command('serve [port]', 'start the server', (yargs) => { yargs .positional('port', { describe: 'port to bind on', default: 5000 }) }, (argv) => { if (argv.verbose) console.info(`start server on :${argv.port}`) serve(argv.port) }) .option('verbose', { alias: 'v', type: 'boolean', description: 'Run with verbose logging' }) .argv ``` Run the example above with `--help` to see the help for the application. ## TypeScript yargs has type definitions at [@types/yargs][type-definitions]. ``` npm i @types/yargs --save-dev ``` See usage examples in [docs](/docs/typescript.md). ## Webpack See usage examples of yargs with webpack in [docs](/docs/webpack.md). ## Community : Having problems? want to contribute? join our [community slack](http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com). ## Documentation : ### Table of Contents * [Yargs' API](/docs/api.md) * [Examples](/docs/examples.md) * [Parsing Tricks](/docs/tricks.md) * [Stop the Parser](/docs/tricks.md#stop) * [Negating Boolean Arguments](/docs/tricks.md#negate) * [Numbers](/docs/tricks.md#numbers) * [Arrays](/docs/tricks.md#arrays) * [Objects](/docs/tricks.md#objects) * [Quotes](/docs/tricks.md#quotes) * [Advanced Topics](/docs/advanced.md) * [Composing Your App Using Commands](/docs/advanced.md#commands) * [Building Configurable CLI Apps](/docs/advanced.md#configuration) * [Customizing Yargs' Parser](/docs/advanced.md#customizing) * [Contributing](/contributing.md) [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/yargs/yargs [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/yargs/yargs/master.svg [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: http://standardjs.com/ [conventional-commits-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg [conventional-commits-url]: https://conventionalcommits.org/ [slack-image]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com/badge.svg [slack-url]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com [type-definitions]: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/master/types/yargs [coverage-image]: https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/yargs [coverage-url]: https://github.com/yargs/yargs/blob/master/.nycrc # yargs-parser [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/yargs-parser.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/yargs-parser) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs-parser.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs-parser) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) The mighty option parser used by [yargs](https://github.com/yargs/yargs). visit the [yargs website](http://yargs.js.org/) for more examples, and thorough usage instructions. <img width="250" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yargs/yargs-parser/master/yargs-logo.png"> ## Example ```sh npm i yargs-parser --save ``` ```js var argv = require('yargs-parser')(process.argv.slice(2)) console.log(argv) ``` ```sh node example.js --foo=33 --bar hello { _: [], foo: 33, bar: 'hello' } ``` _or parse a string!_ ```js var argv = require('yargs-parser')('--foo=99 --bar=33') console.log(argv) ``` ```sh { _: [], foo: 99, bar: 33 } ``` Convert an array of mixed types before passing to `yargs-parser`: ```js var parse = require('yargs-parser') parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].join(' ')) // <-- array to string parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].map(String)) // <-- array of strings ``` ## API ### require('yargs-parser')(args, opts={}) Parses command line arguments returning a simple mapping of keys and values. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing the options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args` should be parsed: * `opts.alias`: an object representing the set of aliases for a key: `{alias: {foo: ['f']}}`. * `opts.array`: indicate that keys should be parsed as an array: `{array: ['foo', 'bar']}`.<br> Indicate that keys should be parsed as an array and coerced to booleans / numbers:<br> `{array: [{ key: 'foo', boolean: true }, {key: 'bar', number: true}]}`. * `opts.boolean`: arguments should be parsed as booleans: `{boolean: ['x', 'y']}`. * `opts.coerce`: provide a custom synchronous function that returns a coerced value from the argument provided (or throws an error). For arrays the function is called only once for the entire array:<br> `{coerce: {foo: function (arg) {return modifiedArg}}}`. * `opts.config`: indicate a key that represents a path to a configuration file (this file will be loaded and parsed). * `opts.configObjects`: configuration objects to parse, their properties will be set as arguments:<br> `{configObjects: [{'x': 5, 'y': 33}, {'z': 44}]}`. * `opts.configuration`: provide configuration options to the yargs-parser (see: [configuration](#configuration)). * `opts.count`: indicate a key that should be used as a counter, e.g., `-vvv` = `{v: 3}`. * `opts.default`: provide default values for keys: `{default: {x: 33, y: 'hello world!'}}`. * `opts.envPrefix`: environment variables (`process.env`) with the prefix provided should be parsed. * `opts.narg`: specify that a key requires `n` arguments: `{narg: {x: 2}}`. * `opts.normalize`: `path.normalize()` will be applied to values set to this key. * `opts.number`: keys should be treated as numbers. * `opts.string`: keys should be treated as strings (even if they resemble a number `-x 33`). **returns:** * `obj`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. ### require('yargs-parser').detailed(args, opts={}) Parses a command line string, returning detailed information required by the yargs engine. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args`, inputs are identical to `require('yargs-parser')(args, opts={})`. **returns:** * `argv`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. * `error`: populated with an error object if an exception occurred during parsing. * `aliases`: the inferred list of aliases built by combining lists in `opts.alias`. * `newAliases`: any new aliases added via camel-case expansion: * `boolean`: `{ fooBar: true }` * `defaulted`: any new argument created by `opts.default`, no aliases included. * `boolean`: `{ foo: true }` * `configuration`: given by default settings and `opts.configuration`. <a name="configuration"></a> ### Configuration The yargs-parser applies several automated transformations on the keys provided in `args`. These features can be turned on and off using the `configuration` field of `opts`. ```js var parsed = parser(['--no-dice'], { configuration: { 'boolean-negation': false } }) ``` ### short option groups * default: `true`. * key: `short-option-groups`. Should a group of short-options be treated as boolean flags? ```sh node example.js -abc { _: [], a: true, b: true, c: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -abc { _: [], abc: true } ``` ### camel-case expansion * default: `true`. * key: `camel-case-expansion`. Should hyphenated arguments be expanded into camel-case aliases? ```sh node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true, fooBar: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true } ``` ### dot-notation * default: `true` * key: `dot-notation` Should keys that contain `.` be treated as objects? ```sh node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], foo: { bar: true } } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], "foo.bar": true } ``` ### parse numbers * default: `true` * key: `parse-numbers` Should keys that look like numbers be treated as such? ```sh node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: 99.3 } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: "99.3" } ``` ### boolean negation * default: `true` * key: `boolean-negation` Should variables prefixed with `--no` be treated as negations? ```sh node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --no-foo { _: [], "no-foo": true } ``` ### combine arrays * default: `false` * key: `combine-arrays` Should arrays be combined when provided by both command line arguments and a configuration file. ### duplicate arguments array * default: `true` * key: `duplicate-arguments-array` Should arguments be coerced into an array when duplicated: ```sh node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: 2 } ``` ### flatten duplicate arrays * default: `true` * key: `flatten-duplicate-arrays` Should array arguments be coerced into a single array when duplicated: ```sh node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [1, 2, 3, 4] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [[1, 2], [3, 4]] } ``` ### greedy arrays * default: `true` * key: `greedy-arrays` Should arrays consume more than one positional argument following their flag. ```sh node example --arr 1 2 { _[], arr: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example --arr 1 2 { _[2], arr: [1] } ``` **Note: in `v18.0.0` we are considering defaulting greedy arrays to `false`.** ### nargs eats options * default: `false` * key: `nargs-eats-options` Should nargs consume dash options as well as positional arguments. ### negation prefix * default: `no-` * key: `negation-prefix` The prefix to use for negated boolean variables. ```sh node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if set to `quux`:_ ```sh node example.js --quuxfoo { _: [], foo: false } ``` ### populate -- * default: `false`. * key: `populate--` Should unparsed flags be stored in `--` or `_`. _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a', 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a' ], '--': [ 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` ### set placeholder key * default: `false`. * key: `set-placeholder-key`. Should a placeholder be added for keys not set via the corresponding CLI argument? _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, c: 2 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, b: undefined, c: 2 } ``` ### halt at non-option * default: `false`. * key: `halt-at-non-option`. Should parsing stop at the first positional argument? This is similar to how e.g. `ssh` parses its command line. _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b' ], a: 'run', x: 'y' } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b', '-x', 'y' ], a: 'run' } ``` ### strip aliased * default: `false` * key: `strip-aliased` Should aliases be removed before returning results? _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1, 'test-alias': 1, testAlias: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` ### strip dashed * default: `false` * key: `strip-dashed` Should dashed keys be removed before returning results? This option has no effect if `camel-case-expansion` is disabled. _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], testField: 1 } ``` ### unknown options as args * default: `false` * key: `unknown-options-as-args` Should unknown options be treated like regular arguments? An unknown option is one that is not configured in `opts`. _If disabled_ ```sh node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: [], unknownOption: true, knownOption: 2, stringOption: '', unknownOption2: true } ``` _If enabled_ ```sh node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: ['--unknown-option'], knownOption: 2, stringOption: '--unknown-option2' } ``` ## Special Thanks The yargs project evolves from optimist and minimist. It owes its existence to a lot of James Halliday's hard work. Thanks [substack](https://github.com/substack) **beep** **boop** \o/ ## License ISC assemblyscript-json # assemblyscript-json ## Table of contents ### Namespaces - [JSON](modules/json.md) ### Classes - [DecoderState](classes/decoderstate.md) - [JSONDecoder](classes/jsondecoder.md) - [JSONEncoder](classes/jsonencoder.md) - [JSONHandler](classes/jsonhandler.md) - [ThrowingJSONHandler](classes/throwingjsonhandler.md) # [nearley](http://nearley.js.org) ↗️ [![JS.ORG](https://img.shields.io/badge/js.org-nearley-ffb400.svg?style=flat-square)](http://js.org) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/nearley.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/js/nearley) nearley is a simple, fast and powerful parsing toolkit. It consists of: 1. [A powerful, modular DSL for describing languages](https://nearley.js.org/docs/grammar) 2. [An efficient, lightweight Earley parser](https://nearley.js.org/docs/parser) 3. [Loads of tools, editor plug-ins, and other goodies!](https://nearley.js.org/docs/tooling) nearley is a **streaming** parser with support for catching **errors** gracefully and providing _all_ parsings for **ambiguous** grammars. It is compatible with a variety of **lexers** (we recommend [moo](http://github.com/tjvr/moo)). It comes with tools for creating **tests**, **railroad diagrams** and **fuzzers** from your grammars, and has support for a variety of editors and platforms. It works in both node and the browser. Unlike most other parser generators, nearley can handle *any* grammar you can define in BNF (and more!). In particular, while most existing JS parsers such as PEGjs and Jison choke on certain grammars (e.g. [left recursive ones](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left_recursion)), nearley handles them easily and efficiently by using the [Earley parsing algorithm](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earley_parser). nearley is used by a wide variety of projects: - [artificial intelligence](https://github.com/ChalmersGU-AI-course/shrdlite-course-project) and - [computational linguistics](https://wiki.eecs.yorku.ca/course_archive/2014-15/W/6339/useful_handouts) classes at universities; - [file format parsers](https://github.com/raymond-h/node-dmi); - [data-driven markup languages](https://github.com/idyll-lang/idyll-compiler); - [compilers for real-world programming languages](https://github.com/sizigi/lp5562); - and nearley itself! The nearley compiler is bootstrapped. nearley is an npm [staff pick](https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm-collection-staff-picks). ## Documentation Please visit our website https://nearley.js.org to get started! You will find a tutorial, detailed reference documents, and links to several real-world examples to get inspired. ## Contributing Please read [this document](.github/CONTRIBUTING.md) *before* working on nearley. If you are interested in contributing but unsure where to start, take a look at the issues labeled "up for grabs" on the issue tracker, or message a maintainer (@kach or @tjvr on Github). nearley is MIT licensed. A big thanks to Nathan Dinsmore for teaching me how to Earley, Aria Stewart for helping structure nearley into a mature module, and Robin Windels for bootstrapping the grammar. Additionally, Jacob Edelman wrote an experimental JavaScript parser with nearley and contributed ideas for EBNF support. Joshua T. Corbin refactored the compiler to be much, much prettier. Bojidar Marinov implemented postprocessors-in-other-languages. Shachar Itzhaky fixed a subtle bug with nullables. ## Citing nearley If you are citing nearley in academic work, please use the following BibTeX entry. ```bibtex @misc{nearley, author = "Kartik Chandra and Tim Radvan", title = "{nearley}: a parsing toolkit for {JavaScript}", year = {2014}, doi = {10.5281/zenodo.3897993}, url = {https://github.com/kach/nearley} } ``` # Web IDL Type Conversions on JavaScript Values This package implements, in JavaScript, the algorithms to convert a given JavaScript value according to a given [Web IDL](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/) [type](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#idl-types). The goal is that you should be able to write code like ```js "use strict"; const conversions = require("webidl-conversions"); function doStuff(x, y) { x = conversions["boolean"](x); y = conversions["unsigned long"](y); // actual algorithm code here } ``` and your function `doStuff` will behave the same as a Web IDL operation declared as ```webidl void doStuff(boolean x, unsigned long y); ``` ## API This package's main module's default export is an object with a variety of methods, each corresponding to a different Web IDL type. Each method, when invoked on a JavaScript value, will give back the new JavaScript value that results after passing through the Web IDL conversion rules. (See below for more details on what that means.) Alternately, the method could throw an error, if the Web IDL algorithm is specified to do so: for example `conversions["float"](NaN)` [will throw a `TypeError`](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-float). Each method also accepts a second, optional, parameter for miscellaneous options. For conversion methods that throw errors, a string option `{ context }` may be provided to provide more information in the error message. (For example, `conversions["float"](NaN, { context: "Argument 1 of Interface's operation" })` will throw an error with message `"Argument 1 of Interface's operation is not a finite floating-point value."`) Specific conversions may also accept other options, the details of which can be found below. ## Conversions implemented Conversions for all of the basic types from the Web IDL specification are implemented: - [`any`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-any) - [`void`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-void) - [`boolean`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-boolean) - [Integer types](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-integer-types), which can additionally be provided the boolean options `{ clamp, enforceRange }` as a second parameter - [`float`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-float), [`unrestricted float`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-unrestricted-float) - [`double`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-double), [`unrestricted double`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-unrestricted-double) - [`DOMString`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-DOMString), which can additionally be provided the boolean option `{ treatNullAsEmptyString }` as a second parameter - [`ByteString`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-ByteString), [`USVString`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-USVString) - [`object`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-object) - [`Error`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-Error) - [Buffer source types](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-buffer-source-types) Additionally, for convenience, the following derived type definitions are implemented: - [`ArrayBufferView`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#ArrayBufferView) - [`BufferSource`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#BufferSource) - [`DOMTimeStamp`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#DOMTimeStamp) - [`Function`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#Function) - [`VoidFunction`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#VoidFunction) (although it will not censor the return type) Derived types, such as nullable types, promise types, sequences, records, etc. are not handled by this library. You may wish to investigate the [webidl2js](https://github.com/jsdom/webidl2js) project. ### A note on the `long long` types The `long long` and `unsigned long long` Web IDL types can hold values that cannot be stored in JavaScript numbers, so the conversion is imperfect. For example, converting the JavaScript number `18446744073709552000` to a Web IDL `long long` is supposed to produce the Web IDL value `-18446744073709551232`. Since we are representing our Web IDL values in JavaScript, we can't represent `-18446744073709551232`, so we instead the best we could do is `-18446744073709552000` as the output. This library actually doesn't even get that far. Producing those results would require doing accurate modular arithmetic on 64-bit intermediate values, but JavaScript does not make this easy. We could pull in a big-integer library as a dependency, but in lieu of that, we for now have decided to just produce inaccurate results if you pass in numbers that are not strictly between `Number.MIN_SAFE_INTEGER` and `Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER`. ## Background What's actually going on here, conceptually, is pretty weird. Let's try to explain. Web IDL, as part of its madness-inducing design, has its own type system. When people write algorithms in web platform specs, they usually operate on Web IDL values, i.e. instances of Web IDL types. For example, if they were specifying the algorithm for our `doStuff` operation above, they would treat `x` as a Web IDL value of [Web IDL type `boolean`](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#idl-boolean). Crucially, they would _not_ treat `x` as a JavaScript variable whose value is either the JavaScript `true` or `false`. They're instead working in a different type system altogether, with its own rules. Separately from its type system, Web IDL defines a ["binding"](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#ecmascript-binding) of the type system into JavaScript. This contains rules like: when you pass a JavaScript value to the JavaScript method that manifests a given Web IDL operation, how does that get converted into a Web IDL value? For example, a JavaScript `true` passed in the position of a Web IDL `boolean` argument becomes a Web IDL `true`. But, a JavaScript `true` passed in the position of a [Web IDL `unsigned long`](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#idl-unsigned-long) becomes a Web IDL `1`. And so on. Finally, we have the actual implementation code. This is usually C++, although these days [some smart people are using Rust](https://github.com/servo/servo). The implementation, of course, has its own type system. So when they implement the Web IDL algorithms, they don't actually use Web IDL values, since those aren't "real" outside of specs. Instead, implementations apply the Web IDL binding rules in such a way as to convert incoming JavaScript values into C++ values. For example, if code in the browser called `doStuff(true, true)`, then the implementation code would eventually receive a C++ `bool` containing `true` and a C++ `uint32_t` containing `1`. The upside of all this is that implementations can abstract all the conversion logic away, letting Web IDL handle it, and focus on implementing the relevant methods in C++ with values of the correct type already provided. That is payoff of Web IDL, in a nutshell. And getting to that payoff is the goal of _this_ project—but for JavaScript implementations, instead of C++ ones. That is, this library is designed to make it easier for JavaScript developers to write functions that behave like a given Web IDL operation. So conceptually, the conversion pipeline, which in its general form is JavaScript values ↦ Web IDL values ↦ implementation-language values, in this case becomes JavaScript values ↦ Web IDL values ↦ JavaScript values. And that intermediate step is where all the logic is performed: a JavaScript `true` becomes a Web IDL `1` in an unsigned long context, which then becomes a JavaScript `1`. ## Don't use this Seriously, why would you ever use this? You really shouldn't. Web IDL is … strange, and you shouldn't be emulating its semantics. If you're looking for a generic argument-processing library, you should find one with better rules than those from Web IDL. In general, your JavaScript should not be trying to become more like Web IDL; if anything, we should fix Web IDL to make it more like JavaScript. The _only_ people who should use this are those trying to create faithful implementations (or polyfills) of web platform interfaces defined in Web IDL. Its main consumer is the [jsdom](https://github.com/tmpvar/jsdom) project. # eslint-visitor-keys [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) Constants and utilities about visitor keys to traverse AST. ## 💿 Installation Use [npm] to install. ```bash $ npm install eslint-visitor-keys ``` ### Requirements - [Node.js] 4.0.0 or later. ## 📖 Usage ```js const evk = require("eslint-visitor-keys") ``` ### evk.KEYS > type: `{ [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Visitor keys. This keys are frozen. This is an object. Keys are the type of [ESTree] nodes. Their values are an array of property names which have child nodes. For example: ``` console.log(evk.KEYS.AssignmentExpression) // → ["left", "right"] ``` ### evk.getKeys(node) > type: `(node: object) => string[]` Get the visitor keys of a given AST node. This is similar to `Object.keys(node)` of ES Standard, but some keys are excluded: `parent`, `leadingComments`, `trailingComments`, and names which start with `_`. This will be used to traverse unknown nodes. For example: ``` const node = { type: "AssignmentExpression", left: { type: "Identifier", name: "foo" }, right: { type: "Literal", value: 0 } } console.log(evk.getKeys(node)) // → ["type", "left", "right"] ``` ### evk.unionWith(additionalKeys) > type: `(additionalKeys: object) => { [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Make the union set with `evk.KEYS` and the given keys. - The order of keys is, `additionalKeys` is at first, then `evk.KEYS` is concatenated after that. - It removes duplicated keys as keeping the first one. For example: ``` console.log(evk.unionWith({ MethodDefinition: ["decorators"] })) // → { ..., MethodDefinition: ["decorators", "key", "value"], ... } ``` ## 📰 Change log See [GitHub releases](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys/releases). ## 🍻 Contributing Welcome. See [ESLint contribution guidelines](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/). ### Development commands - `npm test` runs tests and measures code coverage. - `npm run lint` checks source codes with ESLint. - `npm run coverage` opens the code coverage report of the previous test with your default browser. - `npm run release` publishes this package to [npm] registory. [npm]: https://www.npmjs.com/ [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/ [ESTree]: https://github.com/estree/estree # node-tar [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/npm/node-tar.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/npm/node-tar) [Fast](./benchmarks) and full-featured Tar for Node.js The API is designed to mimic the behavior of `tar(1)` on unix systems. If you are familiar with how tar works, most of this will hopefully be straightforward for you. If not, then hopefully this module can teach you useful unix skills that may come in handy someday :) ## Background A "tar file" or "tarball" is an archive of file system entries (directories, files, links, etc.) The name comes from "tape archive". If you run `man tar` on almost any Unix command line, you'll learn quite a bit about what it can do, and its history. Tar has 5 main top-level commands: * `c` Create an archive * `r` Replace entries within an archive * `u` Update entries within an archive (ie, replace if they're newer) * `t` List out the contents of an archive * `x` Extract an archive to disk The other flags and options modify how this top level function works. ## High-Level API These 5 functions are the high-level API. All of them have a single-character name (for unix nerds familiar with `tar(1)`) as well as a long name (for everyone else). All the high-level functions take the following arguments, all three of which are optional and may be omitted. 1. `options` - An optional object specifying various options 2. `paths` - An array of paths to add or extract 3. `callback` - Called when the command is completed, if async. (If sync or no file specified, providing a callback throws a `TypeError`.) If the command is sync (ie, if `options.sync=true`), then the callback is not allowed, since the action will be completed immediately. If a `file` argument is specified, and the command is async, then a `Promise` is returned. In this case, if async, a callback may be provided which is called when the command is completed. If a `file` option is not specified, then a stream is returned. For `create`, this is a readable stream of the generated archive. For `list` and `extract` this is a writable stream that an archive should be written into. If a file is not specified, then a callback is not allowed, because you're already getting a stream to work with. `replace` and `update` only work on existing archives, and so require a `file` argument. Sync commands without a file argument return a stream that acts on its input immediately in the same tick. For readable streams, this means that all of the data is immediately available by calling `stream.read()`. For writable streams, it will be acted upon as soon as it is provided, but this can be at any time. ### Warnings and Errors Tar emits warnings and errors for recoverable and unrecoverable situations, respectively. In many cases, a warning only affects a single entry in an archive, or is simply informing you that it's modifying an entry to comply with the settings provided. Unrecoverable warnings will always raise an error (ie, emit `'error'` on streaming actions, throw for non-streaming sync actions, reject the returned Promise for non-streaming async operations, or call a provided callback with an `Error` as the first argument). Recoverable errors will raise an error only if `strict: true` is set in the options. Respond to (recoverable) warnings by listening to the `warn` event. Handlers receive 3 arguments: - `code` String. One of the error codes below. This may not match `data.code`, which preserves the original error code from fs and zlib. - `message` String. More details about the error. - `data` Metadata about the error. An `Error` object for errors raised by fs and zlib. All fields are attached to errors raisd by tar. Typically contains the following fields, as relevant: - `tarCode` The tar error code. - `code` Either the tar error code, or the error code set by the underlying system. - `file` The archive file being read or written. - `cwd` Working directory for creation and extraction operations. - `entry` The entry object (if it could be created) for `TAR_ENTRY_INFO`, `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID`, and `TAR_ENTRY_ERROR` warnings. - `header` The header object (if it could be created, and the entry could not be created) for `TAR_ENTRY_INFO` and `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID` warnings. - `recoverable` Boolean. If `false`, then the warning will emit an `error`, even in non-strict mode. #### Error Codes * `TAR_ENTRY_INFO` An informative error indicating that an entry is being modified, but otherwise processed normally. For example, removing `/` or `C:\` from absolute paths if `preservePaths` is not set. * `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID` An indication that a given entry is not a valid tar archive entry, and will be skipped. This occurs when: - a checksum fails, - a `linkpath` is missing for a link type, or - a `linkpath` is provided for a non-link type. If every entry in a parsed archive raises an `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID` error, then the archive is presumed to be unrecoverably broken, and `TAR_BAD_ARCHIVE` will be raised. * `TAR_ENTRY_ERROR` The entry appears to be a valid tar archive entry, but encountered an error which prevented it from being unpacked. This occurs when: - an unrecoverable fs error happens during unpacking, - an entry has `..` in the path and `preservePaths` is not set, or - an entry is extracting through a symbolic link, when `preservePaths` is not set. * `TAR_ENTRY_UNSUPPORTED` An indication that a given entry is a valid archive entry, but of a type that is unsupported, and so will be skipped in archive creation or extracting. * `TAR_ABORT` When parsing gzipped-encoded archives, the parser will abort the parse process raise a warning for any zlib errors encountered. Aborts are considered unrecoverable for both parsing and unpacking. * `TAR_BAD_ARCHIVE` The archive file is totally hosed. This can happen for a number of reasons, and always occurs at the end of a parse or extract: - An entry body was truncated before seeing the full number of bytes. - The archive contained only invalid entries, indicating that it is likely not an archive, or at least, not an archive this library can parse. `TAR_BAD_ARCHIVE` is considered informative for parse operations, but unrecoverable for extraction. Note that, if encountered at the end of an extraction, tar WILL still have extracted as much it could from the archive, so there may be some garbage files to clean up. Errors that occur deeper in the system (ie, either the filesystem or zlib) will have their error codes left intact, and a `tarCode` matching one of the above will be added to the warning metadata or the raised error object. Errors generated by tar will have one of the above codes set as the `error.code` field as well, but since errors originating in zlib or fs will have their original codes, it's better to read `error.tarCode` if you wish to see how tar is handling the issue. ### Examples The API mimics the `tar(1)` command line functionality, with aliases for more human-readable option and function names. The goal is that if you know how to use `tar(1)` in Unix, then you know how to use `require('tar')` in JavaScript. To replicate `tar czf my-tarball.tgz files and folders`, you'd do: ```js tar.c( { gzip: <true|gzip options>, file: 'my-tarball.tgz' }, ['some', 'files', 'and', 'folders'] ).then(_ => { .. tarball has been created .. }) ``` To replicate `tar cz files and folders > my-tarball.tgz`, you'd do: ```js tar.c( // or tar.create { gzip: <true|gzip options> }, ['some', 'files', 'and', 'folders'] ).pipe(fs.createWriteStream('my-tarball.tgz')) ``` To replicate `tar xf my-tarball.tgz` you'd do: ```js tar.x( // or tar.extract( { file: 'my-tarball.tgz' } ).then(_=> { .. tarball has been dumped in cwd .. }) ``` To replicate `cat my-tarball.tgz | tar x -C some-dir --strip=1`: ```js fs.createReadStream('my-tarball.tgz').pipe( tar.x({ strip: 1, C: 'some-dir' // alias for cwd:'some-dir', also ok }) ) ``` To replicate `tar tf my-tarball.tgz`, do this: ```js tar.t({ file: 'my-tarball.tgz', onentry: entry => { .. do whatever with it .. } }) ``` To replicate `cat my-tarball.tgz | tar t` do: ```js fs.createReadStream('my-tarball.tgz') .pipe(tar.t()) .on('entry', entry => { .. do whatever with it .. }) ``` To do anything synchronous, add `sync: true` to the options. Note that sync functions don't take a callback and don't return a promise. When the function returns, it's already done. Sync methods without a file argument return a sync stream, which flushes immediately. But, of course, it still won't be done until you `.end()` it. To filter entries, add `filter: <function>` to the options. Tar-creating methods call the filter with `filter(path, stat)`. Tar-reading methods (including extraction) call the filter with `filter(path, entry)`. The filter is called in the `this`-context of the `Pack` or `Unpack` stream object. The arguments list to `tar t` and `tar x` specify a list of filenames to extract or list, so they're equivalent to a filter that tests if the file is in the list. For those who _aren't_ fans of tar's single-character command names: ``` tar.c === tar.create tar.r === tar.replace (appends to archive, file is required) tar.u === tar.update (appends if newer, file is required) tar.x === tar.extract tar.t === tar.list ``` Keep reading for all the command descriptions and options, as well as the low-level API that they are built on. ### tar.c(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.create] Create a tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to add to the tarball. Adding a directory also adds its children recursively. An entry in `fileList` that starts with an `@` symbol is a tar archive whose entries will be added. To add a file that starts with `@`, prepend it with `./`. The following options are supported: - `file` Write the tarball archive to the specified filename. If this is specified, then the callback will be fired when the file has been written, and a promise will be returned that resolves when the file is written. If a filename is not specified, then a Readable Stream will be returned which will emit the file data. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Act synchronously. If this is set, then any provided file will be fully written after the call to `tar.c`. If this is set, and a file is not provided, then the resulting stream will already have the data ready to `read` or `emit('data')` as soon as you request it. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` [Alias: `z`] - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. [Alias: `P`] - `mode` The mode to set on the created file archive - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. [Alias: `n`] - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. [Alias: `L`, `h`] - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. The following options are mostly internal, but can be modified in some advanced use cases, such as re-using caches between runs. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `readdirCache` A Map object that caches calls to `readdir`. - `jobs` A number specifying how many concurrent jobs to run. Defaults to 4. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. ### tar.x(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.extract] Extract a tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to extract from the tarball. If no paths are provided, then all the entries are extracted. If the archive is gzipped, then tar will detect this and unzip it. Note that all directories that are created will be forced to be writable, readable, and listable by their owner, to avoid cases where a directory prevents extraction of child entries by virtue of its mode. Most extraction errors will cause a `warn` event to be emitted. If the `cwd` is missing, or not a directory, then the extraction will fail completely. The following options are supported: - `cwd` Extract files relative to the specified directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. If provided, this must exist and must be a directory. [Alias: `C`] - `file` The archive file to extract. If not specified, then a Writable stream is returned where the archive data should be written. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Create files and directories synchronously. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being unpacked. Return `true` to unpack the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `newer` Set to true to keep the existing file on disk if it's newer than the file in the archive. [Alias: `keep-newer`, `keep-newer-files`] - `keep` Do not overwrite existing files. In particular, if a file appears more than once in an archive, later copies will not overwrite earlier copies. [Alias: `k`, `keep-existing`] - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths, paths containing `..`, and extracting through symbolic links. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths, `..` paths are not extracted, and any file whose location would be modified by a symbolic link is not extracted. [Alias: `P`] - `unlink` Unlink files before creating them. Without this option, tar overwrites existing files, which preserves existing hardlinks. With this option, existing hardlinks will be broken, as will any symlink that would affect the location of an extracted file. [Alias: `U`] - `strip` Remove the specified number of leading path elements. Pathnames with fewer elements will be silently skipped. Note that the pathname is edited after applying the filter, but before security checks. [Alias: `strip-components`, `stripComponents`] - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `preserveOwner` If true, tar will set the `uid` and `gid` of extracted entries to the `uid` and `gid` fields in the archive. This defaults to true when run as root, and false otherwise. If false, then files and directories will be set with the owner and group of the user running the process. This is similar to `-p` in `tar(1)`, but ACLs and other system-specific data is never unpacked in this implementation, and modes are set by default already. [Alias: `p`] - `uid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified user id, regardless of the `uid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `gid` option. - `gid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified group id, regardless of the `gid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `uid` option. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` value for extracted entries. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `transform` Provide a function that takes an `entry` object, and returns a stream, or any falsey value. If a stream is provided, then that stream's data will be written instead of the contents of the archive entry. If a falsey value is provided, then the entry is written to disk as normal. (To exclude items from extraction, use the `filter` option described above.) - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. The following options are mostly internal, but can be modified in some advanced use cases, such as re-using caches between runs. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `umask` Filter the modes of entries like `process.umask()`. - `dmode` Default mode for directories - `fmode` Default mode for files - `dirCache` A Map object of which directories exist. - `maxMetaEntrySize` The maximum size of meta entries that is supported. Defaults to 1 MB. Note that using an asynchronous stream type with the `transform` option will cause undefined behavior in sync extractions. [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass)-based streams are designed for this use case. ### tar.t(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.list] List the contents of a tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to list from the tarball. If no paths are provided, then all the entries are listed. If the archive is gzipped, then tar will detect this and unzip it. Returns an event emitter that emits `entry` events with `tar.ReadEntry` objects. However, they don't emit `'data'` or `'end'` events. (If you want to get actual readable entries, use the `tar.Parse` class instead.) The following options are supported: - `cwd` Extract files relative to the specified directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `file` The archive file to list. If not specified, then a Writable stream is returned where the archive data should be written. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Read the specified file synchronously. (This has no effect when a file option isn't specified, because entries are emitted as fast as they are parsed from the stream anyway.) - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being listed. Return `true` to emit the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. This is important for when both `file` and `sync` are set, because it will be called synchronously. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noResume` By default, `entry` streams are resumed immediately after the call to `onentry`. Set `noResume: true` to suppress this behavior. Note that by opting into this, the stream will never complete until the entry data is consumed. ### tar.u(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.update] Add files to an archive if they are newer than the entry already in the tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to add to the tarball. Adding a directory also adds its children recursively. An entry in `fileList` that starts with an `@` symbol is a tar archive whose entries will be added. To add a file that starts with `@`, prepend it with `./`. The following options are supported: - `file` Required. Write the tarball archive to the specified filename. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Act synchronously. If this is set, then any provided file will be fully written after the call to `tar.c`. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for adding entries to the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` [Alias: `z`] - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. [Alias: `P`] - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. [Alias: `n`] - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. [Alias: `L`, `h`] - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. ### tar.r(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.replace] Add files to an existing archive. Because later entries override earlier entries, this effectively replaces any existing entries. The `fileList` is an array of paths to add to the tarball. Adding a directory also adds its children recursively. An entry in `fileList` that starts with an `@` symbol is a tar archive whose entries will be added. To add a file that starts with `@`, prepend it with `./`. The following options are supported: - `file` Required. Write the tarball archive to the specified filename. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Act synchronously. If this is set, then any provided file will be fully written after the call to `tar.c`. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for adding entries to the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` [Alias: `z`] - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. [Alias: `P`] - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. [Alias: `n`] - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. [Alias: `L`, `h`] - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. ## Low-Level API ### class tar.Pack A readable tar stream. Has all the standard readable stream interface stuff. `'data'` and `'end'` events, `read()` method, `pause()` and `resume()`, etc. #### constructor(options) The following options are supported: - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `readdirCache` A Map object that caches calls to `readdir`. - `jobs` A number specifying how many concurrent jobs to run. Defaults to 4. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. #### add(path) Adds an entry to the archive. Returns the Pack stream. #### write(path) Adds an entry to the archive. Returns true if flushed. #### end() Finishes the archive. ### class tar.Pack.Sync Synchronous version of `tar.Pack`. ### class tar.Unpack A writable stream that unpacks a tar archive onto the file system. All the normal writable stream stuff is supported. `write()` and `end()` methods, `'drain'` events, etc. Note that all directories that are created will be forced to be writable, readable, and listable by their owner, to avoid cases where a directory prevents extraction of child entries by virtue of its mode. `'close'` is emitted when it's done writing stuff to the file system. Most unpack errors will cause a `warn` event to be emitted. If the `cwd` is missing, or not a directory, then an error will be emitted. #### constructor(options) - `cwd` Extract files relative to the specified directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. If provided, this must exist and must be a directory. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being unpacked. Return `true` to unpack the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `newer` Set to true to keep the existing file on disk if it's newer than the file in the archive. - `keep` Do not overwrite existing files. In particular, if a file appears more than once in an archive, later copies will not overwrite earlier copies. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths, paths containing `..`, and extracting through symbolic links. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths, `..` paths are not extracted, and any file whose location would be modified by a symbolic link is not extracted. - `unlink` Unlink files before creating them. Without this option, tar overwrites existing files, which preserves existing hardlinks. With this option, existing hardlinks will be broken, as will any symlink that would affect the location of an extracted file. - `strip` Remove the specified number of leading path elements. Pathnames with fewer elements will be silently skipped. Note that the pathname is edited after applying the filter, but before security checks. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `umask` Filter the modes of entries like `process.umask()`. - `dmode` Default mode for directories - `fmode` Default mode for files - `dirCache` A Map object of which directories exist. - `maxMetaEntrySize` The maximum size of meta entries that is supported. Defaults to 1 MB. - `preserveOwner` If true, tar will set the `uid` and `gid` of extracted entries to the `uid` and `gid` fields in the archive. This defaults to true when run as root, and false otherwise. If false, then files and directories will be set with the owner and group of the user running the process. This is similar to `-p` in `tar(1)`, but ACLs and other system-specific data is never unpacked in this implementation, and modes are set by default already. - `win32` True if on a windows platform. Causes behavior where filenames containing `<|>?` chars are converted to windows-compatible values while being unpacked. - `uid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified user id, regardless of the `uid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `gid` option. - `gid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified group id, regardless of the `gid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `uid` option. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` value for extracted entries. - `transform` Provide a function that takes an `entry` object, and returns a stream, or any falsey value. If a stream is provided, then that stream's data will be written instead of the contents of the archive entry. If a falsey value is provided, then the entry is written to disk as normal. (To exclude items from extraction, use the `filter` option described above.) - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") ### class tar.Unpack.Sync Synchronous version of `tar.Unpack`. Note that using an asynchronous stream type with the `transform` option will cause undefined behavior in sync unpack streams. [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass)-based streams are designed for this use case. ### class tar.Parse A writable stream that parses a tar archive stream. All the standard writable stream stuff is supported. If the archive is gzipped, then tar will detect this and unzip it. Emits `'entry'` events with `tar.ReadEntry` objects, which are themselves readable streams that you can pipe wherever. Each `entry` will not emit until the one before it is flushed through, so make sure to either consume the data (with `on('data', ...)` or `.pipe(...)`) or throw it away with `.resume()` to keep the stream flowing. #### constructor(options) Returns an event emitter that emits `entry` events with `tar.ReadEntry` objects. The following options are supported: - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being listed. Return `true` to emit the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") #### abort(error) Stop all parsing activities. This is called when there are zlib errors. It also emits an unrecoverable warning with the error provided. ### class tar.ReadEntry extends [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass) A representation of an entry that is being read out of a tar archive. It has the following fields: - `extended` The extended metadata object provided to the constructor. - `globalExtended` The global extended metadata object provided to the constructor. - `remain` The number of bytes remaining to be written into the stream. - `blockRemain` The number of 512-byte blocks remaining to be written into the stream. - `ignore` Whether this entry should be ignored. - `meta` True if this represents metadata about the next entry, false if it represents a filesystem object. - All the fields from the header, extended header, and global extended header are added to the ReadEntry object. So it has `path`, `type`, `size, `mode`, and so on. #### constructor(header, extended, globalExtended) Create a new ReadEntry object with the specified header, extended header, and global extended header values. ### class tar.WriteEntry extends [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass) A representation of an entry that is being written from the file system into a tar archive. Emits data for the Header, and for the Pax Extended Header if one is required, as well as any body data. Creating a WriteEntry for a directory does not also create WriteEntry objects for all of the directory contents. It has the following fields: - `path` The path field that will be written to the archive. By default, this is also the path from the cwd to the file system object. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `myuid` If supported, the uid of the user running the current process. - `myuser` The `env.USER` string if set, or `''`. Set as the entry `uname` field if the file's `uid` matches `this.myuid`. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 1 MB. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. - `absolute` The absolute path to the entry on the filesystem. By default, this is `path.resolve(this.cwd, this.path)`, but it can be overridden explicitly. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `win32` True if on a windows platform. Causes behavior where paths replace `\` with `/` and filenames containing the windows-compatible forms of `<|>?:` characters are converted to actual `<|>?:` characters in the archive. - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. #### constructor(path, options) `path` is the path of the entry as it is written in the archive. The following options are supported: - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 1 MB. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. - `absolute` The absolute path to the entry on the filesystem. By default, this is `path.resolve(this.cwd, this.path)`, but it can be overridden explicitly. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `win32` True if on a windows platform. Causes behavior where paths replace `\` with `/`. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. - `umask` Set to restrict the modes on the entries in the archive, somewhat like how umask works on file creation. Defaults to `process.umask()` on unix systems, or `0o22` on Windows. #### warn(message, data) If strict, emit an error with the provided message. Othewise, emit a `'warn'` event with the provided message and data. ### class tar.WriteEntry.Sync Synchronous version of tar.WriteEntry ### class tar.WriteEntry.Tar A version of tar.WriteEntry that gets its data from a tar.ReadEntry instead of from the filesystem. #### constructor(readEntry, options) `readEntry` is the entry being read out of another archive. The following options are supported: - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. ### class tar.Header A class for reading and writing header blocks. It has the following fields: - `nullBlock` True if decoding a block which is entirely composed of `0x00` null bytes. (Useful because tar files are terminated by at least 2 null blocks.) - `cksumValid` True if the checksum in the header is valid, false otherwise. - `needPax` True if the values, as encoded, will require a Pax extended header. - `path` The path of the entry. - `mode` The 4 lowest-order octal digits of the file mode. That is, read/write/execute permissions for world, group, and owner, and the setuid, setgid, and sticky bits. - `uid` Numeric user id of the file owner - `gid` Numeric group id of the file owner - `size` Size of the file in bytes - `mtime` Modified time of the file - `cksum` The checksum of the header. This is generated by adding all the bytes of the header block, treating the checksum field itself as all ascii space characters (that is, `0x20`). - `type` The human-readable name of the type of entry this represents, or the alphanumeric key if unknown. - `typeKey` The alphanumeric key for the type of entry this header represents. - `linkpath` The target of Link and SymbolicLink entries. - `uname` Human-readable user name of the file owner - `gname` Human-readable group name of the file owner - `devmaj` The major portion of the device number. Always `0` for files, directories, and links. - `devmin` The minor portion of the device number. Always `0` for files, directories, and links. - `atime` File access time. - `ctime` File change time. #### constructor(data, [offset=0]) `data` is optional. It is either a Buffer that should be interpreted as a tar Header starting at the specified offset and continuing for 512 bytes, or a data object of keys and values to set on the header object, and eventually encode as a tar Header. #### decode(block, offset) Decode the provided buffer starting at the specified offset. Buffer length must be greater than 512 bytes. #### set(data) Set the fields in the data object. #### encode(buffer, offset) Encode the header fields into the buffer at the specified offset. Returns `this.needPax` to indicate whether a Pax Extended Header is required to properly encode the specified data. ### class tar.Pax An object representing a set of key-value pairs in an Pax extended header entry. It has the following fields. Where the same name is used, they have the same semantics as the tar.Header field of the same name. - `global` True if this represents a global extended header, or false if it is for a single entry. - `atime` - `charset` - `comment` - `ctime` - `gid` - `gname` - `linkpath` - `mtime` - `path` - `size` - `uid` - `uname` - `dev` - `ino` - `nlink` #### constructor(object, global) Set the fields set in the object. `global` is a boolean that defaults to false. #### encode() Return a Buffer containing the header and body for the Pax extended header entry, or `null` if there is nothing to encode. #### encodeBody() Return a string representing the body of the pax extended header entry. #### encodeField(fieldName) Return a string representing the key/value encoding for the specified fieldName, or `''` if the field is unset. ### tar.Pax.parse(string, extended, global) Return a new Pax object created by parsing the contents of the string provided. If the `extended` object is set, then also add the fields from that object. (This is necessary because multiple metadata entries can occur in sequence.) ### tar.types A translation table for the `type` field in tar headers. #### tar.types.name.get(code) Get the human-readable name for a given alphanumeric code. #### tar.types.code.get(name) Get the alphanumeric code for a given human-readable name. Browser-friendly inheritance fully compatible with standard node.js [inherits](http://nodejs.org/api/util.html#util_util_inherits_constructor_superconstructor). This package exports standard `inherits` from node.js `util` module in node environment, but also provides alternative browser-friendly implementation through [browser field](https://gist.github.com/shtylman/4339901). Alternative implementation is a literal copy of standard one located in standalone module to avoid requiring of `util`. It also has a shim for old browsers with no `Object.create` support. While keeping you sure you are using standard `inherits` implementation in node.js environment, it allows bundlers such as [browserify](https://github.com/substack/node-browserify) to not include full `util` package to your client code if all you need is just `inherits` function. It worth, because browser shim for `util` package is large and `inherits` is often the single function you need from it. It's recommended to use this package instead of `require('util').inherits` for any code that has chances to be used not only in node.js but in browser too. ## usage ```js var inherits = require('inherits'); // then use exactly as the standard one ``` ## note on version ~1.0 Version ~1.0 had completely different motivation and is not compatible neither with 2.0 nor with standard node.js `inherits`. If you are using version ~1.0 and planning to switch to ~2.0, be careful: * new version uses `super_` instead of `super` for referencing superclass * new version overwrites current prototype while old one preserves any existing fields on it # axios // core The modules found in `core/` should be modules that are specific to the domain logic of axios. These modules would most likely not make sense to be consumed outside of the axios module, as their logic is too specific. Some examples of core modules are: - Dispatching requests - Managing interceptors - Handling config ![](cow.png) Moo! ==== Moo is a highly-optimised tokenizer/lexer generator. Use it to tokenize your strings, before parsing 'em with a parser like [nearley](https://github.com/hardmath123/nearley) or whatever else you're into. * [Fast](#is-it-fast) * [Convenient](#usage) * uses [Regular Expressions](#on-regular-expressions) * tracks [Line Numbers](#line-numbers) * handles [Keywords](#keywords) * supports [States](#states) * custom [Errors](#errors) * is even [Iterable](#iteration) * has no dependencies * 4KB minified + gzipped * Moo! Is it fast? ----------- Yup! Flying-cows-and-singed-steak fast. Moo is the fastest JS tokenizer around. It's **~2–10x** faster than most other tokenizers; it's a **couple orders of magnitude** faster than some of the slower ones. Define your tokens **using regular expressions**. Moo will compile 'em down to a **single RegExp for performance**. It uses the new ES6 **sticky flag** where possible to make things faster; otherwise it falls back to an almost-as-efficient workaround. (For more than you ever wanted to know about this, read [adventures in the land of substrings and RegExps](http://mrale.ph/blog/2016/11/23/making-less-dart-faster.html).) You _might_ be able to go faster still by writing your lexer by hand rather than using RegExps, but that's icky. Oh, and it [avoids parsing RegExps by itself](https://hackernoon.com/the-madness-of-parsing-real-world-javascript-regexps-d9ee336df983#.2l8qu3l76). Because that would be horrible. Usage ----- First, you need to do the needful: `$ npm install moo`, or whatever will ship this code to your computer. Alternatively, grab the `moo.js` file by itself and slap it into your web page via a `<script>` tag; moo is completely standalone. Then you can start roasting your very own lexer/tokenizer: ```js const moo = require('moo') let lexer = moo.compile({ WS: /[ \t]+/, comment: /\/\/.*?$/, number: /0|[1-9][0-9]*/, string: /"(?:\\["\\]|[^\n"\\])*"/, lparen: '(', rparen: ')', keyword: ['while', 'if', 'else', 'moo', 'cows'], NL: { match: /\n/, lineBreaks: true }, }) ``` And now throw some text at it: ```js lexer.reset('while (10) cows\nmoo') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'keyword', value: 'while' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'WS', value: ' ' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'lparen', value: '(' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'number', value: '10' } // ... ``` When you reach the end of Moo's internal buffer, next() will return `undefined`. You can always `reset()` it and feed it more data when that happens. On Regular Expressions ---------------------- RegExps are nifty for making tokenizers, but they can be a bit of a pain. Here are some things to be aware of: * You often want to use **non-greedy quantifiers**: e.g. `*?` instead of `*`. Otherwise your tokens will be longer than you expect: ```js let lexer = moo.compile({ string: /".*"/, // greedy quantifier * // ... }) lexer.reset('"foo" "bar"') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'string', value: 'foo" "bar' } ``` Better: ```js let lexer = moo.compile({ string: /".*?"/, // non-greedy quantifier *? // ... }) lexer.reset('"foo" "bar"') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'string', value: 'foo' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'space', value: ' ' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'string', value: 'bar' } ``` * The **order of your rules** matters. Earlier ones will take precedence. ```js moo.compile({ identifier: /[a-z0-9]+/, number: /[0-9]+/, }).reset('42').next() // -> { type: 'identifier', value: '42' } moo.compile({ number: /[0-9]+/, identifier: /[a-z0-9]+/, }).reset('42').next() // -> { type: 'number', value: '42' } ``` * Moo uses **multiline RegExps**. This has a few quirks: for example, the **dot `/./` doesn't include newlines**. Use `[^]` instead if you want to match newlines too. * Since an excluding character ranges like `/[^ ]/` (which matches anything but a space) _will_ include newlines, you have to be careful not to include them by accident! In particular, the whitespace metacharacter `\s` includes newlines. Line Numbers ------------ Moo tracks detailed information about the input for you. It will track line numbers, as long as you **apply the `lineBreaks: true` option to any rules which might contain newlines**. Moo will try to warn you if you forget to do this. Note that this is `false` by default, for performance reasons: counting the number of lines in a matched token has a small cost. For optimal performance, only match newlines inside a dedicated token: ```js newline: {match: '\n', lineBreaks: true}, ``` ### Token Info ### Token objects (returned from `next()`) have the following attributes: * **`type`**: the name of the group, as passed to compile. * **`text`**: the string that was matched. * **`value`**: the string that was matched, transformed by your `value` function (if any). * **`offset`**: the number of bytes from the start of the buffer where the match starts. * **`lineBreaks`**: the number of line breaks found in the match. (Always zero if this rule has `lineBreaks: false`.) * **`line`**: the line number of the beginning of the match, starting from 1. * **`col`**: the column where the match begins, starting from 1. ### Value vs. Text ### The `value` is the same as the `text`, unless you provide a [value transform](#transform). ```js const moo = require('moo') const lexer = moo.compile({ ws: /[ \t]+/, string: {match: /"(?:\\["\\]|[^\n"\\])*"/, value: s => s.slice(1, -1)}, }) lexer.reset('"test"') lexer.next() /* { value: 'test', text: '"test"', ... } */ ``` ### Reset ### Calling `reset()` on your lexer will empty its internal buffer, and set the line, column, and offset counts back to their initial value. If you don't want this, you can `save()` the state, and later pass it as the second argument to `reset()` to explicitly control the internal state of the lexer. ```js    lexer.reset('some line\n') let info = lexer.save() // -> { line: 10 } lexer.next() // -> { line: 10 } lexer.next() // -> { line: 11 } // ... lexer.reset('a different line\n', info) lexer.next() // -> { line: 10 } ``` Keywords -------- Moo makes it convenient to define literals. ```js moo.compile({ lparen: '(', rparen: ')', keyword: ['while', 'if', 'else', 'moo', 'cows'], }) ``` It'll automatically compile them into regular expressions, escaping them where necessary. **Keywords** should be written using the `keywords` transform. ```js moo.compile({ IDEN: {match: /[a-zA-Z]+/, type: moo.keywords({ KW: ['while', 'if', 'else', 'moo', 'cows'], })}, SPACE: {match: /\s+/, lineBreaks: true}, }) ``` ### Why? ### You need to do this to ensure the **longest match** principle applies, even in edge cases. Imagine trying to parse the input `className` with the following rules: ```js keyword: ['class'], identifier: /[a-zA-Z]+/, ``` You'll get _two_ tokens — `['class', 'Name']` -- which is _not_ what you want! If you swap the order of the rules, you'll fix this example; but now you'll lex `class` wrong (as an `identifier`). The keywords helper checks matches against the list of keywords; if any of them match, it uses the type `'keyword'` instead of `'identifier'` (for this example). ### Keyword Types ### Keywords can also have **individual types**. ```js let lexer = moo.compile({ name: {match: /[a-zA-Z]+/, type: moo.keywords({ 'kw-class': 'class', 'kw-def': 'def', 'kw-if': 'if', })}, // ... }) lexer.reset('def foo') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'kw-def', value: 'def' } lexer.next() // space lexer.next() // -> { type: 'name', value: 'foo' } ``` You can use [itt](https://github.com/nathan/itt)'s iterator adapters to make constructing keyword objects easier: ```js itt(['class', 'def', 'if']) .map(k => ['kw-' + k, k]) .toObject() ``` States ------ Moo allows you to define multiple lexer **states**. Each state defines its own separate set of token rules. Your lexer will start off in the first state given to `moo.states({})`. Rules can be annotated with `next`, `push`, and `pop`, to change the current state after that token is matched. A "stack" of past states is kept, which is used by `push` and `pop`. * **`next: 'bar'`** moves to the state named `bar`. (The stack is not changed.) * **`push: 'bar'`** moves to the state named `bar`, and pushes the old state onto the stack. * **`pop: 1`** removes one state from the top of the stack, and moves to that state. (Only `1` is supported.) Only rules from the current state can be matched. You need to copy your rule into all the states you want it to be matched in. For example, to tokenize JS-style string interpolation such as `a${{c: d}}e`, you might use: ```js let lexer = moo.states({ main: { strstart: {match: '`', push: 'lit'}, ident: /\w+/, lbrace: {match: '{', push: 'main'}, rbrace: {match: '}', pop: true}, colon: ':', space: {match: /\s+/, lineBreaks: true}, }, lit: { interp: {match: '${', push: 'main'}, escape: /\\./, strend: {match: '`', pop: true}, const: {match: /(?:[^$`]|\$(?!\{))+/, lineBreaks: true}, }, }) // <= `a${{c: d}}e` // => strstart const interp lbrace ident colon space ident rbrace rbrace const strend ``` The `rbrace` rule is annotated with `pop`, so it moves from the `main` state into either `lit` or `main`, depending on the stack. Errors ------ If none of your rules match, Moo will throw an Error; since it doesn't know what else to do. If you prefer, you can have moo return an error token instead of throwing an exception. The error token will contain the whole of the rest of the buffer. ```js moo.compile({ // ... myError: moo.error, }) moo.reset('invalid') moo.next() // -> { type: 'myError', value: 'invalid', text: 'invalid', offset: 0, lineBreaks: 0, line: 1, col: 1 } moo.next() // -> undefined ``` You can have a token type that both matches tokens _and_ contains error values. ```js moo.compile({ // ... myError: {match: /[\$?`]/, error: true}, }) ``` ### Formatting errors ### If you want to throw an error from your parser, you might find `formatError` helpful. Call it with the offending token: ```js throw new Error(lexer.formatError(token, "invalid syntax")) ``` It returns a string with a pretty error message. ``` Error: invalid syntax at line 2 col 15: totally valid `syntax` ^ ``` Iteration --------- Iterators: we got 'em. ```js for (let here of lexer) { // here = { type: 'number', value: '123', ... } } ``` Create an array of tokens. ```js let tokens = Array.from(lexer); ``` Use [itt](https://github.com/nathan/itt)'s iteration tools with Moo. ```js for (let [here, next] = itt(lexer).lookahead()) { // pass a number if you need more tokens // enjoy! } ``` Transform --------- Moo doesn't allow capturing groups, but you can supply a transform function, `value()`, which will be called on the value before storing it in the Token object. ```js moo.compile({ STRING: [ {match: /"""[^]*?"""/, lineBreaks: true, value: x => x.slice(3, -3)}, {match: /"(?:\\["\\rn]|[^"\\])*?"/, lineBreaks: true, value: x => x.slice(1, -1)}, {match: /'(?:\\['\\rn]|[^'\\])*?'/, lineBreaks: true, value: x => x.slice(1, -1)}, ], // ... }) ``` Contributing ------------ Do check the [FAQ](https://github.com/tjvr/moo/issues?q=label%3Aquestion). Before submitting an issue, [remember...](https://github.com/tjvr/moo/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md) # lodash.truncate v4.4.2 The [lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.truncate` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.truncate ``` In Node.js: ```js var truncate = require('lodash.truncate'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#truncate) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.4.2-npm-packages/lodash.truncate) for more details. # is-extglob [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/is-extglob.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-extglob) [![NPM downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/is-extglob.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/is-extglob) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jonschlinkert/is-extglob.svg?style=flat)](https://travis-ci.org/jonschlinkert/is-extglob) > Returns true if a string has an extglob. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install --save is-extglob ``` ## Usage ```js var isExtglob = require('is-extglob'); ``` **True** ```js isExtglob('?(abc)'); isExtglob('@(abc)'); isExtglob('!(abc)'); isExtglob('*(abc)'); isExtglob('+(abc)'); ``` **False** Escaped extglobs: ```js isExtglob('\\?(abc)'); isExtglob('\\@(abc)'); isExtglob('\\!(abc)'); isExtglob('\\*(abc)'); isExtglob('\\+(abc)'); ``` Everything else... ```js isExtglob('foo.js'); isExtglob('!foo.js'); isExtglob('*.js'); isExtglob('**/abc.js'); isExtglob('abc/*.js'); isExtglob('abc/(aaa|bbb).js'); isExtglob('abc/[a-z].js'); isExtglob('abc/{a,b}.js'); isExtglob('abc/?.js'); isExtglob('abc.js'); isExtglob('abc/def/ghi.js'); ``` ## History **v2.0** Adds support for escaping. Escaped exglobs no longer return true. ## About ### Related projects * [has-glob](https://www.npmjs.com/package/has-glob): Returns `true` if an array has a glob pattern. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/has-glob "Returns `true` if an array has a glob pattern.") * [is-glob](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-glob): Returns `true` if the given string looks like a glob pattern or an extglob pattern… [more](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-glob) | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-glob "Returns `true` if the given string looks like a glob pattern or an extglob pattern. This makes it easy to create code that only uses external modules like node-glob when necessary, resulting in much faster code execution and initialization time, and a bet") * [micromatch](https://www.npmjs.com/package/micromatch): Glob matching for javascript/node.js. A drop-in replacement and faster alternative to minimatch and multimatch. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/micromatch "Glob matching for javascript/node.js. A drop-in replacement and faster alternative to minimatch and multimatch.") ### Contributing Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). ### Building docs _(This document was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme) (a [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb) generator), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in [.verb.md](.verb.md).)_ To generate the readme and API documentation with [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb): ```sh $ npm install -g verb verb-generate-readme && verb ``` ### Running tests Install dev dependencies: ```sh $ npm install -d && npm test ``` ### Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [github/jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [twitter/jonschlinkert](http://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) ### License Copyright © 2016, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT license](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-extglob/blob/master/LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), v0.1.31, on October 12, 2016._ # path-parse [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/jbgutierrez/path-parse.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/jbgutierrez/path-parse) > Node.js [`path.parse(pathString)`](https://nodejs.org/api/path.html#path_path_parse_pathstring) [ponyfill](https://ponyfill.com). ## Install ``` $ npm install --save path-parse ``` ## Usage ```js var pathParse = require('path-parse'); pathParse('/home/user/dir/file.txt'); //=> { // root : "/", // dir : "/home/user/dir", // base : "file.txt", // ext : ".txt", // name : "file" // } ``` ## API See [`path.parse(pathString)`](https://nodejs.org/api/path.html#path_path_parse_pathstring) docs. ### pathParse(path) ### pathParse.posix(path) The Posix specific version. ### pathParse.win32(path) The Windows specific version. ## License MIT © [Javier Blanco](http://jbgutierrez.info) ESQuery is a library for querying the AST output by Esprima for patterns of syntax using a CSS style selector system. Check out the demo: [demo](https://estools.github.io/esquery/) The following selectors are supported: * AST node type: `ForStatement` * [wildcard](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#universal-selector): `*` * [attribute existence](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#attribute-selectors): `[attr]` * [attribute value](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#attribute-selectors): `[attr="foo"]` or `[attr=123]` * attribute regex: `[attr=/foo.*/]` or (with flags) `[attr=/foo.*/is]` * attribute conditions: `[attr!="foo"]`, `[attr>2]`, `[attr<3]`, `[attr>=2]`, or `[attr<=3]` * nested attribute: `[attr.level2="foo"]` * field: `FunctionDeclaration > Identifier.id` * [First](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#the-first-child-pseudo) or [last](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#the-last-child-pseudo) child: `:first-child` or `:last-child` * [nth-child](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#the-nth-child-pseudo) (no ax+b support): `:nth-child(2)` * [nth-last-child](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#the-nth-last-child-pseudo) (no ax+b support): `:nth-last-child(1)` * [descendant](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#descendant-combinators): `ancestor descendant` * [child](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#child-combinators): `parent > child` * [following sibling](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#general-sibling-combinators): `node ~ sibling` * [adjacent sibling](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#adjacent-sibling-combinators): `node + adjacent` * [negation](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#negation-pseudo): `:not(ForStatement)` * [has](https://drafts.csswg.org/selectors-4/#has-pseudo): `:has(ForStatement)` * [matches-any](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#matches): `:matches([attr] > :first-child, :last-child)` * [subject indicator](http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors4/#subject): `!IfStatement > [name="foo"]` * class of AST node: `:statement`, `:expression`, `:declaration`, `:function`, or `:pattern` [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/estools/esquery.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/estools/esquery) # node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag <sup>[![Version Badge][npm-version-svg]][package-url]</sup> [![github actions][actions-image]][actions-url] [![coverage][codecov-image]][codecov-url] [![dependency status][deps-svg]][deps-url] [![dev dependency status][dev-deps-svg]][dev-deps-url] [![License][license-image]][license-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url] [![npm badge][npm-badge-png]][package-url] Determine if the current node version supports the `--preserve-symlinks` flag. ## Example ```js var supportsPreserveSymlinks = require('node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag'); var assert = require('assert'); assert.equal(supportsPreserveSymlinks, null); // in a browser assert.equal(supportsPreserveSymlinks, false); // in node < v6.2 assert.equal(supportsPreserveSymlinks, true); // in node v6.2+ ``` ## Tests Simply clone the repo, `npm install`, and run `npm test` [package-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag [npm-version-svg]: https://versionbadg.es/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.svg [deps-svg]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.svg [deps-url]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag [dev-deps-svg]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag/dev-status.svg [dev-deps-url]: https://david-dm.org/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag#info=devDependencies [npm-badge-png]: https://nodei.co/npm/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.png?downloads=true&stars=true [license-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/l/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.svg [license-url]: LICENSE [downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag.svg [downloads-url]: https://npm-stat.com/charts.html?package=node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag [codecov-image]: https://codecov.io/gh/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag/branch/main/graphs/badge.svg [codecov-url]: https://app.codecov.io/gh/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag/ [actions-image]: https://img.shields.io/endpoint?url=https://github-actions-badge-u3jn4tfpocch.runkit.sh/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag [actions-url]: https://github.com/inspect-js/node-supports-preserve-symlinks-flag/actions Like `chown -R`. Takes the same arguments as `fs.chown()` # minizlib A fast zlib stream built on [minipass](http://npm.im/minipass) and Node.js's zlib binding. This module was created to serve the needs of [node-tar](http://npm.im/tar) and [minipass-fetch](http://npm.im/minipass-fetch). Brotli is supported in versions of node with a Brotli binding. ## How does this differ from the streams in `require('zlib')`? First, there are no convenience methods to compress or decompress a buffer. If you want those, use the built-in `zlib` module. This is only streams. That being said, Minipass streams to make it fairly easy to use as one-liners: `new zlib.Deflate().end(data).read()` will return the deflate compressed result. This module compresses and decompresses the data as fast as you feed it in. It is synchronous, and runs on the main process thread. Zlib and Brotli operations can be high CPU, but they're very fast, and doing it this way means much less bookkeeping and artificial deferral. Node's built in zlib streams are built on top of `stream.Transform`. They do the maximally safe thing with respect to consistent asynchrony, buffering, and backpressure. See [Minipass](http://npm.im/minipass) for more on the differences between Node.js core streams and Minipass streams, and the convenience methods provided by that class. ## Classes - Deflate - Inflate - Gzip - Gunzip - DeflateRaw - InflateRaw - Unzip - BrotliCompress (Node v10 and higher) - BrotliDecompress (Node v10 and higher) ## USAGE ```js const zlib = require('minizlib') const input = sourceOfCompressedData() const decode = new zlib.BrotliDecompress() const output = whereToWriteTheDecodedData() input.pipe(decode).pipe(output) ``` ## REPRODUCIBLE BUILDS To create reproducible gzip compressed files across different operating systems, set `portable: true` in the options. This causes minizlib to set the `OS` indicator in byte 9 of the extended gzip header to `0xFF` for 'unknown'. <h1 align="center">Enquirer</h1> <p align="center"> <a href="https://npmjs.org/package/enquirer"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/enquirer.svg" alt="version"> </a> <a href="https://travis-ci.org/enquirer/enquirer"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/travis/enquirer/enquirer.svg" alt="travis"> </a> <a href="https://npmjs.org/package/enquirer"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/enquirer.svg" alt="downloads"> </a> </p> <br> <br> <p align="center"> <b>Stylish CLI prompts that are user-friendly, intuitive and easy to create.</b><br> <sub>>_ Prompts should be more like conversations than inquisitions▌</sub> </p> <br> <p align="center"> <sub>(Example shows Enquirer's <a href="#survey-prompt">Survey Prompt</a>)</a></sub> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/survey-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Survey Prompt" width="750"><br> <sub>The terminal in all examples is <a href="https://hyper.is/">Hyper</a>, theme is <a href="https://github.com/jonschlinkert/hyper-monokai-extended">hyper-monokai-extended</a>.</sub><br><br> <a href="#built-in-prompts"><strong>See more prompt examples</strong></a> </p> <br> <br> Created by [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) and [doowb](https://github.com/doowb), Enquirer is fast, easy to use, and lightweight enough for small projects, while also being powerful and customizable enough for the most advanced use cases. * **Fast** - [Loads in ~4ms](#-performance) (that's about _3-4 times faster than a [single frame of a HD movie](http://www.endmemo.com/sconvert/framespersecondframespermillisecond.php) at 60fps_) * **Lightweight** - Only one dependency, the excellent [ansi-colors](https://github.com/doowb/ansi-colors) by [Brian Woodward](https://github.com/doowb). * **Easy to implement** - Uses promises and async/await and sensible defaults to make prompts easy to create and implement. * **Easy to use** - Thrill your users with a better experience! Navigating around input and choices is a breeze. You can even create [quizzes](examples/fun/countdown.js), or [record](examples/fun/record.js) and [playback](examples/fun/play.js) key bindings to aid with tutorials and videos. * **Intuitive** - Keypress combos are available to simplify usage. * **Flexible** - All prompts can be used standalone or chained together. * **Stylish** - Easily override semantic styles and symbols for any part of the prompt. * **Extensible** - Easily create and use custom prompts by extending Enquirer's built-in [prompts](#-prompts). * **Pluggable** - Add advanced features to Enquirer using plugins. * **Validation** - Optionally validate user input with any prompt. * **Well tested** - All prompts are well-tested, and tests are easy to create without having to use brittle, hacky solutions to spy on prompts or "inject" values. * **Examples** - There are numerous [examples](examples) available to help you get started. If you like Enquirer, please consider starring or tweeting about this project to show your support. Thanks! <br> <p align="center"> <b>>_ Ready to start making prompts your users will love? ▌</b><br> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/heartbeat.gif" alt="Enquirer Select Prompt with heartbeat example" width="750"> </p> <br> <br> ## ❯ Getting started Get started with Enquirer, the most powerful and easy-to-use Node.js library for creating interactive CLI prompts. * [Install](#-install) * [Usage](#-usage) * [Enquirer](#-enquirer) * [Prompts](#-prompts) - [Built-in Prompts](#-prompts) - [Custom Prompts](#-custom-prompts) * [Key Bindings](#-key-bindings) * [Options](#-options) * [Release History](#-release-history) * [Performance](#-performance) * [About](#-about) <br> ## ❯ Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install enquirer --save ``` Install with [yarn](https://yarnpkg.com/en/): ```sh $ yarn add enquirer ``` <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/npm-install.gif" alt="Install Enquirer with NPM" width="750"> </p> _(Requires Node.js 8.6 or higher. Please let us know if you need support for an earlier version by creating an [issue](../../issues/new).)_ <br> ## ❯ Usage ### Single prompt The easiest way to get started with enquirer is to pass a [question object](#prompt-options) to the `prompt` method. ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const response = await prompt({ type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }); console.log(response); // { username: 'jonschlinkert' } ``` _(Examples with `await` need to be run inside an `async` function)_ ### Multiple prompts Pass an array of ["question" objects](#prompt-options) to run a series of prompts. ```js const response = await prompt([ { type: 'input', name: 'name', message: 'What is your name?' }, { type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' } ]); console.log(response); // { name: 'Edward Chan', username: 'edwardmchan' } ``` ### Different ways to run enquirer #### 1. By importing the specific `built-in prompt` ```js const { Confirm } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Confirm({ name: 'question', message: 'Did you like enquirer?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)); ``` #### 2. By passing the options to `prompt` ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); prompt({ type: 'confirm', name: 'question', message: 'Did you like enquirer?' }) .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)); ``` **Jump to**: [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) · [Options](#-options) · [Key Bindings](#-key-bindings) <br> ## ❯ Enquirer **Enquirer is a prompt runner** Add Enquirer to your JavaScript project with following line of code. ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); ``` The main export of this library is the `Enquirer` class, which has methods and features designed to simplify running prompts. ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const question = [ { type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }, { type: 'password', name: 'password', message: 'What is your password?' } ]; let answers = await prompt(question); console.log(answers); ``` **Prompts control how values are rendered and returned** Each individual prompt is a class with special features and functionality for rendering the types of values you want to show users in the terminal, and subsequently returning the types of values you need to use in your application. **How can I customize prompts?** Below in this guide you will find information about creating [custom prompts](#-custom-prompts). For now, we'll focus on how to customize an existing prompt. All of the individual [prompt classes](#built-in-prompts) in this library are exposed as static properties on Enquirer. This allows them to be used directly without using `enquirer.prompt()`. Use this approach if you need to modify a prompt instance, or listen for events on the prompt. **Example** ```js const { Input } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Input({ name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Username:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` ### [Enquirer](index.js#L20) Create an instance of `Enquirer`. **Params** * `options` **{Object}**: (optional) Options to use with all prompts. * `answers` **{Object}**: (optional) Answers object to initialize with. **Example** ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); ``` ### [register()](index.js#L42) Register a custom prompt type. **Params** * `type` **{String}** * `fn` **{Function|Prompt}**: `Prompt` class, or a function that returns a `Prompt` class. * `returns` **{Object}**: Returns the Enquirer instance **Example** ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); enquirer.register('customType', require('./custom-prompt')); ``` ### [prompt()](index.js#L78) Prompt function that takes a "question" object or array of question objects, and returns an object with responses from the user. **Params** * `questions` **{Array|Object}**: Options objects for one or more prompts to run. * `returns` **{Promise}**: Promise that returns an "answers" object with the user's responses. **Example** ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); const response = await enquirer.prompt({ type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }); console.log(response); ``` ### [use()](index.js#L160) Use an enquirer plugin. **Params** * `plugin` **{Function}**: Plugin function that takes an instance of Enquirer. * `returns` **{Object}**: Returns the Enquirer instance. **Example** ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); const plugin = enquirer => { // do stuff to enquire instance }; enquirer.use(plugin); ``` ### [Enquirer#prompt](index.js#L210) Prompt function that takes a "question" object or array of question objects, and returns an object with responses from the user. **Params** * `questions` **{Array|Object}**: Options objects for one or more prompts to run. * `returns` **{Promise}**: Promise that returns an "answers" object with the user's responses. **Example** ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const response = await prompt({ type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }); console.log(response); ``` <br> ## ❯ Prompts This section is about Enquirer's prompts: what they look like, how they work, how to run them, available options, and how to customize the prompts or create your own prompt concept. **Getting started with Enquirer's prompts** * [Prompt](#prompt) - The base `Prompt` class used by other prompts - [Prompt Options](#prompt-options) * [Built-in prompts](#built-in-prompts) * [Prompt Types](#prompt-types) - The base `Prompt` class used by other prompts * [Custom prompts](#%E2%9D%AF-custom-prompts) - Enquirer 2.0 introduced the concept of prompt "types", with the goal of making custom prompts easier than ever to create and use. ### Prompt The base `Prompt` class is used to create all other prompts. ```js const { Prompt } = require('enquirer'); class MyCustomPrompt extends Prompt {} ``` See the documentation for [creating custom prompts](#-custom-prompts) to learn more about how this works. #### Prompt Options Each prompt takes an options object (aka "question" object), that implements the following interface: ```js { // required type: string | function, name: string | function, message: string | function | async function, // optional skip: boolean | function | async function, initial: string | function | async function, format: function | async function, result: function | async function, validate: function | async function, } ``` Each property of the options object is described below: | **Property** | **Required?** | **Type** | **Description** | | ------------ | ------------- | ------------------ | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `type` | yes | `string\|function` | Enquirer uses this value to determine the type of prompt to run, but it's optional when prompts are run directly. | | `name` | yes | `string\|function` | Used as the key for the answer on the returned values (answers) object. | | `message` | yes | `string\|function` | The message to display when the prompt is rendered in the terminal. | | `skip` | no | `boolean\|function` | If `true` it will not ask that prompt. | | `initial` | no | `string\|function` | The default value to return if the user does not supply a value. | | `format` | no | `function` | Function to format user input in the terminal. | | `result` | no | `function` | Function to format the final submitted value before it's returned. | | `validate` | no | `function` | Function to validate the submitted value before it's returned. This function may return a boolean or a string. If a string is returned it will be used as the validation error message. | **Example usage** ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const question = { type: 'input', name: 'username', message: 'What is your username?' }; prompt(question) .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` <br> ### Built-in prompts * [AutoComplete Prompt](#autocomplete-prompt) * [BasicAuth Prompt](#basicauth-prompt) * [Confirm Prompt](#confirm-prompt) * [Form Prompt](#form-prompt) * [Input Prompt](#input-prompt) * [Invisible Prompt](#invisible-prompt) * [List Prompt](#list-prompt) * [MultiSelect Prompt](#multiselect-prompt) * [Numeral Prompt](#numeral-prompt) * [Password Prompt](#password-prompt) * [Quiz Prompt](#quiz-prompt) * [Survey Prompt](#survey-prompt) * [Scale Prompt](#scale-prompt) * [Select Prompt](#select-prompt) * [Sort Prompt](#sort-prompt) * [Snippet Prompt](#snippet-prompt) * [Toggle Prompt](#toggle-prompt) ### AutoComplete Prompt Prompt that auto-completes as the user types, and returns the selected value as a string. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/autocomplete-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer AutoComplete Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { AutoComplete } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new AutoComplete({ name: 'flavor', message: 'Pick your favorite flavor', limit: 10, initial: 2, choices: [ 'Almond', 'Apple', 'Banana', 'Blackberry', 'Blueberry', 'Cherry', 'Chocolate', 'Cinnamon', 'Coconut', 'Cranberry', 'Grape', 'Nougat', 'Orange', 'Pear', 'Pineapple', 'Raspberry', 'Strawberry', 'Vanilla', 'Watermelon', 'Wintergreen' ] }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **AutoComplete Options** | Option | Type | Default | Description | | ----------- | ---------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | `highlight` | `function` | `dim` version of primary style | The color to use when "highlighting" characters in the list that match user input. | | `multiple` | `boolean` | `false` | Allow multiple choices to be selected. | | `suggest` | `function` | Greedy match, returns true if choice message contains input string. | Function that filters choices. Takes user input and a choices array, and returns a list of matching choices. | | `initial` | `number` | 0 | Preselected item in the list of choices. | | `footer` | `function` | None | Function that displays [footer text](https://github.com/enquirer/enquirer/blob/6c2819518a1e2ed284242a99a685655fbaabfa28/examples/autocomplete/option-footer.js#L10) | **Related prompts** * [Select](#select-prompt) * [MultiSelect](#multiselect-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### BasicAuth Prompt Prompt that asks for username and password to authenticate the user. The default implementation of `authenticate` function in `BasicAuth` prompt is to compare the username and password with the values supplied while running the prompt. The implementer is expected to override the `authenticate` function with a custom logic such as making an API request to a server to authenticate the username and password entered and expect a token back. <p align="center"> <img src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13731210/61570485-7ffd9c00-aaaa-11e9-857a-d47dc7008284.gif" alt="Enquirer BasicAuth Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { BasicAuth } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new BasicAuth({ name: 'password', message: 'Please enter your password', username: 'rajat-sr', password: '123', showPassword: true }); prompt .run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Confirm Prompt Prompt that returns `true` or `false`. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/confirm-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Confirm Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Confirm } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Confirm({ name: 'question', message: 'Want to answer?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Numeral](#numeral-prompt) * [Password](#password-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Form Prompt Prompt that allows the user to enter and submit multiple values on a single terminal screen. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/form-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Form Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Form } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Form({ name: 'user', message: 'Please provide the following information:', choices: [ { name: 'firstname', message: 'First Name', initial: 'Jon' }, { name: 'lastname', message: 'Last Name', initial: 'Schlinkert' }, { name: 'username', message: 'GitHub username', initial: 'jonschlinkert' } ] }); prompt.run() .then(value => console.log('Answer:', value)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Input Prompt Prompt that takes user input and returns a string. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/input-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Input Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Input } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Input({ message: 'What is your username?', initial: 'jonschlinkert' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.log); ``` You can use [data-store](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/data-store) to store [input history](https://github.com/enquirer/enquirer/blob/master/examples/input/option-history.js) that the user can cycle through (see [source](https://github.com/enquirer/enquirer/blob/8407dc3579123df5e6e20215078e33bb605b0c37/lib/prompts/input.js)). **Related prompts** * [Confirm](#confirm-prompt) * [Numeral](#numeral-prompt) * [Password](#password-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Invisible Prompt Prompt that takes user input, hides it from the terminal, and returns a string. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/invisible-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Invisible Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Invisible } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Invisible({ name: 'secret', message: 'What is your secret?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', { secret: answer })) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Password](#password-prompt) * [Input](#input-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### List Prompt Prompt that returns a list of values, created by splitting the user input. The default split character is `,` with optional trailing whitespace. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/list-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer List Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { List } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new List({ name: 'keywords', message: 'Type comma-separated keywords' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Sort](#sort-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### MultiSelect Prompt Prompt that allows the user to select multiple items from a list of options. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/multiselect-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer MultiSelect Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { MultiSelect } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new MultiSelect({ name: 'value', message: 'Pick your favorite colors', limit: 7, choices: [ { name: 'aqua', value: '#00ffff' }, { name: 'black', value: '#000000' }, { name: 'blue', value: '#0000ff' }, { name: 'fuchsia', value: '#ff00ff' }, { name: 'gray', value: '#808080' }, { name: 'green', value: '#008000' }, { name: 'lime', value: '#00ff00' }, { name: 'maroon', value: '#800000' }, { name: 'navy', value: '#000080' }, { name: 'olive', value: '#808000' }, { name: 'purple', value: '#800080' }, { name: 'red', value: '#ff0000' }, { name: 'silver', value: '#c0c0c0' }, { name: 'teal', value: '#008080' }, { name: 'white', value: '#ffffff' }, { name: 'yellow', value: '#ffff00' } ] }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); // Answer: ['aqua', 'blue', 'fuchsia'] ``` **Example key-value pairs** Optionally, pass a `result` function and use the `.map` method to return an object of key-value pairs of the selected names and values: [example](./examples/multiselect/option-result.js) ```js const { MultiSelect } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new MultiSelect({ name: 'value', message: 'Pick your favorite colors', limit: 7, choices: [ { name: 'aqua', value: '#00ffff' }, { name: 'black', value: '#000000' }, { name: 'blue', value: '#0000ff' }, { name: 'fuchsia', value: '#ff00ff' }, { name: 'gray', value: '#808080' }, { name: 'green', value: '#008000' }, { name: 'lime', value: '#00ff00' }, { name: 'maroon', value: '#800000' }, { name: 'navy', value: '#000080' }, { name: 'olive', value: '#808000' }, { name: 'purple', value: '#800080' }, { name: 'red', value: '#ff0000' }, { name: 'silver', value: '#c0c0c0' }, { name: 'teal', value: '#008080' }, { name: 'white', value: '#ffffff' }, { name: 'yellow', value: '#ffff00' } ], result(names) { return this.map(names); } }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); // Answer: { aqua: '#00ffff', blue: '#0000ff', fuchsia: '#ff00ff' } ``` **Related prompts** * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Numeral Prompt Prompt that takes a number as input. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/numeral-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Numeral Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { NumberPrompt } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new NumberPrompt({ name: 'number', message: 'Please enter a number' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Confirm](#confirm-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Password Prompt Prompt that takes user input and masks it in the terminal. Also see the [invisible prompt](#invisible-prompt) <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/password-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Password Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Password } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Password({ name: 'password', message: 'What is your password?' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Invisible](#invisible-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Quiz Prompt Prompt that allows the user to play multiple-choice quiz questions. <p align="center"> <img src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13731210/61567561-891d4780-aa6f-11e9-9b09-3d504abd24ed.gif" alt="Enquirer Quiz Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Quiz } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Quiz({ name: 'countries', message: 'How many countries are there in the world?', choices: ['165', '175', '185', '195', '205'], correctChoice: 3 }); prompt .run() .then(answer => { if (answer.correct) { console.log('Correct!'); } else { console.log(`Wrong! Correct answer is ${answer.correctAnswer}`); } }) .catch(console.error); ``` **Quiz Options** | Option | Type | Required | Description | | ----------- | ---------- | ---------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | `choices` | `array` | Yes | The list of possible answers to the quiz question. | | `correctChoice`| `number` | Yes | Index of the correct choice from the `choices` array. | **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Survey Prompt Prompt that allows the user to provide feedback for a list of questions. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/survey-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Survey Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Survey } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Survey({ name: 'experience', message: 'Please rate your experience', scale: [ { name: '1', message: 'Strongly Disagree' }, { name: '2', message: 'Disagree' }, { name: '3', message: 'Neutral' }, { name: '4', message: 'Agree' }, { name: '5', message: 'Strongly Agree' } ], margin: [0, 0, 2, 1], choices: [ { name: 'interface', message: 'The website has a friendly interface.' }, { name: 'navigation', message: 'The website is easy to navigate.' }, { name: 'images', message: 'The website usually has good images.' }, { name: 'upload', message: 'The website makes it easy to upload images.' }, { name: 'colors', message: 'The website has a pleasing color palette.' } ] }); prompt.run() .then(value => console.log('ANSWERS:', value)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Scale](#scale-prompt) * [Snippet](#snippet-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) *** ### Scale Prompt A more compact version of the [Survey prompt](#survey-prompt), the Scale prompt allows the user to quickly provide feedback using a [Likert Scale](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Likert_scale). <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/scale-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Scale Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Scale } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Scale({ name: 'experience', message: 'Please rate your experience', scale: [ { name: '1', message: 'Strongly Disagree' }, { name: '2', message: 'Disagree' }, { name: '3', message: 'Neutral' }, { name: '4', message: 'Agree' }, { name: '5', message: 'Strongly Agree' } ], margin: [0, 0, 2, 1], choices: [ { name: 'interface', message: 'The website has a friendly interface.', initial: 2 }, { name: 'navigation', message: 'The website is easy to navigate.', initial: 2 }, { name: 'images', message: 'The website usually has good images.', initial: 2 }, { name: 'upload', message: 'The website makes it easy to upload images.', initial: 2 }, { name: 'colors', message: 'The website has a pleasing color palette.', initial: 2 } ] }); prompt.run() .then(value => console.log('ANSWERS:', value)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Select Prompt Prompt that allows the user to select from a list of options. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/select-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Select Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Select } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Select({ name: 'color', message: 'Pick a flavor', choices: ['apple', 'grape', 'watermelon', 'cherry', 'orange'] }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) * [MultiSelect](#multiselect-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Sort Prompt Prompt that allows the user to sort items in a list. **Example** In this [example](https://github.com/enquirer/enquirer/raw/master/examples/sort/prompt.js), custom styling is applied to the returned values to make it easier to see what's happening. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/sort-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Sort Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const colors = require('ansi-colors'); const { Sort } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Sort({ name: 'colors', message: 'Sort the colors in order of preference', hint: 'Top is best, bottom is worst', numbered: true, choices: ['red', 'white', 'green', 'cyan', 'yellow'].map(n => ({ name: n, message: colors[n](n) })) }); prompt.run() .then(function(answer = []) { console.log(answer); console.log('Your preferred order of colors is:'); console.log(answer.map(key => colors[key](key)).join('\n')); }) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [List](#list-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Snippet Prompt Prompt that allows the user to replace placeholders in a snippet of code or text. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/snippet-prompt.gif" alt="Prompts" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const semver = require('semver'); const { Snippet } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Snippet({ name: 'username', message: 'Fill out the fields in package.json', required: true, fields: [ { name: 'author_name', message: 'Author Name' }, { name: 'version', validate(value, state, item, index) { if (item && item.name === 'version' && !semver.valid(value)) { return prompt.styles.danger('version should be a valid semver value'); } return true; } } ], template: `{ "name": "\${name}", "description": "\${description}", "version": "\${version}", "homepage": "https://github.com/\${username}/\${name}", "author": "\${author_name} (https://github.com/\${username})", "repository": "\${username}/\${name}", "license": "\${license:ISC}" } ` }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer.result)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Survey](#survey-prompt) * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Toggle Prompt Prompt that allows the user to toggle between two values then returns `true` or `false`. <p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/enquirer/enquirer/master/media/toggle-prompt.gif" alt="Enquirer Toggle Prompt" width="750"> </p> **Example Usage** ```js const { Toggle } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new Toggle({ message: 'Want to answer?', enabled: 'Yep', disabled: 'Nope' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Answer:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Related prompts** * [Confirm](#confirm-prompt) * [Input](#input-prompt) * [Sort](#sort-prompt) **↑ back to:** [Getting Started](#-getting-started) · [Prompts](#-prompts) *** ### Prompt Types There are 5 (soon to be 6!) type classes: * [ArrayPrompt](#arrayprompt) - [Options](#options) - [Properties](#properties) - [Methods](#methods) - [Choices](#choices) - [Defining choices](#defining-choices) - [Choice properties](#choice-properties) - [Related prompts](#related-prompts) * [AuthPrompt](#authprompt) * [BooleanPrompt](#booleanprompt) * DatePrompt (Coming Soon!) * [NumberPrompt](#numberprompt) * [StringPrompt](#stringprompt) Each type is a low-level class that may be used as a starting point for creating higher level prompts. Continue reading to learn how. ### ArrayPrompt The `ArrayPrompt` class is used for creating prompts that display a list of choices in the terminal. For example, Enquirer uses this class as the basis for the [Select](#select) and [Survey](#survey) prompts. #### Options In addition to the [options](#options) available to all prompts, Array prompts also support the following options. | **Option** | **Required?** | **Type** | **Description** | | ----------- | ------------- | --------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `autofocus` | `no` | `string\|number` | The index or name of the choice that should have focus when the prompt loads. Only one choice may have focus at a time. | | | `stdin` | `no` | `stream` | The input stream to use for emitting keypress events. Defaults to `process.stdin`. | | `stdout` | `no` | `stream` | The output stream to use for writing the prompt to the terminal. Defaults to `process.stdout`. | | | #### Properties Array prompts have the following instance properties and getters. | **Property name** | **Type** | **Description** | | ----------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `choices` | `array` | Array of choices that have been normalized from choices passed on the prompt options. | | `cursor` | `number` | Position of the cursor relative to the _user input (string)_. | | `enabled` | `array` | Returns an array of enabled choices. | | `focused` | `array` | Returns the currently selected choice in the visible list of choices. This is similar to the concept of focus in HTML and CSS. Focused choices are always visible (on-screen). When a list of choices is longer than the list of visible choices, and an off-screen choice is _focused_, the list will scroll to the focused choice and re-render. | | `focused` | Gets the currently selected choice. Equivalent to `prompt.choices[prompt.index]`. | | `index` | `number` | Position of the pointer in the _visible list (array) of choices_. | | `limit` | `number` | The number of choices to display on-screen. | | `selected` | `array` | Either a list of enabled choices (when `options.multiple` is true) or the currently focused choice. | | `visible` | `string` | | #### Methods | **Method** | **Description** | | ------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `pointer()` | Returns the visual symbol to use to identify the choice that currently has focus. The `❯` symbol is often used for this. The pointer is not always visible, as with the `autocomplete` prompt. | | `indicator()` | Returns the visual symbol that indicates whether or not a choice is checked/enabled. | | `focus()` | Sets focus on a choice, if it can be focused. | #### Choices Array prompts support the `choices` option, which is the array of choices users will be able to select from when rendered in the terminal. **Type**: `string|object` **Example** ```js const { prompt } = require('enquirer'); const questions = [{ type: 'select', name: 'color', message: 'Favorite color?', initial: 1, choices: [ { name: 'red', message: 'Red', value: '#ff0000' }, //<= choice object { name: 'green', message: 'Green', value: '#00ff00' }, //<= choice object { name: 'blue', message: 'Blue', value: '#0000ff' } //<= choice object ] }]; let answers = await prompt(questions); console.log('Answer:', answers.color); ``` #### Defining choices Whether defined as a string or object, choices are normalized to the following interface: ```js { name: string; message: string | undefined; value: string | undefined; hint: string | undefined; disabled: boolean | string | undefined; } ``` **Example** ```js const question = { name: 'fruit', message: 'Favorite fruit?', choices: ['Apple', 'Orange', 'Raspberry'] }; ``` Normalizes to the following when the prompt is run: ```js const question = { name: 'fruit', message: 'Favorite fruit?', choices: [ { name: 'Apple', message: 'Apple', value: 'Apple' }, { name: 'Orange', message: 'Orange', value: 'Orange' }, { name: 'Raspberry', message: 'Raspberry', value: 'Raspberry' } ] }; ``` #### Choice properties The following properties are supported on `choice` objects. | **Option** | **Type** | **Description** | | ----------- | ----------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `name` | `string` | The unique key to identify a choice | | `message` | `string` | The message to display in the terminal. `name` is used when this is undefined. | | `value` | `string` | Value to associate with the choice. Useful for creating key-value pairs from user choices. `name` is used when this is undefined. | | `choices` | `array` | Array of "child" choices. | | `hint` | `string` | Help message to display next to a choice. | | `role` | `string` | Determines how the choice will be displayed. Currently the only role supported is `separator`. Additional roles may be added in the future (like `heading`, etc). Please create a [feature request] | | `enabled` | `boolean` | Enabled a choice by default. This is only supported when `options.multiple` is true or on prompts that support multiple choices, like [MultiSelect](#-multiselect). | | `disabled` | `boolean\|string` | Disable a choice so that it cannot be selected. This value may either be `true`, `false`, or a message to display. | | `indicator` | `string\|function` | Custom indicator to render for a choice (like a check or radio button). | #### Related prompts * [AutoComplete](#autocomplete-prompt) * [Form](#form-prompt) * [MultiSelect](#multiselect-prompt) * [Select](#select-prompt) * [Survey](#survey-prompt) *** ### AuthPrompt The `AuthPrompt` is used to create prompts to log in user using any authentication method. For example, Enquirer uses this class as the basis for the [BasicAuth Prompt](#basicauth-prompt). You can also find prompt examples in `examples/auth/` folder that utilizes `AuthPrompt` to create OAuth based authentication prompt or a prompt that authenticates using time-based OTP, among others. `AuthPrompt` has a factory function that creates an instance of `AuthPrompt` class and it expects an `authenticate` function, as an argument, which overrides the `authenticate` function of the `AuthPrompt` class. #### Methods | **Method** | **Description** | | ------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `authenticate()` | Contain all the authentication logic. This function should be overridden to implement custom authentication logic. The default `authenticate` function throws an error if no other function is provided. | #### Choices Auth prompt supports the `choices` option, which is the similar to the choices used in [Form Prompt](#form-prompt). **Example** ```js const { AuthPrompt } = require('enquirer'); function authenticate(value, state) { if (value.username === this.options.username && value.password === this.options.password) { return true; } return false; } const CustomAuthPrompt = AuthPrompt.create(authenticate); const prompt = new CustomAuthPrompt({ name: 'password', message: 'Please enter your password', username: 'rajat-sr', password: '1234567', choices: [ { name: 'username', message: 'username' }, { name: 'password', message: 'password' } ] }); prompt .run() .then(answer => console.log('Authenticated?', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` #### Related prompts * [BasicAuth Prompt](#basicauth-prompt) *** ### BooleanPrompt The `BooleanPrompt` class is used for creating prompts that display and return a boolean value. ```js const { BooleanPrompt } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new BooleanPrompt({ header: '========================', message: 'Do you love enquirer?', footer: '========================', }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Selected:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Returns**: `boolean` *** ### NumberPrompt The `NumberPrompt` class is used for creating prompts that display and return a numerical value. ```js const { NumberPrompt } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new NumberPrompt({ header: '************************', message: 'Input the Numbers:', footer: '************************', }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Numbers are:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Returns**: `string|number` (number, or number formatted as a string) *** ### StringPrompt The `StringPrompt` class is used for creating prompts that display and return a string value. ```js const { StringPrompt } = require('enquirer'); const prompt = new StringPrompt({ header: '************************', message: 'Input the String:', footer: '************************' }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('String is:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` **Returns**: `string` <br> ## ❯ Custom prompts With Enquirer 2.0, custom prompts are easier than ever to create and use. **How do I create a custom prompt?** Custom prompts are created by extending either: * Enquirer's `Prompt` class * one of the built-in [prompts](#-prompts), or * low-level [types](#-types). <!-- Example: HaiKarate Custom Prompt --> ```js const { Prompt } = require('enquirer'); class HaiKarate extends Prompt { constructor(options = {}) { super(options); this.value = options.initial || 0; this.cursorHide(); } up() { this.value++; this.render(); } down() { this.value--; this.render(); } render() { this.clear(); // clear previously rendered prompt from the terminal this.write(`${this.state.message}: ${this.value}`); } } // Use the prompt by creating an instance of your custom prompt class. const prompt = new HaiKarate({ message: 'How many sprays do you want?', initial: 10 }); prompt.run() .then(answer => console.log('Sprays:', answer)) .catch(console.error); ``` If you want to be able to specify your prompt by `type` so that it may be used alongside other prompts, you will need to first create an instance of `Enquirer`. ```js const Enquirer = require('enquirer'); const enquirer = new Enquirer(); ``` Then use the `.register()` method to add your custom prompt. ```js enquirer.register('haikarate', HaiKarate); ``` Now you can do the following when defining "questions". ```js let spritzer = require('cologne-drone'); let answers = await enquirer.prompt([ { type: 'haikarate', name: 'cologne', message: 'How many sprays do you need?', initial: 10, async onSubmit(name, value) { await spritzer.activate(value); //<= activate drone return value; } } ]); ``` <br> ## ❯ Key Bindings ### All prompts These key combinations may be used with all prompts. | **command** | **description** | | -------------------------------- | -------------------------------------- | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>c</kbd> | Cancel the prompt. | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>g</kbd> | Reset the prompt to its initial state. | <br> ### Move cursor These combinations may be used on prompts that support user input (eg. [input prompt](#input-prompt), [password prompt](#password-prompt), and [invisible prompt](#invisible-prompt)). | **command** | **description** | | ------------------------------ | ---------------------------------------- | | <kbd>left</kbd> | Move the cursor back one character. | | <kbd>right</kbd> | Move the cursor forward one character. | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>a</kbd> | Move cursor to the start of the line | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>e</kbd> | Move cursor to the end of the line | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>b</kbd> | Move cursor back one character | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>f</kbd> | Move cursor forward one character | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>x</kbd> | Toggle between first and cursor position | <br> ### Edit Input These key combinations may be used on prompts that support user input (eg. [input prompt](#input-prompt), [password prompt](#password-prompt), and [invisible prompt](#invisible-prompt)). | **command** | **description** | | ------------------------------ | ---------------------------------------- | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>a</kbd> | Move cursor to the start of the line | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>e</kbd> | Move cursor to the end of the line | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>b</kbd> | Move cursor back one character | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>f</kbd> | Move cursor forward one character | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>x</kbd> | Toggle between first and cursor position | <br> | **command (Mac)** | **command (Windows)** | **description** | | ----------------------------------- | -------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>delete</kbd> | <kbd>backspace</kbd> | Delete one character to the left. | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>delete</kbd> | <kbd>delete</kbd> | Delete one character to the right. | | <kbd>option</kbd> + <kbd>up</kbd> | <kbd>alt</kbd> + <kbd>up</kbd> | Scroll to the previous item in history ([Input prompt](#input-prompt) only, when [history is enabled](examples/input/option-history.js)). | | <kbd>option</kbd> + <kbd>down</kbd> | <kbd>alt</kbd> + <kbd>down</kbd> | Scroll to the next item in history ([Input prompt](#input-prompt) only, when [history is enabled](examples/input/option-history.js)). | ### Select choices These key combinations may be used on prompts that support _multiple_ choices, such as the [multiselect prompt](#multiselect-prompt), or the [select prompt](#select-prompt) when the `multiple` options is true. | **command** | **description** | | ----------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>space</kbd> | Toggle the currently selected choice when `options.multiple` is true. | | <kbd>number</kbd> | Move the pointer to the choice at the given index. Also toggles the selected choice when `options.multiple` is true. | | <kbd>a</kbd> | Toggle all choices to be enabled or disabled. | | <kbd>i</kbd> | Invert the current selection of choices. | | <kbd>g</kbd> | Toggle the current choice group. | <br> ### Hide/show choices | **command** | **description** | | ------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>up</kbd> | Decrease the number of visible choices by one. | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>down</kbd> | Increase the number of visible choices by one. | <br> ### Move/lock Pointer | **command** | **description** | | ---------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>number</kbd> | Move the pointer to the choice at the given index. Also toggles the selected choice when `options.multiple` is true. | | <kbd>up</kbd> | Move the pointer up. | | <kbd>down</kbd> | Move the pointer down. | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>a</kbd> | Move the pointer to the first _visible_ choice. | | <kbd>ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>e</kbd> | Move the pointer to the last _visible_ choice. | | <kbd>shift</kbd> + <kbd>up</kbd> | Scroll up one choice without changing pointer position (locks the pointer while scrolling). | | <kbd>shift</kbd> + <kbd>down</kbd> | Scroll down one choice without changing pointer position (locks the pointer while scrolling). | <br> | **command (Mac)** | **command (Windows)** | **description** | | -------------------------------- | --------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------- | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>left</kbd> | <kbd>home</kbd> | Move the pointer to the first choice in the choices array. | | <kbd>fn</kbd> + <kbd>right</kbd> | <kbd>end</kbd> | Move the pointer to the last choice in the choices array. | <br> ## ❯ Release History Please see [CHANGELOG.md](CHANGELOG.md). ## ❯ Performance ### System specs MacBook Pro, Intel Core i7, 2.5 GHz, 16 GB. ### Load time Time it takes for the module to load the first time (average of 3 runs): ``` enquirer: 4.013ms inquirer: 286.717ms ``` <br> ## ❯ About <details> <summary><strong>Contributing</strong></summary> Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). ### Todo We're currently working on documentation for the following items. Please star and watch the repository for updates! * [ ] Customizing symbols * [ ] Customizing styles (palette) * [ ] Customizing rendered input * [ ] Customizing returned values * [ ] Customizing key bindings * [ ] Question validation * [ ] Choice validation * [ ] Skipping questions * [ ] Async choices * [ ] Async timers: loaders, spinners and other animations * [ ] Links to examples </details> <details> <summary><strong>Running Tests</strong></summary> Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command: ```sh $ npm install && npm test ``` ```sh $ yarn && yarn test ``` </details> <details> <summary><strong>Building docs</strong></summary> _(This project's readme.md is generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the [.verb.md](.verb.md) readme template.)_ To generate the readme, run the following command: ```sh $ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb ``` </details> #### Contributors | **Commits** | **Contributor** | | --- | --- | | 283 | [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) | | 82 | [doowb](https://github.com/doowb) | | 32 | [rajat-sr](https://github.com/rajat-sr) | | 20 | [318097](https://github.com/318097) | | 15 | [g-plane](https://github.com/g-plane) | | 12 | [pixelass](https://github.com/pixelass) | | 5 | [adityavyas611](https://github.com/adityavyas611) | | 5 | [satotake](https://github.com/satotake) | | 3 | [tunnckoCore](https://github.com/tunnckoCore) | | 3 | [Ovyerus](https://github.com/Ovyerus) | | 3 | [sw-yx](https://github.com/sw-yx) | | 2 | [DanielRuf](https://github.com/DanielRuf) | | 2 | [GabeL7r](https://github.com/GabeL7r) | | 1 | [AlCalzone](https://github.com/AlCalzone) | | 1 | [hipstersmoothie](https://github.com/hipstersmoothie) | | 1 | [danieldelcore](https://github.com/danieldelcore) | | 1 | [ImgBotApp](https://github.com/ImgBotApp) | | 1 | [jsonkao](https://github.com/jsonkao) | | 1 | [knpwrs](https://github.com/knpwrs) | | 1 | [yeskunall](https://github.com/yeskunall) | | 1 | [mischah](https://github.com/mischah) | | 1 | [renarsvilnis](https://github.com/renarsvilnis) | | 1 | [sbugert](https://github.com/sbugert) | | 1 | [stephencweiss](https://github.com/stephencweiss) | | 1 | [skellock](https://github.com/skellock) | | 1 | [whxaxes](https://github.com/whxaxes) | #### Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [GitHub Profile](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [Twitter Profile](https://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) * [LinkedIn Profile](https://linkedin.com/in/jonschlinkert) #### Credit Thanks to [derhuerst](https://github.com/derhuerst), creator of prompt libraries such as [prompt-skeleton](https://github.com/derhuerst/prompt-skeleton), which influenced some of the concepts we used in our prompts. #### License Copyright © 2018-present, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE). argparse ======== [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/nodeca/argparse.svg?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/nodeca/argparse) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/argparse.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/argparse) CLI arguments parser for node.js. Javascript port of python's [argparse](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html) module (original version 3.2). That's a full port, except some very rare options, recorded in issue tracker. **NB. Difference with original.** - Method names changed to camelCase. See [generated docs](http://nodeca.github.com/argparse/). - Use `defaultValue` instead of `default`. - Use `argparse.Const.REMAINDER` instead of `argparse.REMAINDER`, and similarly for constant values `OPTIONAL`, `ZERO_OR_MORE`, and `ONE_OR_MORE` (aliases for `nargs` values `'?'`, `'*'`, `'+'`, respectively), and `SUPPRESS`. Example ======= test.js file: ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node 'use strict'; var ArgumentParser = require('../lib/argparse').ArgumentParser; var parser = new ArgumentParser({ version: '0.0.1', addHelp:true, description: 'Argparse example' }); parser.addArgument( [ '-f', '--foo' ], { help: 'foo bar' } ); parser.addArgument( [ '-b', '--bar' ], { help: 'bar foo' } ); parser.addArgument( '--baz', { help: 'baz bar' } ); var args = parser.parseArgs(); console.dir(args); ``` Display help: ``` $ ./test.js -h usage: example.js [-h] [-v] [-f FOO] [-b BAR] [--baz BAZ] Argparse example Optional arguments: -h, --help Show this help message and exit. -v, --version Show program's version number and exit. -f FOO, --foo FOO foo bar -b BAR, --bar BAR bar foo --baz BAZ baz bar ``` Parse arguments: ``` $ ./test.js -f=3 --bar=4 --baz 5 { foo: '3', bar: '4', baz: '5' } ``` More [examples](https://github.com/nodeca/argparse/tree/master/examples). ArgumentParser objects ====================== ``` new ArgumentParser({parameters hash}); ``` Creates a new ArgumentParser object. **Supported params:** - ```description``` - Text to display before the argument help. - ```epilog``` - Text to display after the argument help. - ```addHelp``` - Add a -h/–help option to the parser. (default: true) - ```argumentDefault``` - Set the global default value for arguments. (default: null) - ```parents``` - A list of ArgumentParser objects whose arguments should also be included. - ```prefixChars``` - The set of characters that prefix optional arguments. (default: ‘-‘) - ```formatterClass``` - A class for customizing the help output. - ```prog``` - The name of the program (default: `path.basename(process.argv[1])`) - ```usage``` - The string describing the program usage (default: generated) - ```conflictHandler``` - Usually unnecessary, defines strategy for resolving conflicting optionals. **Not supported yet** - ```fromfilePrefixChars``` - The set of characters that prefix files from which additional arguments should be read. Details in [original ArgumentParser guide](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#argumentparser-objects) addArgument() method ==================== ``` ArgumentParser.addArgument(name or flag or [name] or [flags...], {options}) ``` Defines how a single command-line argument should be parsed. - ```name or flag or [name] or [flags...]``` - Either a positional name (e.g., `'foo'`), a single option (e.g., `'-f'` or `'--foo'`), an array of a single positional name (e.g., `['foo']`), or an array of options (e.g., `['-f', '--foo']`). Options: - ```action``` - The basic type of action to be taken when this argument is encountered at the command line. - ```nargs```- The number of command-line arguments that should be consumed. - ```constant``` - A constant value required by some action and nargs selections. - ```defaultValue``` - The value produced if the argument is absent from the command line. - ```type``` - The type to which the command-line argument should be converted. - ```choices``` - A container of the allowable values for the argument. - ```required``` - Whether or not the command-line option may be omitted (optionals only). - ```help``` - A brief description of what the argument does. - ```metavar``` - A name for the argument in usage messages. - ```dest``` - The name of the attribute to be added to the object returned by parseArgs(). Details in [original add_argument guide](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#the-add-argument-method) Action (some details) ================ ArgumentParser objects associate command-line arguments with actions. These actions can do just about anything with the command-line arguments associated with them, though most actions simply add an attribute to the object returned by parseArgs(). The action keyword argument specifies how the command-line arguments should be handled. The supported actions are: - ```store``` - Just stores the argument’s value. This is the default action. - ```storeConst``` - Stores value, specified by the const keyword argument. (Note that the const keyword argument defaults to the rather unhelpful None.) The 'storeConst' action is most commonly used with optional arguments, that specify some sort of flag. - ```storeTrue``` and ```storeFalse``` - Stores values True and False respectively. These are special cases of 'storeConst'. - ```append``` - Stores a list, and appends each argument value to the list. This is useful to allow an option to be specified multiple times. - ```appendConst``` - Stores a list, and appends value, specified by the const keyword argument to the list. (Note, that the const keyword argument defaults is None.) The 'appendConst' action is typically used when multiple arguments need to store constants to the same list. - ```count``` - Counts the number of times a keyword argument occurs. For example, used for increasing verbosity levels. - ```help``` - Prints a complete help message for all the options in the current parser and then exits. By default a help action is automatically added to the parser. See ArgumentParser for details of how the output is created. - ```version``` - Prints version information and exit. Expects a `version=` keyword argument in the addArgument() call. Details in [original action guide](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#action) Sub-commands ============ ArgumentParser.addSubparsers() Many programs split their functionality into a number of sub-commands, for example, the svn program can invoke sub-commands like `svn checkout`, `svn update`, and `svn commit`. Splitting up functionality this way can be a particularly good idea when a program performs several different functions which require different kinds of command-line arguments. `ArgumentParser` supports creation of such sub-commands with `addSubparsers()` method. The `addSubparsers()` method is normally called with no arguments and returns an special action object. This object has a single method `addParser()`, which takes a command name and any `ArgumentParser` constructor arguments, and returns an `ArgumentParser` object that can be modified as usual. Example: sub_commands.js ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node 'use strict'; var ArgumentParser = require('../lib/argparse').ArgumentParser; var parser = new ArgumentParser({ version: '0.0.1', addHelp:true, description: 'Argparse examples: sub-commands', }); var subparsers = parser.addSubparsers({ title:'subcommands', dest:"subcommand_name" }); var bar = subparsers.addParser('c1', {addHelp:true}); bar.addArgument( [ '-f', '--foo' ], { action: 'store', help: 'foo3 bar3' } ); var bar = subparsers.addParser( 'c2', {aliases:['co'], addHelp:true} ); bar.addArgument( [ '-b', '--bar' ], { action: 'store', type: 'int', help: 'foo3 bar3' } ); var args = parser.parseArgs(); console.dir(args); ``` Details in [original sub-commands guide](http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#sub-commands) Contributors ============ - [Eugene Shkuropat](https://github.com/shkuropat) - [Paul Jacobson](https://github.com/hpaulj) [others](https://github.com/nodeca/argparse/graphs/contributors) License ======= Copyright (c) 2012 [Vitaly Puzrin](https://github.com/puzrin). Released under the MIT license. See [LICENSE](https://github.com/nodeca/argparse/blob/master/LICENSE) for details. # AssemblyScript Loader A convenient loader for [AssemblyScript](https://assemblyscript.org) modules. Demangles module exports to a friendly object structure compatible with TypeScript definitions and provides useful utility to read/write data from/to memory. [Documentation](https://assemblyscript.org/loader.html) Overview [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/lydell/js-tokens.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/lydell/js-tokens) ======== A regex that tokenizes JavaScript. ```js var jsTokens = require("js-tokens").default var jsString = "var foo=opts.foo;\n..." jsString.match(jsTokens) // ["var", " ", "foo", "=", "opts", ".", "foo", ";", "\n", ...] ``` Installation ============ `npm install js-tokens` ```js import jsTokens from "js-tokens" // or: var jsTokens = require("js-tokens").default ``` Usage ===== ### `jsTokens` ### A regex with the `g` flag that matches JavaScript tokens. The regex _always_ matches, even invalid JavaScript and the empty string. The next match is always directly after the previous. ### `var token = matchToToken(match)` ### ```js import {matchToToken} from "js-tokens" // or: var matchToToken = require("js-tokens").matchToToken ``` Takes a `match` returned by `jsTokens.exec(string)`, and returns a `{type: String, value: String}` object. The following types are available: - string - comment - regex - number - name - punctuator - whitespace - invalid Multi-line comments and strings also have a `closed` property indicating if the token was closed or not (see below). Comments and strings both come in several flavors. To distinguish them, check if the token starts with `//`, `/*`, `'`, `"` or `` ` ``. Names are ECMAScript IdentifierNames, that is, including both identifiers and keywords. You may use [is-keyword-js] to tell them apart. Whitespace includes both line terminators and other whitespace. [is-keyword-js]: https://github.com/crissdev/is-keyword-js ECMAScript support ================== The intention is to always support the latest ECMAScript version whose feature set has been finalized. If adding support for a newer version requires changes, a new version with a major verion bump will be released. Currently, ECMAScript 2018 is supported. Invalid code handling ===================== Unterminated strings are still matched as strings. JavaScript strings cannot contain (unescaped) newlines, so unterminated strings simply end at the end of the line. Unterminated template strings can contain unescaped newlines, though, so they go on to the end of input. Unterminated multi-line comments are also still matched as comments. They simply go on to the end of the input. Unterminated regex literals are likely matched as division and whatever is inside the regex. Invalid ASCII characters have their own capturing group. Invalid non-ASCII characters are treated as names, to simplify the matching of names (except unicode spaces which are treated as whitespace). Note: See also the [ES2018](#es2018) section. Regex literals may contain invalid regex syntax. They are still matched as regex literals. They may also contain repeated regex flags, to keep the regex simple. Strings may contain invalid escape sequences. Limitations =========== Tokenizing JavaScript using regexes—in fact, _one single regex_—won’t be perfect. But that’s not the point either. You may compare jsTokens with [esprima] by using `esprima-compare.js`. See `npm run esprima-compare`! [esprima]: http://esprima.org/ ### Template string interpolation ### Template strings are matched as single tokens, from the starting `` ` `` to the ending `` ` ``, including interpolations (whose tokens are not matched individually). Matching template string interpolations requires recursive balancing of `{` and `}`—something that JavaScript regexes cannot do. Only one level of nesting is supported. ### Division and regex literals collision ### Consider this example: ```js var g = 9.82 var number = bar / 2/g var regex = / 2/g ``` A human can easily understand that in the `number` line we’re dealing with division, and in the `regex` line we’re dealing with a regex literal. How come? Because humans can look at the whole code to put the `/` characters in context. A JavaScript regex cannot. It only sees forwards. (Well, ES2018 regexes can also look backwards. See the [ES2018](#es2018) section). When the `jsTokens` regex scans throught the above, it will see the following at the end of both the `number` and `regex` rows: ```js / 2/g ``` It is then impossible to know if that is a regex literal, or part of an expression dealing with division. Here is a similar case: ```js foo /= 2/g foo(/= 2/g) ``` The first line divides the `foo` variable with `2/g`. The second line calls the `foo` function with the regex literal `/= 2/g`. Again, since `jsTokens` only sees forwards, it cannot tell the two cases apart. There are some cases where we _can_ tell division and regex literals apart, though. First off, we have the simple cases where there’s only one slash in the line: ```js var foo = 2/g foo /= 2 ``` Regex literals cannot contain newlines, so the above cases are correctly identified as division. Things are only problematic when there are more than one non-comment slash in a single line. Secondly, not every character is a valid regex flag. ```js var number = bar / 2/e ``` The above example is also correctly identified as division, because `e` is not a valid regex flag. I initially wanted to future-proof by allowing `[a-zA-Z]*` (any letter) as flags, but it is not worth it since it increases the amount of ambigous cases. So only the standard `g`, `m`, `i`, `y` and `u` flags are allowed. This means that the above example will be identified as division as long as you don’t rename the `e` variable to some permutation of `gmiyus` 1 to 6 characters long. Lastly, we can look _forward_ for information. - If the token following what looks like a regex literal is not valid after a regex literal, but is valid in a division expression, then the regex literal is treated as division instead. For example, a flagless regex cannot be followed by a string, number or name, but all of those three can be the denominator of a division. - Generally, if what looks like a regex literal is followed by an operator, the regex literal is treated as division instead. This is because regexes are seldomly used with operators (such as `+`, `*`, `&&` and `==`), but division could likely be part of such an expression. Please consult the regex source and the test cases for precise information on when regex or division is matched (should you need to know). In short, you could sum it up as: If the end of a statement looks like a regex literal (even if it isn’t), it will be treated as one. Otherwise it should work as expected (if you write sane code). ### ES2018 ### ES2018 added some nice regex improvements to the language. - [Unicode property escapes] should allow telling names and invalid non-ASCII characters apart without blowing up the regex size. - [Lookbehind assertions] should allow matching telling division and regex literals apart in more cases. - [Named capture groups] might simplify some things. These things would be nice to do, but are not critical. They probably have to wait until the oldest maintained Node.js LTS release supports those features. [Unicode property escapes]: http://2ality.com/2017/07/regexp-unicode-property-escapes.html [Lookbehind assertions]: http://2ality.com/2017/05/regexp-lookbehind-assertions.html [Named capture groups]: http://2ality.com/2017/05/regexp-named-capture-groups.html License ======= [MIT](LICENSE). # axios [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/axios) [![build status](https://img.shields.io/travis/axios/axios/master.svg?style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/axios/axios) [![code coverage](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/mzabriskie/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://coveralls.io/r/mzabriskie/axios) [![install size](https://packagephobia.now.sh/badge?p=axios)](https://packagephobia.now.sh/result?p=axios) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](http://npm-stat.com/charts.html?package=axios) [![gitter chat](https://img.shields.io/gitter/room/mzabriskie/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://gitter.im/mzabriskie/axios) [![code helpers](https://www.codetriage.com/axios/axios/badges/users.svg)](https://www.codetriage.com/axios/axios) Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js ## Features - Make [XMLHttpRequests](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/XMLHttpRequest) from the browser - Make [http](http://nodejs.org/api/http.html) requests from node.js - Supports the [Promise](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise) API - Intercept request and response - Transform request and response data - Cancel requests - Automatic transforms for JSON data - Client side support for protecting against [XSRF](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery) ## Browser Support ![Chrome](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/chrome/chrome_48x48.png) | ![Firefox](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/firefox/firefox_48x48.png) | ![Safari](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/safari/safari_48x48.png) | ![Opera](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/opera/opera_48x48.png) | ![Edge](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/edge/edge_48x48.png) | ![IE](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/archive/internet-explorer_9-11/internet-explorer_9-11_48x48.png) | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | 11 ✔ | [![Browser Matrix](https://saucelabs.com/open_sauce/build_matrix/axios.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/axios) ## Installing Using npm: ```bash $ npm install axios ``` Using bower: ```bash $ bower install axios ``` Using yarn: ```bash $ yarn add axios ``` Using cdn: ```html <script src="https://unpkg.com/axios/dist/axios.min.js"></script> ``` ## Example ### note: CommonJS usage In order to gain the TypeScript typings (for intellisense / autocomplete) while using CommonJS imports with `require()` use the following approach: ```js const axios = require('axios').default; // axios.<method> will now provide autocomplete and parameter typings ``` Performing a `GET` request ```js const axios = require('axios'); // Make a request for a user with a given ID axios.get('/user?ID=12345') .then(function (response) { // handle success console.log(response); }) .catch(function (error) { // handle error console.log(error); }) .finally(function () { // always executed }); // Optionally the request above could also be done as axios.get('/user', { params: { ID: 12345 } }) .then(function (response) { console.log(response); }) .catch(function (error) { console.log(error); }) .finally(function () { // always executed }); // Want to use async/await? Add the `async` keyword to your outer function/method. async function getUser() { try { const response = await axios.get('/user?ID=12345'); console.log(response); } catch (error) { console.error(error); } } ``` > **NOTE:** `async/await` is part of ECMAScript 2017 and is not supported in Internet > Explorer and older browsers, so use with caution. Performing a `POST` request ```js axios.post('/user', { firstName: 'Fred', lastName: 'Flintstone' }) .then(function (response) { console.log(response); }) .catch(function (error) { console.log(error); }); ``` Performing multiple concurrent requests ```js function getUserAccount() { return axios.get('/user/12345'); } function getUserPermissions() { return axios.get('/user/12345/permissions'); } axios.all([getUserAccount(), getUserPermissions()]) .then(axios.spread(function (acct, perms) { // Both requests are now complete })); ``` ## axios API Requests can be made by passing the relevant config to `axios`. ##### axios(config) ```js // Send a POST request axios({ method: 'post', url: '/user/12345', data: { firstName: 'Fred', lastName: 'Flintstone' } }); ``` ```js // GET request for remote image axios({ method: 'get', url: 'http://bit.ly/2mTM3nY', responseType: 'stream' }) .then(function (response) { response.data.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('ada_lovelace.jpg')) }); ``` ##### axios(url[, config]) ```js // Send a GET request (default method) axios('/user/12345'); ``` ### Request method aliases For convenience aliases have been provided for all supported request methods. ##### axios.request(config) ##### axios.get(url[, config]) ##### axios.delete(url[, config]) ##### axios.head(url[, config]) ##### axios.options(url[, config]) ##### axios.post(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios.put(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios.patch(url[, data[, config]]) ###### NOTE When using the alias methods `url`, `method`, and `data` properties don't need to be specified in config. ### Concurrency Helper functions for dealing with concurrent requests. ##### axios.all(iterable) ##### axios.spread(callback) ### Creating an instance You can create a new instance of axios with a custom config. ##### axios.create([config]) ```js const instance = axios.create({ baseURL: 'https://some-domain.com/api/', timeout: 1000, headers: {'X-Custom-Header': 'foobar'} }); ``` ### Instance methods The available instance methods are listed below. The specified config will be merged with the instance config. ##### axios#request(config) ##### axios#get(url[, config]) ##### axios#delete(url[, config]) ##### axios#head(url[, config]) ##### axios#options(url[, config]) ##### axios#post(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios#put(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios#patch(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios#getUri([config]) ## Request Config These are the available config options for making requests. Only the `url` is required. Requests will default to `GET` if `method` is not specified. ```js { // `url` is the server URL that will be used for the request url: '/user', // `method` is the request method to be used when making the request method: 'get', // default // `baseURL` will be prepended to `url` unless `url` is absolute. // It can be convenient to set `baseURL` for an instance of axios to pass relative URLs // to methods of that instance. baseURL: 'https://some-domain.com/api/', // `transformRequest` allows changes to the request data before it is sent to the server // This is only applicable for request methods 'PUT', 'POST', 'PATCH' and 'DELETE' // The last function in the array must return a string or an instance of Buffer, ArrayBuffer, // FormData or Stream // You may modify the headers object. transformRequest: [function (data, headers) { // Do whatever you want to transform the data return data; }], // `transformResponse` allows changes to the response data to be made before // it is passed to then/catch transformResponse: [function (data) { // Do whatever you want to transform the data return data; }], // `headers` are custom headers to be sent headers: {'X-Requested-With': 'XMLHttpRequest'}, // `params` are the URL parameters to be sent with the request // Must be a plain object or a URLSearchParams object params: { ID: 12345 }, // `paramsSerializer` is an optional function in charge of serializing `params` // (e.g. https://www.npmjs.com/package/qs, http://api.jquery.com/jquery.param/) paramsSerializer: function (params) { return Qs.stringify(params, {arrayFormat: 'brackets'}) }, // `data` is the data to be sent as the request body // Only applicable for request methods 'PUT', 'POST', and 'PATCH' // When no `transformRequest` is set, must be of one of the following types: // - string, plain object, ArrayBuffer, ArrayBufferView, URLSearchParams // - Browser only: FormData, File, Blob // - Node only: Stream, Buffer data: { firstName: 'Fred' }, // syntax alternative to send data into the body // method post // only the value is sent, not the key data: 'Country=Brasil&City=Belo Horizonte', // `timeout` specifies the number of milliseconds before the request times out. // If the request takes longer than `timeout`, the request will be aborted. timeout: 1000, // default is `0` (no timeout) // `withCredentials` indicates whether or not cross-site Access-Control requests // should be made using credentials withCredentials: false, // default // `adapter` allows custom handling of requests which makes testing easier. // Return a promise and supply a valid response (see lib/adapters/README.md). adapter: function (config) { /* ... */ }, // `auth` indicates that HTTP Basic auth should be used, and supplies credentials. // This will set an `Authorization` header, overwriting any existing // `Authorization` custom headers you have set using `headers`. // Please note that only HTTP Basic auth is configurable through this parameter. // For Bearer tokens and such, use `Authorization` custom headers instead. auth: { username: 'janedoe', password: 's00pers3cret' }, // `responseType` indicates the type of data that the server will respond with // options are: 'arraybuffer', 'document', 'json', 'text', 'stream' // browser only: 'blob' responseType: 'json', // default // `responseEncoding` indicates encoding to use for decoding responses // Note: Ignored for `responseType` of 'stream' or client-side requests responseEncoding: 'utf8', // default // `xsrfCookieName` is the name of the cookie to use as a value for xsrf token xsrfCookieName: 'XSRF-TOKEN', // default // `xsrfHeaderName` is the name of the http header that carries the xsrf token value xsrfHeaderName: 'X-XSRF-TOKEN', // default // `onUploadProgress` allows handling of progress events for uploads onUploadProgress: function (progressEvent) { // Do whatever you want with the native progress event }, // `onDownloadProgress` allows handling of progress events for downloads onDownloadProgress: function (progressEvent) { // Do whatever you want with the native progress event }, // `maxContentLength` defines the max size of the http response content in bytes allowed maxContentLength: 2000, // `validateStatus` defines whether to resolve or reject the promise for a given // HTTP response status code. If `validateStatus` returns `true` (or is set to `null` // or `undefined`), the promise will be resolved; otherwise, the promise will be // rejected. validateStatus: function (status) { return status >= 200 && status < 300; // default }, // `maxRedirects` defines the maximum number of redirects to follow in node.js. // If set to 0, no redirects will be followed. maxRedirects: 5, // default // `socketPath` defines a UNIX Socket to be used in node.js. // e.g. '/var/run/docker.sock' to send requests to the docker daemon. // Only either `socketPath` or `proxy` can be specified. // If both are specified, `socketPath` is used. socketPath: null, // default // `httpAgent` and `httpsAgent` define a custom agent to be used when performing http // and https requests, respectively, in node.js. This allows options to be added like // `keepAlive` that are not enabled by default. httpAgent: new http.Agent({ keepAlive: true }), httpsAgent: new https.Agent({ keepAlive: true }), // 'proxy' defines the hostname and port of the proxy server. // You can also define your proxy using the conventional `http_proxy` and // `https_proxy` environment variables. If you are using environment variables // for your proxy configuration, you can also define a `no_proxy` environment // variable as a comma-separated list of domains that should not be proxied. // Use `false` to disable proxies, ignoring environment variables. // `auth` indicates that HTTP Basic auth should be used to connect to the proxy, and // supplies credentials. // This will set an `Proxy-Authorization` header, overwriting any existing // `Proxy-Authorization` custom headers you have set using `headers`. proxy: { host: '127.0.0.1', port: 9000, auth: { username: 'mikeymike', password: 'rapunz3l' } }, // `cancelToken` specifies a cancel token that can be used to cancel the request // (see Cancellation section below for details) cancelToken: new CancelToken(function (cancel) { }) } ``` ## Response Schema The response for a request contains the following information. ```js { // `data` is the response that was provided by the server data: {}, // `status` is the HTTP status code from the server response status: 200, // `statusText` is the HTTP status message from the server response statusText: 'OK', // `headers` the headers that the server responded with // All header names are lower cased headers: {}, // `config` is the config that was provided to `axios` for the request config: {}, // `request` is the request that generated this response // It is the last ClientRequest instance in node.js (in redirects) // and an XMLHttpRequest instance in the browser request: {} } ``` When using `then`, you will receive the response as follows: ```js axios.get('/user/12345') .then(function (response) { console.log(response.data); console.log(response.status); console.log(response.statusText); console.log(response.headers); console.log(response.config); }); ``` When using `catch`, or passing a [rejection callback](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise/then) as second parameter of `then`, the response will be available through the `error` object as explained in the [Handling Errors](#handling-errors) section. ## Config Defaults You can specify config defaults that will be applied to every request. ### Global axios defaults ```js axios.defaults.baseURL = 'https://api.example.com'; axios.defaults.headers.common['Authorization'] = AUTH_TOKEN; axios.defaults.headers.post['Content-Type'] = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'; ``` ### Custom instance defaults ```js // Set config defaults when creating the instance const instance = axios.create({ baseURL: 'https://api.example.com' }); // Alter defaults after instance has been created instance.defaults.headers.common['Authorization'] = AUTH_TOKEN; ``` ### Config order of precedence Config will be merged with an order of precedence. The order is library defaults found in [lib/defaults.js](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/lib/defaults.js#L28), then `defaults` property of the instance, and finally `config` argument for the request. The latter will take precedence over the former. Here's an example. ```js // Create an instance using the config defaults provided by the library // At this point the timeout config value is `0` as is the default for the library const instance = axios.create(); // Override timeout default for the library // Now all requests using this instance will wait 2.5 seconds before timing out instance.defaults.timeout = 2500; // Override timeout for this request as it's known to take a long time instance.get('/longRequest', { timeout: 5000 }); ``` ## Interceptors You can intercept requests or responses before they are handled by `then` or `catch`. ```js // Add a request interceptor axios.interceptors.request.use(function (config) { // Do something before request is sent return config; }, function (error) { // Do something with request error return Promise.reject(error); }); // Add a response interceptor axios.interceptors.response.use(function (response) { // Any status code that lie within the range of 2xx cause this function to trigger // Do something with response data return response; }, function (error) { // Any status codes that falls outside the range of 2xx cause this function to trigger // Do something with response error return Promise.reject(error); }); ``` If you need to remove an interceptor later you can. ```js const myInterceptor = axios.interceptors.request.use(function () {/*...*/}); axios.interceptors.request.eject(myInterceptor); ``` You can add interceptors to a custom instance of axios. ```js const instance = axios.create(); instance.interceptors.request.use(function () {/*...*/}); ``` ## Handling Errors ```js axios.get('/user/12345') .catch(function (error) { if (error.response) { // The request was made and the server responded with a status code // that falls out of the range of 2xx console.log(error.response.data); console.log(error.response.status); console.log(error.response.headers); } else if (error.request) { // The request was made but no response was received // `error.request` is an instance of XMLHttpRequest in the browser and an instance of // http.ClientRequest in node.js console.log(error.request); } else { // Something happened in setting up the request that triggered an Error console.log('Error', error.message); } console.log(error.config); }); ``` Using the `validateStatus` config option, you can define HTTP code(s) that should throw an error. ```js axios.get('/user/12345', { validateStatus: function (status) { return status < 500; // Reject only if the status code is greater than or equal to 500 } }) ``` Using `toJSON` you get an object with more information about the HTTP error. ```js axios.get('/user/12345') .catch(function (error) { console.log(error.toJSON()); }); ``` ## Cancellation You can cancel a request using a *cancel token*. > The axios cancel token API is based on the withdrawn [cancelable promises proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-cancelable-promises). You can create a cancel token using the `CancelToken.source` factory as shown below: ```js const CancelToken = axios.CancelToken; const source = CancelToken.source(); axios.get('/user/12345', { cancelToken: source.token }).catch(function (thrown) { if (axios.isCancel(thrown)) { console.log('Request canceled', thrown.message); } else { // handle error } }); axios.post('/user/12345', { name: 'new name' }, { cancelToken: source.token }) // cancel the request (the message parameter is optional) source.cancel('Operation canceled by the user.'); ``` You can also create a cancel token by passing an executor function to the `CancelToken` constructor: ```js const CancelToken = axios.CancelToken; let cancel; axios.get('/user/12345', { cancelToken: new CancelToken(function executor(c) { // An executor function receives a cancel function as a parameter cancel = c; }) }); // cancel the request cancel(); ``` > Note: you can cancel several requests with the same cancel token. ## Using application/x-www-form-urlencoded format By default, axios serializes JavaScript objects to `JSON`. To send data in the `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` format instead, you can use one of the following options. ### Browser In a browser, you can use the [`URLSearchParams`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URLSearchParams) API as follows: ```js const params = new URLSearchParams(); params.append('param1', 'value1'); params.append('param2', 'value2'); axios.post('/foo', params); ``` > Note that `URLSearchParams` is not supported by all browsers (see [caniuse.com](http://www.caniuse.com/#feat=urlsearchparams)), but there is a [polyfill](https://github.com/WebReflection/url-search-params) available (make sure to polyfill the global environment). Alternatively, you can encode data using the [`qs`](https://github.com/ljharb/qs) library: ```js const qs = require('qs'); axios.post('/foo', qs.stringify({ 'bar': 123 })); ``` Or in another way (ES6), ```js import qs from 'qs'; const data = { 'bar': 123 }; const options = { method: 'POST', headers: { 'content-type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' }, data: qs.stringify(data), url, }; axios(options); ``` ### Node.js In node.js, you can use the [`querystring`](https://nodejs.org/api/querystring.html) module as follows: ```js const querystring = require('querystring'); axios.post('http://something.com/', querystring.stringify({ foo: 'bar' })); ``` You can also use the [`qs`](https://github.com/ljharb/qs) library. ###### NOTE The `qs` library is preferable if you need to stringify nested objects, as the `querystring` method has known issues with that use case (https://github.com/nodejs/node-v0.x-archive/issues/1665). ## Semver Until axios reaches a `1.0` release, breaking changes will be released with a new minor version. For example `0.5.1`, and `0.5.4` will have the same API, but `0.6.0` will have breaking changes. ## Promises axios depends on a native ES6 Promise implementation to be [supported](http://caniuse.com/promises). If your environment doesn't support ES6 Promises, you can [polyfill](https://github.com/jakearchibald/es6-promise). ## TypeScript axios includes [TypeScript](http://typescriptlang.org) definitions. ```typescript import axios from 'axios'; axios.get('/user?ID=12345'); ``` ## Resources * [Changelog](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md) * [Upgrade Guide](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/UPGRADE_GUIDE.md) * [Ecosystem](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/ECOSYSTEM.md) * [Contributing Guide](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) * [Code of Conduct](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md) ## Credits axios is heavily inspired by the [$http service](https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$http) provided in [Angular](https://angularjs.org/). Ultimately axios is an effort to provide a standalone `$http`-like service for use outside of Angular. ## License [MIT](LICENSE) # eslint-utils [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint-utils.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-utils) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint-utils.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/eslint-utils) [![Build Status](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-utils/workflows/CI/badge.svg)](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-utils/actions) [![Coverage Status](https://codecov.io/gh/mysticatea/eslint-utils/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/mysticatea/eslint-utils) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/mysticatea/eslint-utils.svg)](https://david-dm.org/mysticatea/eslint-utils) ## 🏁 Goal This package provides utility functions and classes for make ESLint custom rules. For examples: - [getStaticValue](https://eslint-utils.mysticatea.dev/api/ast-utils.html#getstaticvalue) evaluates static value on AST. - [ReferenceTracker](https://eslint-utils.mysticatea.dev/api/scope-utils.html#referencetracker-class) checks the members of modules/globals as handling assignments and destructuring. ## 📖 Usage See [documentation](https://eslint-utils.mysticatea.dev/). ## 📰 Changelog See [releases](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-utils/releases). ## ❤️ Contributing Welcome contributing! Please use GitHub's Issues/PRs. ### Development Tools - `npm test` runs tests and measures coverage. - `npm run clean` removes the coverage result of `npm test` command. - `npm run coverage` shows the coverage result of the last `npm test` command. - `npm run lint` runs ESLint. - `npm run watch` runs tests on each file change. <img align="right" alt="Ajv logo" width="160" src="https://ajv.js.org/img/ajv.svg"> &nbsp; # Ajv JSON schema validator The fastest JSON validator for Node.js and browser. Supports JSON Schema draft-04/06/07/2019-09/2020-12 ([draft-04 support](https://ajv.js.org/json-schema.html#draft-04) requires ajv-draft-04 package) and JSON Type Definition [RFC8927](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc8927/). [![build](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/workflows/build/badge.svg)](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/actions?query=workflow%3Abuild) [![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/ajv.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/ajv.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ajv) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/ajv-validator/ajv/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/ajv-validator/ajv?branch=master) [![SimpleX](https://img.shields.io/badge/chat-on%20SimpleX-%2307b4b9)](https://simplex.chat/contact#/?v=1&smp=smp%3A%2F%2Fu2dS9sG8nMNURyZwqASV4yROM28Er0luVTx5X1CsMrU%3D%40smp4.simplex.im%2Fap4lMFzfXF8Hzmh-Vz0WNxp_1jKiOa-h%23MCowBQYDK2VuAyEAcdefddRvDfI8iAuBpztm_J3qFucj8MDZoVs_2EcMTzU%3D) [![Gitter](https://img.shields.io/gitter/room/ajv-validator/ajv.svg)](https://gitter.im/ajv-validator/ajv) [![GitHub Sponsors](https://img.shields.io/badge/$-sponsors-brightgreen)](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) ## Ajv sponsors [<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/mozilla.svg" width="45%" alt="Mozilla">](https://www.mozilla.org)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="9%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/reserved.svg" width="45%">](https://opencollective.com/ajv) [<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/microsoft.png" width="31%" alt="Microsoft">](https://opensource.microsoft.com)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/reserved.svg" width="31%">](https://opencollective.com/ajv)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/reserved.svg" width="31%">](https://opencollective.com/ajv) [<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/retool.svg" width="22.5%" alt="Retool">](https://retool.com/?utm_source=sponsor&utm_campaign=ajv)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/tidelift.svg" width="22.5%" alt="Tidelift">](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-ajv?utm_source=npm-ajv&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/simplex.svg" width="22.5%" alt="SimpleX">](https://github.com/simplex-chat/simplex-chat)<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/gap.svg" width="3%">[<img src="https://ajv.js.org/img/reserved.svg" width="22.5%">](https://opencollective.com/ajv) ## Contributing More than 100 people contributed to Ajv, and we would love to have you join the development. We welcome implementing new features that will benefit many users and ideas to improve our documentation. Please review [Contributing guidelines](./CONTRIBUTING.md) and [Code components](https://ajv.js.org/components.html). ## Documentation All documentation is available on the [Ajv website](https://ajv.js.org). Some useful site links: - [Getting started](https://ajv.js.org/guide/getting-started.html) - [JSON Schema vs JSON Type Definition](https://ajv.js.org/guide/schema-language.html) - [API reference](https://ajv.js.org/api.html) - [Strict mode](https://ajv.js.org/strict-mode.html) - [Standalone validation code](https://ajv.js.org/standalone.html) - [Security considerations](https://ajv.js.org/security.html) - [Command line interface](https://ajv.js.org/packages/ajv-cli.html) - [Frequently Asked Questions](https://ajv.js.org/faq.html) ## <a name="sponsors"></a>Please [sponsor Ajv development](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) Since I asked to support Ajv development 40 people and 6 organizations contributed via GitHub and OpenCollective - this support helped receiving the MOSS grant! Your continuing support is very important - the funds will be used to develop and maintain Ajv once the next major version is released. Please sponsor Ajv via: - [GitHub sponsors page](https://github.com/sponsors/epoberezkin) (GitHub will match it) - [Ajv Open Collective️](https://opencollective.com/ajv) Thank you. #### Open Collective sponsors <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/individuals.svg?width=890"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/0/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/0/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/1/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/1/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/2/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/2/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/3/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/3/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/4/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/4/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/5/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/5/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/6/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/6/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/7/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/7/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/8/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/8/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/9/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/9/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/10/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/10/avatar.svg"></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/11/website"><img src="https://opencollective.com/ajv/organization/11/avatar.svg"></a> ## Performance Ajv generates code to turn JSON Schemas into super-fast validation functions that are efficient for v8 optimization. Currently Ajv is the fastest and the most standard compliant validator according to these benchmarks: - [json-schema-benchmark](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark) - 50% faster than the second place - [jsck benchmark](https://github.com/pandastrike/jsck#benchmarks) - 20-190% faster - [z-schema benchmark](https://rawgit.com/zaggino/z-schema/master/benchmark/results.html) - [themis benchmark](https://cdn.rawgit.com/playlyfe/themis/master/benchmark/results.html) Performance of different validators by [json-schema-benchmark](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark): [![performance](https://chart.googleapis.com/chart?chxt=x,y&cht=bhs&chco=76A4FB&chls=2.0&chbh=62,4,1&chs=600x416&chxl=-1:|ajv|@exodus&#x2F;schemasafe|is-my-json-valid|djv|@cfworker&#x2F;json-schema|jsonschema&chd=t:100,69.2,51.5,13.1,5.1,1.2)](https://github.com/ebdrup/json-schema-benchmark/blob/master/README.md#performance) ## Features - Ajv implements JSON Schema [draft-06/07/2019-09/2020-12](http://json-schema.org/) standards (draft-04 is supported in v6): - all validation keywords (see [JSON Schema validation keywords](https://ajv.js.org/json-schema.html)) - [OpenAPI](https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/master/versions/3.0.3.md) extensions: - NEW: keyword [discriminator](https://ajv.js.org/json-schema.html#discriminator). - keyword [nullable](https://ajv.js.org/json-schema.html#nullable). - full support of remote references (remote schemas have to be added with `addSchema` or compiled to be available) - support of recursive references between schemas - correct string lengths for strings with unicode pairs - JSON Schema [formats](https://ajv.js.org/guide/formats.html) (with [ajv-formats](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-formats) plugin). - [validates schemas against meta-schema](https://ajv.js.org/api.html#api-validateschema) - NEW: supports [JSON Type Definition](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc8927/): - all keywords (see [JSON Type Definition schema forms](https://ajv.js.org/json-type-definition.html)) - meta-schema for JTD schemas - "union" keyword and user-defined keywords (can be used inside "metadata" member of the schema) - supports [browsers](https://ajv.js.org/guide/environments.html#browsers) and Node.js 10.x - current - [asynchronous loading](https://ajv.js.org/guide/managing-schemas.html#asynchronous-schema-loading) of referenced schemas during compilation - "All errors" validation mode with [option allErrors](https://ajv.js.org/options.html#allerrors) - [error messages with parameters](https://ajv.js.org/api.html#validation-errors) describing error reasons to allow error message generation - i18n error messages support with [ajv-i18n](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-i18n) package - [removing-additional-properties](https://ajv.js.org/guide/modifying-data.html#removing-additional-properties) - [assigning defaults](https://ajv.js.org/guide/modifying-data.html#assigning-defaults) to missing properties and items - [coercing data](https://ajv.js.org/guide/modifying-data.html#coercing-data-types) to the types specified in `type` keywords - [user-defined keywords](https://ajv.js.org/guide/user-keywords.html) - additional extension keywords with [ajv-keywords](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv-keywords) package - [\$data reference](https://ajv.js.org/guide/combining-schemas.html#data-reference) to use values from the validated data as values for the schema keywords - [asynchronous validation](https://ajv.js.org/guide/async-validation.html) of user-defined formats and keywords ## Install To install version 8: ``` npm install ajv ``` ## <a name="usage"></a>Getting started Try it in the Node.js REPL: https://runkit.com/npm/ajv In JavaScript: ```javascript // or ESM/TypeScript import import Ajv from "ajv" // Node.js require: const Ajv = require("ajv") const ajv = new Ajv() // options can be passed, e.g. {allErrors: true} const schema = { type: "object", properties: { foo: {type: "integer"}, bar: {type: "string"} }, required: ["foo"], additionalProperties: false, } const data = { foo: 1, bar: "abc" } const validate = ajv.compile(schema) const valid = validate(data) if (!valid) console.log(validate.errors) ``` Learn how to use Ajv and see more examples in the [Guide: getting started](https://ajv.js.org/guide/getting-started.html) ## Changes history See [https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases) **Please note**: [Changes in version 8.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v8.0.0) [Version 7.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v7.0.0) [Version 6.0.0](https://github.com/ajv-validator/ajv/releases/tag/v6.0.0). ## Code of conduct Please review and follow the [Code of conduct](./CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). Please report any unacceptable behaviour to [email protected] - it will be reviewed by the project team. ## Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerabilities via GitHub issues. ## Open-source software support Ajv is a part of [Tidelift subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-ajv?utm_source=npm-ajv&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=readme) - it provides a centralised support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## License [MIT](./LICENSE) [![Build Status](https://api.travis-ci.org/adaltas/node-csv-stringify.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/#!/adaltas/node-csv-stringify) [![NPM](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/csv-stringify)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/csv-stringify) [![NPM](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/csv-stringify)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/csv-stringify) This package is a stringifier converting records into a CSV text and implementing the Node.js [`stream.Transform` API](https://nodejs.org/api/stream.html). It also provides the easier synchronous and callback-based APIs for conveniency. It is both extremely easy to use and powerful. It was first released in 2010 and is tested against big data sets by a large community. ## Documentation * [Project homepage](http://csv.js.org/stringify/) * [API](http://csv.js.org/stringify/api/) * [Options](http://csv.js.org/stringify/options/) * [Examples](http://csv.js.org/stringify/examples/) ## Main features * Follow the Node.js streaming API * Simplicity with the optional callback API * Support for custom formatters, delimiters, quotes, escape characters and header * Support big datasets * Complete test coverage and samples for inspiration * Only 1 external dependency * to be used conjointly with `csv-generate`, `csv-parse` and `stream-transform` * MIT License ## Usage The module is built on the Node.js Stream API. For the sake of simplicity, a simple callback API is also provided. To give you a quick look, here's an example of the callback API: ```javascript const stringify = require('csv-stringify') const assert = require('assert') // import stringify from 'csv-stringify' // import assert from 'assert/strict' const input = [ [ '1', '2', '3', '4' ], [ 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd' ] ] stringify(input, function(err, output) { const expected = '1,2,3,4\na,b,c,d\n' assert.strictEqual(output, expected, `output.should.eql ${expected}`) console.log("Passed.", output) }) ``` ## Development Tests are executed with mocha. To install it, run `npm install` followed by `npm test`. It will install mocha and its dependencies in your project "node_modules" directory and run the test suite. The tests run against the CoffeeScript source files. To generate the JavaScript files, run `npm run build`. The test suite is run online with [Travis](https://travis-ci.org/#!/adaltas/node-csv-stringify). See the [Travis definition file](https://github.com/adaltas/node-csv-stringify/blob/master/.travis.yml) to view the tested Node.js version. ## Contributors * David Worms: <https://github.com/wdavidw> [csv_home]: https://github.com/adaltas/node-csv [stream_transform]: http://nodejs.org/api/stream.html#stream_class_stream_transform [examples]: http://csv.js.org/stringify/examples/ [csv]: https://github.com/adaltas/node-csv # color-convert [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/Qix-/color-convert.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/Qix-/color-convert) Color-convert is a color conversion library for JavaScript and node. It converts all ways between `rgb`, `hsl`, `hsv`, `hwb`, `cmyk`, `ansi`, `ansi16`, `hex` strings, and CSS `keyword`s (will round to closest): ```js var convert = require('color-convert'); convert.rgb.hsl(140, 200, 100); // [96, 48, 59] convert.keyword.rgb('blue'); // [0, 0, 255] var rgbChannels = convert.rgb.channels; // 3 var cmykChannels = convert.cmyk.channels; // 4 var ansiChannels = convert.ansi16.channels; // 1 ``` # Install ```console $ npm install color-convert ``` # API Simply get the property of the _from_ and _to_ conversion that you're looking for. All functions have a rounded and unrounded variant. By default, return values are rounded. To get the unrounded (raw) results, simply tack on `.raw` to the function. All 'from' functions have a hidden property called `.channels` that indicates the number of channels the function expects (not including alpha). ```js var convert = require('color-convert'); // Hex to LAB convert.hex.lab('DEADBF'); // [ 76, 21, -2 ] convert.hex.lab.raw('DEADBF'); // [ 75.56213190997677, 20.653827952644754, -2.290532499330533 ] // RGB to CMYK convert.rgb.cmyk(167, 255, 4); // [ 35, 0, 98, 0 ] convert.rgb.cmyk.raw(167, 255, 4); // [ 34.509803921568626, 0, 98.43137254901961, 0 ] ``` ### Arrays All functions that accept multiple arguments also support passing an array. Note that this does **not** apply to functions that convert from a color that only requires one value (e.g. `keyword`, `ansi256`, `hex`, etc.) ```js var convert = require('color-convert'); convert.rgb.hex(123, 45, 67); // '7B2D43' convert.rgb.hex([123, 45, 67]); // '7B2D43' ``` ## Routing Conversions that don't have an _explicitly_ defined conversion (in [conversions.js](conversions.js)), but can be converted by means of sub-conversions (e.g. XYZ -> **RGB** -> CMYK), are automatically routed together. This allows just about any color model supported by `color-convert` to be converted to any other model, so long as a sub-conversion path exists. This is also true for conversions requiring more than one step in between (e.g. LCH -> **LAB** -> **XYZ** -> **RGB** -> Hex). Keep in mind that extensive conversions _may_ result in a loss of precision, and exist only to be complete. For a list of "direct" (single-step) conversions, see [conversions.js](conversions.js). # Contribute If there is a new model you would like to support, or want to add a direct conversion between two existing models, please send us a pull request. # License Copyright &copy; 2011-2016, Heather Arthur and Josh Junon. Licensed under the [MIT License](LICENSE). <p align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><img width="100" src="https://avatars1.githubusercontent.com/u/28916798?s=200&v=4" alt="AssemblyScript logo"></a> </p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/actions?query=workflow%3ATest"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/Test/master?label=test&logo=github" alt="Test status" /></a> <a href="https://github.com/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/actions?query=workflow%3APublish"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/Publish/master?label=publish&logo=github" alt="Publish status" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/assemblyscript"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/assemblyscript.svg?label=compiler&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm compiler version" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/@assemblyscript/loader"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/@assemblyscript/loader.svg?label=loader&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm loader version" /></a> <a href="https://discord.gg/assemblyscript"><img src="https://img.shields.io/discord/721472913886281818.svg?label=&logo=discord&logoColor=ffffff&color=7389D8&labelColor=6A7EC2" alt="Discord online" /></a> </p> <p align="justify"><strong>AssemblyScript</strong> compiles a strict variant of <a href="http://www.typescriptlang.org">TypeScript</a> (basically JavaScript with types) to <a href="http://webassembly.org">WebAssembly</a> using <a href="https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen">Binaryen</a>. It generates lean and mean WebAssembly modules while being just an <code>npm install</code> away.</p> <h3 align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org">About</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/introduction.html">Introduction</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/quick-start.html">Quick&nbsp;start</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/examples.html">Examples</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/development.html">Development&nbsp;instructions</a> </h3> <br> <h2 align="center">Contributors</h2> <p align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/#contributors"><img src="https://assemblyscript.org/contributors.svg" alt="Contributor logos" width="720" /></a> </p> <h2 align="center">Thanks to our sponsors!</h2> <p align="justify">Most of the core team members and most contributors do this open source work in their free time. If you use AssemblyScript for a serious task or plan to do so, and you'd like us to invest more time on it, <a href="https://opencollective.com/assemblyscript/donate" target="_blank" rel="noopener">please donate</a> to our <a href="https://opencollective.com/assemblyscript" target="_blank" rel="noopener">OpenCollective</a>. By sponsoring this project, your logo will show up below. Thank you so much for your support!</p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/#sponsors"><img src="https://assemblyscript.org/sponsors.svg" alt="Sponsor logos" width="720" /></a> </p> # y18n [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) The bare-bones internationalization library used by yargs. Inspired by [i18n](https://www.npmjs.com/package/i18n). ## Examples _simple string translation:_ ```js const __ = require('y18n')().__; console.log(__('my awesome string %s', 'foo')); ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _using tagged template literals_ ```js const __ = require('y18n')().__; const str = 'foo'; console.log(__`my awesome string ${str}`); ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _pluralization support:_ ```js const __n = require('y18n')().__n; console.log(__n('one fish %s', '%d fishes %s', 2, 'foo')); ``` output: `2 fishes foo` ## Deno Example As of `v5` `y18n` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno): ```typescript import y18n from "https://deno.land/x/y18n/deno.ts"; const __ = y18n({ locale: 'pirate', directory: './test/locales' }).__ console.info(__`Hi, ${'Ben'} ${'Coe'}!`) ``` You will need to run with `--allow-read` to load alternative locales. ## JSON Language Files The JSON language files should be stored in a `./locales` folder. File names correspond to locales, e.g., `en.json`, `pirate.json`. When strings are observed for the first time they will be added to the JSON file corresponding to the current locale. ## Methods ### require('y18n')(config) Create an instance of y18n with the config provided, options include: * `directory`: the locale directory, default `./locales`. * `updateFiles`: should newly observed strings be updated in file, default `true`. * `locale`: what locale should be used. * `fallbackToLanguage`: should fallback to a language-only file (e.g. `en.json`) be allowed if a file matching the locale does not exist (e.g. `en_US.json`), default `true`. ### y18n.\_\_(str, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string, `%s` will be replaced with `arg`s. This function can also be used as a tag for a template literal. You can use it like this: <code>__&#96;hello ${'world'}&#96;</code>. This will be equivalent to `__('hello %s', 'world')`. ### y18n.\_\_n(singularString, pluralString, count, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string with appropriate pluralization. If `%d` is provided in the string, the `count` will replace this placeholder. ### y18n.setLocale(str) Set the current locale being used. ### y18n.getLocale() What locale is currently being used? ### y18n.updateLocale(obj) Update the current locale with the key value pairs in `obj`. ## Supported Node.js Versions Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track [Node.js' release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/). Here's [a post on why we think this is important](https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/maintainers-should-consider-following-node-js-release-schedule-ab08ed4de71a). ## License ISC [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/y18n [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/y18n.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: https://github.com/feross/standard These files are compiled dot templates from dot folder. Do NOT edit them directly, edit the templates and run `npm run build` from main ajv folder. # minipass A _very_ minimal implementation of a [PassThrough stream](https://nodejs.org/api/stream.html#stream_class_stream_passthrough) [It's very fast](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1oObKSrVwLX_7Ut4Z6g3fZW-AX1j1-k6w-cDsrkaSbHM/edit#gid=0) for objects, strings, and buffers. Supports `pipe()`ing (including multi-`pipe()` and backpressure transmission), buffering data until either a `data` event handler or `pipe()` is added (so you don't lose the first chunk), and most other cases where PassThrough is a good idea. There is a `read()` method, but it's much more efficient to consume data from this stream via `'data'` events or by calling `pipe()` into some other stream. Calling `read()` requires the buffer to be flattened in some cases, which requires copying memory. There is also no `unpipe()` method. Once you start piping, there is no stopping it! If you set `objectMode: true` in the options, then whatever is written will be emitted. Otherwise, it'll do a minimal amount of Buffer copying to ensure proper Streams semantics when `read(n)` is called. `objectMode` can also be set by doing `stream.objectMode = true`, or by writing any non-string/non-buffer data. `objectMode` cannot be set to false once it is set. This is not a `through` or `through2` stream. It doesn't transform the data, it just passes it right through. If you want to transform the data, extend the class, and override the `write()` method. Once you're done transforming the data however you want, call `super.write()` with the transform output. For some examples of streams that extend Minipass in various ways, check out: - [minizlib](http://npm.im/minizlib) - [fs-minipass](http://npm.im/fs-minipass) - [tar](http://npm.im/tar) - [minipass-collect](http://npm.im/minipass-collect) - [minipass-flush](http://npm.im/minipass-flush) - [minipass-pipeline](http://npm.im/minipass-pipeline) - [tap](http://npm.im/tap) - [tap-parser](http://npm.im/tap-parser) - [treport](http://npm.im/treport) - [minipass-fetch](http://npm.im/minipass-fetch) - [pacote](http://npm.im/pacote) - [make-fetch-happen](http://npm.im/make-fetch-happen) - [cacache](http://npm.im/cacache) - [ssri](http://npm.im/ssri) - [npm-registry-fetch](http://npm.im/npm-registry-fetch) - [minipass-json-stream](http://npm.im/minipass-json-stream) - [minipass-sized](http://npm.im/minipass-sized) ## Differences from Node.js Streams There are several things that make Minipass streams different from (and in some ways superior to) Node.js core streams. Please read these caveats if you are familiar with node-core streams and intend to use Minipass streams in your programs. ### Timing Minipass streams are designed to support synchronous use-cases. Thus, data is emitted as soon as it is available, always. It is buffered until read, but no longer. Another way to look at it is that Minipass streams are exactly as synchronous as the logic that writes into them. This can be surprising if your code relies on `PassThrough.write()` always providing data on the next tick rather than the current one, or being able to call `resume()` and not have the entire buffer disappear immediately. However, without this synchronicity guarantee, there would be no way for Minipass to achieve the speeds it does, or support the synchronous use cases that it does. Simply put, waiting takes time. This non-deferring approach makes Minipass streams much easier to reason about, especially in the context of Promises and other flow-control mechanisms. ### No High/Low Water Marks Node.js core streams will optimistically fill up a buffer, returning `true` on all writes until the limit is hit, even if the data has nowhere to go. Then, they will not attempt to draw more data in until the buffer size dips below a minimum value. Minipass streams are much simpler. The `write()` method will return `true` if the data has somewhere to go (which is to say, given the timing guarantees, that the data is already there by the time `write()` returns). If the data has nowhere to go, then `write()` returns false, and the data sits in a buffer, to be drained out immediately as soon as anyone consumes it. ### Hazards of Buffering (or: Why Minipass Is So Fast) Since data written to a Minipass stream is immediately written all the way through the pipeline, and `write()` always returns true/false based on whether the data was fully flushed, backpressure is communicated immediately to the upstream caller. This minimizes buffering. Consider this case: ```js const {PassThrough} = require('stream') const p1 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) const p2 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) const p3 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) const p4 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) p1.pipe(p2).pipe(p3).pipe(p4) p4.on('data', () => console.log('made it through')) // this returns false and buffers, then writes to p2 on next tick (1) // p2 returns false and buffers, pausing p1, then writes to p3 on next tick (2) // p3 returns false and buffers, pausing p2, then writes to p4 on next tick (3) // p4 returns false and buffers, pausing p3, then emits 'data' and 'drain' // on next tick (4) // p3 sees p4's 'drain' event, and calls resume(), emitting 'resume' and // 'drain' on next tick (5) // p2 sees p3's 'drain', calls resume(), emits 'resume' and 'drain' on next tick (6) // p1 sees p2's 'drain', calls resume(), emits 'resume' and 'drain' on next // tick (7) p1.write(Buffer.alloc(2048)) // returns false ``` Along the way, the data was buffered and deferred at each stage, and multiple event deferrals happened, for an unblocked pipeline where it was perfectly safe to write all the way through! Furthermore, setting a `highWaterMark` of `1024` might lead someone reading the code to think an advisory maximum of 1KiB is being set for the pipeline. However, the actual advisory buffering level is the _sum_ of `highWaterMark` values, since each one has its own bucket. Consider the Minipass case: ```js const m1 = new Minipass() const m2 = new Minipass() const m3 = new Minipass() const m4 = new Minipass() m1.pipe(m2).pipe(m3).pipe(m4) m4.on('data', () => console.log('made it through')) // m1 is flowing, so it writes the data to m2 immediately // m2 is flowing, so it writes the data to m3 immediately // m3 is flowing, so it writes the data to m4 immediately // m4 is flowing, so it fires the 'data' event immediately, returns true // m4's write returned true, so m3 is still flowing, returns true // m3's write returned true, so m2 is still flowing, returns true // m2's write returned true, so m1 is still flowing, returns true // No event deferrals or buffering along the way! m1.write(Buffer.alloc(2048)) // returns true ``` It is extremely unlikely that you _don't_ want to buffer any data written, or _ever_ buffer data that can be flushed all the way through. Neither node-core streams nor Minipass ever fail to buffer written data, but node-core streams do a lot of unnecessary buffering and pausing. As always, the faster implementation is the one that does less stuff and waits less time to do it. ### Immediately emit `end` for empty streams (when not paused) If a stream is not paused, and `end()` is called before writing any data into it, then it will emit `end` immediately. If you have logic that occurs on the `end` event which you don't want to potentially happen immediately (for example, closing file descriptors, moving on to the next entry in an archive parse stream, etc.) then be sure to call `stream.pause()` on creation, and then `stream.resume()` once you are ready to respond to the `end` event. ### Emit `end` When Asked One hazard of immediately emitting `'end'` is that you may not yet have had a chance to add a listener. In order to avoid this hazard, Minipass streams safely re-emit the `'end'` event if a new listener is added after `'end'` has been emitted. Ie, if you do `stream.on('end', someFunction)`, and the stream has already emitted `end`, then it will call the handler right away. (You can think of this somewhat like attaching a new `.then(fn)` to a previously-resolved Promise.) To prevent calling handlers multiple times who would not expect multiple ends to occur, all listeners are removed from the `'end'` event whenever it is emitted. ### Impact of "immediate flow" on Tee-streams A "tee stream" is a stream piping to multiple destinations: ```js const tee = new Minipass() t.pipe(dest1) t.pipe(dest2) t.write('foo') // goes to both destinations ``` Since Minipass streams _immediately_ process any pending data through the pipeline when a new pipe destination is added, this can have surprising effects, especially when a stream comes in from some other function and may or may not have data in its buffer. ```js // WARNING! WILL LOSE DATA! const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') src.pipe(dest1) // 'foo' chunk flows to dest1 immediately, and is gone src.pipe(dest2) // gets nothing! ``` The solution is to create a dedicated tee-stream junction that pipes to both locations, and then pipe to _that_ instead. ```js // Safe example: tee to both places const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') const tee = new Minipass() tee.pipe(dest1) tee.pipe(dest2) src.pipe(tee) // tee gets 'foo', pipes to both locations ``` The same caveat applies to `on('data')` event listeners. The first one added will _immediately_ receive all of the data, leaving nothing for the second: ```js // WARNING! WILL LOSE DATA! const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') src.on('data', handler1) // receives 'foo' right away src.on('data', handler2) // nothing to see here! ``` Using a dedicated tee-stream can be used in this case as well: ```js // Safe example: tee to both data handlers const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') const tee = new Minipass() tee.on('data', handler1) tee.on('data', handler2) src.pipe(tee) ``` ## USAGE It's a stream! Use it like a stream and it'll most likely do what you want. ```js const Minipass = require('minipass') const mp = new Minipass(options) // optional: { encoding, objectMode } mp.write('foo') mp.pipe(someOtherStream) mp.end('bar') ``` ### OPTIONS * `encoding` How would you like the data coming _out_ of the stream to be encoded? Accepts any values that can be passed to `Buffer.toString()`. * `objectMode` Emit data exactly as it comes in. This will be flipped on by default if you write() something other than a string or Buffer at any point. Setting `objectMode: true` will prevent setting any encoding value. ### API Implements the user-facing portions of Node.js's `Readable` and `Writable` streams. ### Methods * `write(chunk, [encoding], [callback])` - Put data in. (Note that, in the base Minipass class, the same data will come out.) Returns `false` if the stream will buffer the next write, or true if it's still in "flowing" mode. * `end([chunk, [encoding]], [callback])` - Signal that you have no more data to write. This will queue an `end` event to be fired when all the data has been consumed. * `setEncoding(encoding)` - Set the encoding for data coming of the stream. This can only be done once. * `pause()` - No more data for a while, please. This also prevents `end` from being emitted for empty streams until the stream is resumed. * `resume()` - Resume the stream. If there's data in the buffer, it is all discarded. Any buffered events are immediately emitted. * `pipe(dest)` - Send all output to the stream provided. There is no way to unpipe. When data is emitted, it is immediately written to any and all pipe destinations. * `on(ev, fn)`, `emit(ev, fn)` - Minipass streams are EventEmitters. Some events are given special treatment, however. (See below under "events".) * `promise()` - Returns a Promise that resolves when the stream emits `end`, or rejects if the stream emits `error`. * `collect()` - Return a Promise that resolves on `end` with an array containing each chunk of data that was emitted, or rejects if the stream emits `error`. Note that this consumes the stream data. * `concat()` - Same as `collect()`, but concatenates the data into a single Buffer object. Will reject the returned promise if the stream is in objectMode, or if it goes into objectMode by the end of the data. * `read(n)` - Consume `n` bytes of data out of the buffer. If `n` is not provided, then consume all of it. If `n` bytes are not available, then it returns null. **Note** consuming streams in this way is less efficient, and can lead to unnecessary Buffer copying. * `destroy([er])` - Destroy the stream. If an error is provided, then an `'error'` event is emitted. If the stream has a `close()` method, and has not emitted a `'close'` event yet, then `stream.close()` will be called. Any Promises returned by `.promise()`, `.collect()` or `.concat()` will be rejected. After being destroyed, writing to the stream will emit an error. No more data will be emitted if the stream is destroyed, even if it was previously buffered. ### Properties * `bufferLength` Read-only. Total number of bytes buffered, or in the case of objectMode, the total number of objects. * `encoding` The encoding that has been set. (Setting this is equivalent to calling `setEncoding(enc)` and has the same prohibition against setting multiple times.) * `flowing` Read-only. Boolean indicating whether a chunk written to the stream will be immediately emitted. * `emittedEnd` Read-only. Boolean indicating whether the end-ish events (ie, `end`, `prefinish`, `finish`) have been emitted. Note that listening on any end-ish event will immediateyl re-emit it if it has already been emitted. * `writable` Whether the stream is writable. Default `true`. Set to `false` when `end()` * `readable` Whether the stream is readable. Default `true`. * `buffer` A [yallist](http://npm.im/yallist) linked list of chunks written to the stream that have not yet been emitted. (It's probably a bad idea to mess with this.) * `pipes` A [yallist](http://npm.im/yallist) linked list of streams that this stream is piping into. (It's probably a bad idea to mess with this.) * `destroyed` A getter that indicates whether the stream was destroyed. * `paused` True if the stream has been explicitly paused, otherwise false. * `objectMode` Indicates whether the stream is in `objectMode`. Once set to `true`, it cannot be set to `false`. ### Events * `data` Emitted when there's data to read. Argument is the data to read. This is never emitted while not flowing. If a listener is attached, that will resume the stream. * `end` Emitted when there's no more data to read. This will be emitted immediately for empty streams when `end()` is called. If a listener is attached, and `end` was already emitted, then it will be emitted again. All listeners are removed when `end` is emitted. * `prefinish` An end-ish event that follows the same logic as `end` and is emitted in the same conditions where `end` is emitted. Emitted after `'end'`. * `finish` An end-ish event that follows the same logic as `end` and is emitted in the same conditions where `end` is emitted. Emitted after `'prefinish'`. * `close` An indication that an underlying resource has been released. Minipass does not emit this event, but will defer it until after `end` has been emitted, since it throws off some stream libraries otherwise. * `drain` Emitted when the internal buffer empties, and it is again suitable to `write()` into the stream. * `readable` Emitted when data is buffered and ready to be read by a consumer. * `resume` Emitted when stream changes state from buffering to flowing mode. (Ie, when `resume` is called, `pipe` is called, or a `data` event listener is added.) ### Static Methods * `Minipass.isStream(stream)` Returns `true` if the argument is a stream, and false otherwise. To be considered a stream, the object must be either an instance of Minipass, or an EventEmitter that has either a `pipe()` method, or both `write()` and `end()` methods. (Pretty much any stream in node-land will return `true` for this.) ## EXAMPLES Here are some examples of things you can do with Minipass streams. ### simple "are you done yet" promise ```js mp.promise().then(() => { // stream is finished }, er => { // stream emitted an error }) ``` ### collecting ```js mp.collect().then(all => { // all is an array of all the data emitted // encoding is supported in this case, so // so the result will be a collection of strings if // an encoding is specified, or buffers/objects if not. // // In an async function, you may do // const data = await stream.collect() }) ``` ### collecting into a single blob This is a bit slower because it concatenates the data into one chunk for you, but if you're going to do it yourself anyway, it's convenient this way: ```js mp.concat().then(onebigchunk => { // onebigchunk is a string if the stream // had an encoding set, or a buffer otherwise. }) ``` ### iteration You can iterate over streams synchronously or asynchronously in platforms that support it. Synchronous iteration will end when the currently available data is consumed, even if the `end` event has not been reached. In string and buffer mode, the data is concatenated, so unless multiple writes are occurring in the same tick as the `read()`, sync iteration loops will generally only have a single iteration. To consume chunks in this way exactly as they have been written, with no flattening, create the stream with the `{ objectMode: true }` option. ```js const mp = new Minipass({ objectMode: true }) mp.write('a') mp.write('b') for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // a, b } mp.write('c') mp.write('d') for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // c, d } mp.write('e') mp.end() for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // e } for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // nothing } ``` Asynchronous iteration will continue until the end event is reached, consuming all of the data. ```js const mp = new Minipass({ encoding: 'utf8' }) // some source of some data let i = 5 const inter = setInterval(() => { if (i-- > 0) mp.write(Buffer.from('foo\n', 'utf8')) else { mp.end() clearInterval(inter) } }, 100) // consume the data with asynchronous iteration async function consume () { for await (let chunk of mp) { console.log(chunk) } return 'ok' } consume().then(res => console.log(res)) // logs `foo\n` 5 times, and then `ok` ``` ### subclass that `console.log()`s everything written into it ```js class Logger extends Minipass { write (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('WRITE', chunk, encoding) return super.write(chunk, encoding, callback) } end (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('END', chunk, encoding) return super.end(chunk, encoding, callback) } } someSource.pipe(new Logger()).pipe(someDest) ``` ### same thing, but using an inline anonymous class ```js // js classes are fun someSource .pipe(new (class extends Minipass { emit (ev, ...data) { // let's also log events, because debugging some weird thing console.log('EMIT', ev) return super.emit(ev, ...data) } write (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('WRITE', chunk, encoding) return super.write(chunk, encoding, callback) } end (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('END', chunk, encoding) return super.end(chunk, encoding, callback) } })) .pipe(someDest) ``` ### subclass that defers 'end' for some reason ```js class SlowEnd extends Minipass { emit (ev, ...args) { if (ev === 'end') { console.log('going to end, hold on a sec') setTimeout(() => { console.log('ok, ready to end now') super.emit('end', ...args) }, 100) } else { return super.emit(ev, ...args) } } } ``` ### transform that creates newline-delimited JSON ```js class NDJSONEncode extends Minipass { write (obj, cb) { try { // JSON.stringify can throw, emit an error on that return super.write(JSON.stringify(obj) + '\n', 'utf8', cb) } catch (er) { this.emit('error', er) } } end (obj, cb) { if (typeof obj === 'function') { cb = obj obj = undefined } if (obj !== undefined) { this.write(obj) } return super.end(cb) } } ``` ### transform that parses newline-delimited JSON ```js class NDJSONDecode extends Minipass { constructor (options) { // always be in object mode, as far as Minipass is concerned super({ objectMode: true }) this._jsonBuffer = '' } write (chunk, encoding, cb) { if (typeof chunk === 'string' && typeof encoding === 'string' && encoding !== 'utf8') { chunk = Buffer.from(chunk, encoding).toString() } else if (Buffer.isBuffer(chunk)) chunk = chunk.toString() } if (typeof encoding === 'function') { cb = encoding } const jsonData = (this._jsonBuffer + chunk).split('\n') this._jsonBuffer = jsonData.pop() for (let i = 0; i < jsonData.length; i++) { try { // JSON.parse can throw, emit an error on that super.write(JSON.parse(jsonData[i])) } catch (er) { this.emit('error', er) continue } } if (cb) cb() } } ``` [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/espree.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/espree) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/espree.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/espree) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/espree.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/espree) [![Bountysource](https://www.bountysource.com/badge/tracker?tracker_id=9348450)](https://www.bountysource.com/trackers/9348450-eslint?utm_source=9348450&utm_medium=shield&utm_campaign=TRACKER_BADGE) # Espree Espree started out as a fork of [Esprima](http://esprima.org) v1.2.2, the last stable published released of Esprima before work on ECMAScript 6 began. Espree is now built on top of [Acorn](https://github.com/ternjs/acorn), which has a modular architecture that allows extension of core functionality. The goal of Espree is to produce output that is similar to Esprima with a similar API so that it can be used in place of Esprima. ## Usage Install: ``` npm i espree ``` And in your Node.js code: ```javascript const espree = require("espree"); const ast = espree.parse(code); ``` ## API ### `parse()` `parse` parses the given code and returns a abstract syntax tree (AST). It takes two parameters. - `code` [string]() - the code which needs to be parsed. - `options (Optional)` [Object]() - read more about this [here](#options). ```javascript const espree = require("espree"); const ast = espree.parse(code, options); ``` **Example :** ```js const ast = espree.parse('let foo = "bar"', { ecmaVersion: 6 }); console.log(ast); ``` <details><summary>Output</summary> <p> ``` Node { type: 'Program', start: 0, end: 15, body: [ Node { type: 'VariableDeclaration', start: 0, end: 15, declarations: [Array], kind: 'let' } ], sourceType: 'script' } ``` </p> </details> ### `tokenize()` `tokenize` returns the tokens of a given code. It takes two parameters. - `code` [string]() - the code which needs to be parsed. - `options (Optional)` [Object]() - read more about this [here](#options). Even if `options` is empty or undefined or `options.tokens` is `false`, it assigns it to `true` in order to get the `tokens` array **Example :** ```js const tokens = espree.tokenize('let foo = "bar"', { ecmaVersion: 6 }); console.log(tokens); ``` <details><summary>Output</summary> <p> ``` Token { type: 'Keyword', value: 'let', start: 0, end: 3 }, Token { type: 'Identifier', value: 'foo', start: 4, end: 7 }, Token { type: 'Punctuator', value: '=', start: 8, end: 9 }, Token { type: 'String', value: '"bar"', start: 10, end: 15 } ``` </p> </details> ### `version` Returns the current `espree` version ### `VisitorKeys` Returns all visitor keys for traversing the AST from [eslint-visitor-keys](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) ### `latestEcmaVersion` Returns the latest ECMAScript supported by `espree` ### `supportedEcmaVersions` Returns an array of all supported ECMAScript versions ## Options ```js const options = { // attach range information to each node range: false, // attach line/column location information to each node loc: false, // create a top-level comments array containing all comments comment: false, // create a top-level tokens array containing all tokens tokens: false, // Set to 3, 5 (default), 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, or 12 to specify the version of ECMAScript syntax you want to use. // You can also set to 2015 (same as 6), 2016 (same as 7), 2017 (same as 8), 2018 (same as 9), 2019 (same as 10), 2020 (same as 11), or 2021 (same as 12) to use the year-based naming. ecmaVersion: 5, // specify which type of script you're parsing ("script" or "module") sourceType: "script", // specify additional language features ecmaFeatures: { // enable JSX parsing jsx: false, // enable return in global scope globalReturn: false, // enable implied strict mode (if ecmaVersion >= 5) impliedStrict: false } } ``` ## Esprima Compatibility Going Forward The primary goal is to produce the exact same AST structure and tokens as Esprima, and that takes precedence over anything else. (The AST structure being the [ESTree](https://github.com/estree/estree) API with JSX extensions.) Separate from that, Espree may deviate from what Esprima outputs in terms of where and how comments are attached, as well as what additional information is available on AST nodes. That is to say, Espree may add more things to the AST nodes than Esprima does but the overall AST structure produced will be the same. Espree may also deviate from Esprima in the interface it exposes. ## Contributing Issues and pull requests will be triaged and responded to as quickly as possible. We operate under the [ESLint Contributor Guidelines](http://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing), so please be sure to read them before contributing. If you're not sure where to dig in, check out the [issues](https://github.com/eslint/espree/issues). Espree is licensed under a permissive BSD 2-clause license. ## Security Policy We work hard to ensure that Espree is safe for everyone and that security issues are addressed quickly and responsibly. Read the full [security policy](https://github.com/eslint/.github/blob/master/SECURITY.md). ## Build Commands * `npm test` - run all linting and tests * `npm run lint` - run all linting * `npm run browserify` - creates a version of Espree that is usable in a browser ## Differences from Espree 2.x * The `tokenize()` method does not use `ecmaFeatures`. Any string will be tokenized completely based on ECMAScript 6 semantics. * Trailing whitespace no longer is counted as part of a node. * `let` and `const` declarations are no longer parsed by default. You must opt-in by using an `ecmaVersion` newer than `5` or setting `sourceType` to `module`. * The `esparse` and `esvalidate` binary scripts have been removed. * There is no `tolerant` option. We will investigate adding this back in the future. ## Known Incompatibilities In an effort to help those wanting to transition from other parsers to Espree, the following is a list of noteworthy incompatibilities with other parsers. These are known differences that we do not intend to change. ### Esprima 1.2.2 * Esprima counts trailing whitespace as part of each AST node while Espree does not. In Espree, the end of a node is where the last token occurs. * Espree does not parse `let` and `const` declarations by default. * Error messages returned for parsing errors are different. * There are two addition properties on every node and token: `start` and `end`. These represent the same data as `range` and are used internally by Acorn. ### Esprima 2.x * Esprima 2.x uses a different comment attachment algorithm that results in some comments being added in different places than Espree. The algorithm Espree uses is the same one used in Esprima 1.2.2. ## Frequently Asked Questions ### Why another parser [ESLint](http://eslint.org) had been relying on Esprima as its parser from the beginning. While that was fine when the JavaScript language was evolving slowly, the pace of development increased dramatically and Esprima had fallen behind. ESLint, like many other tools reliant on Esprima, has been stuck in using new JavaScript language features until Esprima updates, and that caused our users frustration. We decided the only way for us to move forward was to create our own parser, bringing us inline with JSHint and JSLint, and allowing us to keep implementing new features as we need them. We chose to fork Esprima instead of starting from scratch in order to move as quickly as possible with a compatible API. With Espree 2.0.0, we are no longer a fork of Esprima but rather a translation layer between Acorn and Esprima syntax. This allows us to put work back into a community-supported parser (Acorn) that is continuing to grow and evolve while maintaining an Esprima-compatible parser for those utilities still built on Esprima. ### Have you tried working with Esprima? Yes. Since the start of ESLint, we've regularly filed bugs and feature requests with Esprima and will continue to do so. However, there are some different philosophies around how the projects work that need to be worked through. The initial goal was to have Espree track Esprima and eventually merge the two back together, but we ultimately decided that building on top of Acorn was a better choice due to Acorn's plugin support. ### Why don't you just use Acorn? Acorn is a great JavaScript parser that produces an AST that is compatible with Esprima. Unfortunately, ESLint relies on more than just the AST to do its job. It relies on Esprima's tokens and comment attachment features to get a complete picture of the source code. We investigated switching to Acorn, but the inconsistencies between Esprima and Acorn created too much work for a project like ESLint. We are building on top of Acorn, however, so that we can contribute back and help make Acorn even better. ### What ECMAScript features do you support? Espree supports all ECMAScript 2020 features and partially supports ECMAScript 2021 features. Because ECMAScript 2021 is still under development, we are implementing features as they are finalized. Currently, Espree supports: * [Logical Assignment Operators](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-logical-assignment) * [Numeric Separators](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-numeric-separator) See [finished-proposals.md](https://github.com/tc39/proposals/blob/master/finished-proposals.md) to know what features are finalized. ### How do you determine which experimental features to support? In general, we do not support experimental JavaScript features. We may make exceptions from time to time depending on the maturity of the features. ### Esrecurse [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/estools/esrecurse.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/estools/esrecurse) Esrecurse ([esrecurse](https://github.com/estools/esrecurse)) is [ECMAScript](https://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-262.htm) recursive traversing functionality. ### Example Usage The following code will output all variables declared at the root of a file. ```javascript esrecurse.visit(ast, { XXXStatement: function (node) { this.visit(node.left); // do something... this.visit(node.right); } }); ``` We can use `Visitor` instance. ```javascript var visitor = new esrecurse.Visitor({ XXXStatement: function (node) { this.visit(node.left); // do something... this.visit(node.right); } }); visitor.visit(ast); ``` We can inherit `Visitor` instance easily. ```javascript class Derived extends esrecurse.Visitor { constructor() { super(null); } XXXStatement(node) { } } ``` ```javascript function DerivedVisitor() { esrecurse.Visitor.call(/* this for constructor */ this /* visitor object automatically becomes this. */); } util.inherits(DerivedVisitor, esrecurse.Visitor); DerivedVisitor.prototype.XXXStatement = function (node) { this.visit(node.left); // do something... this.visit(node.right); }; ``` And you can invoke default visiting operation inside custom visit operation. ```javascript function DerivedVisitor() { esrecurse.Visitor.call(/* this for constructor */ this /* visitor object automatically becomes this. */); } util.inherits(DerivedVisitor, esrecurse.Visitor); DerivedVisitor.prototype.XXXStatement = function (node) { // do something... this.visitChildren(node); }; ``` The `childVisitorKeys` option does customize the behaviour of `this.visitChildren(node)`. We can use user-defined node types. ```javascript // This tree contains a user-defined `TestExpression` node. var tree = { type: 'TestExpression', // This 'argument' is the property containing the other **node**. argument: { type: 'Literal', value: 20 }, // This 'extended' is the property not containing the other **node**. extended: true }; esrecurse.visit( ast, { Literal: function (node) { // do something... } }, { // Extending the existing traversing rules. childVisitorKeys: { // TargetNodeName: [ 'keys', 'containing', 'the', 'other', '**node**' ] TestExpression: ['argument'] } } ); ``` We can use the `fallback` option as well. If the `fallback` option is `"iteration"`, `esrecurse` would visit all enumerable properties of unknown nodes. Please note circular references cause the stack overflow. AST might have circular references in additional properties for some purpose (e.g. `node.parent`). ```javascript esrecurse.visit( ast, { Literal: function (node) { // do something... } }, { fallback: 'iteration' } ); ``` If the `fallback` option is a function, `esrecurse` calls this function to determine the enumerable properties of unknown nodes. Please note circular references cause the stack overflow. AST might have circular references in additional properties for some purpose (e.g. `node.parent`). ```javascript esrecurse.visit( ast, { Literal: function (node) { // do something... } }, { fallback: function (node) { return Object.keys(node).filter(function(key) { return key !== 'argument' }); } } ); ``` ### License Copyright (C) 2014 [Yusuke Suzuki](https://github.com/Constellation) (twitter: [@Constellation](https://twitter.com/Constellation)) and other contributors. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. # is-glob [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/is-glob.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-glob) [![NPM monthly downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/is-glob.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/is-glob) [![NPM total downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dt/is-glob.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/is-glob) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/micromatch/is-glob/dev)](https://github.com/micromatch/is-glob/actions) > Returns `true` if the given string looks like a glob pattern or an extglob pattern. This makes it easy to create code that only uses external modules like node-glob when necessary, resulting in much faster code execution and initialization time, and a better user experience. Please consider following this project's author, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert), and consider starring the project to show your :heart: and support. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install --save is-glob ``` You might also be interested in [is-valid-glob](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-valid-glob) and [has-glob](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/has-glob). ## Usage ```js var isGlob = require('is-glob'); ``` ### Default behavior **True** Patterns that have glob characters or regex patterns will return `true`: ```js isGlob('!foo.js'); isGlob('*.js'); isGlob('**/abc.js'); isGlob('abc/*.js'); isGlob('abc/(aaa|bbb).js'); isGlob('abc/[a-z].js'); isGlob('abc/{a,b}.js'); //=> true ``` Extglobs ```js isGlob('abc/@(a).js'); isGlob('abc/!(a).js'); isGlob('abc/+(a).js'); isGlob('abc/*(a).js'); isGlob('abc/?(a).js'); //=> true ``` **False** Escaped globs or extglobs return `false`: ```js isGlob('abc/\\@(a).js'); isGlob('abc/\\!(a).js'); isGlob('abc/\\+(a).js'); isGlob('abc/\\*(a).js'); isGlob('abc/\\?(a).js'); isGlob('\\!foo.js'); isGlob('\\*.js'); isGlob('\\*\\*/abc.js'); isGlob('abc/\\*.js'); isGlob('abc/\\(aaa|bbb).js'); isGlob('abc/\\[a-z].js'); isGlob('abc/\\{a,b}.js'); //=> false ``` Patterns that do not have glob patterns return `false`: ```js isGlob('abc.js'); isGlob('abc/def/ghi.js'); isGlob('foo.js'); isGlob('abc/@.js'); isGlob('abc/+.js'); isGlob('abc/?.js'); isGlob(); isGlob(null); //=> false ``` Arrays are also `false` (If you want to check if an array has a glob pattern, use [has-glob](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/has-glob)): ```js isGlob(['**/*.js']); isGlob(['foo.js']); //=> false ``` ### Option strict When `options.strict === false` the behavior is less strict in determining if a pattern is a glob. Meaning that some patterns that would return `false` may return `true`. This is done so that matching libraries like [micromatch](https://github.com/micromatch/micromatch) have a chance at determining if the pattern is a glob or not. **True** Patterns that have glob characters or regex patterns will return `true`: ```js isGlob('!foo.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('*.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('**/abc.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/*.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/(aaa|bbb).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/[a-z].js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/{a,b}.js', {strict: false}); //=> true ``` Extglobs ```js isGlob('abc/@(a).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/!(a).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/+(a).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/*(a).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/?(a).js', {strict: false}); //=> true ``` **False** Escaped globs or extglobs return `false`: ```js isGlob('\\!foo.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('\\*.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('\\*\\*/abc.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/\\*.js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/\\(aaa|bbb).js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/\\[a-z].js', {strict: false}); isGlob('abc/\\{a,b}.js', {strict: false}); //=> false ``` ## About <details> <summary><strong>Contributing</strong></summary> Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). </details> <details> <summary><strong>Running Tests</strong></summary> Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command: ```sh $ npm install && npm test ``` </details> <details> <summary><strong>Building docs</strong></summary> _(This project's readme.md is generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the [.verb.md](.verb.md) readme template.)_ To generate the readme, run the following command: ```sh $ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb ``` </details> ### Related projects You might also be interested in these projects: * [assemble](https://www.npmjs.com/package/assemble): Get the rocks out of your socks! Assemble makes you fast at creating web projects… [more](https://github.com/assemble/assemble) | [homepage](https://github.com/assemble/assemble "Get the rocks out of your socks! Assemble makes you fast at creating web projects. Assemble is used by thousands of projects for rapid prototyping, creating themes, scaffolds, boilerplates, e-books, UI components, API documentation, blogs, building websit") * [base](https://www.npmjs.com/package/base): Framework for rapidly creating high quality, server-side node.js applications, using plugins like building blocks | [homepage](https://github.com/node-base/base "Framework for rapidly creating high quality, server-side node.js applications, using plugins like building blocks") * [update](https://www.npmjs.com/package/update): Be scalable! Update is a new, open source developer framework and CLI for automating updates… [more](https://github.com/update/update) | [homepage](https://github.com/update/update "Be scalable! Update is a new, open source developer framework and CLI for automating updates of any kind in code projects.") * [verb](https://www.npmjs.com/package/verb): Documentation generator for GitHub projects. Verb is extremely powerful, easy to use, and is used… [more](https://github.com/verbose/verb) | [homepage](https://github.com/verbose/verb "Documentation generator for GitHub projects. Verb is extremely powerful, easy to use, and is used on hundreds of projects of all sizes to generate everything from API docs to readmes.") ### Contributors | **Commits** | **Contributor** | | --- | --- | | 47 | [jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) | | 5 | [doowb](https://github.com/doowb) | | 1 | [phated](https://github.com/phated) | | 1 | [danhper](https://github.com/danhper) | | 1 | [paulmillr](https://github.com/paulmillr) | ### Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [GitHub Profile](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [Twitter Profile](https://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) * [LinkedIn Profile](https://linkedin.com/in/jonschlinkert) ### License Copyright © 2019, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), v0.8.0, on March 27, 2019._ # binary-install Install .tar.gz binary applications via npm ## Usage This library provides a single class `Binary` that takes a download url and some optional arguments. You **must** provide either `name` or `installDirectory` when creating your `Binary`. | option | decription | | ---------------- | --------------------------------------------- | | name | The name of your binary | | installDirectory | A path to the directory to install the binary | If an `installDirectory` is not provided, the binary will be installed at your OS specific config directory. On MacOS it defaults to `~/Library/Preferences/${name}-nodejs` After your `Binary` has been created, you can run `.install()` to install the binary, and `.run()` to run it. ### Example This is meant to be used as a library - create your `Binary` with your desired options, then call `.install()` in the `postinstall` of your `package.json`, `.run()` in the `bin` section of your `package.json`, and `.uninstall()` in the `preuninstall` section of your `package.json`. See [this example project](/example) to see how to create an npm package that installs and runs a binary using the Github releases API. [Build]: http://img.shields.io/travis/litejs/natural-compare-lite.png [Coverage]: http://img.shields.io/coveralls/litejs/natural-compare-lite.png [1]: https://travis-ci.org/litejs/natural-compare-lite [2]: https://coveralls.io/r/litejs/natural-compare-lite [npm package]: https://npmjs.org/package/natural-compare-lite [GitHub repo]: https://github.com/litejs/natural-compare-lite @version 1.4.0 @date 2015-10-26 @stability 3 - Stable Natural Compare &ndash; [![Build][]][1] [![Coverage][]][2] =============== Compare strings containing a mix of letters and numbers in the way a human being would in sort order. This is described as a "natural ordering". ```text Standard sorting: Natural order sorting: img1.png img1.png img10.png img2.png img12.png img10.png img2.png img12.png ``` String.naturalCompare returns a number indicating whether a reference string comes before or after or is the same as the given string in sort order. Use it with builtin sort() function. ### Installation - In browser ```html <script src=min.natural-compare.js></script> ``` - In node.js: `npm install natural-compare-lite` ```javascript require("natural-compare-lite") ``` ### Usage ```javascript // Simple case sensitive example var a = ["z1.doc", "z10.doc", "z17.doc", "z2.doc", "z23.doc", "z3.doc"]; a.sort(String.naturalCompare); // ["z1.doc", "z2.doc", "z3.doc", "z10.doc", "z17.doc", "z23.doc"] // Use wrapper function for case insensitivity a.sort(function(a, b){ return String.naturalCompare(a.toLowerCase(), b.toLowerCase()); }) // In most cases we want to sort an array of objects var a = [ {"street":"350 5th Ave", "room":"A-1021"} , {"street":"350 5th Ave", "room":"A-21046-b"} ]; // sort by street, then by room a.sort(function(a, b){ return String.naturalCompare(a.street, b.street) || String.naturalCompare(a.room, b.room); }) // When text transformation is needed (eg toLowerCase()), // it is best for performance to keep // transformed key in that object. // There are no need to do text transformation // on each comparision when sorting. var a = [ {"make":"Audi", "model":"A6"} , {"make":"Kia", "model":"Rio"} ]; // sort by make, then by model a.map(function(car){ car.sort_key = (car.make + " " + car.model).toLowerCase(); }) a.sort(function(a, b){ return String.naturalCompare(a.sort_key, b.sort_key); }) ``` - Works well with dates in ISO format eg "Rev 2012-07-26.doc". ### Custom alphabet It is possible to configure a custom alphabet to achieve a desired order. ```javascript // Estonian alphabet String.alphabet = "ABDEFGHIJKLMNOPRSŠZŽTUVÕÄÖÜXYabdefghijklmnoprsšzžtuvõäöüxy" ["t", "z", "x", "õ"].sort(String.naturalCompare) // ["z", "t", "õ", "x"] // Russian alphabet String.alphabet = "АБВГДЕЁЖЗИЙКЛМНОПРСТУФХЦЧШЩЪЫЬЭЮЯабвгдеёжзийклмнопрстуфхцчшщъыьэюя" ["Ё", "А", "Б"].sort(String.naturalCompare) // ["А", "Б", "Ё"] ``` External links -------------- - [GitHub repo][https://github.com/litejs/natural-compare-lite] - [jsperf test](http://jsperf.com/natural-sort-2/12) Licence ------- Copyright (c) 2012-2015 Lauri Rooden &lt;[email protected]&gt; [The MIT License](http://lauri.rooden.ee/mit-license.txt) <a name="table"></a> # Table > Produces a string that represents array data in a text table. [![Github action status](https://github.com/gajus/table/actions/workflows/main.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/gajus/table/actions) [![Coveralls](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/gajus/table.svg?style=flat-square)](https://coveralls.io/github/gajus/table) [![NPM version](http://img.shields.io/npm/v/table.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/table) [![Canonical Code Style](https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-canonical-blue.svg?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/gajus/canonical) [![Twitter Follow](https://img.shields.io/twitter/follow/kuizinas.svg?style=social&label=Follow)](https://twitter.com/kuizinas) * [Table](#table) * [Features](#table-features) * [Install](#table-install) * [Usage](#table-usage) * [API](#table-api) * [table](#table-api-table-1) * [createStream](#table-api-createstream) * [getBorderCharacters](#table-api-getbordercharacters) ![Demo of table displaying a list of missions to the Moon.](./.README/demo.png) <a name="table-features"></a> ## Features * Works with strings containing [fullwidth](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfwidth_and_fullwidth_forms) characters. * Works with strings containing [ANSI escape codes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code). * Configurable border characters. * Configurable content alignment per column. * Configurable content padding per column. * Configurable column width. * Text wrapping. <a name="table-install"></a> ## Install ```bash npm install table ``` [![Buy Me A Coffee](https://www.buymeacoffee.com/assets/img/custom_images/orange_img.png)](https://www.buymeacoffee.com/gajus) [![Become a Patron](https://c5.patreon.com/external/logo/become_a_patron_button.png)](https://www.patreon.com/gajus) <a name="table-usage"></a> ## Usage ```js import { table } from 'table'; // Using commonjs? // const { table } = require('table'); const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; console.log(table(data)); ``` ``` ╔════╤════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚════╧════╧════╝ ``` <a name="table-api"></a> ## API <a name="table-api-table-1"></a> ### table Returns the string in the table format **Parameters:** - **_data_:** The data to display - Type: `any[][]` - Required: `true` - **_config_:** Table configuration - Type: `object` - Required: `false` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-border"></a> ##### config.border Type: `{ [type: string]: string }`\ Default: `honeywell` [template](#getbordercharacters) Custom borders. The keys are any of: - `topLeft`, `topRight`, `topBody`,`topJoin` - `bottomLeft`, `bottomRight`, `bottomBody`, `bottomJoin` - `joinLeft`, `joinRight`, `joinBody`, `joinJoin` - `bodyLeft`, `bodyRight`, `bodyJoin` - `headerJoin` ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; const config = { border: { topBody: `─`, topJoin: `┬`, topLeft: `┌`, topRight: `┐`, bottomBody: `─`, bottomJoin: `┴`, bottomLeft: `└`, bottomRight: `┘`, bodyLeft: `│`, bodyRight: `│`, bodyJoin: `│`, joinBody: `─`, joinLeft: `├`, joinRight: `┤`, joinJoin: `┼` } }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ┌────┬────┬────┐ │ 0A │ 0B │ 0C │ ├────┼────┼────┤ │ 1A │ 1B │ 1C │ ├────┼────┼────┤ │ 2A │ 2B │ 2C │ └────┴────┴────┘ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-drawverticalline"></a> ##### config.drawVerticalLine Type: `(lineIndex: number, columnCount: number) => boolean`\ Default: `() => true` It is used to tell whether to draw a vertical line. This callback is called for each vertical border of the table. If the table has `n` columns, then the `index` parameter is alternatively received all numbers in range `[0, n]` inclusively. ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'], ['3A', '3B', '3C'], ['4A', '4B', '4C'] ]; const config = { drawVerticalLine: (lineIndex, columnCount) => { return lineIndex === 0 || lineIndex === columnCount; } }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔════════════╗ ║ 0A 0B 0C ║ ╟────────────╢ ║ 1A 1B 1C ║ ╟────────────╢ ║ 2A 2B 2C ║ ╟────────────╢ ║ 3A 3B 3C ║ ╟────────────╢ ║ 4A 4B 4C ║ ╚════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-drawhorizontalline"></a> ##### config.drawHorizontalLine Type: `(lineIndex: number, rowCount: number) => boolean`\ Default: `() => true` It is used to tell whether to draw a horizontal line. This callback is called for each horizontal border of the table. If the table has `n` rows, then the `index` parameter is alternatively received all numbers in range `[0, n]` inclusively. If the table has `n` rows and contains the header, then the range will be `[0, n+1]` inclusively. ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'], ['3A', '3B', '3C'], ['4A', '4B', '4C'] ]; const config = { drawHorizontalLine: (lineIndex, rowCount) => { return lineIndex === 0 || lineIndex === 1 || lineIndex === rowCount - 1 || lineIndex === rowCount; } }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔════╤════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ║ 3A │ 3B │ 3C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 4A │ 4B │ 4C ║ ╚════╧════╧════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-singleline"></a> ##### config.singleLine Type: `boolean`\ Default: `false` If `true`, horizontal lines inside the table are not drawn. This option also overrides the `config.drawHorizontalLine` if specified. ```js const data = [ ['-rw-r--r--', '1', 'pandorym', 'staff', '1529', 'May 23 11:25', 'LICENSE'], ['-rw-r--r--', '1', 'pandorym', 'staff', '16327', 'May 23 11:58', 'README.md'], ['drwxr-xr-x', '76', 'pandorym', 'staff', '2432', 'May 23 12:02', 'dist'], ['drwxr-xr-x', '634', 'pandorym', 'staff', '20288', 'May 23 11:54', 'node_modules'], ['-rw-r--r--', '1,', 'pandorym', 'staff', '525688', 'May 23 11:52', 'package-lock.json'], ['-rw-r--r--@', '1', 'pandorym', 'staff', '2440', 'May 23 11:25', 'package.json'], ['drwxr-xr-x', '27', 'pandorym', 'staff', '864', 'May 23 11:25', 'src'], ['drwxr-xr-x', '20', 'pandorym', 'staff', '640', 'May 23 11:25', 'test'], ]; const config = { singleLine: true }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔═════════════╤═════╤══════════╤═══════╤════════╤══════════════╤═══════════════════╗ ║ -rw-r--r-- │ 1 │ pandorym │ staff │ 1529 │ May 23 11:25 │ LICENSE ║ ║ -rw-r--r-- │ 1 │ pandorym │ staff │ 16327 │ May 23 11:58 │ README.md ║ ║ drwxr-xr-x │ 76 │ pandorym │ staff │ 2432 │ May 23 12:02 │ dist ║ ║ drwxr-xr-x │ 634 │ pandorym │ staff │ 20288 │ May 23 11:54 │ node_modules ║ ║ -rw-r--r-- │ 1, │ pandorym │ staff │ 525688 │ May 23 11:52 │ package-lock.json ║ ║ -rw-r--r--@ │ 1 │ pandorym │ staff │ 2440 │ May 23 11:25 │ package.json ║ ║ drwxr-xr-x │ 27 │ pandorym │ staff │ 864 │ May 23 11:25 │ src ║ ║ drwxr-xr-x │ 20 │ pandorym │ staff │ 640 │ May 23 11:25 │ test ║ ╚═════════════╧═════╧══════════╧═══════╧════════╧══════════════╧═══════════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns"></a> ##### config.columns Type: `Column[] | { [columnIndex: number]: Column }` Column specific configurations. <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-width"></a> ###### config.columns[*].width Type: `number`\ Default: the maximum cell widths of the column Column width (excluding the paddings). ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; const config = { columns: { 1: { width: 10 } } }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔════╤════════════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────┼────────────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟────┼────────────┼────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚════╧════════════╧════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-alignment"></a> ###### config.columns[*].alignment Type: `'center' | 'justify' | 'left' | 'right'`\ Default: `'left'` Cell content horizontal alignment ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C', '0D 0E 0F'], ['1A', '1B', '1C', '1D 1E 1F'], ['2A', '2B', '2C', '2D 2E 2F'], ]; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 10, }, columns: [ { alignment: 'left' }, { alignment: 'center' }, { alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'justify' } ], }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔════════════╤════════════╤════════════╤════════════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C │ 0D 0E 0F ║ ╟────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C │ 1D 1E 1F ║ ╟────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C │ 2D 2E 2F ║ ╚════════════╧════════════╧════════════╧════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-verticalalignment"></a> ###### config.columns[*].verticalAlignment Type: `'top' | 'middle' | 'bottom'`\ Default: `'top'` Cell content vertical alignment ```js const data = [ ['A', 'B', 'C', 'DEF'], ]; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 1, }, columns: [ { verticalAlignment: 'top' }, { verticalAlignment: 'middle' }, { verticalAlignment: 'bottom' }, ], }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔═══╤═══╤═══╤═══╗ ║ A │ │ │ D ║ ║ │ B │ │ E ║ ║ │ │ C │ F ║ ╚═══╧═══╧═══╧═══╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-paddingleft"></a> ###### config.columns[*].paddingLeft Type: `number`\ Default: `1` The number of whitespaces used to pad the content on the left. <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-paddingright"></a> ###### config.columns[*].paddingRight Type: `number`\ Default: `1` The number of whitespaces used to pad the content on the right. The `paddingLeft` and `paddingRight` options do not count on the column width. So the column has `width = 5`, `paddingLeft = 2` and `paddingRight = 2` will have the total width is `9`. ```js const data = [ ['0A', 'AABBCC', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; const config = { columns: [ { paddingLeft: 3 }, { width: 2, paddingRight: 3 } ] }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════╤══════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ AA │ 0C ║ ║ │ BB │ ║ ║ │ CC │ ║ ╟──────┼──────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟──────┼──────┼────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚══════╧══════╧════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-truncate"></a> ###### config.columns[*].truncate Type: `number`\ Default: `Infinity` The number of characters is which the content will be truncated. To handle a content that overflows the container width, `table` package implements [text wrapping](#config.columns[*].wrapWord). However, sometimes you may want to truncate content that is too long to be displayed in the table. ```js const data = [ ['Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Phasellus pulvinar nibh sed mauris convallis dapibus. Nunc venenatis tempus nulla sit amet viverra.'] ]; const config = { columns: [ { width: 20, truncate: 100 } ] }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════════════════════╗ ║ Lorem ipsum dolor si ║ ║ t amet, consectetur ║ ║ adipiscing elit. Pha ║ ║ sellus pulvinar nibh ║ ║ sed mauris convall… ║ ╚══════════════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columns-config-columns-wrapword"></a> ###### config.columns[*].wrapWord Type: `boolean`\ Default: `false` The `table` package implements auto text wrapping, i.e., text that has the width greater than the container width will be separated into multiple lines at the nearest space or one of the special characters: `\|/_.,;-`. When `wrapWord` is `false`: ```js const data = [ ['Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Phasellus pulvinar nibh sed mauris convallis dapibus. Nunc venenatis tempus nulla sit amet viverra.'] ]; const config = { columns: [ { width: 20 } ] }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════════════════════╗ ║ Lorem ipsum dolor si ║ ║ t amet, consectetur ║ ║ adipiscing elit. Pha ║ ║ sellus pulvinar nibh ║ ║ sed mauris convallis ║ ║ dapibus. Nunc venena ║ ║ tis tempus nulla sit ║ ║ amet viverra. ║ ╚══════════════════════╝ ``` When `wrapWord` is `true`: ``` ╔══════════════════════╗ ║ Lorem ipsum dolor ║ ║ sit amet, ║ ║ consectetur ║ ║ adipiscing elit. ║ ║ Phasellus pulvinar ║ ║ nibh sed mauris ║ ║ convallis dapibus. ║ ║ Nunc venenatis ║ ║ tempus nulla sit ║ ║ amet viverra. ║ ╚══════════════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-columndefault"></a> ##### config.columnDefault Type: `Column`\ Default: `{}` The default configuration for all columns. Column-specific settings will overwrite the default values. <a name="table-api-table-1-config-header"></a> ##### config.header Type: `object` Header configuration. *Deprecated in favor of the new spanning cells API.* The header configuration inherits the most of the column's, except: - `content` **{string}**: the header content. - `width:` calculate based on the content width automatically. - `alignment:` `center` be default. - `verticalAlignment:` is not supported. - `config.border.topJoin` will be `config.border.topBody` for prettier. ```js const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'], ]; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 10, }, header: { alignment: 'center', content: 'THE HEADER\nThis is the table about something', }, } console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════════════════════════════════════╗ ║ THE HEADER ║ ║ This is the table about something ║ ╟────────────┬────────────┬────────────╢ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────────────┼────────────┼────────────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟────────────┼────────────┼────────────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚════════════╧════════════╧════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-table-1-config-spanningcells"></a> ##### config.spanningCells Type: `SpanningCellConfig[]` Spanning cells configuration. The configuration should be straightforward: just specify an array of minimal cell configurations including the position of top-left cell and the number of columns and/or rows will be expanded from it. The content of overlap cells will be ignored to make the `data` shape be consistent. By default, the configuration of column that the top-left cell belongs to will be applied to the whole spanning cell, except: * The `width` will be summed up of all spanning columns. * The `paddingRight` will be received from the right-most column intentionally. Advances customized column-like styles can be configurable to each spanning cell to overwrite the default behavior. ```js const data = [ ['Test Coverage Report', '', '', '', '', ''], ['Module', 'Component', 'Test Cases', 'Failures', 'Durations', 'Success Rate'], ['Services', 'User', '50', '30', '3m 7s', '60.0%'], ['', 'Payment', '100', '80', '7m 15s', '80.0%'], ['Subtotal', '', '150', '110', '10m 22s', '73.3%'], ['Controllers', 'User', '24', '18', '1m 30s', '75.0%'], ['', 'Payment', '30', '24', '50s', '80.0%'], ['Subtotal', '', '54', '42', '2m 20s', '77.8%'], ['Total', '', '204', '152', '12m 42s', '74.5%'], ]; const config = { columns: [ { alignment: 'center', width: 12 }, { alignment: 'center', width: 10 }, { alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'right' } ], spanningCells: [ { col: 0, row: 0, colSpan: 6 }, { col: 0, row: 2, rowSpan: 2, verticalAlignment: 'middle'}, { col: 0, row: 4, colSpan: 2, alignment: 'right'}, { col: 0, row: 5, rowSpan: 2, verticalAlignment: 'middle'}, { col: 0, row: 7, colSpan: 2, alignment: 'right' }, { col: 0, row: 8, colSpan: 2, alignment: 'right' } ], }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` ╔══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╗ ║ Test Coverage Report ║ ╟──────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬──────────┬───────────┬──────────────╢ ║ Module │ Component │ Test Cases │ Failures │ Durations │ Success Rate ║ ╟──────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ │ User │ 50 │ 30 │ 3m 7s │ 60.0% ║ ║ Services ├────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ │ Payment │ 100 │ 80 │ 7m 15s │ 80.0% ║ ╟──────────────┴────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ Subtotal │ 150 │ 110 │ 10m 22s │ 73.3% ║ ╟──────────────┬────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ │ User │ 24 │ 18 │ 1m 30s │ 75.0% ║ ║ Controllers ├────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ │ Payment │ 30 │ 24 │ 50s │ 80.0% ║ ╟──────────────┴────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ Subtotal │ 54 │ 42 │ 2m 20s │ 77.8% ║ ╟───────────────────────────┼────────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────────╢ ║ Total │ 204 │ 152 │ 12m 42s │ 74.5% ║ ╚═══════════════════════════╧════════════╧══════════╧═══════════╧══════════════╝ ``` <a name="table-api-createstream"></a> ### createStream `table` package exports `createStream` function used to draw a table and append rows. **Parameter:** - _**config:**_ the same as `table`'s, except `config.columnDefault.width` and `config.columnCount` must be provided. ```js import { createStream } from 'table'; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 50 }, columnCount: 1 }; const stream = createStream(config); setInterval(() => { stream.write([new Date()]); }, 500); ``` ![Streaming current date.](./.README/api/stream/streaming.gif) `table` package uses ANSI escape codes to overwrite the output of the last line when a new row is printed. The underlying implementation is explained in this [Stack Overflow answer](http://stackoverflow.com/a/32938658/368691). Streaming supports all of the configuration properties and functionality of a static table (such as auto text wrapping, alignment and padding), e.g. ```js import { createStream } from 'table'; import _ from 'lodash'; const config = { columnDefault: { width: 50 }, columnCount: 3, columns: [ { width: 10, alignment: 'right' }, { alignment: 'center' }, { width: 10 } ] }; const stream = createStream(config); let i = 0; setInterval(() => { let random; random = _.sample('abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz', _.random(1, 30)).join(''); stream.write([i++, new Date(), random]); }, 500); ``` ![Streaming random data.](./.README/api/stream/streaming-random.gif) <a name="table-api-getbordercharacters"></a> ### getBorderCharacters **Parameter:** - **_template_** - Type: `'honeywell' | 'norc' | 'ramac' | 'void'` - Required: `true` You can load one of the predefined border templates using `getBorderCharacters` function. ```js import { table, getBorderCharacters } from 'table'; const data = [ ['0A', '0B', '0C'], ['1A', '1B', '1C'], ['2A', '2B', '2C'] ]; const config = { border: getBorderCharacters(`name of the template`) }; console.log(table(data, config)); ``` ``` # honeywell ╔════╤════╤════╗ ║ 0A │ 0B │ 0C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 1A │ 1B │ 1C ║ ╟────┼────┼────╢ ║ 2A │ 2B │ 2C ║ ╚════╧════╧════╝ # norc ┌────┬────┬────┐ │ 0A │ 0B │ 0C │ ├────┼────┼────┤ │ 1A │ 1B │ 1C │ ├────┼────┼────┤ │ 2A │ 2B │ 2C │ └────┴────┴────┘ # ramac (ASCII; for use in terminals that do not support Unicode characters) +----+----+----+ | 0A | 0B | 0C | |----|----|----| | 1A | 1B | 1C | |----|----|----| | 2A | 2B | 2C | +----+----+----+ # void (no borders; see "borderless table" section of the documentation) 0A 0B 0C 1A 1B 1C 2A 2B 2C ``` Raise [an issue](https://github.com/gajus/table/issues) if you'd like to contribute a new border template. <a name="table-api-getbordercharacters-borderless-table"></a> #### Borderless Table Simply using `void` border character template creates a table with a lot of unnecessary spacing. To create a more pleasant to the eye table, reset the padding and remove the joining rows, e.g. ```js const output = table(data, { border: getBorderCharacters('void'), columnDefault: { paddingLeft: 0, paddingRight: 1 }, drawHorizontalLine: () => false } ); console.log(output); ``` ``` 0A 0B 0C 1A 1B 1C 2A 2B 2C ``` [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint) [![Downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint) [![Build Status](https://github.com/eslint/eslint/workflows/CI/badge.svg)](https://github.com/eslint/eslint/actions) [![FOSSA Status](https://app.fossa.io/api/projects/git%2Bhttps%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Feslint%2Feslint.svg?type=shield)](https://app.fossa.io/projects/git%2Bhttps%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Feslint%2Feslint?ref=badge_shield) <br /> [![Open Collective Backers](https://img.shields.io/opencollective/backers/eslint)](https://opencollective.com/eslint) [![Open Collective Sponsors](https://img.shields.io/opencollective/sponsors/eslint)](https://opencollective.com/eslint) [![Follow us on Twitter](https://img.shields.io/twitter/follow/geteslint?label=Follow&style=social)](https://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=geteslint) # ESLint [Website](https://eslint.org) | [Configuring](https://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/configuring) | [Rules](https://eslint.org/docs/rules/) | [Contributing](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing) | [Reporting Bugs](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/reporting-bugs) | [Code of Conduct](https://eslint.org/conduct) | [Twitter](https://twitter.com/geteslint) | [Mailing List](https://groups.google.com/group/eslint) | [Chat Room](https://eslint.org/chat) ESLint is a tool for identifying and reporting on patterns found in ECMAScript/JavaScript code. In many ways, it is similar to JSLint and JSHint with a few exceptions: * ESLint uses [Espree](https://github.com/eslint/espree) for JavaScript parsing. * ESLint uses an AST to evaluate patterns in code. * ESLint is completely pluggable, every single rule is a plugin and you can add more at runtime. ## Table of Contents 1. [Installation and Usage](#installation-and-usage) 2. [Configuration](#configuration) 3. [Code of Conduct](#code-of-conduct) 4. [Filing Issues](#filing-issues) 5. [Frequently Asked Questions](#faq) 6. [Releases](#releases) 7. [Security Policy](#security-policy) 8. [Semantic Versioning Policy](#semantic-versioning-policy) 9. [Stylistic Rule Updates](#stylistic-rule-updates) 10. [License](#license) 11. [Team](#team) 12. [Sponsors](#sponsors) 13. [Technology Sponsors](#technology-sponsors) ## <a name="installation-and-usage"></a>Installation and Usage Prerequisites: [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) (`^10.12.0`, or `>=12.0.0`) built with SSL support. (If you are using an official Node.js distribution, SSL is always built in.) You can install ESLint using npm: ``` $ npm install eslint --save-dev ``` You should then set up a configuration file: ``` $ ./node_modules/.bin/eslint --init ``` After that, you can run ESLint on any file or directory like this: ``` $ ./node_modules/.bin/eslint yourfile.js ``` ## <a name="configuration"></a>Configuration After running `eslint --init`, you'll have a `.eslintrc` file in your directory. In it, you'll see some rules configured like this: ```json { "rules": { "semi": ["error", "always"], "quotes": ["error", "double"] } } ``` The names `"semi"` and `"quotes"` are the names of [rules](https://eslint.org/docs/rules) in ESLint. The first value is the error level of the rule and can be one of these values: * `"off"` or `0` - turn the rule off * `"warn"` or `1` - turn the rule on as a warning (doesn't affect exit code) * `"error"` or `2` - turn the rule on as an error (exit code will be 1) The three error levels allow you fine-grained control over how ESLint applies rules (for more configuration options and details, see the [configuration docs](https://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/configuring)). ## <a name="code-of-conduct"></a>Code of Conduct ESLint adheres to the [JS Foundation Code of Conduct](https://eslint.org/conduct). ## <a name="filing-issues"></a>Filing Issues Before filing an issue, please be sure to read the guidelines for what you're reporting: * [Bug Report](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/reporting-bugs) * [Propose a New Rule](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/new-rules) * [Proposing a Rule Change](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/rule-changes) * [Request a Change](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/changes) ## <a name="faq"></a>Frequently Asked Questions ### I'm using JSCS, should I migrate to ESLint? 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We recommend using [eslint-plugin-react](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-plugin-react) if you are using React and want React semantics. ### What ECMAScript versions does ESLint support? ESLint has full support for ECMAScript 3, 5 (default), 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020. You can set your desired ECMAScript syntax (and other settings, like global variables or your target environments) through [configuration](https://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/configuring). ### What about experimental features? ESLint's parser only officially supports the latest final ECMAScript standard. We will make changes to core rules in order to avoid crashes on stage 3 ECMAScript syntax proposals (as long as they are implemented using the correct experimental ESTree syntax). We may make changes to core rules to better work with language extensions (such as JSX, Flow, and TypeScript) on a case-by-case basis. In other cases (including if rules need to warn on more or fewer cases due to new syntax, rather than just not crashing), we recommend you use other parsers and/or rule plugins. If you are using Babel, you can use the [babel-eslint](https://github.com/babel/babel-eslint) parser and [eslint-plugin-babel](https://github.com/babel/eslint-plugin-babel) to use any option available in Babel. Once a language feature has been adopted into the ECMAScript standard (stage 4 according to the [TC39 process](https://tc39.github.io/process-document/)), we will accept issues and pull requests related to the new feature, subject to our [contributing guidelines](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing). Until then, please use the appropriate parser and plugin(s) for your experimental feature. ### Where to ask for help? Join our [Mailing List](https://groups.google.com/group/eslint) or [Chatroom](https://eslint.org/chat). ### Why doesn't ESLint lock dependency versions? Lock files like `package-lock.json` are helpful for deployed applications. They ensure that dependencies are consistent between environments and across deployments. Packages like `eslint` that get published to the npm registry do not include lock files. `npm install eslint` as a user will respect version constraints in ESLint's `package.json`. ESLint and its dependencies will be included in the user's lock file if one exists, but ESLint's own lock file would not be used. We intentionally don't lock dependency versions so that we have the latest compatible dependency versions in development and CI that our users get when installing ESLint in a project. The Twilio blog has a [deeper dive](https://www.twilio.com/blog/lockfiles-nodejs) to learn more. ## <a name="releases"></a>Releases We have scheduled releases every two weeks on Friday or Saturday. You can follow a [release issue](https://github.com/eslint/eslint/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Arelease) for updates about the scheduling of any particular release. ## <a name="security-policy"></a>Security Policy ESLint takes security seriously. We work hard to ensure that ESLint is safe for everyone and that security issues are addressed quickly and responsibly. Read the full [security policy](https://github.com/eslint/.github/blob/master/SECURITY.md). ## <a name="semantic-versioning-policy"></a>Semantic Versioning Policy ESLint follows [semantic versioning](https://semver.org). However, due to the nature of ESLint as a code quality tool, it's not always clear when a minor or major version bump occurs. To help clarify this for everyone, we've defined the following semantic versioning policy for ESLint: * Patch release (intended to not break your lint build) * A bug fix in a rule that results in ESLint reporting fewer linting errors. * A bug fix to the CLI or core (including formatters). * Improvements to documentation. * Non-user-facing changes such as refactoring code, adding, deleting, or modifying tests, and increasing test coverage. * Re-releasing after a failed release (i.e., publishing a release that doesn't work for anyone). * Minor release (might break your lint build) * A bug fix in a rule that results in ESLint reporting more linting errors. * A new rule is created. * A new option to an existing rule that does not result in ESLint reporting more linting errors by default. * A new addition to an existing rule to support a newly-added language feature (within the last 12 months) that will result in ESLint reporting more linting errors by default. * An existing rule is deprecated. * A new CLI capability is created. * New capabilities to the public API are added (new classes, new methods, new arguments to existing methods, etc.). * A new formatter is created. * `eslint:recommended` is updated and will result in strictly fewer linting errors (e.g., rule removals). * Major release (likely to break your lint build) * `eslint:recommended` is updated and may result in new linting errors (e.g., rule additions, most rule option updates). * A new option to an existing rule that results in ESLint reporting more linting errors by default. * An existing formatter is removed. * Part of the public API is removed or changed in an incompatible way. The public API includes: * Rule schemas * Configuration schema * Command-line options * Node.js API * Rule, formatter, parser, plugin APIs According to our policy, any minor update may report more linting errors than the previous release (ex: from a bug fix). As such, we recommend using the tilde (`~`) in `package.json` e.g. `"eslint": "~3.1.0"` to guarantee the results of your builds. ## <a name="stylistic-rule-updates"></a>Stylistic Rule Updates Stylistic rules are frozen according to [our policy](https://eslint.org/blog/2020/05/changes-to-rules-policies) on how we evaluate new rules and rule changes. This means: * **Bug fixes**: We will still fix bugs in stylistic rules. * **New ECMAScript features**: We will also make sure stylistic rules are compatible with new ECMAScript features. * **New options**: We will **not** add any new options to stylistic rules unless an option is the only way to fix a bug or support a newly-added ECMAScript feature. ## <a name="license"></a>License [![FOSSA Status](https://app.fossa.io/api/projects/git%2Bhttps%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Feslint%2Feslint.svg?type=large)](https://app.fossa.io/projects/git%2Bhttps%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Feslint%2Feslint?ref=badge_large) ## <a name="team"></a>Team These folks keep the project moving and are resources for help. <!-- NOTE: This section is autogenerated. Do not manually edit.--> <!--teamstart--> ### Technical Steering Committee (TSC) The people who manage releases, review feature requests, and meet regularly to ensure ESLint is properly maintained. <table><tbody><tr><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/nzakas"> <img src="https://github.com/nzakas.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Nicholas C. Zakas </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/btmills"> <img src="https://github.com/btmills.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Brandon Mills </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/mdjermanovic"> <img src="https://github.com/mdjermanovic.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Milos Djermanovic </a> </td></tr></tbody></table> ### Reviewers The people who review and implement new features. <table><tbody><tr><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/mysticatea"> <img src="https://github.com/mysticatea.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Toru Nagashima </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/aladdin-add"> <img src="https://github.com/aladdin-add.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> 薛定谔的猫 </a> </td></tr></tbody></table> ### Committers The people who review and fix bugs and help triage issues. <table><tbody><tr><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/brettz9"> <img src="https://github.com/brettz9.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Brett Zamir </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/bmish"> <img src="https://github.com/bmish.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Bryan Mishkin </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/g-plane"> <img src="https://github.com/g-plane.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Pig Fang </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/anikethsaha"> <img src="https://github.com/anikethsaha.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Anix </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/yeonjuan"> <img src="https://github.com/yeonjuan.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> YeonJuan </a> </td><td align="center" valign="top" width="11%"> <a href="https://github.com/snitin315"> <img src="https://github.com/snitin315.png?s=75" width="75" height="75"><br /> Nitin Kumar </a> </td></tr></tbody></table> <!--teamend--> ## <a name="sponsors"></a>Sponsors The following companies, organizations, and individuals support ESLint's ongoing maintenance and development. [Become a Sponsor](https://opencollective.com/eslint) to get your logo on our README and website. <!-- NOTE: This section is autogenerated. Do not manually edit.--> <!--sponsorsstart--> <h3>Platinum Sponsors</h3> <p><a href="https://automattic.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/photomatt/d0ef3e1/logo.png" alt="Automattic" height="undefined"></a></p><h3>Gold Sponsors</h3> <p><a href="https://nx.dev"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/nx/0efbe42/logo.png" alt="Nx (by Nrwl)" height="96"></a> <a href="https://google.com/chrome"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/chrome/dc55bd4/logo.png" alt="Chrome's Web Framework & Tools Performance Fund" height="96"></a> <a href="https://www.salesforce.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/salesforce/ca8f997/logo.png" alt="Salesforce" height="96"></a> <a href="https://www.airbnb.com/"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/airbnb/d327d66/logo.png" alt="Airbnb" height="96"></a> <a href="https://coinbase.com"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/1885080?v=4" alt="Coinbase" height="96"></a> <a href="https://substack.com/"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/53023767?v=4" alt="Substack" height="96"></a></p><h3>Silver Sponsors</h3> <p><a href="https://retool.com/"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/retool/98ea68e/logo.png" alt="Retool" height="64"></a> <a href="https://liftoff.io/"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/liftoff/5c4fa84/logo.png" alt="Liftoff" height="64"></a></p><h3>Bronze Sponsors</h3> <p><a href="https://www.crosswordsolver.org/anagram-solver/"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/anagram-solver/2666271/logo.png" alt="Anagram Solver" height="32"></a> <a href="null"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/bugsnag-stability-monitoring/c2cef36/logo.png" alt="Bugsnag Stability Monitoring" height="32"></a> <a href="https://mixpanel.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/mixpanel/cd682f7/logo.png" alt="Mixpanel" height="32"></a> <a href="https://www.vpsserver.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/vpsservercom/logo.png" alt="VPS Server" height="32"></a> <a href="https://icons8.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/icons8/7fa1641/logo.png" alt="Icons8: free icons, photos, illustrations, and music" height="32"></a> <a href="https://discord.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/discordapp/f9645d9/logo.png" alt="Discord" height="32"></a> <a href="https://themeisle.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/themeisle/d5592fe/logo.png" alt="ThemeIsle" height="32"></a> <a href="https://www.firesticktricks.com"><img src="https://images.opencollective.com/fire-stick-tricks/b8fbe2c/logo.png" alt="Fire Stick Tricks" height="32"></a> <a href="https://www.practiceignition.com"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/5753491?v=4" alt="Practice Ignition" height="32"></a></p> <!--sponsorsend--> ## <a name="technology-sponsors"></a>Technology Sponsors * Site search ([eslint.org](https://eslint.org)) is sponsored by [Algolia](https://www.algolia.com) * Hosting for ([eslint.org](https://eslint.org)) is sponsored by [Netlify](https://www.netlify.com) * Password management is sponsored by [1Password](https://www.1password.com) # fs-minipass Filesystem streams based on [minipass](http://npm.im/minipass). 4 classes are exported: - ReadStream - ReadStreamSync - WriteStream - WriteStreamSync When using `ReadStreamSync`, all of the data is made available immediately upon consuming the stream. Nothing is buffered in memory when the stream is constructed. If the stream is piped to a writer, then it will synchronously `read()` and emit data into the writer as fast as the writer can consume it. (That is, it will respect backpressure.) If you call `stream.read()` then it will read the entire file and return the contents. When using `WriteStreamSync`, every write is flushed to the file synchronously. If your writes all come in a single tick, then it'll write it all out in a single tick. It's as synchronous as you are. The async versions work much like their node builtin counterparts, with the exception of introducing significantly less Stream machinery overhead. ## USAGE It's just streams, you pipe them or read() them or write() to them. ```js const fsm = require('fs-minipass') const readStream = new fsm.ReadStream('file.txt') const writeStream = new fsm.WriteStream('output.txt') writeStream.write('some file header or whatever\n') readStream.pipe(writeStream) ``` ## ReadStream(path, options) Path string is required, but somewhat irrelevant if an open file descriptor is passed in as an option. Options: - `fd` Pass in a numeric file descriptor, if the file is already open. - `readSize` The size of reads to do, defaults to 16MB - `size` The size of the file, if known. Prevents zero-byte read() call at the end. - `autoClose` Set to `false` to prevent the file descriptor from being closed when the file is done being read. ## WriteStream(path, options) Path string is required, but somewhat irrelevant if an open file descriptor is passed in as an option. Options: - `fd` Pass in a numeric file descriptor, if the file is already open. - `mode` The mode to create the file with. Defaults to `0o666`. - `start` The position in the file to start reading. If not specified, then the file will start writing at position zero, and be truncated by default. - `autoClose` Set to `false` to prevent the file descriptor from being closed when the stream is ended. - `flags` Flags to use when opening the file. Irrelevant if `fd` is passed in, since file won't be opened in that case. Defaults to `'a'` if a `pos` is specified, or `'w'` otherwise. # once Only call a function once. ## usage ```javascript var once = require('once') function load (file, cb) { cb = once(cb) loader.load('file') loader.once('load', cb) loader.once('error', cb) } ``` Or add to the Function.prototype in a responsible way: ```javascript // only has to be done once require('once').proto() function load (file, cb) { cb = cb.once() loader.load('file') loader.once('load', cb) loader.once('error', cb) } ``` Ironically, the prototype feature makes this module twice as complicated as necessary. To check whether you function has been called, use `fn.called`. Once the function is called for the first time the return value of the original function is saved in `fn.value` and subsequent calls will continue to return this value. ```javascript var once = require('once') function load (cb) { cb = once(cb) var stream = createStream() stream.once('data', cb) stream.once('end', function () { if (!cb.called) cb(new Error('not found')) }) } ``` ## `once.strict(func)` Throw an error if the function is called twice. Some functions are expected to be called only once. Using `once` for them would potentially hide logical errors. In the example below, the `greet` function has to call the callback only once: ```javascript function greet (name, cb) { // return is missing from the if statement // when no name is passed, the callback is called twice if (!name) cb('Hello anonymous') cb('Hello ' + name) } function log (msg) { console.log(msg) } // this will print 'Hello anonymous' but the logical error will be missed greet(null, once(msg)) // once.strict will print 'Hello anonymous' and throw an error when the callback will be called the second time greet(null, once.strict(msg)) ``` # cliui [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/cliui.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/cliui) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/yargs/cliui/badge.svg?branch=)](https://coveralls.io/r/yargs/cliui?branch=) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/cliui.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cliui) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) easily create complex multi-column command-line-interfaces. ## Example ```js var ui = require('cliui')() ui.div('Usage: $0 [command] [options]') ui.div({ text: 'Options:', padding: [2, 0, 2, 0] }) ui.div( { text: "-f, --file", width: 20, padding: [0, 4, 0, 4] }, { text: "the file to load." + chalk.green("(if this description is long it wraps).") , width: 20 }, { text: chalk.red("[required]"), align: 'right' } ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` <img width="500" src="screenshot.png"> ## Layout DSL cliui exposes a simple layout DSL: If you create a single `ui.div`, passing a string rather than an object: * `\n`: characters will be interpreted as new rows. * `\t`: characters will be interpreted as new columns. * `\s`: characters will be interpreted as padding. **as an example...** ```js var ui = require('./')({ width: 60 }) ui.div( 'Usage: node ./bin/foo.js\n' + ' <regex>\t provide a regex\n' + ' <glob>\t provide a glob\t [required]' ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` **will output:** ```shell Usage: node ./bin/foo.js <regex> provide a regex <glob> provide a glob [required] ``` ## Methods ```js cliui = require('cliui') ``` ### cliui({width: integer}) Specify the maximum width of the UI being generated. If no width is provided, cliui will try to get the current window's width and use it, and if that doesn't work, width will be set to `80`. ### cliui({wrap: boolean}) Enable or disable the wrapping of text in a column. ### cliui.div(column, column, column) Create a row with any number of columns, a column can either be a string, or an object with the following options: * **text:** some text to place in the column. * **width:** the width of a column. * **align:** alignment, `right` or `center`. * **padding:** `[top, right, bottom, left]`. * **border:** should a border be placed around the div? ### cliui.span(column, column, column) Similar to `div`, except the next row will be appended without a new line being created. ### cliui.resetOutput() Resets the UI elements of the current cliui instance, maintaining the values set for `width` and `wrap`. # yallist Yet Another Linked List There are many doubly-linked list implementations like it, but this one is mine. For when an array would be too big, and a Map can't be iterated in reverse order. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/yallist.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/yallist) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/isaacs/yallist/badge.svg?service=github)](https://coveralls.io/github/isaacs/yallist) ## basic usage ```javascript var yallist = require('yallist') var myList = yallist.create([1, 2, 3]) myList.push('foo') myList.unshift('bar') // of course pop() and shift() are there, too console.log(myList.toArray()) // ['bar', 1, 2, 3, 'foo'] myList.forEach(function (k) { // walk the list head to tail }) myList.forEachReverse(function (k, index, list) { // walk the list tail to head }) var myDoubledList = myList.map(function (k) { return k + k }) // now myDoubledList contains ['barbar', 2, 4, 6, 'foofoo'] // mapReverse is also a thing var myDoubledListReverse = myList.mapReverse(function (k) { return k + k }) // ['foofoo', 6, 4, 2, 'barbar'] var reduced = myList.reduce(function (set, entry) { set += entry return set }, 'start') console.log(reduced) // 'startfoo123bar' ``` ## api The whole API is considered "public". Functions with the same name as an Array method work more or less the same way. There's reverse versions of most things because that's the point. ### Yallist Default export, the class that holds and manages a list. Call it with either a forEach-able (like an array) or a set of arguments, to initialize the list. The Array-ish methods all act like you'd expect. No magic length, though, so if you change that it won't automatically prune or add empty spots. ### Yallist.create(..) Alias for Yallist function. Some people like factories. #### yallist.head The first node in the list #### yallist.tail The last node in the list #### yallist.length The number of nodes in the list. (Change this at your peril. It is not magic like Array length.) #### yallist.toArray() Convert the list to an array. #### yallist.forEach(fn, [thisp]) Call a function on each item in the list. #### yallist.forEachReverse(fn, [thisp]) Call a function on each item in the list, in reverse order. #### yallist.get(n) Get the data at position `n` in the list. If you use this a lot, probably better off just using an Array. #### yallist.getReverse(n) Get the data at position `n`, counting from the tail. #### yallist.map(fn, thisp) Create a new Yallist with the result of calling the function on each item. #### yallist.mapReverse(fn, thisp) Same as `map`, but in reverse. #### yallist.pop() Get the data from the list tail, and remove the tail from the list. #### yallist.push(item, ...) Insert one or more items to the tail of the list. #### yallist.reduce(fn, initialValue) Like Array.reduce. #### yallist.reduceReverse Like Array.reduce, but in reverse. #### yallist.reverse Reverse the list in place. #### yallist.shift() Get the data from the list head, and remove the head from the list. #### yallist.slice([from], [to]) Just like Array.slice, but returns a new Yallist. #### yallist.sliceReverse([from], [to]) Just like yallist.slice, but the result is returned in reverse. #### yallist.toArray() Create an array representation of the list. #### yallist.toArrayReverse() Create a reversed array representation of the list. #### yallist.unshift(item, ...) Insert one or more items to the head of the list. #### yallist.unshiftNode(node) Move a Node object to the front of the list. (That is, pull it out of wherever it lives, and make it the new head.) If the node belongs to a different list, then that list will remove it first. #### yallist.pushNode(node) Move a Node object to the end of the list. (That is, pull it out of wherever it lives, and make it the new tail.) If the node belongs to a list already, then that list will remove it first. #### yallist.removeNode(node) Remove a node from the list, preserving referential integrity of head and tail and other nodes. Will throw an error if you try to have a list remove a node that doesn't belong to it. ### Yallist.Node The class that holds the data and is actually the list. Call with `var n = new Node(value, previousNode, nextNode)` Note that if you do direct operations on Nodes themselves, it's very easy to get into weird states where the list is broken. Be careful :) #### node.next The next node in the list. #### node.prev The previous node in the list. #### node.value The data the node contains. #### node.list The list to which this node belongs. (Null if it does not belong to any list.) discontinuous-range =================== ``` DiscontinuousRange(1, 10).subtract(4, 6); // [ 1-3, 7-10 ] ``` [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/dtudury/discontinuous-range.png)](https://travis-ci.org/dtudury/discontinuous-range) this is a pretty simple module, but it exists to service another project so this'll be pretty lacking documentation. reading the test to see how this works may help. otherwise, here's an example that I think pretty much sums it up ###Example ``` var all_numbers = new DiscontinuousRange(1, 100); var bad_numbers = DiscontinuousRange(13).add(8).add(60,80); var good_numbers = all_numbers.clone().subtract(bad_numbers); console.log(good_numbers.toString()); //[ 1-7, 9-12, 14-59, 81-100 ] var random_good_number = good_numbers.index(Math.floor(Math.random() * good_numbers.length)); ``` ## Timezone support In order to provide support for timezones, without relying on the JavaScript host or any other time-zone aware environment, this library makes use of teh IANA Timezone Database directly: https://www.iana.org/time-zones The database files are parsed by the scripts in this folder, which emit AssemblyScript code which is used to process the various rules at runtime. # isobject [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/isobject.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/isobject) [![NPM downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/isobject.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/isobject) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jonschlinkert/isobject.svg?style=flat)](https://travis-ci.org/jonschlinkert/isobject) Returns true if the value is an object and not an array or null. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install isobject --save ``` Use [is-plain-object](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-plain-object) if you want only objects that are created by the `Object` constructor. ## Install Install with [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh $ npm install isobject ``` Install with [bower](http://bower.io/) ```sh $ bower install isobject ``` ## Usage ```js var isObject = require('isobject'); ``` **True** All of the following return `true`: ```js isObject({}); isObject(Object.create({})); isObject(Object.create(Object.prototype)); isObject(Object.create(null)); isObject({}); isObject(new Foo); isObject(/foo/); ``` **False** All of the following return `false`: ```js isObject(); isObject(function () {}); isObject(1); isObject([]); isObject(undefined); isObject(null); ``` ## Related projects You might also be interested in these projects: [merge-deep](https://www.npmjs.com/package/merge-deep): Recursively merge values in a javascript object. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/merge-deep) * [extend-shallow](https://www.npmjs.com/package/extend-shallow): Extend an object with the properties of additional objects. node.js/javascript util. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/extend-shallow) * [is-plain-object](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-plain-object): Returns true if an object was created by the `Object` constructor. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-plain-object) * [kind-of](https://www.npmjs.com/package/kind-of): Get the native type of a value. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/kind-of) ## Contributing Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/isobject/issues/new). ## Building docs Generate readme and API documentation with [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb): ```sh $ npm install verb && npm run docs ``` Or, if [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb) is installed globally: ```sh $ verb ``` ## Running tests Install dev dependencies: ```sh $ npm install -d && npm test ``` ## Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [github/jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [twitter/jonschlinkert](http://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) ## License Copyright © 2016, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT license](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/isobject/blob/master/LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb](https://github.com/verbose/verb), v0.9.0, on April 25, 2016._ # yargs-parser ![ci](https://github.com/yargs/yargs-parser/workflows/ci/badge.svg) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs-parser.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs-parser) [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) ![nycrc config on GitHub](https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/yargs-parser) The mighty option parser used by [yargs](https://github.com/yargs/yargs). visit the [yargs website](http://yargs.js.org/) for more examples, and thorough usage instructions. <img width="250" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yargs/yargs-parser/main/yargs-logo.png"> ## Example ```sh npm i yargs-parser --save ``` ```js const argv = require('yargs-parser')(process.argv.slice(2)) console.log(argv) ``` ```console $ node example.js --foo=33 --bar hello { _: [], foo: 33, bar: 'hello' } ``` _or parse a string!_ ```js const argv = require('yargs-parser')('--foo=99 --bar=33') console.log(argv) ``` ```console { _: [], foo: 99, bar: 33 } ``` Convert an array of mixed types before passing to `yargs-parser`: ```js const parse = require('yargs-parser') parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].join(' ')) // <-- array to string parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].map(String)) // <-- array of strings ``` ## Deno Example As of `v19` `yargs-parser` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno): ```typescript import parser from "https://deno.land/x/yargs_parser/deno.ts"; const argv = parser('--foo=99 --bar=9987930', { string: ['bar'] }) console.log(argv) ``` ## ESM Example As of `v19` `yargs-parser` supports ESM (_both in Node.js and in the browser_): **Node.js:** ```js import parser from 'yargs-parser' const argv = parser('--foo=99 --bar=9987930', { string: ['bar'] }) console.log(argv) ``` **Browsers:** ```html <!doctype html> <body> <script type="module"> import parser from "https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/browser.js"; const argv = parser('--foo=99 --bar=9987930', { string: ['bar'] }) console.log(argv) </script> </body> ``` ## API ### parser(args, opts={}) Parses command line arguments returning a simple mapping of keys and values. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing the options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args` should be parsed: * `opts.alias`: an object representing the set of aliases for a key: `{alias: {foo: ['f']}}`. * `opts.array`: indicate that keys should be parsed as an array: `{array: ['foo', 'bar']}`.<br> Indicate that keys should be parsed as an array and coerced to booleans / numbers:<br> `{array: [{ key: 'foo', boolean: true }, {key: 'bar', number: true}]}`. * `opts.boolean`: arguments should be parsed as booleans: `{boolean: ['x', 'y']}`. * `opts.coerce`: provide a custom synchronous function that returns a coerced value from the argument provided (or throws an error). For arrays the function is called only once for the entire array:<br> `{coerce: {foo: function (arg) {return modifiedArg}}}`. * `opts.config`: indicate a key that represents a path to a configuration file (this file will be loaded and parsed). * `opts.configObjects`: configuration objects to parse, their properties will be set as arguments:<br> `{configObjects: [{'x': 5, 'y': 33}, {'z': 44}]}`. * `opts.configuration`: provide configuration options to the yargs-parser (see: [configuration](#configuration)). * `opts.count`: indicate a key that should be used as a counter, e.g., `-vvv` = `{v: 3}`. * `opts.default`: provide default values for keys: `{default: {x: 33, y: 'hello world!'}}`. * `opts.envPrefix`: environment variables (`process.env`) with the prefix provided should be parsed. * `opts.narg`: specify that a key requires `n` arguments: `{narg: {x: 2}}`. * `opts.normalize`: `path.normalize()` will be applied to values set to this key. * `opts.number`: keys should be treated as numbers. * `opts.string`: keys should be treated as strings (even if they resemble a number `-x 33`). **returns:** * `obj`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. ### require('yargs-parser').detailed(args, opts={}) Parses a command line string, returning detailed information required by the yargs engine. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args`, inputs are identical to `require('yargs-parser')(args, opts={})`. **returns:** * `argv`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. * `error`: populated with an error object if an exception occurred during parsing. * `aliases`: the inferred list of aliases built by combining lists in `opts.alias`. * `newAliases`: any new aliases added via camel-case expansion: * `boolean`: `{ fooBar: true }` * `defaulted`: any new argument created by `opts.default`, no aliases included. * `boolean`: `{ foo: true }` * `configuration`: given by default settings and `opts.configuration`. <a name="configuration"></a> ### Configuration The yargs-parser applies several automated transformations on the keys provided in `args`. These features can be turned on and off using the `configuration` field of `opts`. ```js var parsed = parser(['--no-dice'], { configuration: { 'boolean-negation': false } }) ``` ### short option groups * default: `true`. * key: `short-option-groups`. Should a group of short-options be treated as boolean flags? ```console $ node example.js -abc { _: [], a: true, b: true, c: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -abc { _: [], abc: true } ``` ### camel-case expansion * default: `true`. * key: `camel-case-expansion`. Should hyphenated arguments be expanded into camel-case aliases? ```console $ node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true, fooBar: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true } ``` ### dot-notation * default: `true` * key: `dot-notation` Should keys that contain `.` be treated as objects? ```console $ node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], foo: { bar: true } } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], "foo.bar": true } ``` ### parse numbers * default: `true` * key: `parse-numbers` Should keys that look like numbers be treated as such? ```console $ node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: 99.3 } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: "99.3" } ``` ### parse positional numbers * default: `true` * key: `parse-positional-numbers` Should positional keys that look like numbers be treated as such. ```console $ node example.js 99.3 { _: [99.3] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js 99.3 { _: ['99.3'] } ``` ### boolean negation * default: `true` * key: `boolean-negation` Should variables prefixed with `--no` be treated as negations? ```console $ node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --no-foo { _: [], "no-foo": true } ``` ### combine arrays * default: `false` * key: `combine-arrays` Should arrays be combined when provided by both command line arguments and a configuration file. ### duplicate arguments array * default: `true` * key: `duplicate-arguments-array` Should arguments be coerced into an array when duplicated: ```console $ node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: 2 } ``` ### flatten duplicate arrays * default: `true` * key: `flatten-duplicate-arrays` Should array arguments be coerced into a single array when duplicated: ```console $ node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [1, 2, 3, 4] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [[1, 2], [3, 4]] } ``` ### greedy arrays * default: `true` * key: `greedy-arrays` Should arrays consume more than one positional argument following their flag. ```console $ node example --arr 1 2 { _: [], arr: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example --arr 1 2 { _: [2], arr: [1] } ``` **Note: in `v18.0.0` we are considering defaulting greedy arrays to `false`.** ### nargs eats options * default: `false` * key: `nargs-eats-options` Should nargs consume dash options as well as positional arguments. ### negation prefix * default: `no-` * key: `negation-prefix` The prefix to use for negated boolean variables. ```console $ node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if set to `quux`:_ ```console $ node example.js --quuxfoo { _: [], foo: false } ``` ### populate -- * default: `false`. * key: `populate--` Should unparsed flags be stored in `--` or `_`. _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a', 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a' ], '--': [ 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` ### set placeholder key * default: `false`. * key: `set-placeholder-key`. Should a placeholder be added for keys not set via the corresponding CLI argument? _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, c: 2 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, b: undefined, c: 2 } ``` ### halt at non-option * default: `false`. * key: `halt-at-non-option`. Should parsing stop at the first positional argument? This is similar to how e.g. `ssh` parses its command line. _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b' ], a: 'run', x: 'y' } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b', '-x', 'y' ], a: 'run' } ``` ### strip aliased * default: `false` * key: `strip-aliased` Should aliases be removed before returning results? _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1, 'test-alias': 1, testAlias: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` ### strip dashed * default: `false` * key: `strip-dashed` Should dashed keys be removed before returning results? This option has no effect if `camel-case-expansion` is disabled. _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], testField: 1 } ``` ### unknown options as args * default: `false` * key: `unknown-options-as-args` Should unknown options be treated like regular arguments? An unknown option is one that is not configured in `opts`. _If disabled_ ```console $ node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: [], unknownOption: true, knownOption: 2, stringOption: '', unknownOption2: true } ``` _If enabled_ ```console $ node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: ['--unknown-option'], knownOption: 2, stringOption: '--unknown-option2' } ``` ## Supported Node.js Versions Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track [Node.js' release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/). Here's [a post on why we think this is important](https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/maintainers-should-consider-following-node-js-release-schedule-ab08ed4de71a). ## Special Thanks The yargs project evolves from optimist and minimist. It owes its existence to a lot of James Halliday's hard work. Thanks [substack](https://github.com/substack) **beep** **boop** \o/ ## License ISC # which Like the unix `which` utility. Finds the first instance of a specified executable in the PATH environment variable. Does not cache the results, so `hash -r` is not needed when the PATH changes. ## USAGE ```javascript var which = require('which') // async usage which('node', function (er, resolvedPath) { // er is returned if no "node" is found on the PATH // if it is found, then the absolute path to the exec is returned }) // or promise which('node').then(resolvedPath => { ... }).catch(er => { ... not found ... }) // sync usage // throws if not found var resolved = which.sync('node') // if nothrow option is used, returns null if not found resolved = which.sync('node', {nothrow: true}) // Pass options to override the PATH and PATHEXT environment vars. which('node', { path: someOtherPath }, function (er, resolved) { if (er) throw er console.log('found at %j', resolved) }) ``` ## CLI USAGE Same as the BSD `which(1)` binary. ``` usage: which [-as] program ... ``` ## OPTIONS You may pass an options object as the second argument. - `path`: Use instead of the `PATH` environment variable. - `pathExt`: Use instead of the `PATHEXT` environment variable. - `all`: Return all matches, instead of just the first one. Note that this means the function returns an array of strings instead of a single string. # Glob Match files using the patterns the shell uses, like stars and stuff. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-glob.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-glob/) [![Build Status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/kd7f3yftf7unxlsx?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/isaacs/node-glob) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/isaacs/node-glob/badge.svg?branch=master&service=github)](https://coveralls.io/github/isaacs/node-glob?branch=master) This is a glob implementation in JavaScript. It uses the `minimatch` library to do its matching. ![a fun cartoon logo made of glob characters](logo/glob.png) ## Usage Install with npm ``` npm i glob ``` ```javascript var glob = require("glob") // options is optional glob("**/*.js", options, function (er, files) { // files is an array of filenames. // If the `nonull` option is set, and nothing // was found, then files is ["**/*.js"] // er is an error object or null. }) ``` ## Glob Primer "Globs" are the patterns you type when you do stuff like `ls *.js` on the command line, or put `build/*` in a `.gitignore` file. Before parsing the path part patterns, braced sections are expanded into a set. Braced sections start with `{` and end with `}`, with any number of comma-delimited sections within. Braced sections may contain slash characters, so `a{/b/c,bcd}` would expand into `a/b/c` and `abcd`. The following characters have special magic meaning when used in a path portion: * `*` Matches 0 or more characters in a single path portion * `?` Matches 1 character * `[...]` Matches a range of characters, similar to a RegExp range. If the first character of the range is `!` or `^` then it matches any character not in the range. * `!(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches anything that does not match any of the patterns provided. * `?(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches zero or one occurrence of the patterns provided. * `+(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches one or more occurrences of the patterns provided. * `*(a|b|c)` Matches zero or more occurrences of the patterns provided * `@(pattern|pat*|pat?erN)` Matches exactly one of the patterns provided * `**` If a "globstar" is alone in a path portion, then it matches zero or more directories and subdirectories searching for matches. It does not crawl symlinked directories. ### Dots If a file or directory path portion has a `.` as the first character, then it will not match any glob pattern unless that pattern's corresponding path part also has a `.` as its first character. For example, the pattern `a/.*/c` would match the file at `a/.b/c`. However the pattern `a/*/c` would not, because `*` does not start with a dot character. You can make glob treat dots as normal characters by setting `dot:true` in the options. ### Basename Matching If you set `matchBase:true` in the options, and the pattern has no slashes in it, then it will seek for any file anywhere in the tree with a matching basename. For example, `*.js` would match `test/simple/basic.js`. ### Empty Sets If no matching files are found, then an empty array is returned. This differs from the shell, where the pattern itself is returned. For example: $ echo a*s*d*f a*s*d*f To get the bash-style behavior, set the `nonull:true` in the options. ### See Also: * `man sh` * `man bash` (Search for "Pattern Matching") * `man 3 fnmatch` * `man 5 gitignore` * [minimatch documentation](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch) ## glob.hasMagic(pattern, [options]) Returns `true` if there are any special characters in the pattern, and `false` otherwise. Note that the options affect the results. If `noext:true` is set in the options object, then `+(a|b)` will not be considered a magic pattern. If the pattern has a brace expansion, like `a/{b/c,x/y}` then that is considered magical, unless `nobrace:true` is set in the options. ## glob(pattern, [options], cb) * `pattern` `{String}` Pattern to be matched * `options` `{Object}` * `cb` `{Function}` * `err` `{Error | null}` * `matches` `{Array<String>}` filenames found matching the pattern Perform an asynchronous glob search. ## glob.sync(pattern, [options]) * `pattern` `{String}` Pattern to be matched * `options` `{Object}` * return: `{Array<String>}` filenames found matching the pattern Perform a synchronous glob search. ## Class: glob.Glob Create a Glob object by instantiating the `glob.Glob` class. ```javascript var Glob = require("glob").Glob var mg = new Glob(pattern, options, cb) ``` It's an EventEmitter, and starts walking the filesystem to find matches immediately. ### new glob.Glob(pattern, [options], [cb]) * `pattern` `{String}` pattern to search for * `options` `{Object}` * `cb` `{Function}` Called when an error occurs, or matches are found * `err` `{Error | null}` * `matches` `{Array<String>}` filenames found matching the pattern Note that if the `sync` flag is set in the options, then matches will be immediately available on the `g.found` member. ### Properties * `minimatch` The minimatch object that the glob uses. * `options` The options object passed in. * `aborted` Boolean which is set to true when calling `abort()`. There is no way at this time to continue a glob search after aborting, but you can re-use the statCache to avoid having to duplicate syscalls. * `cache` Convenience object. Each field has the following possible values: * `false` - Path does not exist * `true` - Path exists * `'FILE'` - Path exists, and is not a directory * `'DIR'` - Path exists, and is a directory * `[file, entries, ...]` - Path exists, is a directory, and the array value is the results of `fs.readdir` * `statCache` Cache of `fs.stat` results, to prevent statting the same path multiple times. * `symlinks` A record of which paths are symbolic links, which is relevant in resolving `**` patterns. * `realpathCache` An optional object which is passed to `fs.realpath` to minimize unnecessary syscalls. It is stored on the instantiated Glob object, and may be re-used. ### Events * `end` When the matching is finished, this is emitted with all the matches found. If the `nonull` option is set, and no match was found, then the `matches` list contains the original pattern. The matches are sorted, unless the `nosort` flag is set. * `match` Every time a match is found, this is emitted with the specific thing that matched. It is not deduplicated or resolved to a realpath. * `error` Emitted when an unexpected error is encountered, or whenever any fs error occurs if `options.strict` is set. * `abort` When `abort()` is called, this event is raised. ### Methods * `pause` Temporarily stop the search * `resume` Resume the search * `abort` Stop the search forever ### Options All the options that can be passed to Minimatch can also be passed to Glob to change pattern matching behavior. Also, some have been added, or have glob-specific ramifications. All options are false by default, unless otherwise noted. All options are added to the Glob object, as well. If you are running many `glob` operations, you can pass a Glob object as the `options` argument to a subsequent operation to shortcut some `stat` and `readdir` calls. At the very least, you may pass in shared `symlinks`, `statCache`, `realpathCache`, and `cache` options, so that parallel glob operations will be sped up by sharing information about the filesystem. * `cwd` The current working directory in which to search. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. * `root` The place where patterns starting with `/` will be mounted onto. Defaults to `path.resolve(options.cwd, "/")` (`/` on Unix systems, and `C:\` or some such on Windows.) * `dot` Include `.dot` files in normal matches and `globstar` matches. Note that an explicit dot in a portion of the pattern will always match dot files. * `nomount` By default, a pattern starting with a forward-slash will be "mounted" onto the root setting, so that a valid filesystem path is returned. Set this flag to disable that behavior. * `mark` Add a `/` character to directory matches. Note that this requires additional stat calls. * `nosort` Don't sort the results. * `stat` Set to true to stat *all* results. This reduces performance somewhat, and is completely unnecessary, unless `readdir` is presumed to be an untrustworthy indicator of file existence. * `silent` When an unusual error is encountered when attempting to read a directory, a warning will be printed to stderr. Set the `silent` option to true to suppress these warnings. * `strict` When an unusual error is encountered when attempting to read a directory, the process will just continue on in search of other matches. Set the `strict` option to raise an error in these cases. * `cache` See `cache` property above. Pass in a previously generated cache object to save some fs calls. * `statCache` A cache of results of filesystem information, to prevent unnecessary stat calls. While it should not normally be necessary to set this, you may pass the statCache from one glob() call to the options object of another, if you know that the filesystem will not change between calls. (See "Race Conditions" below.) * `symlinks` A cache of known symbolic links. You may pass in a previously generated `symlinks` object to save `lstat` calls when resolving `**` matches. * `sync` DEPRECATED: use `glob.sync(pattern, opts)` instead. * `nounique` In some cases, brace-expanded patterns can result in the same file showing up multiple times in the result set. By default, this implementation prevents duplicates in the result set. Set this flag to disable that behavior. * `nonull` Set to never return an empty set, instead returning a set containing the pattern itself. This is the default in glob(3). * `debug` Set to enable debug logging in minimatch and glob. * `nobrace` Do not expand `{a,b}` and `{1..3}` brace sets. * `noglobstar` Do not match `**` against multiple filenames. (Ie, treat it as a normal `*` instead.) * `noext` Do not match `+(a|b)` "extglob" patterns. * `nocase` Perform a case-insensitive match. Note: on case-insensitive filesystems, non-magic patterns will match by default, since `stat` and `readdir` will not raise errors. * `matchBase` Perform a basename-only match if the pattern does not contain any slash characters. That is, `*.js` would be treated as equivalent to `**/*.js`, matching all js files in all directories. * `nodir` Do not match directories, only files. (Note: to match *only* directories, simply put a `/` at the end of the pattern.) * `ignore` Add a pattern or an array of glob patterns to exclude matches. Note: `ignore` patterns are *always* in `dot:true` mode, regardless of any other settings. * `follow` Follow symlinked directories when expanding `**` patterns. Note that this can result in a lot of duplicate references in the presence of cyclic links. * `realpath` Set to true to call `fs.realpath` on all of the results. In the case of a symlink that cannot be resolved, the full absolute path to the matched entry is returned (though it will usually be a broken symlink) * `absolute` Set to true to always receive absolute paths for matched files. Unlike `realpath`, this also affects the values returned in the `match` event. * `fs` File-system object with Node's `fs` API. By default, the built-in `fs` module will be used. Set to a volume provided by a library like `memfs` to avoid using the "real" file-system. ## Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations While strict compliance with the existing standards is a worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between node-glob and other implementations, and are intentional. The double-star character `**` is supported by default, unless the `noglobstar` flag is set. This is supported in the manner of bsdglob and bash 4.3, where `**` only has special significance if it is the only thing in a path part. That is, `a/**/b` will match `a/x/y/b`, but `a/**b` will not. Note that symlinked directories are not crawled as part of a `**`, though their contents may match against subsequent portions of the pattern. This prevents infinite loops and duplicates and the like. If an escaped pattern has no matches, and the `nonull` flag is set, then glob returns the pattern as-provided, rather than interpreting the character escapes. For example, `glob.match([], "\\*a\\?")` will return `"\\*a\\?"` rather than `"*a?"`. This is akin to setting the `nullglob` option in bash, except that it does not resolve escaped pattern characters. If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before any other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern like `+(a|{b),c)}`, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is expanded **first** into the set of `+(a|b)` and `+(a|c)`, and those patterns are checked for validity. Since those two are valid, matching proceeds. ### Comments and Negation Previously, this module let you mark a pattern as a "comment" if it started with a `#` character, or a "negated" pattern if it started with a `!` character. These options were deprecated in version 5, and removed in version 6. To specify things that should not match, use the `ignore` option. ## Windows **Please only use forward-slashes in glob expressions.** Though windows uses either `/` or `\` as its path separator, only `/` characters are used by this glob implementation. You must use forward-slashes **only** in glob expressions. Back-slashes will always be interpreted as escape characters, not path separators. Results from absolute patterns such as `/foo/*` are mounted onto the root setting using `path.join`. On windows, this will by default result in `/foo/*` matching `C:\foo\bar.txt`. ## Race Conditions Glob searching, by its very nature, is susceptible to race conditions, since it relies on directory walking and such. As a result, it is possible that a file that exists when glob looks for it may have been deleted or modified by the time it returns the result. As part of its internal implementation, this program caches all stat and readdir calls that it makes, in order to cut down on system overhead. However, this also makes it even more susceptible to races, especially if the cache or statCache objects are reused between glob calls. Users are thus advised not to use a glob result as a guarantee of filesystem state in the face of rapid changes. For the vast majority of operations, this is never a problem. ## Glob Logo Glob's logo was created by [Tanya Brassie](http://tanyabrassie.com/). Logo files can be found [here](https://github.com/isaacs/node-glob/tree/master/logo). The logo is licensed under a [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). ## Contributing Any change to behavior (including bugfixes) must come with a test. Patches that fail tests or reduce performance will be rejected. ``` # to run tests npm test # to re-generate test fixtures npm run test-regen # to benchmark against bash/zsh npm run bench # to profile javascript npm run prof ``` ![](oh-my-glob.gif) <p align="center"> <img width="250" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yargs/yargs/master/yargs-logo.png"> </p> <h1 align="center"> Yargs </h1> <p align="center"> <b >Yargs be a node.js library fer hearties tryin' ter parse optstrings</b> </p> <br> ![ci](https://github.com/yargs/yargs/workflows/ci/badge.svg) [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Coverage][coverage-image]][coverage-url] [![Conventional Commits][conventional-commits-image]][conventional-commits-url] [![Slack][slack-image]][slack-url] ## Description Yargs helps you build interactive command line tools, by parsing arguments and generating an elegant user interface. It gives you: * commands and (grouped) options (`my-program.js serve --port=5000`). * a dynamically generated help menu based on your arguments: ``` mocha [spec..] Run tests with Mocha Commands mocha inspect [spec..] Run tests with Mocha [default] mocha init <path> create a client-side Mocha setup at <path> Rules & Behavior --allow-uncaught Allow uncaught errors to propagate [boolean] --async-only, -A Require all tests to use a callback (async) or return a Promise [boolean] ``` * bash-completion shortcuts for commands and options. * and [tons more](/docs/api.md). ## Installation Stable version: ```bash npm i yargs ``` Bleeding edge version with the most recent features: ```bash npm i yargs@next ``` ## Usage ### Simple Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node const yargs = require('yargs/yargs') const { hideBin } = require('yargs/helpers') const argv = yargs(hideBin(process.argv)).argv if (argv.ships > 3 && argv.distance < 53.5) { console.log('Plunder more riffiwobbles!') } else { console.log('Retreat from the xupptumblers!') } ``` ```bash $ ./plunder.js --ships=4 --distance=22 Plunder more riffiwobbles! $ ./plunder.js --ships 12 --distance 98.7 Retreat from the xupptumblers! ``` ### Complex Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node const yargs = require('yargs/yargs') const { hideBin } = require('yargs/helpers') yargs(hideBin(process.argv)) .command('serve [port]', 'start the server', (yargs) => { yargs .positional('port', { describe: 'port to bind on', default: 5000 }) }, (argv) => { if (argv.verbose) console.info(`start server on :${argv.port}`) serve(argv.port) }) .option('verbose', { alias: 'v', type: 'boolean', description: 'Run with verbose logging' }) .argv ``` Run the example above with `--help` to see the help for the application. ## Supported Platforms ### TypeScript yargs has type definitions at [@types/yargs][type-definitions]. ``` npm i @types/yargs --save-dev ``` See usage examples in [docs](/docs/typescript.md). ### Deno As of `v16`, `yargs` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno): ```typescript import yargs from 'https://deno.land/x/yargs/deno.ts' import { Arguments } from 'https://deno.land/x/yargs/deno-types.ts' yargs(Deno.args) .command('download <files...>', 'download a list of files', (yargs: any) => { return yargs.positional('files', { describe: 'a list of files to do something with' }) }, (argv: Arguments) => { console.info(argv) }) .strictCommands() .demandCommand(1) .argv ``` ### ESM As of `v16`,`yargs` supports ESM imports: ```js import yargs from 'yargs' import { hideBin } from 'yargs/helpers' yargs(hideBin(process.argv)) .command('curl <url>', 'fetch the contents of the URL', () => {}, (argv) => { console.info(argv) }) .demandCommand(1) .argv ``` ### Usage in Browser See examples of using yargs in the browser in [docs](/docs/browser.md). ## Community Having problems? want to contribute? join our [community slack](http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com). ## Documentation ### Table of Contents * [Yargs' API](/docs/api.md) * [Examples](/docs/examples.md) * [Parsing Tricks](/docs/tricks.md) * [Stop the Parser](/docs/tricks.md#stop) * [Negating Boolean Arguments](/docs/tricks.md#negate) * [Numbers](/docs/tricks.md#numbers) * [Arrays](/docs/tricks.md#arrays) * [Objects](/docs/tricks.md#objects) * [Quotes](/docs/tricks.md#quotes) * [Advanced Topics](/docs/advanced.md) * [Composing Your App Using Commands](/docs/advanced.md#commands) * [Building Configurable CLI Apps](/docs/advanced.md#configuration) * [Customizing Yargs' Parser](/docs/advanced.md#customizing) * [Bundling yargs](/docs/bundling.md) * [Contributing](/contributing.md) ## Supported Node.js Versions Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track [Node.js' release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/). Here's [a post on why we think this is important](https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/maintainers-should-consider-following-node-js-release-schedule-ab08ed4de71a). [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: http://standardjs.com/ [conventional-commits-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg [conventional-commits-url]: https://conventionalcommits.org/ [slack-image]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com/badge.svg [slack-url]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com [type-definitions]: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/master/types/yargs [coverage-image]: https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/yargs [coverage-url]: https://github.com/yargs/yargs/blob/master/.nycrc <p align="center"> <a href="http://gulpjs.com"> <img height="257" width="114" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/gulpjs/artwork/master/gulp-2x.png"> </a> </p> # interpret [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Downloads][downloads-image]][npm-url] [![Travis Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![AppVeyor Build Status][appveyor-image]][appveyor-url] [![Coveralls Status][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url] [![Gitter chat][gitter-image]][gitter-url] A dictionary of file extensions and associated module loaders. ## What is it This is used by [Liftoff](http://github.com/tkellen/node-liftoff) to automatically require dependencies for configuration files, and by [rechoir](http://github.com/tkellen/node-rechoir) for registering module loaders. ## API ### extensions Map file types to modules which provide a [require.extensions] loader. ```js { '.babel.js': [ { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { // register on .js extension due to https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/v0.12.0/lib/module.js#L353 // which only captures the final extension (.babel.js -> .js) hook({ extensions: '.js' }); }, }, { module: 'babel-register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.js' }); }, }, { module: 'babel-core/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.js' }); }, }, { module: 'babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.js' }); }, }, ], '.babel.ts': [ { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.ts' }); }, }, ], '.buble.js': 'buble/register', '.cirru': 'cirru-script/lib/register', '.cjsx': 'node-cjsx/register', '.co': 'coco', '.coffee': ['coffeescript/register', 'coffee-script/register', 'coffeescript', 'coffee-script'], '.coffee.md': ['coffeescript/register', 'coffee-script/register', 'coffeescript', 'coffee-script'], '.csv': 'require-csv', '.eg': 'earlgrey/register', '.esm.js': { module: 'esm', register: function(hook) { // register on .js extension due to https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/v0.12.0/lib/module.js#L353 // which only captures the final extension (.babel.js -> .js) var esmLoader = hook(module); require.extensions['.js'] = esmLoader('module')._extensions['.js']; }, }, '.iced': ['iced-coffee-script/register', 'iced-coffee-script'], '.iced.md': 'iced-coffee-script/register', '.ini': 'require-ini', '.js': null, '.json': null, '.json5': 'json5/lib/require', '.jsx': [ { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.jsx' }); }, }, { module: 'babel-register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.jsx' }); }, }, { module: 'babel-core/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.jsx' }); }, }, { module: 'babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.jsx' }); }, }, { module: 'node-jsx', register: function(hook) { hook.install({ extension: '.jsx', harmony: true }); }, }, ], '.litcoffee': ['coffeescript/register', 'coffee-script/register', 'coffeescript', 'coffee-script'], '.liticed': 'iced-coffee-script/register', '.ls': ['livescript', 'LiveScript'], '.mjs': '/absolute/path/to/interpret/mjs-stub.js', '.node': null, '.toml': { module: 'toml-require', register: function(hook) { hook.install(); }, }, '.ts': [ 'ts-node/register', 'typescript-node/register', 'typescript-register', 'typescript-require', 'sucrase/register/ts', { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.ts' }); }, }, ], '.tsx': [ 'ts-node/register', 'typescript-node/register', 'sucrase/register', { module: '@babel/register', register: function(hook) { hook({ extensions: '.tsx' }); }, }, ], '.wisp': 'wisp/engine/node', '.xml': 'require-xml', '.yaml': 'require-yaml', '.yml': 'require-yaml', } ``` ### jsVariants Same as above, but only include the extensions which are javascript variants. ## How to use it Consumers should use the exported `extensions` or `jsVariants` object to determine which module should be loaded for a given extension. If a matching extension is found, consumers should do the following: 1. If the value is null, do nothing. 2. If the value is a string, try to require it. 3. If the value is an object, try to require the `module` property. If successful, the `register` property (a function) should be called with the module passed as the first argument. 4. If the value is an array, iterate over it, attempting step #2 or #3 until one of the attempts does not throw. [require.extensions]: http://nodejs.org/api/globals.html#globals_require_extensions [downloads-image]: http://img.shields.io/npm/dm/interpret.svg [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/interpret [npm-image]: http://img.shields.io/npm/v/interpret.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/gulpjs/interpret [travis-image]: http://img.shields.io/travis/gulpjs/interpret.svg?label=travis-ci [appveyor-url]: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/gulpjs/interpret [appveyor-image]: https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/gulpjs/interpret.svg?label=appveyor [coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/r/gulpjs/interpret [coveralls-image]: http://img.shields.io/coveralls/gulpjs/interpret/master.svg [gitter-url]: https://gitter.im/gulpjs/gulp [gitter-image]: https://badges.gitter.im/gulpjs/gulp.svg ## Test Strategy - tests are copied from the [polyfill implementation](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal/tree/main/polyfill/test) - tests should be removed if they relate to features that do not make sense for TS/AS, i.e. tests that validate the shape of an object do not make sense in a language with compile-time type checking - tests that fail because a feature has not been implemented yet should be left as failures. # hasurl [![NPM Version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] > Determine whether Node.js' native [WHATWG `URL`](https://nodejs.org/api/url.html#url_the_whatwg_url_api) implementation is available. ## Installation [Node.js](http://nodejs.org/) `>= 4` is required. To install, type this at the command line: ```shell npm install hasurl ``` ## Usage ```js const hasURL = require('hasurl'); if (hasURL()) { // supported } else { // fallback } ``` [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/hasurl.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/hasurl [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/stevenvachon/hasurl.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/stevenvachon/hasurl # Acorn A tiny, fast JavaScript parser written in JavaScript. ## Community Acorn is open source software released under an [MIT license](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn/blob/master/acorn/LICENSE). You are welcome to [report bugs](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn/issues) or create pull requests on [github](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn). For questions and discussion, please use the [Tern discussion forum](https://discuss.ternjs.net). ## Installation The easiest way to install acorn is from [`npm`](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```sh npm install acorn ``` Alternately, you can download the source and build acorn yourself: ```sh git clone https://github.com/acornjs/acorn.git cd acorn npm install ``` ## Interface **parse**`(input, options)` is the main interface to the library. The `input` parameter is a string, `options` can be undefined or an object setting some of the options listed below. The return value will be an abstract syntax tree object as specified by the [ESTree spec](https://github.com/estree/estree). ```javascript let acorn = require("acorn"); console.log(acorn.parse("1 + 1")); ``` When encountering a syntax error, the parser will raise a `SyntaxError` object with a meaningful message. The error object will have a `pos` property that indicates the string offset at which the error occurred, and a `loc` object that contains a `{line, column}` object referring to that same position. Options can be provided by passing a second argument, which should be an object containing any of these fields: - **ecmaVersion**: Indicates the ECMAScript version to parse. Must be either 3, 5, 6 (2015), 7 (2016), 8 (2017), 9 (2018), 10 (2019) or 11 (2020, partial support). This influences support for strict mode, the set of reserved words, and support for new syntax features. Default is 10. **NOTE**: Only 'stage 4' (finalized) ECMAScript features are being implemented by Acorn. Other proposed new features can be implemented through plugins. - **sourceType**: Indicate the mode the code should be parsed in. Can be either `"script"` or `"module"`. This influences global strict mode and parsing of `import` and `export` declarations. **NOTE**: If set to `"module"`, then static `import` / `export` syntax will be valid, even if `ecmaVersion` is less than 6. - **onInsertedSemicolon**: If given a callback, that callback will be called whenever a missing semicolon is inserted by the parser. The callback will be given the character offset of the point where the semicolon is inserted as argument, and if `locations` is on, also a `{line, column}` object representing this position. - **onTrailingComma**: Like `onInsertedSemicolon`, but for trailing commas. - **allowReserved**: If `false`, using a reserved word will generate an error. Defaults to `true` for `ecmaVersion` 3, `false` for higher versions. When given the value `"never"`, reserved words and keywords can also not be used as property names (as in Internet Explorer's old parser). - **allowReturnOutsideFunction**: By default, a return statement at the top level raises an error. Set this to `true` to accept such code. - **allowImportExportEverywhere**: By default, `import` and `export` declarations can only appear at a program's top level. Setting this option to `true` allows them anywhere where a statement is allowed. - **allowAwaitOutsideFunction**: By default, `await` expressions can only appear inside `async` functions. Setting this option to `true` allows to have top-level `await` expressions. They are still not allowed in non-`async` functions, though. - **allowHashBang**: When this is enabled (off by default), if the code starts with the characters `#!` (as in a shellscript), the first line will be treated as a comment. - **locations**: When `true`, each node has a `loc` object attached with `start` and `end` subobjects, each of which contains the one-based line and zero-based column numbers in `{line, column}` form. Default is `false`. - **onToken**: If a function is passed for this option, each found token will be passed in same format as tokens returned from `tokenizer().getToken()`. If array is passed, each found token is pushed to it. Note that you are not allowed to call the parser from the callback—that will corrupt its internal state. - **onComment**: If a function is passed for this option, whenever a comment is encountered the function will be called with the following parameters: - `block`: `true` if the comment is a block comment, false if it is a line comment. - `text`: The content of the comment. - `start`: Character offset of the start of the comment. - `end`: Character offset of the end of the comment. When the `locations` options is on, the `{line, column}` locations of the comment’s start and end are passed as two additional parameters. If array is passed for this option, each found comment is pushed to it as object in Esprima format: ```javascript { "type": "Line" | "Block", "value": "comment text", "start": Number, "end": Number, // If `locations` option is on: "loc": { "start": {line: Number, column: Number} "end": {line: Number, column: Number} }, // If `ranges` option is on: "range": [Number, Number] } ``` Note that you are not allowed to call the parser from the callback—that will corrupt its internal state. - **ranges**: Nodes have their start and end characters offsets recorded in `start` and `end` properties (directly on the node, rather than the `loc` object, which holds line/column data. To also add a [semi-standardized](https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745678) `range` property holding a `[start, end]` array with the same numbers, set the `ranges` option to `true`. - **program**: It is possible to parse multiple files into a single AST by passing the tree produced by parsing the first file as the `program` option in subsequent parses. This will add the toplevel forms of the parsed file to the "Program" (top) node of an existing parse tree. - **sourceFile**: When the `locations` option is `true`, you can pass this option to add a `source` attribute in every node’s `loc` object. Note that the contents of this option are not examined or processed in any way; you are free to use whatever format you choose. - **directSourceFile**: Like `sourceFile`, but a `sourceFile` property will be added (regardless of the `location` option) directly to the nodes, rather than the `loc` object. - **preserveParens**: If this option is `true`, parenthesized expressions are represented by (non-standard) `ParenthesizedExpression` nodes that have a single `expression` property containing the expression inside parentheses. **parseExpressionAt**`(input, offset, options)` will parse a single expression in a string, and return its AST. It will not complain if there is more of the string left after the expression. **tokenizer**`(input, options)` returns an object with a `getToken` method that can be called repeatedly to get the next token, a `{start, end, type, value}` object (with added `loc` property when the `locations` option is enabled and `range` property when the `ranges` option is enabled). When the token's type is `tokTypes.eof`, you should stop calling the method, since it will keep returning that same token forever. In ES6 environment, returned result can be used as any other protocol-compliant iterable: ```javascript for (let token of acorn.tokenizer(str)) { // iterate over the tokens } // transform code to array of tokens: var tokens = [...acorn.tokenizer(str)]; ``` **tokTypes** holds an object mapping names to the token type objects that end up in the `type` properties of tokens. **getLineInfo**`(input, offset)` can be used to get a `{line, column}` object for a given program string and offset. ### The `Parser` class Instances of the **`Parser`** class contain all the state and logic that drives a parse. It has static methods `parse`, `parseExpressionAt`, and `tokenizer` that match the top-level functions by the same name. When extending the parser with plugins, you need to call these methods on the extended version of the class. To extend a parser with plugins, you can use its static `extend` method. ```javascript var acorn = require("acorn"); var jsx = require("acorn-jsx"); var JSXParser = acorn.Parser.extend(jsx()); JSXParser.parse("foo(<bar/>)"); ``` The `extend` method takes any number of plugin values, and returns a new `Parser` class that includes the extra parser logic provided by the plugins. ## Command line interface The `bin/acorn` utility can be used to parse a file from the command line. It accepts as arguments its input file and the following options: - `--ecma3|--ecma5|--ecma6|--ecma7|--ecma8|--ecma9|--ecma10`: Sets the ECMAScript version to parse. Default is version 9. - `--module`: Sets the parsing mode to `"module"`. Is set to `"script"` otherwise. - `--locations`: Attaches a "loc" object to each node with "start" and "end" subobjects, each of which contains the one-based line and zero-based column numbers in `{line, column}` form. - `--allow-hash-bang`: If the code starts with the characters #! (as in a shellscript), the first line will be treated as a comment. - `--compact`: No whitespace is used in the AST output. - `--silent`: Do not output the AST, just return the exit status. - `--help`: Print the usage information and quit. The utility spits out the syntax tree as JSON data. ## Existing plugins - [`acorn-jsx`](https://github.com/RReverser/acorn-jsx): Parse [Facebook JSX syntax extensions](https://github.com/facebook/jsx) Plugins for ECMAScript proposals: - [`acorn-stage3`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-stage3): Parse most stage 3 proposals, bundling: - [`acorn-class-fields`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-class-fields): Parse [class fields proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-class-fields) - [`acorn-import-meta`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-import-meta): Parse [import.meta proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-import-meta) - [`acorn-private-methods`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-private-methods): parse [private methods, getters and setters proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-private-methods)n JS-YAML - YAML 1.2 parser / writer for JavaScript ================================================= [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/nodeca/js-yaml.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/nodeca/js-yaml) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/js-yaml.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/js-yaml) __[Online Demo](http://nodeca.github.com/js-yaml/)__ This is an implementation of [YAML](http://yaml.org/), a human-friendly data serialization language. Started as [PyYAML](http://pyyaml.org/) port, it was completely rewritten from scratch. Now it's very fast, and supports 1.2 spec. Installation ------------ ### YAML module for node.js ``` npm install js-yaml ``` ### CLI executable If you want to inspect your YAML files from CLI, install js-yaml globally: ``` npm install -g js-yaml ``` #### Usage ``` usage: js-yaml [-h] [-v] [-c] [-t] file Positional arguments: file File with YAML document(s) Optional arguments: -h, --help Show this help message and exit. -v, --version Show program's version number and exit. -c, --compact Display errors in compact mode -t, --trace Show stack trace on error ``` ### Bundled YAML library for browsers ``` html <!-- esprima required only for !!js/function --> <script src="esprima.js"></script> <script src="js-yaml.min.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript"> var doc = jsyaml.load('greeting: hello\nname: world'); </script> ``` Browser support was done mostly for the online demo. If you find any errors - feel free to send pull requests with fixes. Also note, that IE and other old browsers needs [es5-shims](https://github.com/kriskowal/es5-shim) to operate. Notes: 1. We have no resources to support browserified version. Don't expect it to be well tested. Don't expect fast fixes if something goes wrong there. 2. `!!js/function` in browser bundle will not work by default. If you really need it - load `esprima` parser first (via amd or directly). 3. `!!bin` in browser will return `Array`, because browsers do not support node.js `Buffer` and adding Buffer shims is completely useless on practice. API --- Here we cover the most 'useful' methods. If you need advanced details (creating your own tags), see [wiki](https://github.com/nodeca/js-yaml/wiki) and [examples](https://github.com/nodeca/js-yaml/tree/master/examples) for more info. ``` javascript const yaml = require('js-yaml'); const fs = require('fs'); // Get document, or throw exception on error try { const doc = yaml.safeLoad(fs.readFileSync('/home/ixti/example.yml', 'utf8')); console.log(doc); } catch (e) { console.log(e); } ``` ### safeLoad (string [ , options ]) **Recommended loading way.** Parses `string` as single YAML document. Returns either a plain object, a string or `undefined`, or throws `YAMLException` on error. By default, does not support regexps, functions and undefined. This method is safe for untrusted data. options: - `filename` _(default: null)_ - string to be used as a file path in error/warning messages. - `onWarning` _(default: null)_ - function to call on warning messages. Loader will call this function with an instance of `YAMLException` for each warning. - `schema` _(default: `DEFAULT_SAFE_SCHEMA`)_ - specifies a schema to use. - `FAILSAFE_SCHEMA` - only strings, arrays and plain objects: http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2802346 - `JSON_SCHEMA` - all JSON-supported types: http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2803231 - `CORE_SCHEMA` - same as `JSON_SCHEMA`: http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2804923 - `DEFAULT_SAFE_SCHEMA` - all supported YAML types, without unsafe ones (`!!js/undefined`, `!!js/regexp` and `!!js/function`): http://yaml.org/type/ - `DEFAULT_FULL_SCHEMA` - all supported YAML types. - `json` _(default: false)_ - compatibility with JSON.parse behaviour. If true, then duplicate keys in a mapping will override values rather than throwing an error. NOTE: This function **does not** understand multi-document sources, it throws exception on those. NOTE: JS-YAML **does not** support schema-specific tag resolution restrictions. So, the JSON schema is not as strictly defined in the YAML specification. It allows numbers in any notation, use `Null` and `NULL` as `null`, etc. The core schema also has no such restrictions. It allows binary notation for integers. ### load (string [ , options ]) **Use with care with untrusted sources**. The same as `safeLoad()` but uses `DEFAULT_FULL_SCHEMA` by default - adds some JavaScript-specific types: `!!js/function`, `!!js/regexp` and `!!js/undefined`. For untrusted sources, you must additionally validate object structure to avoid injections: ``` javascript const untrusted_code = '"toString": !<tag:yaml.org,2002:js/function> "function (){very_evil_thing();}"'; // I'm just converting that string, what could possibly go wrong? require('js-yaml').load(untrusted_code) + '' ``` ### safeLoadAll (string [, iterator] [, options ]) Same as `safeLoad()`, but understands multi-document sources. Applies `iterator` to each document if specified, or returns array of documents. ``` javascript const yaml = require('js-yaml'); yaml.safeLoadAll(data, function (doc) { console.log(doc); }); ``` ### loadAll (string [, iterator] [ , options ]) Same as `safeLoadAll()` but uses `DEFAULT_FULL_SCHEMA` by default. ### safeDump (object [ , options ]) Serializes `object` as a YAML document. Uses `DEFAULT_SAFE_SCHEMA`, so it will throw an exception if you try to dump regexps or functions. However, you can disable exceptions by setting the `skipInvalid` option to `true`. options: - `indent` _(default: 2)_ - indentation width to use (in spaces). - `noArrayIndent` _(default: false)_ - when true, will not add an indentation level to array elements - `skipInvalid` _(default: false)_ - do not throw on invalid types (like function in the safe schema) and skip pairs and single values with such types. - `flowLevel` (default: -1) - specifies level of nesting, when to switch from block to flow style for collections. -1 means block style everwhere - `styles` - "tag" => "style" map. Each tag may have own set of styles. - `schema` _(default: `DEFAULT_SAFE_SCHEMA`)_ specifies a schema to use. - `sortKeys` _(default: `false`)_ - if `true`, sort keys when dumping YAML. If a function, use the function to sort the keys. - `lineWidth` _(default: `80`)_ - set max line width. - `noRefs` _(default: `false`)_ - if `true`, don't convert duplicate objects into references - `noCompatMode` _(default: `false`)_ - if `true` don't try to be compatible with older yaml versions. Currently: don't quote "yes", "no" and so on, as required for YAML 1.1 - `condenseFlow` _(default: `false`)_ - if `true` flow sequences will be condensed, omitting the space between `a, b`. Eg. `'[a,b]'`, and omitting the space between `key: value` and quoting the key. Eg. `'{"a":b}'` Can be useful when using yaml for pretty URL query params as spaces are %-encoded. The following table show availlable styles (e.g. "canonical", "binary"...) available for each tag (.e.g. !!null, !!int ...). Yaml output is shown on the right side after `=>` (default setting) or `->`: ``` none !!null "canonical" -> "~" "lowercase" => "null" "uppercase" -> "NULL" "camelcase" -> "Null" !!int "binary" -> "0b1", "0b101010", "0b1110001111010" "octal" -> "01", "052", "016172" "decimal" => "1", "42", "7290" "hexadecimal" -> "0x1", "0x2A", "0x1C7A" !!bool "lowercase" => "true", "false" "uppercase" -> "TRUE", "FALSE" "camelcase" -> "True", "False" !!float "lowercase" => ".nan", '.inf' "uppercase" -> ".NAN", '.INF' "camelcase" -> ".NaN", '.Inf' ``` Example: ``` javascript safeDump (object, { 'styles': { '!!null': 'canonical' // dump null as ~ }, 'sortKeys': true // sort object keys }); ``` ### dump (object [ , options ]) Same as `safeDump()` but without limits (uses `DEFAULT_FULL_SCHEMA` by default). Supported YAML types -------------------- The list of standard YAML tags and corresponding JavaScipt types. See also [YAML tag discussion](http://pyyaml.org/wiki/YAMLTagDiscussion) and [YAML types repository](http://yaml.org/type/). ``` !!null '' # null !!bool 'yes' # bool !!int '3...' # number !!float '3.14...' # number !!binary '...base64...' # buffer !!timestamp 'YYYY-...' # date !!omap [ ... ] # array of key-value pairs !!pairs [ ... ] # array or array pairs !!set { ... } # array of objects with given keys and null values !!str '...' # string !!seq [ ... ] # array !!map { ... } # object ``` **JavaScript-specific tags** ``` !!js/regexp /pattern/gim # RegExp !!js/undefined '' # Undefined !!js/function 'function () {...}' # Function ``` Caveats ------- Note, that you use arrays or objects as key in JS-YAML. JS does not allow objects or arrays as keys, and stringifies (by calling `toString()` method) them at the moment of adding them. ``` yaml --- ? [ foo, bar ] : - baz ? { foo: bar } : - baz - baz ``` ``` javascript { "foo,bar": ["baz"], "[object Object]": ["baz", "baz"] } ``` Also, reading of properties on implicit block mapping keys is not supported yet. So, the following YAML document cannot be loaded. ``` yaml &anchor foo: foo: bar *anchor: duplicate key baz: bat *anchor: duplicate key ``` js-yaml for enterprise ---------------------- Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription The maintainers of js-yaml and thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver commercial support and maintenance for the open source dependencies you use to build your applications. Save time, reduce risk, and improve code health, while paying the maintainers of the exact dependencies you use. [Learn more.](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-js-yaml?utm_source=npm-js-yaml&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo) # Near Bindings Generator Transforms the Assembyscript AST to serialize exported functions and add `encode` and `decode` functions for generating and parsing JSON strings. ## Using via CLI After installling, `npm install nearprotocol/near-bindgen-as`, it can be added to the cli arguments of the assemblyscript compiler you must add the following: ```bash asc <file> --transform near-bindgen-as ... ``` This module also adds a binary `near-asc` which adds the default arguments required to build near contracts as well as the transformer. ```bash near-asc <input file> <output file> ``` ## Using a script to compile Another way is to add a file such as `asconfig.js` such as: ```js const compile = require("near-bindgen-as/compiler").compile; compile("assembly/index.ts", // input file "out/index.wasm", // output file [ // "-O1", // Optional arguments "--debug", "--measure" ], // Prints out the final cli arguments passed to compiler. {verbose: true} ); ``` It can then be built with `node asconfig.js`. There is an example of this in the test directory. # has > Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call shortcut ## Installation ```sh npm install --save has ``` ## Usage ```js var has = require('has'); has({}, 'hasOwnProperty'); // false has(Object.prototype, 'hasOwnProperty'); // true ``` # Regular Expression Tokenizer Tokenizes strings that represent a regular expressions. [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/fent/ret.js.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/fent/ret.js) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/fent/ret.js.svg)](https://david-dm.org/fent/ret.js) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/ret.js/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/ret.js) # Usage ```js var ret = require('ret'); var tokens = ret(/foo|bar/.source); ``` `tokens` will contain the following object ```js { "type": ret.types.ROOT "options": [ [ { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 102 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 111 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 111 } ], [ { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 98 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 97 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 114 } ] ] } ``` # Token Types `ret.types` is a collection of the various token types exported by ret. ### ROOT Only used in the root of the regexp. This is needed due to the posibility of the root containing a pipe `|` character. In that case, the token will have an `options` key that will be an array of arrays of tokens. If not, it will contain a `stack` key that is an array of tokens. ```js { "type": ret.types.ROOT, "stack": [token1, token2...], } ``` ```js { "type": ret.types.ROOT, "options" [ [token1, token2...], [othertoken1, othertoken2...] ... ], } ``` ### GROUP Groups contain tokens that are inside of a parenthesis. If the group begins with `?` followed by another character, it's a special type of group. A ':' tells the group not to be remembered when `exec` is used. '=' means the previous token matches only if followed by this group, and '!' means the previous token matches only if NOT followed. Like root, it can contain an `options` key instead of `stack` if there is a pipe. ```js { "type": ret.types.GROUP, "remember" true, "followedBy": false, "notFollowedBy": false, "stack": [token1, token2...], } ``` ```js { "type": ret.types.GROUP, "remember" true, "followedBy": false, "notFollowedBy": false, "options" [ [token1, token2...], [othertoken1, othertoken2...] ... ], } ``` ### POSITION `\b`, `\B`, `^`, and `$` specify positions in the regexp. ```js { "type": ret.types.POSITION, "value": "^", } ``` ### SET Contains a key `set` specifying what tokens are allowed and a key `not` specifying if the set should be negated. A set can contain other sets, ranges, and characters. ```js { "type": ret.types.SET, "set": [token1, token2...], "not": false, } ``` ### RANGE Used in set tokens to specify a character range. `from` and `to` are character codes. ```js { "type": ret.types.RANGE, "from": 97, "to": 122, } ``` ### REPETITION ```js { "type": ret.types.REPETITION, "min": 0, "max": Infinity, "value": token, } ``` ### REFERENCE References a group token. `value` is 1-9. ```js { "type": ret.types.REFERENCE, "value": 1, } ``` ### CHAR Represents a single character token. `value` is the character code. This might seem a bit cluttering instead of concatenating characters together. But since repetition tokens only repeat the last token and not the last clause like the pipe, it's simpler to do it this way. ```js { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value": 123, } ``` ## Errors ret.js will throw errors if given a string with an invalid regular expression. All possible errors are * Invalid group. When a group with an immediate `?` character is followed by an invalid character. It can only be followed by `!`, `=`, or `:`. Example: `/(?_abc)/` * Nothing to repeat. Thrown when a repetitional token is used as the first token in the current clause, as in right in the beginning of the regexp or group, or right after a pipe. Example: `/foo|?bar/`, `/{1,3}foo|bar/`, `/foo(+bar)/` * Unmatched ). A group was not opened, but was closed. Example: `/hello)2u/` * Unterminated group. A group was not closed. Example: `/(1(23)4/` * Unterminated character class. A custom character set was not closed. Example: `/[abc/` # Install npm install ret # Tests Tests are written with [vows](http://vowsjs.org/) ```bash npm test ``` # License MIT # eslint-visitor-keys [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Downloads/month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](http://www.npmtrends.com/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys.svg)](https://david-dm.org/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys) Constants and utilities about visitor keys to traverse AST. ## 💿 Installation Use [npm] to install. ```bash $ npm install eslint-visitor-keys ``` ### Requirements - [Node.js] 10.0.0 or later. ## 📖 Usage ```js const evk = require("eslint-visitor-keys") ``` ### evk.KEYS > type: `{ [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Visitor keys. This keys are frozen. This is an object. Keys are the type of [ESTree] nodes. Their values are an array of property names which have child nodes. For example: ``` console.log(evk.KEYS.AssignmentExpression) // → ["left", "right"] ``` ### evk.getKeys(node) > type: `(node: object) => string[]` Get the visitor keys of a given AST node. This is similar to `Object.keys(node)` of ES Standard, but some keys are excluded: `parent`, `leadingComments`, `trailingComments`, and names which start with `_`. This will be used to traverse unknown nodes. For example: ``` const node = { type: "AssignmentExpression", left: { type: "Identifier", name: "foo" }, right: { type: "Literal", value: 0 } } console.log(evk.getKeys(node)) // → ["type", "left", "right"] ``` ### evk.unionWith(additionalKeys) > type: `(additionalKeys: object) => { [type: string]: string[] | undefined }` Make the union set with `evk.KEYS` and the given keys. - The order of keys is, `additionalKeys` is at first, then `evk.KEYS` is concatenated after that. - It removes duplicated keys as keeping the first one. For example: ``` console.log(evk.unionWith({ MethodDefinition: ["decorators"] })) // → { ..., MethodDefinition: ["decorators", "key", "value"], ... } ``` ## 📰 Change log See [GitHub releases](https://github.com/eslint/eslint-visitor-keys/releases). ## 🍻 Contributing Welcome. See [ESLint contribution guidelines](https://eslint.org/docs/developer-guide/contributing/). ### Development commands - `npm test` runs tests and measures code coverage. - `npm run lint` checks source codes with ESLint. - `npm run coverage` opens the code coverage report of the previous test with your default browser. - `npm run release` publishes this package to [npm] registory. [npm]: https://www.npmjs.com/ [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/ [ESTree]: https://github.com/estree/estree # v8-compile-cache [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/zertosh/v8-compile-cache.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/zertosh/v8-compile-cache) `v8-compile-cache` attaches a `require` hook to use [V8's code cache](https://v8project.blogspot.com/2015/07/code-caching.html) to speed up instantiation time. The "code cache" is the work of parsing and compiling done by V8. The ability to tap into V8 to produce/consume this cache was introduced in [Node v5.7.0](https://nodejs.org/en/blog/release/v5.7.0/). ## Usage 1. Add the dependency: ```sh $ npm install --save v8-compile-cache ``` 2. Then, in your entry module add: ```js require('v8-compile-cache'); ``` **Requiring `v8-compile-cache` in Node <5.7.0 is a noop – but you need at least Node 4.0.0 to support the ES2015 syntax used by `v8-compile-cache`.** ## Options Set the environment variable `DISABLE_V8_COMPILE_CACHE=1` to disable the cache. Cache directory is defined by environment variable `V8_COMPILE_CACHE_CACHE_DIR` or defaults to `<os.tmpdir()>/v8-compile-cache-<V8_VERSION>`. ## Internals Cache files are suffixed `.BLOB` and `.MAP` corresponding to the entry module that required `v8-compile-cache`. The cache is _entry module specific_ because it is faster to load the entire code cache into memory at once, than it is to read it from disk on a file-by-file basis. ## Benchmarks See https://github.com/zertosh/v8-compile-cache/tree/master/bench. **Load Times:** | Module | Without Cache | With Cache | | ---------------- | -------------:| ----------:| | `babel-core` | `218ms` | `185ms` | | `yarn` | `153ms` | `113ms` | | `yarn` (bundled) | `228ms` | `105ms` | _^ Includes the overhead of loading the cache itself._ ## Acknowledgements * `FileSystemBlobStore` and `NativeCompileCache` are based on Atom's implementation of their v8 compile cache: - https://github.com/atom/atom/blob/b0d7a8a/src/file-system-blob-store.js - https://github.com/atom/atom/blob/b0d7a8a/src/native-compile-cache.js * `mkdirpSync` is based on: - https://github.com/substack/node-mkdirp/blob/f2003bb/index.js#L55-L98 # assemblyscript-json ![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/assemblyscript-json) ![npm downloads per month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/assemblyscript-json) JSON encoder / decoder for AssemblyScript. Special thanks to https://github.com/MaxGraey/bignum.wasm for basic unit testing infra for AssemblyScript. ## Installation `assemblyscript-json` is available as a [npm package](https://www.npmjs.com/package/assemblyscript-json). You can install `assemblyscript-json` in your AssemblyScript project by running: `npm install --save assemblyscript-json` ## Usage ### Parsing JSON ```typescript import { JSON } from "assemblyscript-json"; // Parse an object using the JSON object let jsonObj: JSON.Obj = <JSON.Obj>(JSON.parse('{"hello": "world", "value": 24}')); // We can then use the .getX functions to read from the object if you know it's type // This will return the appropriate JSON.X value if the key exists, or null if the key does not exist let worldOrNull: JSON.Str | null = jsonObj.getString("hello"); // This will return a JSON.Str or null if (worldOrNull != null) { // use .valueOf() to turn the high level JSON.Str type into a string let world: string = worldOrNull.valueOf(); } let numOrNull: JSON.Num | null = jsonObj.getNum("value"); if (numOrNull != null) { // use .valueOf() to turn the high level JSON.Num type into a f64 let value: f64 = numOrNull.valueOf(); } // If you don't know the value type, get the parent JSON.Value let valueOrNull: JSON.Value | null = jsonObj.getValue("hello"); if (valueOrNull != null) { let value = <JSON.Value>valueOrNull; // Next we could figure out what type we are if(value.isString) { // value.isString would be true, so we can cast to a string let innerString = (<JSON.Str>value).valueOf(); let jsonString = (<JSON.Str>value).stringify(); // Do something with string value } } ``` ### Encoding JSON ```typescript import { JSONEncoder } from "assemblyscript-json"; // Create encoder let encoder = new JSONEncoder(); // Construct necessary object encoder.pushObject("obj"); encoder.setInteger("int", 10); encoder.setString("str", ""); encoder.popObject(); // Get serialized data let json: Uint8Array = encoder.serialize(); // Or get serialized data as string let jsonString: string = encoder.stringify(); assert(jsonString, '"obj": {"int": 10, "str": ""}'); // True! ``` ### Custom JSON Deserializers ```typescript import { JSONDecoder, JSONHandler } from "assemblyscript-json"; // Events need to be received by custom object extending JSONHandler. // NOTE: All methods are optional to implement. class MyJSONEventsHandler extends JSONHandler { setString(name: string, value: string): void { // Handle field } setBoolean(name: string, value: bool): void { // Handle field } setNull(name: string): void { // Handle field } setInteger(name: string, value: i64): void { // Handle field } setFloat(name: string, value: f64): void { // Handle field } pushArray(name: string): bool { // Handle array start // true means that nested object needs to be traversed, false otherwise // Note that returning false means JSONDecoder.startIndex need to be updated by handler return true; } popArray(): void { // Handle array end } pushObject(name: string): bool { // Handle object start // true means that nested object needs to be traversed, false otherwise // Note that returning false means JSONDecoder.startIndex need to be updated by handler return true; } popObject(): void { // Handle object end } } // Create decoder let decoder = new JSONDecoder<MyJSONEventsHandler>(new MyJSONEventsHandler()); // Create a byte buffer of our JSON. NOTE: Deserializers work on UTF8 string buffers. let jsonString = '{"hello": "world"}'; let jsonBuffer = Uint8Array.wrap(String.UTF8.encode(jsonString)); // Parse JSON decoder.deserialize(jsonBuffer); // This will send events to MyJSONEventsHandler ``` Feel free to look through the [tests](https://github.com/nearprotocol/assemblyscript-json/tree/master/assembly/__tests__) for more usage examples. ## Reference Documentation Reference API Documentation can be found in the [docs directory](./docs). ## License [MIT](./LICENSE) # axios // adapters The modules under `adapters/` are modules that handle dispatching a request and settling a returned `Promise` once a response is received. ## Example ```js var settle = require('./../core/settle'); module.exports = function myAdapter(config) { // At this point: // - config has been merged with defaults // - request transformers have already run // - request interceptors have already run // Make the request using config provided // Upon response settle the Promise return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) { var response = { data: responseData, status: request.status, statusText: request.statusText, headers: responseHeaders, config: config, request: request }; settle(resolve, reject, response); // From here: // - response transformers will run // - response interceptors will run }); } ``` # isexe Minimal module to check if a file is executable, and a normal file. Uses `fs.stat` and tests against the `PATHEXT` environment variable on Windows. ## USAGE ```javascript var isexe = require('isexe') isexe('some-file-name', function (err, isExe) { if (err) { console.error('probably file does not exist or something', err) } else if (isExe) { console.error('this thing can be run') } else { console.error('cannot be run') } }) // same thing but synchronous, throws errors var isExe = isexe.sync('some-file-name') // treat errors as just "not executable" isexe('maybe-missing-file', { ignoreErrors: true }, callback) var isExe = isexe.sync('maybe-missing-file', { ignoreErrors: true }) ``` ## API ### `isexe(path, [options], [callback])` Check if the path is executable. If no callback provided, and a global `Promise` object is available, then a Promise will be returned. Will raise whatever errors may be raised by `fs.stat`, unless `options.ignoreErrors` is set to true. ### `isexe.sync(path, [options])` Same as `isexe` but returns the value and throws any errors raised. ### Options * `ignoreErrors` Treat all errors as "no, this is not executable", but don't raise them. * `uid` Number to use as the user id * `gid` Number to use as the group id * `pathExt` List of path extensions to use instead of `PATHEXT` environment variable on Windows. # file-entry-cache > Super simple cache for file metadata, useful for process that work o a given series of files > and that only need to repeat the job on the changed ones since the previous run of the process — Edit [![NPM Version](http://img.shields.io/npm/v/file-entry-cache.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/file-entry-cache) [![Build Status](http://img.shields.io/travis/royriojas/file-entry-cache.svg?style=flat)](https://travis-ci.org/royriojas/file-entry-cache) ## install ```bash npm i --save file-entry-cache ``` ## Usage The module exposes two functions `create` and `createFromFile`. ## `create(cacheName, [directory, useCheckSum])` - **cacheName**: the name of the cache to be created - **directory**: Optional the directory to load the cache from - **usecheckSum**: Whether to use md5 checksum to verify if file changed. If false the default will be to use the mtime and size of the file. ## `createFromFile(pathToCache, [useCheckSum])` - **pathToCache**: the path to the cache file (this combines the cache name and directory) - **useCheckSum**: Whether to use md5 checksum to verify if file changed. If false the default will be to use the mtime and size of the file. ```js // loads the cache, if one does not exists for the given // Id a new one will be prepared to be created var fileEntryCache = require('file-entry-cache'); var cache = fileEntryCache.create('testCache'); var files = expand('../fixtures/*.txt'); // the first time this method is called, will return all the files var oFiles = cache.getUpdatedFiles(files); // this will persist this to disk checking each file stats and // updating the meta attributes `size` and `mtime`. // custom fields could also be added to the meta object and will be persisted // in order to retrieve them later cache.reconcile(); // use this if you want the non visited file entries to be kept in the cache // for more than one execution // // cache.reconcile( true /* noPrune */) // on a second run var cache2 = fileEntryCache.create('testCache'); // will return now only the files that were modified or none // if no files were modified previous to the execution of this function var oFiles = cache.getUpdatedFiles(files); // if you want to prevent a file from being considered non modified // something useful if a file failed some sort of validation // you can then remove the entry from the cache doing cache.removeEntry('path/to/file'); // path to file should be the same path of the file received on `getUpdatedFiles` // that will effectively make the file to appear again as modified until the validation is passed. In that // case you should not remove it from the cache // if you need all the files, so you can determine what to do with the changed ones // you can call var oFiles = cache.normalizeEntries(files); // oFiles will be an array of objects like the following entry = { key: 'some/name/file', the path to the file changed: true, // if the file was changed since previous run meta: { size: 3242, // the size of the file mtime: 231231231, // the modification time of the file data: {} // some extra field stored for this file (useful to save the result of a transformation on the file } } ``` ## Motivation for this module I needed a super simple and dumb **in-memory cache** with optional disk persistence (write-back cache) in order to make a script that will beautify files with `esformatter` to execute only on the files that were changed since the last run. In doing so the process of beautifying files was reduced from several seconds to a small fraction of a second. This module uses [flat-cache](https://www.npmjs.com/package/flat-cache) a super simple `key/value` cache storage with optional file persistance. The main idea is to read the files when the task begins, apply the transforms required, and if the process succeed, then store the new state of the files. The next time this module request for `getChangedFiles` will return only the files that were modified. Making the process to end faster. This module could also be used by processes that modify the files applying a transform, in that case the result of the transform could be stored in the `meta` field, of the entries. Anything added to the meta field will be persisted. Those processes won't need to call `getChangedFiles` they will instead call `normalizeEntries` that will return the entries with a `changed` field that can be used to determine if the file was changed or not. If it was not changed the transformed stored data could be used instead of actually applying the transformation, saving time in case of only a few files changed. In the worst case scenario all the files will be processed. In the best case scenario only a few of them will be processed. ## Important notes - The values set on the meta attribute of the entries should be `stringify-able` ones if possible, flat-cache uses `circular-json` to try to persist circular structures, but this should be considered experimental. The best results are always obtained with non circular values - All the changes to the cache state are done to memory first and only persisted after reconcile. ## License MIT # json-schema-traverse Traverse JSON Schema passing each schema object to callback [![build](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/workflows/build/badge.svg)](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/actions?query=workflow%3Abuild) [![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/json-schema-traverse)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/json-schema-traverse) [![coverage](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse?branch=master) ## Install ``` npm install json-schema-traverse ``` ## Usage ```javascript const traverse = require('json-schema-traverse'); const schema = { properties: { foo: {type: 'string'}, bar: {type: 'integer'} } }; traverse(schema, {cb}); // cb is called 3 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. {type: 'string'} // 3. {type: 'integer'} // Or: traverse(schema, {cb: {pre, post}}); // pre is called 3 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. {type: 'string'} // 3. {type: 'integer'} // // post is called 3 times with: // 1. {type: 'string'} // 2. {type: 'integer'} // 3. root schema ``` Callback function `cb` is called for each schema object (not including draft-06 boolean schemas), including the root schema, in pre-order traversal. Schema references ($ref) are not resolved, they are passed as is. Alternatively, you can pass a `{pre, post}` object as `cb`, and then `pre` will be called before traversing child elements, and `post` will be called after all child elements have been traversed. Callback is passed these parameters: - _schema_: the current schema object - _JSON pointer_: from the root schema to the current schema object - _root schema_: the schema passed to `traverse` object - _parent JSON pointer_: from the root schema to the parent schema object (see below) - _parent keyword_: the keyword inside which this schema appears (e.g. `properties`, `anyOf`, etc.) - _parent schema_: not necessarily parent object/array; in the example above the parent schema for `{type: 'string'}` is the root schema - _index/property_: index or property name in the array/object containing multiple schemas; in the example above for `{type: 'string'}` the property name is `'foo'` ## Traverse objects in all unknown keywords ```javascript const traverse = require('json-schema-traverse'); const schema = { mySchema: { minimum: 1, maximum: 2 } }; traverse(schema, {allKeys: true, cb}); // cb is called 2 times with: // 1. root schema // 2. mySchema ``` Without option `allKeys: true` callback will be called only with root schema. ## Enterprise support json-schema-traverse package is a part of [Tidelift enterprise subscription](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-json-schema-traverse?utm_source=npm-json-schema-traverse&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=enterprise&utm_term=repo) - it provides a centralised commercial support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers. ## Security contact To report a security vulnerability, please use the [Tidelift security contact](https://tidelift.com/security). Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerability via GitHub issues. ## License [MIT](https://github.com/epoberezkin/json-schema-traverse/blob/master/LICENSE)
hiba-machfej_near-guestbook-react
README.md craco.config.js package.json public index.html manifest.json robots.txt src App.css App.js App.test.js index.css index.js logo.svg reportWebVitals.js services near.js setupTests.js tailwind.config.js
# Getting Started with Create React App This project was bootstrapped with [Create React App](https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app). ## Available Scripts In the project directory, you can run: ### `yarn start` Runs the app in the development mode.\ Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) to view it in the browser. The page will reload if you make edits.\ You will also see any lint errors in the console. ### `yarn test` Launches the test runner in the interactive watch mode.\ See the section about [running tests](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/running-tests) for more information. ### `yarn build` Builds the app for production to the `build` folder.\ It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance. The build is minified and the filenames include the hashes.\ Your app is ready to be deployed! See the section about [deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) for more information. ### `yarn eject` **Note: this is a one-way operation. Once you `eject`, you can’t go back!** If you aren’t satisfied with the build tool and configuration choices, you can `eject` at any time. This command will remove the single build dependency from your project. Instead, it will copy all the configuration files and the transitive dependencies (webpack, Babel, ESLint, etc) right into your project so you have full control over them. All of the commands except `eject` will still work, but they will point to the copied scripts so you can tweak them. At this point you’re on your own. You don’t have to ever use `eject`. The curated feature set is suitable for small and middle deployments, and you shouldn’t feel obligated to use this feature. However we understand that this tool wouldn’t be useful if you couldn’t customize it when you are ready for it. ## Learn More You can learn more in the [Create React App documentation](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/getting-started). To learn React, check out the [React documentation](https://reactjs.org/). ### Code Splitting This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting) ### Analyzing the Bundle Size This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size) ### Making a Progressive Web App This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app) ### Advanced Configuration This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration) ### Deployment This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) ### `yarn build` fails to minify This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify)
novilusio_lucky-number
README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json package.json scripts 1.dev-deploy.sh 2.create-Lucky.sh 3.find-Luck.sh 4.fortune.sh src as_types.d.ts simple __tests__ as-pect.d.ts index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts model.ts singleton __tests__ as-pect.d.ts index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts tsconfig.json utils.ts CREATE A GAME FIND A GAME GAMEPLAY VIEW
# LUCKY NUMBER > ## Lucky Number is a project prepared at the end of the NCD training. **Lucky Number** is a **game** of **chance** played with _two users._ - Each player must deposit **1 NEAR** to play. - _A random number_ between **1** and **10** is generated for each user. - The numbers assigned to the users are compared. - _The big number_ wins the game. - The total **2 NEAR** taken as a deposit is transferred to the winner account. - If the numbers are _equal,_ **1 NEAR** deposit is paid back to users' accounts. ## Prerequisites Lucky Number is a smart contract running on NEAR. We should install near-cli to play. - Install yarn. ``` yarn ``` - Install near-cli ``` npm install --global near-cli ``` ## Build - Deploy - First, we need to **login.** ``` near login ``` - **Build** to the contract. ``` yarn build ``` - **Deploy** to the conract. ``` yarn deploy ``` - Copy **dev-123-789** from the _neardev/dev-account_ folder. ``` export CONTRACT=<your_dev_id> ``` ## How to Play - **Create** a new game. ``` near call $CONTRACT createLucky --accountId <your_account.testnet> --amount 1 ``` - For the **Second Player** to participate. ``` near call $CONTRACT findLuck '{"id":"<gameId>"}' --accountId <player_2.testnet> --amount 1 ``` - Are you fortunate ? ``` near call $CONTRACT fortune '{"id": "<gameId>"}' --accountId <any_player.testnet> ``` > ## **Check your wallet. :)** ## Access Smart Contract - To search for _any game_. ``` near call $CONTRACT viewLucky '{"id": "<game_id>"}' --accountId <your_account.testnet> ``` - To see _all games_. ``` near call $CONTRACT allLucky --accountId <your_account.testnet> ```
iamalperen_NCD.L1.sample--nearly-neighbors
Cargo.toml README.md _config.yml as-pect.config.js asconfig.json package.json simulation Cargo.toml src factory.rs lib.rs project.rs proposal.rs src as-pect.d.ts as_types.d.ts factory __tests__ index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts project __tests__ index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts proposal __tests__ index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts tsconfig.json utils.ts
# Nearly Neighbors A family of smart contracts developed for NEAR Protocol to enable crowd-sourced civic development. Think Kickstarter for neighborhood projects. ## ⚠️ Warning Any content produced by NEAR, or developer resources that NEAR provides, are for educational and inspiration purposes only. NEAR does not encourage, induce or sanction the deployment of any such applications in violation of applicable laws or regulations. ## Concept The contracts provided here enable users to propose neighborhood development projects and crowd-source funding for them. Think of it like Kickstarter, but instead of funding your roommate's sister's math rock band, you'd propose and fund projects like a new local park, grocery store, or community center. And the whole thing is powered by the NEAR protocol, so identity and financial tools are built in. ### Example Story For the sake of this explanation, we'll assume three users: Alice, Bob, and Carol. 1. Alice notices that there isn't a good grocery store in her neighborhood, so she creates a new [proposal](#proposal) and sets a target funding goal of 10 NEAR tokens. 2. Bob lives nearby and also would like to have fresh produce, so he pledges 5 NEAR tokens to Alice's proposal with a geographic radius of 1km from his home. 3. Carol lives farther away, but she would still like to have a grocery store even if it is a longer walk, so she pledges another 5 NEAR to Alice's proposal with an allowed radius of 5km. 4. Now that the proposal is _fully funded_, it is transformed into a [project](#project). A new project account is created, and Bob and Carol's pledged NEAR tokens are transferred over. This project's geographic location is set to the area of overlap between Bob and Carol's specified radii. 5. Alice, as the project owner, now has access to the project funds to hire a contractor and build her grocery store! - [Getting Started](#getting-started) - [Installation](#installation) - [Commands](#commands) - [Who This Is For](#who-this-is-for) - [UI Wireframes](#ui-wireframes) - [File Structure](#file-structure) - [Contracts](#contracts) - [Proposal](#proposal) - [Project](#project) - [Factory](#factory) - [Deploying](#deploying) - [Contributing](#contributing) - [Future Development](#future-development) - [Key Contributors](#key-contributors) --- ## Getting Started This repository is an example of a **dApp seed** project. **dApp seed** projects provide a stable foundation for developers to build a distributed application on top of. This includes: - One or more [smart contracts](https://docs.near.org/docs/roles/developer/contracts/intro) - [Unit tests](https://docs.near.org/docs/roles/developer/contracts/test-contracts#unit-tests) and [simulation tests](https://docs.near.org/docs/roles/developer/contracts/test-contracts#simulation-tests) for the contract(s) - Wireframes and/or mockups for a potential dApp UI - Utilities for building, testing, and deploying contracts (facilitated by the [NEAR CLI](https://docs.near.org/docs/development/near-cli)) ### Installation 1. clone this repo 2. run `yarn install` (or `npm install`) 3. run `yarn build` (or `npm run build`) 4. run `yarn test` (or `npm run test`) 5. explore the contents of `src/` See below for more convenience scripts ... ### Commands **Compile source to WebAssembly** ```sh yarn build # asb --target debug yarn build:release # asb ``` **Run unit tests** ```sh yarn test:unit # asp --verbose --nologo -f unit.spec ``` **Run simulation tests** These tests can be run from within VSCode (or any Rust-compatible IDE) or from the command line. _NOTE: Rust is required_ ```sh yarn test:simulate # yarn build:release && cargo test -- --nocapture ``` **Run all tests** ```sh yarn test # yarn test:unit && test:simulate ``` ### Who This Is For - Novice/intermediate Web3 devs looking for projects to practice on - Developers new to the NEAR Protocol looking for a learning sandbox - NEAR developers looking for inspiration ## UI Wireframes More wireframes can be found in the `wireframes/` folder. Here are some examples showing how we envision the basic user interface elements. **Create a Proposal** ![create-proposal](wireframes/create_proposal.png) **Supporting a Proposal** ![support-project-proposal](wireframes/support_proposal_modal.png) **Map of Projects** ![project-map](wireframes/project_map.png) ## File Structure This contract is designed to be self-contained and so may be extracted into your own projects and used as a starting point. If you do decide to use this code, please pay close attention to all top level files including: - NodeJS artifacts - `package.json`: JavaScript project dependencies and several useful scripts - AssemblyScript artifacts - `asconfig.json`: AssemblyScript project (and per contract) configuration including workspace configuration - `as-pect.config.js`: as-pect unit testing dependency - `src/tsconfig.json`: load TypeScript types - `src/as_types.ts`: AssemblyScript types header file - `src/as-pect.d.ts`: as-pect unit testing types header file - Rust artifacts - `Cargo.toml`: Rust project dependencies and configuration - `Cargo.lock`: version-locked list of Rust project dependencies The core file structure: ``` nearly-neighbors ├── README.md <-- this file ├── build <-- compiled contracts (WASM) │   ├── debug │   └── release ├── simulation │   ├── Cargo.toml <-- simulation test config │   └── src <-- simulation tests │   ├── factory.rs │   ├── lib.rs │   ├── project.rs │   └── proposal.rs ├── src │   ├── factory <-- factory contract with: │   │   ├── asconfig.json │   │   ├── assembly <-- source code │   │   │   └── index.ts │   │   └── __tests__ <-- unit tests │   │   └── index.unit.spec.ts │   ├── project <-- project contract with: │   │   ├── asconfig.json │   │   ├── assembly <-- source code │   │   │   └── index.ts │   │   └── __tests__ <-- unit tests │   │   └── index.unit.spec.ts │   ├── proposal <-- proposal contract with: │   │   ├── asconfig.json │   │   ├── assembly <-- source code │   │   │   └── index.ts │   │   └── __tests__ <-- unit tests │   │   └── index.unit.spec.ts │   └── utils.ts └── wireframes <-- wireframe images ``` ## Contracts There are three contracts that make up this project. By breaking out the logic into multiple contracts, we are employing NEAR development best practices which will make the code more secure (through rigorous testing of separated concerns) and robust (enabling complex features through [cross-contract calls](https://docs.near.org/docs/tutorials/how-to-write-contracts-that-talk-to-each-other)). ### Proposal The proposal contract represents a user's proposed idea for a development project. Proposals are created by users (mediated by the [factory](#factory)) and hold data like: - Project details (what, where, why) - Funding parameters (target amount, minimum pledge, due date) The proposal accepts funding from _supporters_. If proposals are fully funded by their due date, then they are closed and converted to a [project](#project) (with all funds transferred to the new project's account). If proposals do not meet their funding goals, then they are closed and all funds are returned to the supporters. ### Project The project contract represents a fully-funded proposal. It is managed by a _project owner_, who is authorized to access the project's NEAR tokens so that they can put those funds into use by actually executing on the real-world project. Projects are created automatically by the [factory](#factory) from a fully-funded [proposal](#proposal). Projects maintain a reference to their original proposal for proper record-keeping. Projects track their own real-world progress by reporting on key stats like: - Amount of funds used - % progress towards completion ### Factory The factory is a behind-the-scenes contract which takes care of the creation and setup of [proposals](#proposal) and [projects](#project). Instead of human users creating proposal and project contracts directly, they instead send requests to the factory which handles the necessary tasks for them. This is a pattern you'll see frequently in NEAR (and other blockchain) development: designating a contract with the responsibility for managing the lifecycle of other contracts. It helps abstract out the routine tasks of contract initialization and setup, limiting tedious user interactions and thus avoiding potential for user error. ## Deploying TODO: Add referral to resources for deploying ## Contributing There are two main ways you can contribute to this project: 1. **Build off of it**: we made this so that developers like you can build dApps more quickly and easily. Try building out a Web3 app on top of the provided [contracts](#contracts), using the wireframes as your guide. 2. **Enhance this dApp seed**: if you find a bug or an opportunity to enhance this repository, please submit an [issue](https://github.com/Learn-NEAR/nearly-neighbors/issues) and/or open a [pull request](https://github.com/Learn-NEAR/nearly-neighbors/pulls). Interested in creating your own **dApp seed** and earning rewards for your efforts? Learn more: [TODO: ADD LINK / MORE COPY]. ### Future Development Some ideas for future feature development: - Heatmaps showing the concentration of funding in particular geographic areas - Notifications for proposal/project owners and supporters - Algorithm for identifying ideal locations for a project, weighting the locations specified by supporters with their funding amount (i.e. more funding == more likely to use specified location) ### Key Contributors - [Sherif Abushadi - @amgando](https://github.com/amgando) - [Tanner Welsh - @tannerwelsh](https://github.com/tannerwelsh)
intrepidcanadian_encode-hackathon
.gitpod.yml README.md contract build.sh build builder.c code.h hello_near.js methods.h deploy.sh neardev dev-account.env package-lock.json package.json src contract.ts tsconfig.json frontend .parcel-cache f5cb5caddee0a574.txt App.js assets global.css logo-black.svg logo-white.svg dist fetch.3904922d.js fetch.5aa4d3e3.js fetch.8f0a1d37.js index.8f81d6b3.css index.bc0daea6.css index.html index.runtime.2c78ebc4.js index.runtime.305dbd64.js index.runtime.35b0eff7.js index.runtime.390ae6d6.js index.runtime.752963ce.js index.runtime.8b581df1.js index.runtime.981132ca.js index.runtime.b7b08715.js index.runtime.b94dfc56.js index.runtime.df1863aa.js index.runtime.e793628f.js index.runtime.fe248611.js logo-black.4514ed42.svg logo-black.54439fde.svg logo-white.605d2742.svg logo-white.a7716062.svg index.html index.js near-wallet.js package-lock.json package.json start.sh ui-components.js integration-tests package-lock.json package.json src main.ava.ts package-lock.json package.json rust-toolchain.toml
Notes for the Encode Hackathon - Near ================== Video Demo: https://www.loom.com/share/3ee9013167fe4338977422ee5b913aad?sid=bd9ce8de-505e-41a5-a81d-0a994cc0372e How many people know their grandparents? Now how many people know about their grandparents' parents? - Recently, I have felt there is lost history from one generation to the next. - Blockchain's long-term storage represents an intriguing opportunity to commemorate our past at minimal one-time gas fee costs - Everytime a person dies, or a computer with images is damaged, an entire library of history is burned In this hackathon, I built a simple registry on the Near Blockchain to upload details of death. This death certificate allows people to leave commemorative messages. I envision that this project can be further expanded upon with: - more sophisticated contracts that can develop linkages to other profiles - can be used to have a repository of information about the individual - gated access so that information can be used to generate a LLM chat bot for interaction - used for building a family trust that can support generations Block hash on Near Testnet Blockchain 36E94AQFzNU5Q7iDpuZkghrA72yc7nnXvo6ea2GyaDXj starting project ================== to start project, simply run npm install and then npm start near-blank-project ================== This app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== If you haven't installed dependencies during setup: npm install Build and deploy your contract to TestNet with a temporary dev account: npm run deploy Test your contract: npm test If you have a frontend, run `npm start`. This will run a dev server. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The smart-contract code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. In blockchain apps the smart contract is the "backend" of your app. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/frontend` folder. `/frontend/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/frontend/index.js`, this is your entrypoint to learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Test your contract: `npm test`, this will run the tests in `integration-tests` directory. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `npm run deploy`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a temporary dev account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how: Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `npm install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: npm install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `near-blank-project.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `near-blank-project.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account near-blank-project.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: deploy the contract --------------------------- Use the CLI to deploy the contract to TestNet with your account ID. Replace `PATH_TO_WASM_FILE` with the `wasm` that was generated in `contract` build directory. near deploy --accountId near-blank-project.YOUR-NAME.testnet --wasmFile PATH_TO_WASM_FILE Step 3: set contract name in your frontend code ----------------------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'near-blank-project.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/concepts/basics/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages
komalklr_NEAR_App
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<br /> <br /> <p> <img src="https://nearprotocol.com/wp-content/themes/near-19/assets/img/logo.svg?t=1553011311" width="240"> </p> <br /> <br /> ## Template for NEAR dapps ### Requirements ##### IMPORTANT: Make sure you have the latest version of NEAR Shell and Node Version > 10.x 1. [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/) 2. (optional) near-shell ``` npm i -g near-shell ``` 3. (optional) yarn ``` npm i -g yarn ``` ### To run on NEAR testnet ```bash npm install && npm dev ``` with yarn: ```bash yarn && yarn dev ``` The server that starts is for static assets and by default serves them to http://localhost:1234. Navigate there in your browser to see the app running! NOTE: Both contract and client-side code will auto-reload once you change source files. ### To run tests ```bash npm test ``` with yarn: ```bash yarn test ``` ### Deploy #### Step 1: Create account for the contract You'll now want to authorize NEAR shell on your NEAR account, which will allow NEAR Shell to deploy contracts on your NEAR account's behalf \(and spend your NEAR account balance to do so\). Type the command `near login` which opens a webpage at NEAR Wallet. Follow the instructions there and it will create a key for you, stored in the `/neardev` directory. #### Step 2: Modify `src/config.js` line that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id from step 1. NOTE: When you use [create-near-app](https://github.com/nearprotocol/create-near-app) to create the project it'll infer and pre-populate name of contract based on project folder name. ```javascript const CONTRACT_NAME = 'react-template'; /* TODO: Change this to your contract's name! */ const DEFAULT_ENV = 'development'; ... ``` #### Step 3: Check the scripts in the package.json, for frontend and backend both, run the command: ```bash npm run deploy ``` with yarn: ```bash yarn deploy ``` NOTE: This uses [gh-pages](https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages) to publish resulting website on GitHub pages. It'll only work if project already has repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify `deploy:pages` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. ### To Explore - `contract/src/lib.rs` for the contract code and unit tests - `src/index.html` for the front-end HTML - `src/main.js` for the JavaScript front-end code and how to integrate contracts - `src/main.test.js` for the JavaScript integration tests of smart contract # Status Message Records the status messages of the accounts that call this contract. ## Testing To test run: ```bash cargo test --package status-message -- --nocapture ```
longvubka98_white_list_ido
.eslintrc.yml .gitpod.yml .travis.yml README-Gitpod.md README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts guestbook.spec.ts as_types.d.ts main.ts model.ts tsconfig.json types.ts babel.config.js neardev shared-test-staging test.near.json shared-test test.near.json package.json src App.js config.js index.html index.js tests integration App-integration.test.js ui App-ui.test.js
Guest Book ========== [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.com/near-examples/guest-book.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.com/near-examples/guest-book) [![Open in Gitpod](https://gitpod.io/button/open-in-gitpod.svg)](https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/near-examples/guest-book) <!-- MAGIC COMMENT: DO NOT DELETE! Everything above this line is hidden on NEAR Examples page --> Sign in with [NEAR] and add a message to the guest book! A starter app built with an [AssemblyScript] backend and a [React] frontend. Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you have Node.js ≥ 12 installed (https://nodejs.org), then use it to install [yarn]: `npm install --global yarn` (or just `npm i -g yarn`) 2. Run the local development server: `yarn && yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Running `yarn dev` will tell you the URL you can visit in your browser to see the app. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The backend code lives in the `/assembly` folder. This code gets deployed to the NEAR blockchain when you run `yarn deploy:contract`. This sort of code-that-runs-on-a-blockchain is called a "smart contract" – [learn more about NEAR smart contracts][smart contract docs]. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. [/src/index.html](/src/index.html) is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and backend. The backend code gets tested with the [asp] command for running the backend AssemblyScript tests, and [jest] for running frontend tests. You can run both of these at once with `yarn test`. Both contract and client-side code will auto-reload as you change source files. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contracts get deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli -------------------------- You need near-cli installed globally. Here's how: npm install --global near-cli This will give you the `near` [CLI] tool. Ensure that it's installed with: near --version Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Visit [NEAR Wallet] and make a new account. You'll be deploying these smart contracts to this new account. Now authorize NEAR CLI for this new account, and follow the instructions it gives you: near login Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'your-account-here!' Step 3: change remote URL if you cloned this repo ------------------------- Unless you forked this repository you will need to change the remote URL to a repo that you have commit access to. This will allow auto deployment to GitHub Pages from the command line. 1) go to GitHub and create a new repository for this project 2) open your terminal and in the root of this project enter the following: $ `git remote set-url origin https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/YOUR_REPOSITORY.git` Step 4: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contracts to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. [NEAR]: https://near.org/ [yarn]: https://yarnpkg.com/ [AssemblyScript]: https://www.assemblyscript.org/introduction.html [React]: https://reactjs.org [smart contract docs]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [asp]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.near.org [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [CLI]: https://www.w3schools.com/whatis/whatis_cli.asp [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages
LukasMasuch_best-of-crypto
.github CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md ISSUE_TEMPLATE 01_suggest-project.md 02_update-project.md 03_update-category.md 04_change-configuration.md 05_anything-else.md PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md labels.yml workflows update-best-of-list.yml CONTRIBUTING.md README.md config footer.md header.md history 2022-01-08_changes.md 2022-01-09_changes.md 2022-01-11_changes.md 2022-01-12_changes.md 2022-01-19_changes.md 2022-01-26_changes.md 2022-02-02_changes.md 2022-02-09_changes.md 2022-02-16_changes.md 2022-03-09_changes.md 2022-03-16_changes.md 2022-03-23_changes.md 2022-03-30_changes.md 2022-04-13_changes.md 2022-04-20_changes.md 2022-04-27_changes.md 2022-05-04_changes.md 2022-05-11_changes.md 2022-05-18_changes.md 2022-05-25_changes.md 2022-06-01_changes.md 2022-06-08_changes.md 2022-06-22_changes.md 2022-06-29_changes.md 2022-07-06_changes.md 2022-07-13_changes.md 2022-07-20_changes.md 2022-07-27_changes.md 2022-08-03_changes.md 2022-08-10_changes.md 2022-08-17_changes.md 2022-08-24_changes.md 2022-08-31_changes.md 2022-09-07_changes.md 2022-09-14_changes.md 2022-09-21_changes.md 2022-09-28_changes.md 2022-10-05_changes.md 2022-10-12_changes.md 2022-10-19_changes.md 2022-10-26_changes.md 2022-11-02_changes.md 2022-11-09_changes.md 2022-11-16_changes.md 2022-11-23_changes.md 2022-11-30_changes.md 2022-12-07_changes.md 2022-12-14_changes.md 2022-12-28_changes.md 2023-01-04_changes.md 2023-01-11_changes.md 2023-01-18_changes.md 2023-01-22_changes.md 2023-01-25_changes.md 2023-02-01_changes.md 2023-02-07_changes.md 2023-02-08_changes.md 2023-02-15_changes.md 2023-02-22_changes.md 2023-03-01_changes.md 2023-03-08_changes.md 2023-03-15_changes.md 2023-03-22_changes.md 2023-03-29_changes.md 2023-04-05_changes.md 2023-04-12_changes.md 2023-04-19_changes.md 2023-04-26_changes.md 2023-05-03_changes.md 2023-05-17_changes.md 2023-05-24_changes.md 2023-05-31_changes.md 2023-06-07_changes.md 2023-06-14_changes.md 2023-06-21_changes.md 2023-06-28_changes.md 2023-07-05_changes.md 2023-07-12_changes.md 2023-07-19_changes.md 2023-07-26_changes.md 2023-08-02_changes.md 2023-08-09_changes.md 2023-08-16_changes.md 2023-08-23_changes.md 2023-08-30_changes.md 2023-09-06_changes.md 2023-09-13_changes.md 2023-09-20_changes.md 2023-09-27_changes.md 2023-10-04_changes.md 2023-10-18_changes.md 2023-10-25_changes.md 2023-11-01_changes.md 2023-11-08_changes.md 2023-11-15_changes.md 2023-11-22_changes.md 2023-11-29_changes.md 2023-12-13_changes.md 2023-12-20_changes.md 2023-12-27_changes.md 2024-01-03_changes.md 2024-01-17_changes.md 2024-01-24_changes.md 2024-01-31_changes.md 2024-02-07_changes.md 2024-02-14_changes.md 2024-02-21_changes.md 2024-02-28_changes.md 2024-03-06_changes.md 2024-03-13_changes.md 2024-03-20_changes.md 2024-03-27_changes.md 2024-04-03_changes.md 2024-04-10_changes.md 2024-04-17_changes.md 2024-04-24_changes.md 2024-05-01_changes.md 2024-05-08_changes.md latest-changes.md
<!-- markdownlint-disable --> <h1 align="center"> Best-of Crypto <br> </h1> <p align="center"> <strong>🏆&nbsp; A ranked list of open-source digital currency and blockchain projects. Updated weekly.</strong> </p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://best-of.org" title="Best-of Badge"><img src="http://bit.ly/3o3EHNN"></a> <a href="#Contents" title="Project Count"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/projects-3.1K-blue.svg?color=5ac4bf"></a> <a href="#Contribution" title="Contributions are welcome"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/contributions-welcome-green.svg"></a> <a href="https://github.com/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto/releases" title="Best-of Updates"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/release-date/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto?color=green&label=updated"></a> </p> This curated list contains 3.1K awesome open-source projects with a total of 1.2M stars grouped into 11 categories. All projects are ranked by a project-quality score, which is calculated based on various metrics automatically collected from GitHub and different package managers. If you like to add or update projects, feel free to open an [issue](https://github.com/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto/issues/new/choose), submit a [pull request](https://github.com/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto/pulls), or directly edit the [projects.yaml](https://github.com/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto/edit/main/projects.yaml). Contributions are very welcome! > 🧙‍♂️ Discover other [best-of lists](https://best-of.org) or [create your own](https://github.com/best-of-lists/best-of/blob/main/create-best-of-list.md). ## Contents - [Cryptocurrencies](#cryptocurrencies) _48 projects_ - [Smart Contract Platforms](#smart-contract-platforms) _62 projects_ - [Stablecoins](#stablecoins) _3 projects_ - [Decentralized Finance (DeFi)](#decentralized-finance-defi) _120 projects_ - [Exchange-based Tokens](#exchange-based-tokens) _23 projects_ - [Meme Tokens](#meme-tokens) _1 projects_ - [Web 3.0](#web-30) _62 projects_ - [Privacy Coins](#privacy-coins) _43 projects_ - [Automated Market Maker (AMM)](#automated-market-maker-amm) _18 projects_ - [Metaverse, NFTs & Gaming](#metaverse-nfts--gaming) _27 projects_ - [Top Internet of Things (IOT)](#top-internet-of-things-iot) _13 projects_ - [Others](#others) _447 projects_ ## Explanation - 🥇🥈🥉&nbsp; Combined project-quality score - ⭐️&nbsp; Star count from GitHub - 🐣&nbsp; New project _(less than 6 months old)_ - 💤&nbsp; Inactive project _(6 months no activity)_ - 💀&nbsp; Dead project _(12 months no activity)_ - 📈📉&nbsp; Project is trending up or down - ➕&nbsp; Project was recently added - 👨‍💻&nbsp; Contributors count from GitHub - 🔀&nbsp; Fork count from GitHub - 📋&nbsp; Issue count from GitHub - ⏱️&nbsp; Last update timestamp on package manager - 📥&nbsp; Download count from package manager - 📦&nbsp; Number of dependent projects - <img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Ethereum Mainnet. - <img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on BSC Mainnet. - <img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Solana Mainnet. - <img src="https://git.io/J9cOb" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Avalanche Mainnet. - <img src="https://git.io/J9cOx" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Polygon Mainnet. - <img src="https://git.io/J9cOh" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Arbitrum Mainnet. - <img src="https://git.io/J9cOi" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Fantom Mainnet. - <img src="https://git.io/J9cOK" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Harmony Mainnet. - <img src="https://git.io/J9c3v" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Polkadot Mainnet. - <img src="https://git.io/J9cOg" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Terra Mainnet. - <img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13">&nbsp; Deployed on Cosmos Mainnet. <br> ## Cryptocurrencies <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Decentralized peer-to-peer currencies._ <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoinj">BTC - Bitcoin</a></b> (🥇47 · ⭐ 110K) - A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin">bitcoin</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 76K) - Bitcoin Core integration/staging tree. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin) (👨‍💻 1.2K · 🔀 35K · 📦 21 · 📋 8.3K - 8% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ElementsProject/lightning">lightning</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 2.8K) - Core Lightning Lightning Network implementation focusing on.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ElementsProject/lightning) (👨‍💻 270 · 🔀 870 · 📥 230K · 📦 63 · 📋 2.8K - 22% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ElementsProject/lightning ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bitcoinjs-lib">bitcoinjs-lib</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 5.6K) - A javascript Bitcoin library for node.js and browsers. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bitcoinjs-lib) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 2K · 📦 19K · 📋 1.2K - 3% open · ⏱️ 01.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bitcoinjs-lib ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoinj/bitcoinj">bitcoinj</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 4.9K) - A library for working with Bitcoin. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bitcoinj/bitcoinj) (👨‍💻 150 · 🔀 2.4K · 📦 1.7K · 📋 1.3K - 34% open · ⏱️ 05.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bitcoinj/bitcoinj ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/btcsuite/btcd">btcd</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 6.1K) - An alternative full node bitcoin implementation written in Go (golang). <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/btcsuite/btcd) (👨‍💻 220 · 🔀 2.3K · 📥 13K · 📦 3 · 📋 870 - 30% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/btcsuite/btcd ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/btcsuite/btcwallet">btcwallet</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 1.1K) - A secure bitcoin wallet daemon written in Go (golang). <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/btcsuite/btcwallet) (👨‍💻 63 · 🔀 560 · 📥 770 · 📦 880 · 📋 360 - 37% open · ⏱️ 10.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/btcsuite/btcwallet ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ElementsProject/elements">elements</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 1K) - Open Source implementation of advanced blockchain features extending the.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ElementsProject/elements) (👨‍💻 1.1K · 🔀 380 · 📥 92K · 📋 470 - 36% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ElementsProject/elements ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoin/bips">bips</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 9K) - Bitcoin Improvement Proposals. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips) (👨‍💻 380 · 🔀 5.2K · 📦 21 · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bitcoin/bips ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bip39">bip39</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 1K · 💤) - JavaScript implementation of Bitcoin BIP39: Mnemonic code for generating.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bip39) (👨‍💻 19 · 🔀 430 · 📦 180K · 📋 90 - 10% open · ⏱️ 20.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bip39 ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bip38">bip38</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 200 · 💤) - BIP38 is a standard process to encrypt Bitcoin and crypto currency.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bip38) (👨‍💻 13 · 🔀 120 · 📦 2K · 📋 37 - 24% open · ⏱️ 20.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bip38 ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ElementsProject/libwally-core">libwally-core</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 280) - Useful primitives for wallets. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ElementsProject/libwally-core) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 150 · 📥 47K · 📋 130 - 19% open · ⏱️ 10.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ElementsProject/libwally-core ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/BlockstreamResearch/secp256k1-zkp">secp256k1-zkp</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 350) - A fork of libsecp256k1 with support for advanced and experimental.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/BlockstreamResearch/secp256k1-zkp) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 130 · 📋 62 - 32% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ElementsProject/secp256k1-zkp ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/BlockstreamResearch/simplicity">simplicity</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 300) - Simplicity is a blockchain programming language designed as an.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/BlockstreamResearch/simplicity) (👨‍💻 7 · 🔀 42 · 📋 61 - 27% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ElementsProject/simplicity ``` </details> <br> _28 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos">ATOM - Cosmos</a></b> (🥇44 · ⭐ 24K) - The Cosmos network consists of many independent, parallel.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk">cosmos-sdk</a></b> (🥇39 · ⭐ 6K) - A Framework for Building High Value Public Blockchains. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk) (👨‍💻 600 · 🔀 3.4K · 📥 48K · 📦 14K · 📋 6.6K - 6% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/CosmWasm/cosmwasm">cosmwasm</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 1K) - Framework for building smart contracts in Wasm for the Cosmos SDK. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/CosmWasm/cosmwasm) (👨‍💻 55 · 🔀 320 · 📥 4K · 📦 100 · 📋 790 - 11% open · ⏱️ 26.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/CosmWasm/cosmwasm ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/iavl">iavl</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 410) - Merkleized IAVL+ Tree implementation in Go. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/iavl) (👨‍💻 72 · 🔀 240 · 📦 12K · 📋 190 - 19% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/iavl ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/relayer">relayer</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 380) - An IBC relayer for ibc-go. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/relayer) (👨‍💻 130 · 🔀 1.7K · 📥 14K · 📦 92 · 📋 490 - 15% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/relayer ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/ibc-go">ibc-go</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 490) - Inter-Blockchain Communication Protocol (IBC) implementation in Golang. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/ibc-go) (👨‍💻 140 · 🔀 520 · 📥 1.8K · 📦 1 · 📋 1.9K - 17% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/ibc-go ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/gaia">gaia</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 440 · 📉) - Cosmos Hub. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/gaia) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 660 · 📥 280K · 📋 920 - 4% open · ⏱️ 02.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/gaia ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/CosmWasm/cw-plus">cw-plus</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 500) - Production Quality contracts under open source licenses. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/CosmWasm/cw-plus) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 350 · 📥 34K · 📦 4 · 📋 310 - 5% open · ⏱️ 27.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/CosmWasm/cw-plus ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/CosmWasm/wasmd">wasmd</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 360) - Basic cosmos-sdk app with web assembly smart contracts. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/CosmWasm/wasmd) (👨‍💻 80 · 🔀 370 · 📥 400 · 📦 1.9K · 📋 560 - 10% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/CosmWasm/wasmd ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/sdk-tutorials">sdk-tutorials</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 480) - Tutorials for building modules for the Cosmos SDK. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/sdk-tutorials) (👨‍💻 130 · 🔀 380 · 📦 71 · 📋 260 - 25% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/sdk-tutorials ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/cosmjs">cosmjs</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 610) - The Swiss Army knife to power JavaScript based client solutions.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/cosmjs) (👨‍💻 53 · 🔀 310 · 📦 3 · 📋 690 - 23% open · ⏱️ 22.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/cosmjs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/chain-registry">chain-registry</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 480) - <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC-BY-4.0">CC-BY-4.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/chain-registry) (👨‍💻 790 · 🔀 1.1K · 📋 180 - 44% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/chain-registry ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-rust">cosmos-rust</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 290) - The home of all shared Rust resources for the Cosmos ecosystem. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-rust) (👨‍💻 34 · 🔀 110 · 📦 830 · 📋 73 - 23% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-rust ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cosmos/ibc">ibc</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 880) - Interchain Standards (ICS) for the Cosmos network & interchain.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cosmos/ibc) (👨‍💻 64 · 🔀 360 · 📋 530 - 17% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cosmos/ibc ``` </details> <br> _40 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/stellar">XLM - Stellar</a></b> (🥇37 · ⭐ 8.8K) - Open source, distributed, and community owned network used to..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/stellar/go">go</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Stellars public monorepo of go code. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/stellar/go) (👨‍💻 130 · 🔀 570 · 📥 240K · 📦 490 · 📋 2K - 19% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/stellar/go ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/stellar/stellar-core">stellar-core</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 3.1K) - Reference implementation for the peer-to-peer agent that.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/stellar/stellar-core) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 1K · 📋 1.7K - 16% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/stellar/stellar-core ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/stellar/js-stellar-sdk">js-stellar-sdk</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 610) - Main Stellar client library for the JavaScript language. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/stellar/js-stellar-sdk) (👨‍💻 80 · 🔀 290 · 📋 380 - 17% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/stellar/js-stellar-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/stellar/stellar-protocol">stellar-protocol</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 510) - Developer discussion about possible changes to the.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/stellar/stellar-protocol) (👨‍💻 98 · 🔀 340 · 📋 380 - 11% open · ⏱️ 01.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/stellar/stellar-protocol ``` </details> <br> _20 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ripple">XRP</a></b> (🥇34 · ⭐ 7.2K) - The Best Digital Asset for Global Payments. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/XRPLF/rippled">rippled</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 4.5K) - Decentralized cryptocurrency blockchain daemon implementing the XRP.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/XRPLF/rippled) (👨‍💻 150 · 🔀 1.4K · 📋 1.4K - 26% open · ⏱️ 02.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/XRPLF/rippled ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/XRPLF/xrpl.js">xrpl.js</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 1.2K) - A JavaScript/TypeScript API for interacting with the XRP Ledger.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/XRPLF/xrpl.js) (👨‍💻 140 · 🔀 500 · 📥 600 · 📦 4.9K · 📋 580 - 11% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/XRPLF/xrpl.js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/XRPLF/xrpl-dev-portal">xrpl-dev-portal</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 500) - Source code for xrpl.org including developer.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/XRPLF/xrpl-dev-portal) (👨‍💻 160 · 🔀 1.1K · 📋 590 - 36% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/XRPLF/xrpl-dev-portal ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/algorand">ALGO - Algorand</a></b> (🥇34 · ⭐ 3.1K) - Scalable, secure and decentralized digital currency and transactions..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/algorand/go-algorand">go-algorand</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Algorands official implementation in Go. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/algorand/go-algorand) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 430 · 📥 55K · 📦 100 · 📋 1.7K - 18% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/algorand/go-algorand ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/algorand/js-algorand-sdk">js-algorand-sdk</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 280) - The official JavaScript SDK for Algorand. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/algorand/js-algorand-sdk) (👨‍💻 64 · 🔀 190 · 📦 13K · 📋 330 - 13% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/algorand/js-algorand-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/algorand/pyteal">pyteal</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 280) - Algorand Smart Contracts in Python. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/algorand/pyteal) (👨‍💻 41 · 🔀 120 · 📦 1.1K · 📋 220 - 32% open · ⏱️ 04.01.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/algorand/pyteal ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/algorand/py-algorand-sdk">py-algorand-sdk</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 260) - Algorand Python SDK. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/algorand/py-algorand-sdk) (👨‍💻 51 · 🔀 130 · 📦 1.6K · 📋 170 - 14% open · ⏱️ 24.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/algorand/py-algorand-sdk ``` </details> <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dogecoin">DOGE - Dogecoin</a></b> (🥈33 · ⭐ 15K) - Cryptocurrency based on the popular Doge Internet meme and features..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dogecoin/dogecoin">dogecoin</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 14K) - very currency. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dogecoin/dogecoin) (👨‍💻 660 · 🔀 2.8K · 📥 8.8M · 📦 21 · 📋 1.3K - 16% open · ⏱️ 27.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dogecoin/dogecoin ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nanocurrency">XNO - Nano</a></b> (🥈28 · ⭐ 3.7K) - Nano, a low-latency cryptocurrency built on an innovative block-lattice..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nanocurrency/nano-node">nano-node</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 3.5K) - Nano is digital currency. Its ticker is: XNO and its currency symbol.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/nanocurrency/nano-node) (👨‍💻 99 · 🔀 780 · 📥 430K · 📋 1.3K - 24% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/nanocurrency/nano-node ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/litecoin-project">LTC - Litecoin</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 4.4K) - The Future of Money.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/litecoin-project/litecoin">litecoin</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 4.3K) - Litecoin source tree. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/litecoin-project/litecoin) (👨‍💻 950 · 🔀 3.1K · 📥 11K · 📋 570 - 13% open · ⏱️ 28.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/litecoin-project/litecoin ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/deso-protocol">DESO - Decentralized Social</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Decentralized Social (DESO) is a cryptocurrency ...</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/deso-protocol/core">deso-protocol/core</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 330) - DeSo core node. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/deso-protocol/core) (👨‍💻 34 · 🔀 110 · 📦 28 · 📋 93 - 29% open · ⏱️ 22.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/deso-protocol/core ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/deso-protocol/frontend">frontend</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 270) - DeSo frontend. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/deso-protocol/frontend) (👨‍💻 47 · 🔀 140 · 📋 140 - 40% open · ⏱️ 12.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/deso-protocol/frontend ``` </details> <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/peercoin">PPC - Peercoin</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 570) - The Peercoin network activated in 2012 and is one of the first.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/peercoin/peercoin">peercoin</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 570) - Reference implementation of the Peercoin protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/peercoin/peercoin) (👨‍💻 1.2K · 🔀 550 · 📥 96K · 📋 240 - 4% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/peercoin/peercoin ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/steemit">STEEM</a></b> (🥈24 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Cryptocurrency that rewards users for community building by posting and upvoting..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/steemit/steem-js">steem-js</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 470) - Steem.js the official JavaScript library for Steem blockchain. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/steemit/steem-js) (👨‍💻 40 · 🔀 220 · 📥 23K · 📦 3 · 📋 300 - 44% open · ⏱️ 06.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/steemit/steem-js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/steemit/condenser">condenser</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 510) - The greatest application front-end to the Steem Blockchain. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/steemit/condenser) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 430 · 📋 2.1K - 13% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/steemit/condenser ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/RavenProject">RVN - Ravencoin</a></b> (🥈24 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Blockchain specifically dedicated to the creation and peer-to-peer..</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bananocoin">BAN - Banano</a></b> (🥈24 · ⭐ 540) - BANANO was forked in April 2018 from NANO. BANANO offers.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOx" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/BananoCoin/kalium_wallet_flutter">kalium_wallet_flutter</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 260) - Kalium Mobile BANANO Wallet, made with Flutter. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/BananoCoin/kalium_wallet_flutter) (👨‍💻 7 · 🔀 98 · 📥 1.9K · 📋 41 - 65% open · ⏱️ 23.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/BananoCoin/kalium_wallet_flutter ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/fetchai">FET - Fetch.ai</a></b> (🥈24 · ⭐ 530) - Fetch.ai is delivering AI to the crypto economy. Digital Twins,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ArkEcosystem">ARK</a></b> (🥈23 · ⭐ 760) - ARK provides users, developers, and startups with innovative blockchain..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ArkEcosystem/core">ArkEcosystem/core</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 330) - The ARK Core Blockchain Framework. Check.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ArkEcosystem/core) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 300 · 📋 990 - 0% open · ⏱️ 01.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ArkEcosystem/core ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gcash">BCH - Bitcoin Cash</a></b> (🥈23 · ⭐ 370) - Hard fork of Bitcoin with a protocol upgrade to fix on-chain..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gcash/bchd">bchd</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 280) - An alternative full node bitcoin cash implementation written in Go (golang). <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/gcash/bchd) (👨‍💻 130 · 🔀 110 · 📥 16K · 📦 330 · 📋 190 - 15% open · ⏱️ 22.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/gcash/bchd ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/sora-xor">XOR - Sora</a></b> (🥈22 · ⭐ 480) - Supranational world economic system and decentralized and democratic.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9c3v" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/theQRL">QRL - Quantum Resistant Ledger</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 500) - Cryptocurrency based on the Python programming..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/theQRL/QRL">QRL</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 410) - Quantum Resistant Ledger. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/theQRL/QRL) (👨‍💻 34 · 🔀 100 · 📋 220 - 9% open · ⏱️ 14.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/theQRL/QRL ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/XDagger">XDAG - Dagger</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 430) - Novel application of Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) technology that..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/XDagger/xdag">xdag</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 330) - XDAG (Dagger Coin) Official Main Repository. XDAG is a novel DAG based.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/XDagger/xdag) (👨‍💻 50 · 🔀 130 · 📋 130 - 27% open · ⏱️ 17.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/XDagger/xdag ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MinterTeam">BIP - Minter Network</a></b> (🥉18 · ⭐ 390) - What is Minter Network (BIP)? Minter is a DeFi platform.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/chainx-org">PCX - ChainX</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 320) - ChainX aims to facilitate asset interoperability with other.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9c3v" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/chainx-org/ChainX">ChainX</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 320) - Bitcoins layer2 smart contract network has already supported WASM and.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/chainx-org/ChainX) (👨‍💻 17 · 🔀 120 · 📥 6.3K · 📋 170 - 3% open · ⏱️ 07.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/chainx-org/ChainX ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary>Show 27 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Constellation-Labs">DAG - Constellation</a></b> (🥈22 · ⭐ 200) - What is DAG? In more traditional blockchains, the host provides.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/aionnetwork">AION</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 440 · 💀) - Revolutionary multi-tier blockchain platform that has been created to solve the.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/BTCGPU">BTG - Bitcoin Gold</a></b> (🥉20 · ⭐ 660 · 💀) - Bitcoin Gold hopes to change the paradigm around mining on.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/mintme-com">MINTME - MintMe.com Coin</a></b> (🥉20 · ⭐ 240 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2018. Users are able to.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ethereumcommonwealth">CLO - Callisto Network</a></b> (🥉18 · ⭐ 180 · 💤) - Blockchain as seen by Security Experts. Since its.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/muntorg">MUNT</a></b> (🥉18 · ⭐ 140 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency . Users are able to generate MUNT through the process of mining... - <b><a href="https://github.com/sugarchain-project">SUGAR - Sugarchain</a></b> (🥉17 · ⭐ 130 · 💀) - One-CPU-one-vote, the worlds fastest PoW blockchain. - <b><a href="https://github.com/runonflux">FLUX</a></b> (🥉17 · ⭐ 77) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2018. Users are able to generate FLUX through the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mvs-org">ETP - Metaverse ETP</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 400 · 💀) - Leading public blockchain based in China. Designed to.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/uPlexa">UPX - uPlexa</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 90 · 💀) - UPlexa coin aims to incentivize the mass compute power of IoT devices.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/WaykiChain">WICC - WaykiChain</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 1.1K · 💀) - Blockchain-based gambling platform that supports Turing.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/rapidsofficial">RPD - Rapids</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 60 · 💀) - We are a creative agency with a passion for innovation & the design.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/devaultcrypto">DVT - DeVault</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 33) - Community governed and driven digital economy designed around the end.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/ldoge">LDOGE - LiteDoge</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 39) - What Is LiteDoge? LiteDoge (LDOGE) is an open-source peer to peer.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/dogecash">DOGEC - DogeCash</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 31 · 💀) - Transparent, community-governed cryptocurrency aimed at.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/tenup-coin">TUP - Tenup</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 140 · 💀) - Masternode based POS coin. TenUp believes that every individual.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/arqma">ARQ - ArQmA</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 47 · 💀) - Decentralized public project of block chains, crypto currencies, and is.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/joinseeds">SEEDS</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 43) - SEEDS isnt just a better way to pay. Its a solution to the greatest crises of our.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/tokencard">TKN - Monolith</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 95 · 💀) - Non-custodial contract wallet paired with a debit card to.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/hpb-project">HPB - High Performance Blockchain</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 56 · 💤) - High-Performance Blockchain tackles the concept of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/HcashOrg">HC - HyperCash</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 39 · 💀) - New cryptocurrency designed to allow value transfer among.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/0xbitcoin">0XBTC - 0xBitcoin</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 160 · 💀) - The first pure mined ERC20 Token for Ethereum, using the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/citycoins">NYC - NewYorkCoin</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 71 · 💀) - Support, improve and program the city that never sleeps. - <b><a href="https://github.com/stakecube">SCC - StakeCubeCoin</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 44 · 💤) - All-purpose coin when it comes to staking, masternode.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/BitcoinHEX">HEX</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 70 · 💀) - Launched on December 2, 2019 by Richard Heart and team, HEX is the first.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ltonetwork">LTO - LTO Network</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 57 · 💀) - Europes leading blockc. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pantos-io">PAN - Pantos</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 38 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2018and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> </details> <br> ## Smart Contract Platforms <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Blockchains that host smart contracts or decentralized applications._ <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vyperlang">ETH - Ethereum</a></b> (🥇54 · ⭐ 240K) - The foundation for our digital future.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum">go-ethereum</a></b> (🥇39 · ⭐ 46K) - Go implementation of the Ethereum protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum) (👨‍💻 990 · 🔀 19K · 📦 30K · 📋 8K - 4% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts">openzeppelin-contracts</a></b> (🥇37 · ⭐ 24K) - OpenZeppelin Contracts is a library for secure smart.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts) (👨‍💻 430 · 🔀 12K · 📦 22K · 📋 1.9K - 12% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/solidity">solidity</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 22K) - Solidity, the Smart Contract Programming Language. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/solidity) (👨‍💻 710 · 🔀 5.4K · 📥 3.4M · 📦 21 · 📋 5.9K - 7% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/solidity ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vyperlang/vyper">vyper</a></b> (🥇33 · ⭐ 4.8K) - Pythonic Smart Contract Language for the EVM. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/vyperlang/vyper) (👨‍💻 230 · 🔀 780 · 📥 1.2M · 📦 1.3K · 📋 1.6K - 22% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/vyperlang/vyper ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/ethereum-org-website">ethereum-org-website</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 4.8K) - Ethereum.org is a primary online resource for the.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/ethereum-org-website) (👨‍💻 1.7K · 🔀 4.6K · 📋 3.1K - 10% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/ethereum-org-website ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/web3.py">web3.py</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 4.8K) - A python interface for interacting with the Ethereum blockchain and.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/web3.py) (👨‍💻 260 · 🔀 1.6K · 📦 20K · 📋 1.5K - 7% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/web3.py ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/remix-project">remix-project</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 2.3K) - Remix is a browser-based compiler and IDE that enables users to.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/remix-project) (👨‍💻 220 · 🔀 860 · 📥 250K · 📦 2 · 📋 2.1K - 38% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/remix-project ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/quorum">quorum</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 4.6K) - A permissioned implementation of Ethereum supporting data privacy. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/quorum) (👨‍💻 640 · 🔀 1.2K · 📥 18K · 📦 23 · 📋 850 - 5% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/quorum ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Nethereum/Nethereum">Nethereum</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 2.1K) - Ethereum .Net cross platform integration library. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Nethereum/Nethereum) (👨‍💻 88 · 🔀 700 · 📥 12K · 📦 2.3K · 📋 810 - 13% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Nethereum/Nethereum ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs">consensus-specs</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 3.4K) - Ethereum Proof-of-Stake Consensus Specifications. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC0-1.0">CC0-1.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs) (👨‍💻 150 · 🔀 890 · 📦 39 · 📋 990 - 22% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts-upgradeable">openzeppelin-contracts-upgradeable</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 940) - Upgradeable variant of OpenZeppelin Contracts, meant.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts-upgradeable) (👨‍💻 220 · 🔀 420 · 📦 35K · 📋 100 - 5% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts-upgradeable ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dethcrypto/TypeChain">TypeChain</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 2.7K · 💤) - TypeScript bindings for Ethereum smart contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dethcrypto/TypeChain) (👨‍💻 71 · 🔀 350 · 📦 210K · 📋 400 - 30% open · ⏱️ 22.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/dethcrypto/TypeChain ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/gnark">gnark</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 1.3K) - gnark is a fast zk-SNARK library that offers a high-level API to.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/gnark) (👨‍💻 37 · 🔀 320 · 📦 600 · 📋 450 - 23% open · ⏱️ 04.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/gnark ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs">EIPs</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 13K · 📈) - The Ethereum Improvement Proposal repository. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC0-1.0">CC0-1.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs) (👨‍💻 760 · 🔀 5K · 📦 21 · 📋 1.1K - 8% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/remix-ide">remix-ide</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 2.2K) - Documentation for Remix IDE. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/remix-ide) (👨‍💻 150 · 🔀 1.1K · 📥 5.8K · 📦 180 · ⏱️ 18.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/remix-ide ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/py-evm">py-evm</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 2.2K) - A Python implementation of the Ethereum Virtual Machine. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/py-evm) (👨‍💻 100 · 🔀 630 · 📦 910 · 📋 670 - 15% open · ⏱️ 19.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/py-evm ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/mythril">mythril</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 3.7K) - Security analysis tool for EVM bytecode. Supports smart contracts built.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/mythril) (👨‍💻 98 · 🔀 690 · 📦 120 · 📋 840 - 12% open · ⏱️ 27.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/mythril ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-upgrades">openzeppelin-upgrades</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 600) - Plugins for Hardhat and Foundry to deploy and manage.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-upgrades) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 250 · 📦 19K · 📋 420 - 23% open · ⏱️ 02.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-upgrades ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/sourcify">sourcify</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 740) - Decentralized Solidity contract source code verification service. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/sourcify) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 350 · 📦 39 · 📋 560 - 10% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/sourcify ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/js-ethereum-cryptography">js-ethereum-cryptography</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 660) - Every cryptographic primitive needed to work on.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/js-ethereum-cryptography) (👨‍💻 9 · 🔀 88 · 📦 420K · 📋 30 - 30% open · ⏱️ 02.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/js-ethereum-cryptography ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/teku">teku</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 630) - Open-source Ethereum consensus client written in Java. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/teku) (👨‍💻 99 · 🔀 240 · 📋 2.5K - 5% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/teku ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/tests">tests</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 510) - Common tests for all Ethereum implementations. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/tests) (👨‍💻 83 · 🔀 300 · 📦 24 · 📋 350 - 8% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/tests ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/gnark-crypto">gnark-crypto</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 460) - gnark-crypto provides elliptic curve and pairing-based.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/gnark-crypto) (👨‍💻 21 · 🔀 140 · 📦 8.4K · 📋 180 - 35% open · ⏱️ 04.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/gnark-crypto ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/eth-abi">eth-abi</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 230) - Ethereum ABI utilities for python. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/eth-abi) (👨‍💻 30 · 🔀 260 · 📦 9.4K · 📋 77 - 20% open · ⏱️ 22.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/eth-abi ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/evmone">evmone</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 770) - Fast Ethereum Virtual Machine implementation. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/evmone) (👨‍💻 20 · 🔀 240 · 📥 57K · 📋 180 - 50% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/evmone ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereumjs/ethereumjs-monorepo">ethereumjs-monorepo</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 2.5K) - Monorepo for the Ethereum VM TypeScript Implementation. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereumjs/ethereumjs-monorepo) (👨‍💻 220 · 🔀 710 · 📦 1 · 📋 1.1K - 12% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereumjs/ethereumjs-monorepo ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/ethernaut">ethernaut</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 1.9K) - Web3/Solidity based wargame. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/ethernaut) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 620 · 📋 240 - 22% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/ethernaut ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/eth-tester">eth-tester</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 340) - Tool suite for testing ethereum applications. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/eth-tester) (👨‍💻 42 · 🔀 130 · 📦 1.2K · 📋 100 - 40% open · ⏱️ 22.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/eth-tester ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/beacon-APIs">beacon-APIs</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 310) - Collection of RESTful APIs provided by Ethereum Beacon nodes. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC0-1.0">CC0-1.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/beacon-APIs) (👨‍💻 48 · 🔀 140 · 📥 44K · 📦 1 · 📋 140 - 28% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/beacon-APIs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/eth-utils">eth-utils</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 300) - Utility functions for working with ethereum related codebases. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/eth-utils) (👨‍💻 38 · 🔀 140 · 📦 11K · 📋 84 - 25% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/eth-utils ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/eth-account">eth-account</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 250) - Account abstraction library for web3.py. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/eth-account) (👨‍💻 34 · 🔀 140 · 📦 9.4K · 📋 87 - 17% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/eth-account ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/fe">fe</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 1.6K) - Emerging smart contract language for the Ethereum blockchain. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/fe) (👨‍💻 42 · 🔀 160 · 📥 2.7K · 📋 410 - 30% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/fe ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/pm">pm</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 1.5K) - Project Management: Meeting notes and agenda items. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/pm) (👨‍💻 88 · 🔀 270 · 📋 580 - 3% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/pm ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/solc-js">solc-js</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Javascript bindings for the Solidity compiler. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/solc-js) (👨‍💻 43 · 🔀 450 · 📦 3 · 📋 270 - 24% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/solc-js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/cairo-contracts">cairo-contracts</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 780) - OpenZeppelin Contracts written in Cairo for Starknet, a.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/cairo-contracts) (👨‍💻 43 · 🔀 310 · 📋 440 - 11% open · ⏱️ 22.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/cairo-contracts ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/staking-deposit-cli">staking-deposit-cli</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 520 · 💤) - Secure key generation for deposits. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC0-1.0">CC0-1.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/staking-deposit-cli) (👨‍💻 22 · 🔀 300 · 📥 100K · 📋 180 - 60% open · ⏱️ 25.09.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/staking-deposit-cli ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/solidity-docgen">solidity-docgen</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 430 · 💤) - Documentation generator for Solidity projects. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/solidity-docgen) (👨‍💻 15 · 🔀 110 · 📦 6.4K · 📋 150 - 22% open · ⏱️ 14.09.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/solidity-docgen ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/evmc">evmc</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 320) - EVMC Ethereum Client-VM Connector API. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/evmc) (👨‍💻 17 · 🔀 280 · 📥 20 · 📦 12 · 📋 180 - 23% open · ⏱️ 26.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/evmc ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/yellowpaper">yellowpaper</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 1.6K) - The Yellow Paper: Ethereums formal specification. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3mSooSG">CC-BY-SA-4.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/yellowpaper) (👨‍💻 90 · 🔀 490 · 📋 260 - 41% open · ⏱️ 04.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/yellowpaper ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/remix-desktop">remix-desktop</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 1K · 💤) - Remix IDE desktop. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/remix-desktop) (👨‍💻 6 · 🔀 260 · 📥 8.2M · 📋 130 - 45% open · ⏱️ 15.05.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/remix-desktop ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/execution-specs">execution-specs</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 780) - Specification for the Execution Layer. Tracking network.. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC0-1.0">CC0-1.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/execution-specs) (👨‍💻 75 · 🔀 210 · 📋 390 - 17% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/execution-specs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/merkle-tree">merkle-tree</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 400) - A JavaScript library to generate merkle trees and merkle proofs. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/merkle-tree) (👨‍💻 5 · 🔀 100 · 📦 1.1K · 📋 22 - 22% open · ⏱️ 04.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/merkle-tree ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/contracts-wizard">contracts-wizard</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 230) - Interactive smart contract generator based on OpenZeppelin.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/contracts-wizard) (👨‍💻 19 · 🔀 120 · 📦 130 · 📋 89 - 30% open · ⏱️ 01.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/contracts-wizard ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vyperlang/titanoboa">titanoboa</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 230) - a vyper interpreter. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/vyperlang/titanoboa) (👨‍💻 17 · 🔀 33 · 📦 38 · 📋 86 - 41% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/vyperlang/titanoboa ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/smart-contract-best-practices">smart-contract-best-practices</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 7.3K) - A guide to smart contract security best practices. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/smart-contract-best-practices) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 1.4K · 📦 20 · 📋 99 - 20% open · ⏱️ 11.01.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/smart-contract-best-practices ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/ethereum-developer-tools-list">ethereum-developer-tools-list</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 5.2K) - A guide to available tools and platforms for.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/ethereum-developer-tools-list) (👨‍💻 250 · 🔀 1.3K · 📋 63 - 42% open · ⏱️ 18.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/ethereum-developer-tools-list ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/UniversalToken">UniversalToken</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 340) - Implementation of Universal Token for Assets and Payments. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/UniversalToken) (👨‍💻 26 · 🔀 180 · 📋 46 - 39% open · ⏱️ 23.01.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/UniversalToken ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/trin">trin</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 330) - An Ethereum portal client: a json-rpc server with nearly instant.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/trin) (👨‍💻 37 · 🔀 94 · 📥 45 · 📦 5 · 📋 400 - 19% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/trin ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/scribble">scribble</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 310) - Scribble instrumentation tool. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/scribble) (👨‍💻 5 · 🔀 35 · 📦 14 · 📋 100 - 12% open · ⏱️ 24.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/scribble ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/hevm">hevm</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 210) - symbolic EVM evaluator. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3pwmjO5">AGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/hevm) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 41 · 📥 290 · 📋 140 - 27% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/hevm ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/research">research</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 1.7K) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/research) (👨‍💻 28 · 🔀 590 · 📋 64 - 90% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/research ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Consensys/surya">surya</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 1K · 💤) - A set of utilities for exploring Solidity contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Consensys/surya) (👨‍💻 20 · 🔀 120 · 📦 570 · 📋 67 - 4% open · ⏱️ 31.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/ConsenSys/surya ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/execution-apis">execution-apis</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 880) - Collection of APIs provided by Ethereum execution layer.. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC0-1.0">CC0-1.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/execution-apis) (👨‍💻 51 · 🔀 310 · 📦 3 · 📋 160 - 45% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/execution-apis ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/l2beat/earl">earl</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 250) - Ergonomic, modern and type-safe assertion library for TypeScript. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/l2beat/earl) (👨‍💻 14 · 🔀 18 · 📦 57 · 📋 92 - 9% open · ⏱️ 21.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dethcrypto/earl ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dethcrypto/eth-sdk">eth-sdk</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 430 · 💤) - Type-safe, lightweight SDKs for Ethereum smart contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dethcrypto/eth-sdk) (👨‍💻 9 · 🔀 39 · 📦 540 · 📋 55 - 49% open · ⏱️ 14.05.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/dethcrypto/eth-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/staking-launchpad">staking-launchpad</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 260) - The deposit launchpad for staking on Ethereum. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC0-1.0">CC0-1.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/staking-launchpad) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 160 · 📋 200 - 49% open · ⏱️ 10.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/staking-launchpad ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum/solc-bin">solc-bin</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 380) - This repository contains current and historical builds of the.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum/solc-bin) (👨‍💻 19 · 🔀 390 · 📦 1 · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum/solc-bin ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/nile">nile</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 320) - CLI tool to develop StarkNet projects written in Cairo. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/nile) (👨‍💻 23 · 🔀 76 · 📋 200 - 29% open · ⏱️ 01.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/nile ``` </details> <br> _129 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/solana-labs">SOL - Solana</a></b> (🥇46 · ⭐ 26K) - About Solana (SOL)? Solana (SOL) is a high throughput cryptocurrency..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/solana-labs/solana">solana</a></b> (🥇35 · ⭐ 12K) - Web-Scale Blockchain for fast, secure, scalable, decentralized apps.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/solana-labs/solana) (👨‍💻 520 · 🔀 3.8K · 📥 770K · 📋 5.3K - 8% open · ⏱️ 22.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/solana-labs/solana ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/solana-labs/solana-program-library">solana-program-library</a></b> (🥇34 · ⭐ 3K) - A collection of Solana programs maintained by Solana.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/solana-labs/solana-program-library) (👨‍💻 220 · 🔀 1.9K · 📥 24K · 📦 2.3K · 📋 740 - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/solana-labs/solana-program-library ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/solana-labs/solana-web3.js">solana-web3.js</a></b> (🥇33 · ⭐ 1.9K) - Solana JavaScript SDK. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/solana-labs/solana-web3.js) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 730 · 📦 110K · 📋 370 - 17% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/solana-labs/solana-web3.js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/anza-xyz/wallet-adapter">wallet-adapter</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Modular TypeScript wallet adapters and components for.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/anza-xyz/wallet-adapter) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 840 · 📦 2 · 📋 430 - 7% open · ⏱️ 26.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/solana-labs/wallet-adapter ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/solana-labs/rbpf">rbpf</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 240) - Rust virtual machine and JIT compiler for eBPF programs. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/solana-labs/rbpf) (👨‍💻 25 · 🔀 140 · 📦 14K · 📋 49 - 30% open · ⏱️ 01.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/solana-labs/rbpf ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/anza-xyz/solana-pay">solana-pay</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 1.2K) - A new standard for decentralized payments. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/anza-xyz/solana-pay) (👨‍💻 32 · 🔀 440 · 📦 4 · 📋 89 - 29% open · ⏱️ 15.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/solana-labs/solana-pay ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/solana-labs/governance-ui">governance-ui</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 260) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/solana-labs/governance-ui) (👨‍💻 200 · 🔀 500 · 📋 130 - 72% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/solana-labs/governance-ui ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/solana-labs/dapp-scaffold">dapp-scaffold</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 1.7K · 💤) - Scaffolding for a dapp built on Solana. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/solana-labs/dapp-scaffold) (👨‍💻 26 · 🔀 930 · 📦 2 · 📋 64 - 29% open · ⏱️ 24.06.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/solana-labs/dapp-scaffold ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/solana-labs/example-helloworld">example-helloworld</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 870 · 💤) - Hello world on Solana. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/solana-labs/example-helloworld) (👨‍💻 40 · 🔀 810 · 📋 160 - 21% open · ⏱️ 20.07.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/solana-labs/example-helloworld ``` </details> <br> _17 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/w3f">DOT - Polkadot</a></b> (🥇45 · ⭐ 38K) - Platform that allows diverse blockchains to transfer messages,..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/polkadot-js/apps">apps</a></b> (🥇33 · ⭐ 1.7K) - Basic Polkadot/Substrate UI for interacting with a Polkadot and.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/polkadot-js/apps) (👨‍💻 530 · 🔀 1.5K · 📥 110K · 📦 4 · 📋 3.6K - 7% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/polkadot-js/apps ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/substrate">substrate</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 8.4K · 💤) - Substrate: The platform for blockchain innovators. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/substrate) (👨‍💻 480 · 🔀 2.7K · 📥 1.8K · 📦 330 · 📋 4K - 15% open · ⏱️ 25.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/substrate ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot">polkadot</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 7.1K · 💤) - Polkadot Node Implementation. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot) (👨‍💻 260 · 🔀 1.6K · 📥 260K · 📦 1.4K · 📋 1.8K - 12% open · ⏱️ 25.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/wasmi-labs/wasmi">wasmi</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 1.3K) - WebAssembly (Wasm) interpreter. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/wasmi-labs/wasmi) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 220 · 📦 23K · 📋 260 - 13% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/wasmi ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/use-ink/ink">ink</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Paritys ink! to write smart contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/use-ink/ink) (👨‍💻 89 · 🔀 390 · 📦 1.4K · 📋 700 - 18% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/ink ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/jsonrpsee">jsonrpsee</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 560) - Rust JSON-RPC library on top of async/await. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/jsonrpsee) (👨‍💻 68 · 🔀 150 · 📦 7.3K · 📋 480 - 12% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/jsonrpsee ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/novasamatech/parity-signer">parity-signer</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 550) - Air-gapped crypto wallet. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/novasamatech/parity-signer) (👨‍💻 44 · 🔀 190 · 📥 1.6K · 📦 90 · 📋 680 - 12% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/parity-signer ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/subxt">subxt</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 380) - Submit extrinsics (transactions) to a substrate node via RPC. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/subxt) (👨‍💻 81 · 🔀 220 · 📦 1.1K · 📋 530 - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/subxt ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/polkadot-js/common">common</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 250) - Utilities and base libraries for use across polkadot-js for Polkadot.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/polkadot-js/common) (👨‍💻 70 · 🔀 140 · 📦 16K · 📋 270 - 4% open · ⏱️ 08.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/polkadot-js/common ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/parity-scale-codec">parity-scale-codec</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 240) - Lightweight, efficient, binary serialization and.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/parity-scale-codec) (👨‍💻 72 · 🔀 91 · 📦 38K · 📋 140 - 36% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/parity-scale-codec ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/polkadot-js/api">api</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Promise and RxJS APIs around Polkadot and Substrate based chains via RPC.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/polkadot-js/api) (👨‍💻 140 · 🔀 320 · 📋 1.8K - 3% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/polkadot-js/api ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/polkadot-js/extension">extension</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 950) - Simple browser extension for managing Polkadot and Substrate.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/polkadot-js/extension) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 380 · 📥 4.1K · 📦 2 · 📋 480 - 10% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/polkadot-js/extension ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/substrate-connect">substrate-connect</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 220) - Run Wasm Light Clients of any Substrate based chain.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/substrate-connect) (👨‍💻 22 · 🔀 71 · 📦 5K · 📋 370 - 10% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/substrate-connect ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/cumulus">cumulus</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 620 · 💤) - Write Parachains on Substrate. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/cumulus) (👨‍💻 150 · 🔀 380 · 📥 17K · 📦 21 · 📋 640 - 32% open · ⏱️ 25.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/cumulus ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/w3f/polkadot-wiki">polkadot-wiki</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 360) - The source of truth for Polkadot. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/w3f/polkadot-wiki) (👨‍💻 310 · 🔀 1.9K · 📋 1.4K - 2% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/w3f/polkadot-wiki ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/parity-common">parity-common</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 270) - Collection of crates used in Parity projects. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/parity-common) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 210 · 📦 2.3K · 📋 200 - 23% open · ⏱️ 05.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/parity-common ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/use-ink/cargo-contract">cargo-contract</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 240) - Setup and deployment tool for developing Wasm based smart.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/use-ink/cargo-contract) (👨‍💻 57 · 🔀 100 · 📦 72 · 📋 300 - 27% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/cargo-contract ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/w3f/Grants-Program">Grants-Program</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 980) - Web3 Foundation Grants Program. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/w3f/Grants-Program) (👨‍💻 450 · 🔀 1.9K · 📦 4 · 📋 46 - 28% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/w3f/Grants-Program ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/w3f/schnorrkel">schnorrkel</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 300) - Schnorr VRFs and signatures on the Ristretto group. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/w3f/schnorrkel) (👨‍💻 36 · 🔀 88 · 📦 19K · 📋 67 - 35% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/w3f/schnorrkel ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/parity-bridges-common">parity-bridges-common</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 270) - Collection of Useful Bridge Building Tools. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/parity-bridges-common) (👨‍💻 48 · 🔀 120 · 📋 770 - 16% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/parity-bridges-common ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/polkadot-js/tools">tools</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 280) - Various cli tools for Polkadot and Substrate chains, including basic.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/polkadot-js/tools) (👨‍💻 23 · 🔀 64 · 📦 3 · 📋 61 - 18% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/polkadot-js/tools ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/parity-db">parity-db</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 260) - Experimental blockchain database. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/parity-db) (👨‍💻 27 · 🔀 58 · 📦 14K · 📋 69 - 18% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/parity-db ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/substrate-api-sidecar">substrate-api-sidecar</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 230) - REST service that makes it easy to interact with.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/substrate-api-sidecar) (👨‍💻 49 · 🔀 150 · 📦 22 · 📋 480 - 6% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/substrate-api-sidecar ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/jsonrpc">jsonrpc</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 770 · 💤) - Rust JSON-RPC implementation. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/jsonrpc) (👨‍💻 76 · 🔀 260 · 📋 250 - 32% open · ⏱️ 26.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/jsonrpc ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/polkadot-evm/frontier">frontier</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 530) - Ethereum compatibility layer for Substrate. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/polkadot-evm/frontier) (👨‍💻 82 · 🔀 300 · 📋 250 - 41% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/frontier ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paritytech/substrate-telemetry">substrate-telemetry</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 290) - Polkadot Telemetry service. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paritytech/substrate-telemetry) (👨‍💻 59 · 🔀 190 · 📋 160 - 32% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paritytech/substrate-telemetry ``` </details> <br> _64 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/input-output-hk">ADA - Cardano</a></b> (🥇40 · ⭐ 16K) - Decentralised platform that will allow complex programmable transfers..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/IntersectMBO/cardano-node">cardano-node</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 3K) - The core component that is used to participate in a Cardano.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/IntersectMBO/cardano-node) (👨‍💻 160 · 🔀 710 · 📥 41K · 📋 1.9K - 15% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-node ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/IntersectMBO/cardano-ledger">cardano-ledger</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 240) - The ledger implementation and specifications of the Cardano.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/IntersectMBO/cardano-ledger) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 150 · 📥 34K · 📋 1.5K - 11% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-ledger ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cardano-foundation/cardano-wallet">cardano-wallet</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 740) - HTTP server & command-line for managing UTxOs and HD wallets.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cardano-foundation/cardano-wallet) (👨‍💻 51 · 🔀 220 · 📥 20K · 📋 920 - 12% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-wallet ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/IntersectMBO/plutus">plutus</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 1.5K) - The Plutus language implementation and tools. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/IntersectMBO/plutus) (👨‍💻 150 · 🔀 450 · 📥 61 · 📦 3 · 📋 1K - 6% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/plutus ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/input-output-hk/daedalus">daedalus</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 1.2K) - The open source cryptocurrency wallet for ada, built to grow with.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/input-output-hk/daedalus) (👨‍💻 71 · 🔀 290 · 📥 8.3K · 📋 580 - 18% open · ⏱️ 04.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/daedalus ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/input-output-hk/haskell.nix">haskell.nix</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 530) - Alternative Haskell Infrastructure for Nixpkgs. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/input-output-hk/haskell.nix) (👨‍💻 150 · 🔀 220 · 📥 200 · 📋 900 - 21% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/haskell.nix ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/IntersectMBO/cardano-db-sync">cardano-db-sync</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 280) - A component that follows the Cardano chain and stores.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/IntersectMBO/cardano-db-sync) (👨‍💻 65 · 🔀 150 · 📥 3.1K · 📋 760 - 13% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-db-sync ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/input-output-hk/jormungandr">jormungandr</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 370) - privacy voting blockchain node. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/input-output-hk/jormungandr) (👨‍💻 66 · 🔀 140 · 📥 78K · 📋 1K - 25% open · ⏱️ 08.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/jormungandr ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/IntersectMBO/plutus-apps">plutus-apps</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 300) - The Plutus application platform. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/IntersectMBO/plutus-apps) (👨‍💻 160 · 🔀 200 · 📋 290 - 22% open · ⏱️ 04.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/plutus-apps ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/input-output-hk/hydra">hydra</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 260) - Implementation of the Hydra Head protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/input-output-hk/hydra) (👨‍💻 40 · 🔀 80 · 📥 220 · 📋 340 - 14% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/hydra ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-js-sdk">cardano-js-sdk</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 210) - JavaScript SDK for interacting with Cardano, providing.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-js-sdk) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 54 · 📦 6 · 📋 72 - 40% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-js-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/IntersectMBO/ouroboros-network">ouroboros-network</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 270) - Specifications of network protocols and implementations.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/IntersectMBO/ouroboros-network) (👨‍💻 84 · 🔀 83 · 📋 1.5K - 22% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/ouroboros-network ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cardano-foundation/cardano-graphql">cardano-graphql</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 250) - GraphQL API for Cardano. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cardano-foundation/cardano-graphql) (👨‍💻 33 · 🔀 100 · 📥 10 · 📦 4 · 📋 420 - 14% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-graphql ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-documentation">cardano-documentation</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 260) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-documentation) (👨‍💻 79 · 🔀 150 · 📋 51 - 5% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/cardano-documentation ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/input-output-hk/plutus-pioneer-program">plutus-pioneer-program</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 1.4K) - This repository hosts the lectures of the Plutus.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/input-output-hk/plutus-pioneer-program) (👨‍💻 24 · 🔀 960 · 📋 46 - 2% open · ⏱️ 20.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/plutus-pioneer-program ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/IntersectMBO/essential-cardano">essential-cardano</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 740) - Repository for the Essential Cardano list. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/IntersectMBO/essential-cardano) (👨‍💻 190 · 🔀 290 · ⏱️ 07.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/input-output-hk/essential-cardano ``` </details> <br> _43 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/near">NEAR - NEAR Protocol</a></b> (🥇38 · ⭐ 7K) - Infrastructure for innovation. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/near/near-api-js">near-api-js</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 380) - JavaScript library to interact with NEAR Protocol via RPC API. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/near/near-api-js) (👨‍💻 83 · 🔀 230 · 📦 18K · 📋 350 - 21% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/near/near-api-js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/near/nearcore">nearcore</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 2.3K) - Reference client for NEAR Protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/near/nearcore) (👨‍💻 190 · 🔀 560 · 📦 19 · 📋 3.6K - 29% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/near/nearcore ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs">near-sdk-rs</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 430) - Rust library for writing NEAR smart contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs) (👨‍💻 72 · 🔀 210 · 📦 2.3K · 📋 480 - 27% open · ⏱️ 01.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/near/create-near-app">create-near-app</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 340) - Create a starter app hooked up to the NEAR blockchain. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/near/create-near-app) (👨‍💻 36 · 🔀 150 · 📦 12 · 📋 110 - 9% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/near/create-near-app ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/near/borsh-rs">borsh-rs</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 270) - Rust implementation of Binary Object Representation Serializer for.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/near/borsh-rs) (👨‍💻 47 · 🔀 60 · 📦 43K · 📋 90 - 18% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/near/borsh-rs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/near/near-wallet">near-wallet</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 210) - Web wallet for NEAR Protocol which stores keys in browsers.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/near/near-wallet) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 180 · 📋 900 - 27% open · ⏱️ 18.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/near/near-wallet ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/near/borsh">borsh</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 460) - Binary Object Representation Serializer for Hashing. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/near/borsh) (👨‍💻 28 · 🔀 39 · 📦 110K · 📋 67 - 56% open · ⏱️ 06.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/near/borsh ``` </details> <br> _28 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Chia-Network">XCH - Chia</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 13K) - Founded by Bram Cohen, the inventor of the BitTorrent network, Chia Network..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Chia-Network/chia-blockchain">chia-blockchain</a></b> (🥇37 · ⭐ 11K) - Chia blockchain python implementation (full node, farmer,.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Chia-Network/chia-blockchain) (👨‍💻 160 · 🔀 2K · 📥 130K · 📦 110 · 📋 5.2K - 8% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Chia-Network/chia-blockchain ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Chia-Network/bls-signatures">Chia-Network/bls-signatures</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 290) - BLS signatures in C++, using the blst library for.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Chia-Network/bls-signatures) (👨‍💻 47 · 🔀 210 · 📦 380 · 📋 110 - 5% open · ⏱️ 19.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Chia-Network/bls-signatures ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Chia-Network/chiapos">chiapos</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 270) - Chia Proof of Space library. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Chia-Network/chiapos) (👨‍💻 44 · 🔀 280 · 📦 520 · 📋 100 - 22% open · ⏱️ 18.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Chia-Network/chiapos ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Chia-Network/chia-blockchain-gui">chia-blockchain-gui</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 330) - Chia blockchain GUI in electron/react. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Chia-Network/chia-blockchain-gui) (👨‍💻 56 · 🔀 240 · 📋 720 - 5% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Chia-Network/chia-blockchain-gui ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Chia-Network/bladebit">bladebit</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 340) - A high-performance k32-only, Chia (XCH) plotter supporting in-RAM.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Chia-Network/bladebit) (👨‍💻 10 · 🔀 110 · 📥 220K · 📋 230 - 47% open · ⏱️ 05.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Chia-Network/bladebit ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Chia-Network/chia-docker">chia-docker</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 210) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Chia-Network/chia-docker) (👨‍💻 36 · 🔀 350 · 📋 110 - 1% open · ⏱️ 21.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Chia-Network/chia-docker ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Chia-Network/pool-reference">pool-reference</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 440) - Reference python implementation of Chia pool operations for.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Chia-Network/pool-reference) (👨‍💻 39 · 🔀 200 · 📋 180 - 7% open · ⏱️ 28.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Chia-Network/pool-reference ``` </details> <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/eosio">EOS</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 7.3K) - Blockchain built and run by the EOS Community. The EOSIO core development is now in..</summary> --- <br> _32 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/tronprotocol">TRX - TRON</a></b> (🥈34 · ⭐ 6.6K) - What is Tron? Trons mission is to build a truly decentralized internet and..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/tronprotocol/java-tron">java-tron</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 3.6K) - Java implementation of the Tron whitepaper. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/tronprotocol/java-tron) (👨‍💻 250 · 🔀 1.4K · 📥 120K · 📋 1.4K - 2% open · ⏱️ 19.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/tronprotocol/java-tron ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/tronprotocol/tronweb">tronweb</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 370) - Javascript API Library for interacting with the TRON Network. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/tronprotocol/tronweb) (👨‍💻 49 · 🔀 250 · 📦 4.4K · 📋 270 - 3% open · ⏱️ 22.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/tronprotocol/tronweb ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/tronprotocol/wallet-cli">wallet-cli</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 550) - Wallet CLI. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/tronprotocol/wallet-cli) (👨‍💻 88 · 🔀 370 · 📥 5.2K · 📋 160 - 6% open · ⏱️ 15.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/tronprotocol/wallet-cli ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/tronprotocol/documentation">tronprotocol/documentation</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 540 · 💤) - Documentations of project TRON. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/tronprotocol/documentation) (👨‍💻 57 · 🔀 490 · 📋 100 - 28% open · ⏱️ 08.06.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/tronprotocol/documentation ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/tronprotocol/tips">tips</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 200) - TRON Improvement Proposals. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/tronprotocol/tips) (👨‍💻 50 · 🔀 170 · 📋 270 - 3% open · ⏱️ 15.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/tronprotocol/tips ``` </details> <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/maticnetwork">MATIC - Polygon</a></b> (🥈34 · ⭐ 5.2K) - Hybrid POS-Plasma Layer 2, bringing scale to Ethereum. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/maticnetwork/bor">bor</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 960) - Official repository for the Polygon Blockchain. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/maticnetwork/bor) (👨‍💻 950 · 🔀 460 · 📥 51K · 📦 69 · 📋 380 - 3% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/maticnetwork/bor ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/maticnetwork/heimdall">heimdall</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 240) - Validator node for Polygon PoS. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/maticnetwork/heimdall) (👨‍💻 52 · 🔀 170 · 📥 40K · 📦 34 · 📋 320 - 0% open · ⏱️ 18.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/maticnetwork/heimdall ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/availproject/avail">avail</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 750) - <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/availproject/avail) (👨‍💻 36 · 🔀 480 · 📥 21K · 📦 35 · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/maticnetwork/avail ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/maticnetwork/matic.js">matic.js</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 540) - Javascript developer library to interact with Matic Network. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/maticnetwork/matic.js) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 250 · 📦 3 · 📋 91 - 15% open · ⏱️ 19.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/maticnetwork/matic.js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/maticnetwork/contracts">contracts</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Smart contracts comprising the business logic of the Matic Network. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/maticnetwork/contracts) (👨‍💻 25 · 🔀 530 · 📋 120 - 61% open · ⏱️ 01.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/maticnetwork/contracts ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/maticnetwork/pos-portal">pos-portal</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 330) - Smart contracts that powers the PoS (proof-of-stake) based bridge.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/maticnetwork/pos-portal) (👨‍💻 16 · 🔀 240 · 📦 37 · 📋 46 - 84% open · ⏱️ 26.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/maticnetwork/pos-portal ``` </details> <br> _12 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/neo-project">NEO</a></b> (🥈34 · ⭐ 2.7K) - Next generation smart economy platform (formerly Antshares) and Chinas first open..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/CityOfZion/neon-wallet">neon-wallet</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Light wallet for the NEO blockchain. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/CityOfZion/neon-wallet) (👨‍💻 91 · 🔀 330 · 📥 3.2M · 📋 1.4K - 2% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/CityOfZion/neon-wallet ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/neo-project/neo-node">neo-node</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 230) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/neo-project/neo-node) (👨‍💻 46 · 🔀 220 · 📥 110K · 📦 28 · 📋 520 - 13% open · ⏱️ 07.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/neo-project/neo-node ``` </details> <br> _11 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/multiversx">EGLD - MultiversX</a></b> (🥈34 · ⭐ 1.8K) - MultiversX (formerly Elrond) is a technology ecosystem for.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/multiversx/mx-chain-go">mx-chain-go</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 910) - The official implementation of the MultiversX blockchain.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/multiversx/mx-chain-go) (👨‍💻 57 · 🔀 200 · 📥 580 · 📦 120 · 📋 500 - 17% open · ⏱️ 22.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/multiversx/mx-chain-go ``` </details> <br> _12 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hashgraph">HBAR - Hedera</a></b> (🥈34 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Decentralized public network where developers can build secure, fair..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hashgraph/hedera-sdk-js">hedera-sdk-js</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 250) - Hedera Hashgraph SDK for JavaScript/TypeScript. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/hashgraph/hedera-sdk-js) (👨‍💻 43 · 🔀 130 · 📦 2.3K · 📋 810 - 11% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/hashgraph/hedera-sdk-js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hashgraph/hedera-services">hedera-services</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 260) - Crypto, token, consensus, file, and smart contract.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/hashgraph/hedera-services) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 110 · 📋 7.2K - 21% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/hashgraph/hedera-services ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hashgraph/hedera-sdk-java">hedera-sdk-java</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 200) - Hedera Hashgraph SDK for Java. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/hashgraph/hedera-sdk-java) (👨‍💻 32 · 🔀 110 · 📋 630 - 10% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/hashgraph/hedera-sdk-java ``` </details> <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/LiskHQ">LSK - Lisk</a></b> (🥈32 · ⭐ 3.7K) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2016. Lisk has a current supply of 144,818,773..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/LiskHQ/lisk-sdk">lisk-sdk</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 2.7K) - Lisk software development kit. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/LiskHQ/lisk-sdk) (👨‍💻 98 · 🔀 460 · 📦 240 · 📋 5.2K - 1% open · ⏱️ 08.01.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/LiskHQ/lisk-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/LiskHQ/lisk-desktop">lisk-desktop</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 590) - Lisk graphical user interface for desktop. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/LiskHQ/lisk-desktop) (👨‍💻 73 · 🔀 97 · 📥 580K · 📋 3.1K - 0% open · ⏱️ 05.01.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/LiskHQ/lisk-desktop ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/oasislabs">ROSE - Oasis Network</a></b> (🥈31 · ⭐ 720) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2020and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/oasisprotocol/oasis-core">oasis-core</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 330) - Performant and Confidentiality-Preserving Smart Contracts +.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/oasisprotocol/oasis-core) (👨‍💻 44 · 🔀 110 · 📥 58K · 📦 180 · 📋 1.8K - 15% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/oasisprotocol/oasis-core ``` </details> <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/harmony-one">ONE - Harmony</a></b> (🥈30 · ⭐ 2K) - Harmonys open, decentralized network is enabled through the use of the..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/harmony-one/harmony">harmony</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 1.5K) - The core protocol of harmony. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/harmony-one/harmony) (👨‍💻 99 · 🔀 290 · 📥 330K · 📦 81 · 📋 1.2K - 7% open · ⏱️ 05.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/harmony-one/harmony ``` </details> <br> _11 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereumclassic">ETC - Ethereum Classic</a></b> (🥈30 · ⭐ 1K) - Cryptocurrency . Users are able to generate ETC through.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/etclabscore/core-geth">core-geth</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 260) - A highly configurable Go implementation of the Ethereum protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/etclabscore/core-geth) (👨‍💻 920 · 🔀 160 · 📥 110K · 📦 7 · 📋 220 - 30% open · ⏱️ 13.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/etclabscore/core-geth ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/waves-enterprise">WAVES</a></b> (🥈28 · ⭐ 750) - Open blockchain protocol and development toolset for Web 3.0 applications.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/poanetwork">POA - POA Network</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 1.9K) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2017. POA Network has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _12 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ontio">ONT - Ontology</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 1.2K) - New high-performance public blockchain project & a distributed trust..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ontio/ontology">ontology</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 820) - Official Go implementation of the Ontology protocol. https://dev-.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ontio/ontology) (👨‍💻 75 · 🔀 320 · 📥 21K · 📦 250 · 📋 260 - 24% open · ⏱️ 26.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ontio/ontology ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Zilliqa">ZIL - Zilliqa</a></b> (🥈26 · ⭐ 1.6K) - The highly scalable and secure public blockchain platform. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Zilliqa/Zilliqa">Zilliqa</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Zilliqa is the worlds first high-throughput public blockchain.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Zilliqa/Zilliqa) (👨‍💻 85 · 🔀 280 · 📋 400 - 28% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Zilliqa/Zilliqa ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Zilliqa/scilla">scilla</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 240) - Scilla - A Smart Contract Intermediate Level Language. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Zilliqa/scilla) (👨‍💻 41 · 🔀 81 · 📥 390 · 📋 410 - 33% open · ⏱️ 15.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Zilliqa/scilla ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/DeFiCh">DFI - DeFiChain</a></b> (🥈26 · ⭐ 710) - Decentralized blockchain platform dedicated to enable fast,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/DeFiCh/ain">ain</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 400) - DeFi Blockchain - enabling decentralized finance on Bitcoin. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/DeFiCh/ain) (👨‍💻 840 · 🔀 120 · 📥 40K · 📋 510 - 17% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/DeFiCh/ain ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/KomodoPlatform">KMD - Komodo</a></b> (🥈26 · ⭐ 550) - End-to-end blockchain infrastructure solutions provider... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/KomodoPlatform/komodo-wallet-desktop">atomicDEX-Desktop</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 240) - Komodo Wallet Desktop GUI. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2KucAZR">GPL-2.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/KomodoPlatform/komodo-wallet-desktop) (👨‍💻 51 · 🔀 170 · 📥 82K · 📋 920 - 18% open · ⏱️ 08.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/KomodoPlatform/atomicDEX-Desktop ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/PureStake">MOVR - Moonriver</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Fully Ethereum-compatible smart contract parachain on Kusama. Due..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/moonbeam-foundation/moonbeam">moonbeam</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 900) - An Ethereum-compatible smart contract parachain on Polkadot. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/moonbeam-foundation/moonbeam) (👨‍💻 57 · 🔀 290 · 📥 25K · 📦 3 · 📋 390 - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/PureStake/moonbeam ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AstarNetwork">SDN - Shiden Network</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 1K) - Multi-chain decentralized application layer on Kusama Network...</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AstarNetwork/Astar">Astar</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 730) - The dApp hub for blockchains of the future. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/AstarNetwork/Astar) (👨‍💻 37 · 🔀 200 · 📥 22K · 📋 310 - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/AstarNetwork/Astar ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/casper-ecosystem">CSPR - Casper Network</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 540) - First live proof-of-stake blockchain built off the Casper CBC..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/casper-network/casper-node">casper-node</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 390) - Reference client for CASPER protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/casper-network/casper-node) (👨‍💻 91 · 🔀 220 · 📥 1.4K · 📦 180 · 📋 1.7K - 20% open · ⏱️ 10.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/casper-network/casper-node ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/icon-project">ICX - ICON</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 430) - ICONs goal is to hyperconnect the world using blockchain.</summary> --- <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OmniLayer">OMNI</a></b> (🥉24 · ⭐ 1.7K) - Digital currency built on top of the Bitcoin blockchain. Its features include the..</summary> --- <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vitelabs">VITE</a></b> (🥉24 · ⭐ 580) - Vite has built the worlds first DAG (Directed Acyclic Graph) based smart-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/kadena-io">KDA - Kadena</a></b> (🥉23 · ⭐ 1K) - Kadena is launching one of the worlds first true scalable blockchains..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/kadena-io/pact">pact</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 580) - The Pact Smart Contract Language. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/kadena-io/pact) (👨‍💻 55 · 🔀 100 · 📥 10K · 📋 400 - 24% open · ⏱️ 28.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/kadena-io/pact ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/kadena-io/chainweb-node">chainweb-node</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 250) - Chainweb: A Proof-of-Work Parallel-Chain Architecture for.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/kadena-io/chainweb-node) (👨‍💻 34 · 🔀 89 · 📥 1.6K · 📋 250 - 40% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/kadena-io/chainweb-node ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/radixdlt">XRD - Radix</a></b> (🥉23 · ⭐ 800) - Radix is building an open, interconnected platform where the full range of..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/radixdlt/radixdlt-scrypto">radixdlt-scrypto</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 400) - Scrypto is the asset-oriented smart contract.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/radixdlt/radixdlt-scrypto) (👨‍💻 51 · 🔀 120 · 📦 9 · 📋 110 - 14% open · ⏱️ 24.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/radixdlt/radixdlt-scrypto ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/CosmosContracts">JUNO</a></b> (🥉23 · ⭐ 550) - Global, open source, permission-less network for decentralized interoperable.. <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/CosmosContracts/juno">CosmosContracts/juno</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 310) - Open Source Platform for Interoperable Smart Contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/CosmosContracts/juno) (👨‍💻 39 · 🔀 160 · 📥 43K · 📦 3 · 📋 230 - 17% open · ⏱️ 21.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/CosmosContracts/juno ``` </details> <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/tomochain">TOMO - TomoChain</a></b> (🥉22 · ⭐ 390) - Innovative solution to the scalability problem with the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/signum-network">SIGNA - Signum</a></b> (🥉22 · ⭐ 330) - Cryptocurrency . Signum has a current supply of 2,130,801,392... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nebulasio">NAS - Nebulas</a></b> (🥉21 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Next generation public blockchain, aiming for a continuously.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/byteball">GBYTE - Obyte</a></b> (🥉21 · ⭐ 570) - Launched on Dec 25, 2016, Obyte is a distributed ledger based.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/byteball/obyte-gui-wallet">obyte-gui-wallet</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 430) - Smart payments made simple. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/byteball/obyte-gui-wallet) (👨‍💻 37 · 🔀 180 · 📥 350K · 📋 260 - 34% open · ⏱️ 29.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/byteball/obyte-gui-wallet ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/elastos">ELA - Elastos</a></b> (🥉18 · ⭐ 250 · 💤) - Founded by OS expert Rong Chen, Elastos is building the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/CounterpartyXCP">XCP - Counterparty</a></b> (🥉18 · ⭐ 240) - Platform for user-created assets on Bitcoin. Its a protocol, set..</summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/lamden">TAU - Lamden</a></b> (🥉17 · ⭐ 220 · 💤) - Performant Python-based blockchain platform that makes using.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nuls-io">NULS</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 480) - Singaporean based project is trying to develop a highly adaptable blockchain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 23 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/stratisproject">STRAX - Stratis</a></b> (🥉22 · ⭐ 880 · 💀) - Powerful and flexible Blockchain Development Platform designed.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/omgnetwork">OMG - OMG Network</a></b> (🥉21 · ⭐ 730 · 💀) - The value transfer layer for the Ethereum Network. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/perlin-network">PERL - PERL.eco</a></b> (🥉20 · ⭐ 2K · 💀) - Tokenized real-world ecological assets Perlins latest.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Bytom">BTM - Bytom</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 1.3K · 💀) - Blockchain protocol for financial and digital asset applications... - <b><a href="https://github.com/hicommonwealth">EDG - Edgeware</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 200) - High-performance, self-upgrading WASM smart contract platform, in.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9c3v" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/qtumproject">QTUM</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 120) - Decentralized and open-source smart contracts platform and value transfer protocol... - <b><a href="https://github.com/velas">VLX - Velas</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 70) - Velas AG, headquartered in Switzerland, is a new AI-operated dPoS.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/truechain">TRUE - TrueChain</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 150 · 💀) - With the digital advertising becoming a preserve for the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ubiq">UBQ - Ubiq</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 83) - Decentralized platform which allows the creation and implementation of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOx" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/expanse-org">EXP - Expanse</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 55) - The Expanse platform now has a two-year history of consistent growth and.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/bobanetwork">BOBA - Boba Network</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 2) - Blockchain Layer-2 scaling solution and Hybrid Compute.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/nymtech">NYM</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 270) - Existing internet protocols leak sensitive data that can be used without users.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/xtrabytes">XBY - XTRABYTES</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 87 · 💀) - XTRABYTES goes beyond being a currency. Its a next-gen blockchain.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/thundercore">TT - ThunderCore</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 100 · 💤) - Secure, high-performance, EVM-compatible public blockchain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/TheLindaProjectInc">MRX - Metrix Coin</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 41 · 💤) - Metrix Coin (formerly Lindacoin) is a Proof of Stake.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Oneledger">OLT - OneLedger</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 40) - OneLedger enables you to focus building your business.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/coti-io">COTI</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 130 · 💀) - First enterprise-grade digital fintech platform, which eliminates all.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/xdaichain">STAKE - xDAI Stake</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 120 · 💀) - New ERC20-type (implemented as an ERC677) token designed.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/idni">AGRS - Agoras: Currency of Tau</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 120 · 💀) - Application over Tau-Chain, being first and foremost.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/tezos">XTZ - Tezos</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 1.5K · 💀) - Coin created by a former Morgan Stanley analyst, Arthur Breitman... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/lightstreams-network">PHT - Phoneum</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 55 · 💀) - Decentralized network for building a new generation of applications... - <b><a href="https://github.com/bankex">BKX - BANKEX</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 34 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. BANKEX has.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/aergoio">AERGO</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 100 · 💀) - Open platform that allows businesses to build innovative.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> </details> <br> ## Stablecoins <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Cryptocurrencies that are designed to minimize volatility by pegging to a more stable asset._ <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/centrehq">USDC - USD Coin</a></b> (🥇18 · ⭐ 680) - Fully collateralized US dollar stablecoin. USDC is the bridge.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/circlefin/stablecoin-evm">centre-tokens</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 500) - Source repository for smart contracts used by Circles.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/circlefin/stablecoin-evm) (👨‍💻 22 · 🔀 260 · 📥 17 · 📋 52 - 30% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/centrehq/centre-tokens ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 2 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/beanstalkfarms">BEAN</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 120) - The practicality of using Decentralized Finance is limited by the lack of a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/paxosglobal">BUSD - Binance USD</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 360) - Stable coin pegged to USD that has received approval.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> </details> <br> ## Decentralized Finance (DeFi) <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Financial services that are built on top of distributed networks with no central intermediaries._ <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aave">AAVE</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 4.8K) - Decentralized money market protocol where users can lend and borrow.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aave/aave-v3-core">aave-v3-core</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 770) - This repository contains the core smart contracts of the.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/aave/aave-v3-core) (👨‍💻 25 · 🔀 490 · 📦 1.2K · 📋 410 - 7% open · ⏱️ 07.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/aave/aave-v3-core ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aave/interface">aave/interface</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 380) - An open source interface for the decentralized liquidity.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/aave/interface) (👨‍💻 46 · 🔀 300 · 📥 180 · 📋 580 - 20% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/aave/interface ``` </details> <br> _13 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gnosis">GNO - Gnosis</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 3.6K) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. Gnosis has a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gnosisguild/zodiac">zodiac</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 440) - A library for composable tooling for onchain entities. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/gnosisguild/zodiac) (👨‍💻 26 · 🔀 110 · 📥 9 · 📦 330 · 📋 21 - 33% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/gnosis/zodiac ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cowprotocol/ethcontract-rs">ethcontract-rs</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 300) - Generate type-safe bindings for interacting with Ethereum.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cowprotocol/ethcontract-rs) (👨‍💻 17 · 🔀 43 · 📦 140 · 📋 110 - 27% open · ⏱️ 22.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/gnosis/ethcontract-rs ``` </details> <br> _22 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Synthetixio">SNX - Synthetix</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 2.3K) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Synthetixio/synthetix">synthetix</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Synthetix Solidity smart contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Synthetixio/synthetix) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 590 · 📦 660 · 📋 130 - 65% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Synthetixio/synthetix ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Synthetixio/synpress">synpress</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 540) - Synpress is e2e testing framework based on Cypress.io and playwright with.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Synthetixio/synpress) (👨‍💻 26 · 🔀 160 · 📦 3 · 📋 200 - 41% open · ⏱️ 25.01.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Synthetixio/synpress ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/makerdao">MKR - Maker</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 6K) - Cryptocurrency depicted as a smart contract platform and works.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _34 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/0xProject">ZRX - 0x</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 4.2K) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. 0x has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/0xProject/protocol">0xProject/protocol</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 350) - <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/0xProject/protocol) (👨‍💻 130 · 🔀 190 · 📦 180 · 📋 28 - 17% open · ⏱️ 16.11.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/0xProject/protocol ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/0xProject/0x-mesh">0x-mesh</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 260) - A peer-to-peer network for sharing 0x orders. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/0xProject/0x-mesh) (👨‍💻 18 · 🔀 110 · 📥 120 · 📦 160 · 📋 340 - 38% open · ⏱️ 10.11.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/0xProject/0x-mesh ``` </details> <br> _11 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cowprotocol">COW - CoW Protocol</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 360) - Earn by just holding!. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/InjectiveLabs">INJ - Injective Protocol</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 240) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/compound-finance">COMP - Compound</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 3K) - The Compound Governance Token is a governance token on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/yearn">YFI - yearn.finance</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 2.7K) - Suite of products in Decentralized Finance (DeFi) that.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _20 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/consenlabs">LON - Tokenlon</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Utility token issued by the Tokenlon DEX, used to align all.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/consenlabs/token-profile">token-profile</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 810) - Blockchain coin and token profile collection. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/consenlabs/token-profile) (👨‍💻 1.7K · 🔀 3.5K · 📋 690 - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/consenlabs/token-profile ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/electroneum">ETN - Electroneum</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 420) - Electroneum has coined the phrase enablement currency as it is..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/electroneum/electroneum">electroneum</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 390) - Electroneum: The Legacy L1 Repository. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/electroneum/electroneum) (👨‍💻 290 · 🔀 190 · 📥 630K · 📋 400 - 24% open · ⏱️ 24.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/electroneum/electroneum ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bandprotocol">BAND - Band Protocol</a></b> (🥈23 · ⭐ 620) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/traderjoe-xyz">JOE</a></b> (🥈23 · ⭐ 460) - Trader Joe is your one-stop decentralized trading platform on the Avalanche.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOb" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/enzymefinance">MLN - Enzyme</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 1.7K) - A fast & cost-effective way to build, scale and monetize.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/enzymefinance/protocol">enzymefinance/protocol</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 360) - Enzyme Protocol Implementation. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/enzymefinance/protocol) (👨‍💻 32 · 🔀 150 · 📥 270 · 📦 17 · 📋 530 - 0% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/enzymefinance/protocol ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/beefyfinance">BIFI - Beefy.Finance</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 540) - $BIFI tokens are dividend-eligible revenue shares in.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/instadapp">INST - Instadapp</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 500) - On Instadapp, users and developers manage and build their DeFi.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/VenusProtocol">XVS - Venus</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 290) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the BNB Smart Chain (BEP20) platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/VenusProtocol/venus-protocol">venus-protocol</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 250) - BNB Smart Chain Venus Protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/VenusProtocol/venus-protocol) (👨‍💻 25 · 🔀 160 · 📦 33 · 📋 53 - 33% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/VenusProtocol/venus-protocol ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/diadata-org">DIA</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 230) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. DIA has a current supply.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/diadata-org/diadata">diadata</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 230) - DIAdata.org platform. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/diadata-org/diadata) (👨‍💻 73 · 🔀 130 · 📦 27 · 📋 460 - 43% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/diadata-org/diadata ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/neptune-mutual-blue">NPM - Neptune Mutual</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Neptune mutual follows a parametric insurance model, meaning..</summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/portto">BLT - Bloom</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 650) - End-to-end protocol for identity attestation, risk assessment and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/blocto/solana-go-sdk">solana-go-sdk</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 320) - Solana Golang SDK. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/blocto/solana-go-sdk) (👨‍💻 11 · 🔀 74 · 📦 56 · 📋 91 - 30% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/portto/solana-go-sdk ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/UMAprotocol">UMA</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 410) - Decentralized financial contracts platform built to enable Universal Market.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/UMAprotocol/protocol">UMAprotocol/protocol</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 360) - UMA Protocol Running on Ethereum. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3pwmjO5">AGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/UMAprotocol/protocol) (👨‍💻 51 · 🔀 170 · 📋 980 - 1% open · ⏱️ 02.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/UMAprotocol/protocol ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/api3dao">API3</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 260) - API3 builds blockchain-native, decentralized APIs with DAO-governance and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/depayfi">DEPAY</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 230) - DePay pioneers Web3 Payments with the power of DeFi. Driving mass adoption.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/erasureprotocol">NMR - Numeraire</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OlympusDAO">OHM - Olympus</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 1K) - The Decentralized Reserve Currency. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OlympusDAO/olympus-frontend">olympus-frontend</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 290) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OlympusDAO/olympus-frontend) (👨‍💻 62 · 🔀 720 · 📋 290 - 10% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/OlympusDAO/olympus-frontend ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/pooltogether">POOL - PoolTogether</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 700 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/liquity">LQTY - Liquity</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 420) - Token that captures the fee revenue generated by the Liquity.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/liquity/dev">liquity/dev</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 310) - Liquity monorepo containing the contracts, SDK and Dev UI frontend. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/liquity/dev) (👨‍💻 17 · 🔀 270 · 📋 270 - 18% open · ⏱️ 28.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/liquity/dev ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/SetProtocol">DPI - DeFi Pulse Index</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 380 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2020and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/fuseio">FUSE</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 330) - Open-source, democratized, borderless money. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bifrost-finance">BNC - Bifrost Native Coin</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 220) - Polkadot Ecological DeFi basic protocol. It is.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9c3v" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bifrost-finance/bifrost">bifrost</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 220) - A parachain focused on building bridges of chains based on PoS.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bifrost-finance/bifrost) (👨‍💻 25 · 🔀 66 · 📥 2.3K · 📋 50 - 30% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bifrost-finance/bifrost ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/fei-protocol">TRIBE</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 540) - Governance token which will allow community members to vote on the future.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/solendprotocol">SLND - Solend</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 300 · 💤) - Algorithmic, decentralized protocol for lending and borrowing.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 88 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/AugurProject">REP - Augur</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 2K · 💀) - Trustless, decentralized platform for prediction markets. Augur is.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ConcealNetwork">CCX - Conceal</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 170) - Privacy Protected DeFi & Encrypted Communications. - <b><a href="https://github.com/xinfinorg">XDC - XDC Network</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 140) - Enterprise-ready hybrid Blockchain technology company.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pangolindex">PNG - Pangolin</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 200) - Community-driven decentralized exchange for Avalanche and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOb" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/NexusMutual">NXM</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 160) - Decentralized insurance protocol built on Ethereum that currently offers cover.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Anchor-Protocol">ANC - Anchor Protocol</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 370 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOg" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/PolymathNetwork">POLY - Polymath</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 330 · 💀) - Polymath provides technology to create, issue, and manage.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/X-CASH-official">XCASH - X-CASH</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 120 · 💀) - Open-source private cryptocurrency with unique features developed.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/tornadocash">TORN - Tornado Cash</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 2K · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Rari-Capital">RGT - Rari Governance Token</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 1K · 💀) - The Rari Governance Token is the native token behind.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pillarwallet">PLR - Pillar</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 140) - Community-run, multichain & non-custodial DeFi wallet governed by.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Cryptorubic">RBC - Rubic</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 64) - No description. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/maple-labs">MPL - Maple</a></b> (🥈14 · ⭐ 460) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/alpaca-finance">ALPACA - Alpaca Finance</a></b> (🥈14 · ⭐ 230) - First leveraged yield farming protocol on Binance.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/reserve-protocol">RSR - Reserve Rights</a></b> (🥈14 · ⭐ 130) - Reserve aims to build a stable, decentralized, asset-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/HathorNetwork">HTR - Hathor</a></b> (🥈14 · ⭐ 80) - Natural evolution of Bitcoins blockchain. Instead of arranging the.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/reddcoin-project">RDD - ReddCoin</a></b> (🥈14 · ⭐ 16) - Launched in 2014 as a fork of Litecoin, Reddcoin (RDD) is a.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/yam-finance">YAM</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 720 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. YAM V3 has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/nash-io">NEX - Nash</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 390 · 💀) - Easiest place to grow your wealth. Manage your money alongside crypto.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/ribbon-finance">RBN - Ribbon Finance</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 360) - New protocol that helps users access crypto structured.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/trusttoken">TRU - TrueFi</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 320 · 💤) - DeFiuncollateralized lending protocol developed by the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/jet-lab">JET - Jetcoin</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 270) - Jet Protocol is highly capital efficient DeFi borrowing and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Mirror-Protocol">MIR - Mirror Protocol</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 220 · 💀) - What are Mirrored Assets? MIR is the governance token.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/risevision">RISE - EverRise</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 74 · 💀) - Blockchain technology company focused on increasing.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/EverexIO">EVX - Everex</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 900 · 💤) - Everex enables you to transfer, borrow, and trade in any fiat.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ampleforth">AMPL - Ampleforth</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 340) - Digital-asset-protocol for smart commodity-money. The smart.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pickle-finance">PICKLE - Pickle Finance</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 340 · 💤) - Yield aggregator that compounds LPs across various.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/webdollar">WEBD - WebDollar</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 120 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency fully native to the World Wide Web, entirely.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/SwissBorg">CHSB - SwissBorg</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 71) - SwissBorg is decentralising wealth management by making it fun,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/fraxfinance">FXS - Frax Share</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 500) - Governance and value accrual token of the Frax Stablecoin.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/harvest-finance">FARM - Harvest Finance</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 360 · 💀) - Harvest automatically farms the highest yields in DeFi. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/BarnBridge">BOND - BarnBridge</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 170 · 💀) - A Cross Platform Protocol for Tokenizing Risk. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/tranchess">CHESS - Tranchess</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 87) - Tokenized asset management and derivatives trading protocol... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Idle-Labs">IDLE</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 82) - Governance Token of Idle Protocol. It allows community participants to vote on-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/snowblossomcoin">SNOW - SnowSwap</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 67 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/thales-markets">THALES</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 55) - Ethereum protocol that allows the creation of peer-to-peer parimutuel.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/tetu-io">TETU</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 42) - DeFi application built on Polygon that implements automated yield farming.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOx" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Basis-Cash">BAC - Basis Cash</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 260 · 💀) - Fairly distributed & censorship resistant stablecoin with.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/alchemix-finance">ALCX - Alchemix</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 260) - Governance token for the Alchemix protocol. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/indexed-finance">NDX - Indexed Finance</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 200 · 💀) - Project focused on the development of passive.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/akropolisio">AKRO - Akropolis</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 150 · 💀) - Akropolis mission is to give everyone the tools to save,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/kava-labs">KAVA</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 110 · 💀) - Cross-chain DeFi Hub for decentralized financial services and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Badger-Finance">BADGER - Badger DAO</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 100 · 💀) - Badger DAO aims to create an ecosystem of DeFi.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/rtoken-project">RDAI</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 88 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. rDAI has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/dopex-io">DPX - Dopex</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 52 · 💤) - Dopex (Decentralized Options Exchange) is a decentralized options.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/NEST-Protocol">NEST - Nest Protocol</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 1K · 💤) - Decentralized price fact Oracle protocol network based.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Abracadabra-money">SPELL - Spell Token</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 210 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/PancakeBunny-finance">BUNNY - Pancake Bunny</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 180 · 💀) - Compound Yields on Binance Smart Chain with Bunny... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/laminar-protocol">LAMINAR</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 87 · 💀) - ## What Is Laminar (Laminar)? Laminar is an open financial platform founded.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/etherisc">DIP - Etherisc DIP Token</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 78 · 💀) - Etherisc is building a platform for decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/stafiprotocol">FIS - Stafi</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 47 · 💤) - First DeFi protocol unlocking liquidity of staked assets... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9c3v" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/octofi">OCTO - OctoFi</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 39 · 💀) - All-in-one DeFi and NFT with cashbacks. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/credmark">CMK - Credmark</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 36) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/gammastrategies">GAMMA - Gamma Strategies</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 520 · 💀) - Gamma offers non-custodial, automated, and active.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/benddao">BEND - BendDAO</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 130) - NFT liquidity and lending protocol with reactive interest rates.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/step-finance">STEP - Step Finance</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 120) - Front page of Solana. Visualise, Analyse, Execute and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Synthetify">SNY - Synthetify</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 83 · 💀) - Upcoming synthetic assets platform, fully built on top of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/premian-labs">PREMIA</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 80 · 💤) - Next-generation options and meta-vaults. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pie-dao">DOUGH - PieDAO DOUGH v2</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 55 · 💀) - DOUGH is PieDAOs governance token. Anybody can be a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/tellor-io">TRB - Tellor</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 49 · 💀) - Smart contracts on Ethereum are fully self contained and any.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/yfii">YFII - DFI.money</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 48 · 💀) - Fork of YFI project with YIP-8 implementation. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/FUSIONFoundation">FSN - Fusion</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 31 · 💤) - Project which consists of an all-inclusive blockchain-based.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/NFTX-project">NFTX</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 120 · 💀) - NFT-backed index funds on Ethereum. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/CreamFi">CREAM</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 120 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2020and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/powerpool-finance">CVP - PowerPool Concentrated Voting Power</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 50) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/unitprotocol">DUCK - Unit Protocol</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 47) - Decentralized borrowing protocol that allows using a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/sirenmarkets">SI - Siren</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 42 · 💀) - Distributed protocol for creating, trading, and redeeming fully-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Linear-finance">LINA - Linear</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 38) - A Cross-chain Decentralized Delta-One Asset Protocol with Unlimited.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ProtonProtocol">XPR - Proton</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 30 · 💀) - Launched in San Francisco, Proton (XPR) is a new public.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/hector-network">HEC - Hector DAO</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 28 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2022and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOb" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOi" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/AlphaFinanceLab">ALPHA - Alpha Venture DAO</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 110 · 💀) - Alpha Finance Lab is focused on researching and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/88mphapp">MPH - 88mph</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 84 · 💀) - No description. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/InverseFinance">INV - Inverse Finance</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 66 · 💀) - Yield aggregator and a lending protocol. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/banklessdao">BED - Bankless BED Index</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 37 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/spectrumprotocol">SPEC - Spectrum Token</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 35 · 💀) - The first and innovative yield optimizer on Terra.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOg" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/yaxis-project">YAXIS</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 33 · 💀) - Experiment in DAO-directed yield farming. Users will deposit stable coins.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/vesperfi">VSP - Vesper Finance</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 32 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/nexofinance">NEXO</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 98 · 💀) - Asset-backed token and is backed by the underlying assets of Nexos loan.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mtpelerin">MPS - Mt Pelerin Shares</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 49 · 💀) - MPS tokens are the tokenized shares of Mt Pelerin.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/saffron-finance">SFI - saffron.finance</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 39 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/OpiumProtocol">OPIUM</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 39 · 💀) - Decentralized derivative protocol. It offers two products: USDT de-pegging.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/defidollar">DFD - DefiDollar DAO</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 49 · 💀) - DFD is DefiDollars governance token in which holders.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/sol-farm">TULIP - Tulip Protocol</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 40 · 💀) - First yield aggregator on Solana, averaging around.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Popsicle-Finance">ICE - Popsicle Finance</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 38 · 💀) - A next-gen cross-chain yield enhancement platform.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/0xcap">CAP</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 37 · 💀) - Protocol to trade the markets with stablecoins. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/frontierdotxyz">FRONT - Frontier</a></b> (🥉3 · ⭐ 82 · 💀) - Chain-agnostic DeFi aggregation layer. With our.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/visorfinance">VISR - Visor</a></b> (🥉2 · ⭐ 20 · 💀) - Interact with DeFi protocols through an NFT Enhancing the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/daoventures">DVD - DAOventures</a></b> (🥉2 · ⭐ 4 · 💀) - DeFi robo-advisor and automated money manager. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> </details> <br> ## Exchange-based Tokens <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Tokens associated with centralized or decentralized exchanges._ <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bnb-chain">BNB</a></b> (🥇37 · ⭐ 9.6K) - Cryptocurrency of the Binance platform. It is a trading platform exclusively for..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bnb-chain/bsc">bsc</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 2.6K) - A BNB Smart Chain client based on the go-ethereum fork. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bnb-chain/bsc) (👨‍💻 1K · 🔀 1.5K · 📥 310K · 📦 5 · 📋 1.2K - 2% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bnb-chain/bsc ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bnb-chain/javascript-sdk">javascript-sdk</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 380) - Javascript SDK to communicate with BNB Beacon Chain. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bnb-chain/javascript-sdk) (👨‍💻 31 · 🔀 240 · 📦 750 · 📋 180 - 1% open · ⏱️ 11.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bnb-chain/javascript-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bnb-chain/tss-lib">tss-lib</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 720) - Threshold Signature Scheme, for ECDSA and EDDSA. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bnb-chain/tss-lib) (👨‍💻 20 · 🔀 240 · 📥 4K · 📦 180 · 📋 140 - 43% open · ⏱️ 18.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bnb-chain/tss-lib ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bnb-chain/bsc-genesis-contract">bsc-genesis-contract</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 630) - The genesis contracts of BNB Smart Chain. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bnb-chain/bsc-genesis-contract) (👨‍💻 18 · 🔀 680 · 📦 3 · 📋 89 - 20% open · ⏱️ 08.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bnb-chain/bsc-genesis-contract ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bnb-chain/go-sdk">bnb-chain/go-sdk</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 200) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bnb-chain/go-sdk) (👨‍💻 28 · 🔀 100 · 📦 250 · 📋 88 - 21% open · ⏱️ 26.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bnb-chain/go-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bnb-chain/BEPs">BEPs</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 740) - BNB Evolution Proposals. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bnb-chain/BEPs) (👨‍💻 68 · 🔀 470 · 📋 89 - 34% open · ⏱️ 23.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bnb-chain/BEPs ``` </details> <br> _20 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/trustwallet">TWT - Trust Wallet Token</a></b> (🥇37 · ⭐ 9.2K) - Trust Wallet Token (TWT) 511 is a utility token that.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/trustwallet/wallet-core">wallet-core</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 2.6K) - Cross-platform, cross-blockchain wallet library. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/trustwallet/wallet-core) (👨‍💻 140 · 🔀 1.5K · 📥 100K · 📦 3 · 📋 1.4K - 2% open · ⏱️ 24.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/trustwallet/wallet-core ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/trustwallet/assets">trustwallet/assets</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 4.4K) - A comprehensive, up-to-date collection of information about.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/trustwallet/assets) (👨‍💻 4.1K · 🔀 22K · 📦 3 · 📋 1.1K - 1% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/trustwallet/assets ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/trustwallet/trust-web3-provider">trust-web3-provider</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 700) - Web3 javascript wrapper provider for iOS and Android.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/trustwallet/trust-web3-provider) (👨‍💻 18 · 🔀 400 · 📦 3 · 📋 240 - 23% open · ⏱️ 02.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/trustwallet/trust-web3-provider ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/trustwallet/developer">developer</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 300) - Trust Developer documentation: developer.trustwallet.com. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/trustwallet/developer) (👨‍💻 37 · 🔀 170 · 📋 77 - 25% open · ⏱️ 25.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/trustwallet/developer ``` </details> <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitshares">BTS - BitShares</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 2.1K) - Cryptocurrency . BitShares has a current supply of..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitshares/bitshares-ui">bitshares-ui</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 520) - Fully featured Graphical User Interface / Reference Wallet for the.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bitshares/bitshares-ui) (👨‍💻 180 · 🔀 590 · 📥 220K · 📋 2.3K - 18% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bitshares/bitshares-ui ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitshares/bitshares-core">bitshares-core</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 1.2K) - BitShares Blockchain node and command-line wallet. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bitshares/bitshares-core) (👨‍💻 81 · 🔀 660 · 📥 140K · 📋 1.3K - 20% open · ⏱️ 15.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/bitshares/bitshares-core ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/crypto-org-chain">CRO - Cronos</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 840) - We propose Crypto.com Chain, the next generation decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/crypto-org-chain/cronos">cronos</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 280) - Cronos is the first Ethereum-compatible blockchain network built.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/crypto-org-chain/cronos) (👨‍💻 27 · 🔀 210 · 📥 260K · 📦 17 · 📋 460 - 20% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/crypto-org-chain/cronos ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/crypto-org-chain/chain-main">chain-main</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 490) - Crypto.org Chain: Croeseid Testnet and beyond development. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/crypto-org-chain/chain-main) (👨‍💻 20 · 🔀 330 · 📥 150K · 📋 380 - 5% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/crypto-org-chain/chain-main ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dydxprotocol">DYDX</a></b> (🥈23 · ⭐ 1.8K) - Governance token for the dYdX exchange protocol. Past users of the protocol.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dydxprotocol/dydx-v3-python">dydx-v3-python</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 300) - Python client for dYdX (API v3). <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dydxprotocol/dydx-v3-python) (👨‍💻 12 · 🔀 210 · 📦 630 · 📋 100 - 61% open · ⏱️ 11.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/dydxprotocol/dydx-v3-python ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/kucoin">KCS - KuCoin Token</a></b> (🥈22 · ⭐ 680) - International cryptocurrency exchange based out of Seychelle.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/loopring">LRC - Loopring</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 630) - Decentralized Exchange (DEX) built on an Ethereum Layer-2 (L2).. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Loopring/protocols">protocols</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 320 · 💤) - A zkRollup DEX & Payment Protocol. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Loopring/protocols) (👨‍💻 40 · 🔀 110 · 📋 370 - 4% open · ⏱️ 29.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/Loopring/protocols ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/airswap">AST - AirSwap</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 360) - Decentralized token exchange based on the Swap protocol.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/airswap/airswap-protocols">airswap-protocols</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 220) - AirSwap Contracts and Tools. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/airswap/airswap-protocols) (👨‍💻 29 · 🔀 89 · 📦 17 · 📋 270 - 2% open · ⏱️ 09.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/airswap/airswap-protocols ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paraswap">PSP - ParaSwap</a></b> (🥉20 · ⭐ 1.5K) - Governance token for ParaSwap with the aim toprovide a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paraswap/paraswap-dex-lib">paraswap-dex-lib</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 710) - DexLib is a library used by ParaSwap backend to integrate.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paraswap/paraswap-dex-lib) (👨‍💻 68 · 🔀 260 · 📦 3 · 📋 110 - 97% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paraswap/paraswap-dex-lib ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/paraswap/paraswap-sdk">paraswap-sdk</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 670) - ParaSwap allows dApps and traders to get the best DEX.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/paraswap/paraswap-sdk) (👨‍💻 24 · 🔀 96 · 📦 4 · 📋 38 - 78% open · ⏱️ 18.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/paraswap/paraswap-sdk ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 14 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/republicprotocol">REN</a></b> (🥈24 · ⭐ 860 · 💀) - Open protocol that enables the movement of value between blockchains. Rens.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/project-serum">SRM - Serum</a></b> (🥈23 · ⭐ 2.9K · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2020. Serum has a current supply of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/astroport-fi">ASTRO - AstroSwap</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 150) - First interstellar DEX, built for the most loyal blockchain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/idexio">IDEX</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 120) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. IDEX has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/diviproject">DIVX - Divi Exchange Token</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 76 · 💤) - Divi Exchange Token (DIVX) is a cryptocurrency and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/dodoex">DODO</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 330) - Decentralized Exchange (DEX) running on Ethereum and Binance Smart Chain... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/universablockchain">UTNP - Universa</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 320 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2017and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/max-coin">MAX - Maxcoin</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 79 · 💀) - One of the most important things for MaxCoin was to achieve a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mxcdevelop">MX - MX Token</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 160) - Proof of rights and interests of MXC trading platform itself. Its.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/WazirX">WRX - WazirX</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 180 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency exchange with an advanced trading interface and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/dexkit">KIT - DexKit</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 75 · 💤) - Next generation DEX. It uses technology based on ZRX protocol,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/hegic">HEGIC</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 40 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. Hegic has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ellipsis-finance">EPS - Ellipsis</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 57 · 💀) - Secure low-slippage stable swapping on BSC. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mcdexio">MCB - MCDex</a></b> (🥉3 · ⭐ 10 · 💀) - Decentralized leveraged trading protocol allowing zero price impact.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> </details> <br> ## Meme Tokens <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Cryptocurrencies inspired by Internet memes._ <details><summary>Show 1 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/hodlcoin">HODL - HOdlcoin</a></b> (🥇16 · ⭐ 37 · 💀) - Passive Income Made Easy. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> </details> <br> ## Web 3.0 <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/filecoin-project">FIL - Filecoin</a></b> (🥇42 · ⭐ 11K) - The Filecoin network achieves staggering economies of scale by..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/filecoin-project/lotus">lotus</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 2.8K) - Reference implementation of the Filecoin protocol, written in Go. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/filecoin-project/lotus) (👨‍💻 270 · 🔀 1.2K · 📥 13K · 📋 4.6K - 15% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/lotus ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/filecoin-project/venus">venus</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 2.1K) - Filecoin Full Node Implementation in Go. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/filecoin-project/venus) (👨‍💻 96 · 🔀 450 · 📥 11K · 📦 65 · 📋 3.2K - 2% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/venus ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bacalhau-project/bacalhau">bacalhau</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 610) - Compute over Data framework for public, transparent, and optionally.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bacalhau-project/bacalhau) (👨‍💻 61 · 🔀 80 · 📥 96K · 📦 10 · 📋 2K - 15% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/bacalhau ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/filecoin-project/rust-fil-proofs">rust-fil-proofs</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 480) - Proofs for Filecoin in Rust. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/filecoin-project/rust-fil-proofs) (👨‍💻 59 · 🔀 310 · 📥 3.2K · 📦 160 · 📋 640 - 5% open · ⏱️ 01.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/rust-fil-proofs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/filecoin-project/ref-fvm">ref-fvm</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 370) - Reference implementation of the Filecoin Virtual Machine. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/filecoin-project/ref-fvm) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 130 · 📦 130 · 📋 970 - 22% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/ref-fvm ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/filecoin-project/specs">specs</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 370 · 💤) - The Filecoin protocol specification. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/filecoin-project/specs) (👨‍💻 75 · 🔀 180 · 📦 3 · 📋 620 - 38% open · ⏱️ 16.07.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/specs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/filecoin-project/devgrants">devgrants</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 370) - Apply for a Filecoin devgrant. Help build the Filecoin.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/filecoin-project/devgrants) (👨‍💻 71 · 🔀 310 · 📋 1.5K - 12% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/devgrants ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/filecoin-project/filecoin-docs">filecoin-docs</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 210) - Filecoin Docs. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/filecoin-project/filecoin-docs) (👨‍💻 190 · 🔀 280 · 📋 590 - 2% open · ⏱️ 23.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/filecoin-docs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/lurk-lab/neptune">neptune</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 250) - Rust Poseidon implementation. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/lurk-lab/neptune) (👨‍💻 24 · 🔀 81 · 📦 820 · 📋 48 - 14% open · ⏱️ 13.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/neptune ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/filecoin-project/FIPs">FIPs</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 310) - The Filecoin Improvement Proposal repository. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/filecoin-project/FIPs) (👨‍💻 73 · 🔀 170 · 📋 120 - 9% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/filecoin-project/FIPs ``` </details> <br> _29 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/status-im">SNT - Status</a></b> (🥇40 · ⭐ 9.7K) - Mobile operating system that will completely change the way the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/status-im/status-mobile">status-mobile</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 3.8K) - a free (libre) open source, mobile OS for Ethereum. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3postzC">MPL-2.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/status-im/status-mobile) (👨‍💻 300 · 🔀 1K · 📥 5K · 📋 9.9K - 6% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/status-im/status-mobile ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/status-im/status-go">status-go</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 720) - The Status module that consumes go-ethereum. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3postzC">MPL-2.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/status-im/status-go) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 240 · 📥 1.6K · 📦 14 · 📋 1.3K - 22% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/status-im/status-go ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/status-im/status-desktop">status-desktop</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 260) - Status Desktop client made in Nim & QML. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3postzC">MPL-2.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/status-im/status-desktop) (👨‍💻 64 · 🔀 74 · 📥 13K · 📋 7.7K - 7% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/status-im/status-desktop ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth2">nimbus-eth2</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 490) - Nim implementation of the Ethereum Beacon Chain. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth2) (👨‍💻 82 · 🔀 200 · 📥 31K · 📋 1.1K - 17% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth2 ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vacp2p/nim-libp2p">nim-libp2p</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 240) - libp2p implementation in Nim. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/vacp2p/nim-libp2p) (👨‍💻 34 · 🔀 51 · 📋 240 - 26% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/status-im/nim-libp2p ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1">nimbus-eth1</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 550) - Nimbus: an Ethereum Execution Client for Resource-Restricted.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1) (👨‍💻 41 · 🔀 98 · 📋 430 - 26% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1 ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/status-im/nim-chronos">nim-chronos</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 350) - Chronos - An efficient library for asynchronous programming. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/status-im/nim-chronos) (👨‍💻 30 · 🔀 50 · 📋 140 - 36% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/status-im/nim-chronos ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/status-im/status-keycard">status-keycard</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 210 · 💤) - Our Javacard Implementation for making secure.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/status-im/status-keycard) (👨‍💻 7 · 🔀 60 · 📥 1.7K · 📋 68 - 17% open · ⏱️ 06.06.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/status-im/status-keycard ``` </details> <br> _24 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/stacks-network">STX - Stacks</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 7.7K) - Stacks brings Apps and Smart Contracts to Bitcoin. Apps built on Stacks..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/stacks-network/stacks-core">stacks-blockchain</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 2.9K) - The Stacks blockchain implementation. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/stacks-network/stacks-core) (👨‍💻 130 · 🔀 620 · 📥 22K · 📦 21 · 📋 2.6K - 12% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/stacks-network/stacks-blockchain ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/stacks-network/stacks">stacks</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 2K) - Overview of Bitcoins Stacks layer. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/stacks-network/stacks) (👨‍💻 42 · 🔀 230 · 📋 320 - 8% open · ⏱️ 18.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/stacks-network/stacks ``` </details> <br> _16 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/smartcontractkit">LINK - Chainlink</a></b> (🥇35 · ⭐ 34K) - Framework for building Decentralized Oracle Networks (DONs).. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/smartcontractkit/chainlink">chainlink</a></b> (🥇33 · ⭐ 6.7K) - node of the decentralized oracle network, bridging on and off-chain.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/smartcontractkit/chainlink) (👨‍💻 260 · 🔀 1.6K · 📦 520 · 📋 570 - 39% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/smartcontractkit/chainlink ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/smartcontractkit/external-adapters-js">external-adapters-js</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 260) - Monorepo containing JavaScript implementation of external.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/smartcontractkit/external-adapters-js) (👨‍💻 88 · 🔀 240 · 📦 12 · 📋 180 - 22% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/smartcontractkit/external-adapters-js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/smartcontractkit/documentation">documentation</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 360) - https://docs.chain.link The Chainlink developer documentation.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/smartcontractkit/documentation) (👨‍💻 160 · 🔀 370 · 📋 350 - 12% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/smartcontractkit/documentation ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/smartcontractkit/full-blockchain-solidity-course-js">full-blockchain-solidity-course-js</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 12K · 💤) - Learn Blockchain, Solidity, and Full Stack Web3.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/smartcontractkit/full-blockchain-solidity-course-js) (👨‍💻 27 · 🔀 2.7K · 📋 240 - 34% open · ⏱️ 31.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/smartcontractkit/full-blockchain-solidity-course-js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/smartcontractkit/hardhat-starter-kit">hardhat-starter-kit</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 1.2K) - A repo for boilerplate code for testing, deploying, and.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/smartcontractkit/hardhat-starter-kit) (👨‍💻 31 · 🔀 480 · 📋 80 - 26% open · ⏱️ 13.11.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/smartcontractkit/hardhat-starter-kit ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/smartcontractkit/full-blockchain-solidity-course-py">full-blockchain-solidity-course-py</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 11K) - Ultimate Solidity, Blockchain, and Smart Contract -.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/smartcontractkit/full-blockchain-solidity-course-py) (👨‍💻 17 · 🔀 2.9K · 📋 500 - 44% open · ⏱️ 10.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/smartcontractkit/full-blockchain-solidity-course-py ``` </details> <br> _25 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/holochain">HOT - Holo</a></b> (🥇33 · ⭐ 2.3K) - Holochain enables a distributed web with user autonomy built directly.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/holochain/holochain">holochain</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 1.1K) - The current, performant & industrial strength version of.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/holochain/holochain) (👨‍💻 52 · 🔀 130 · 📦 270 · 📋 390 - 42% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/holochain/holochain ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/holochain/launcher">launcher</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 260) - Desktop launcher to install and use Holochain apps locally. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/holochain/launcher) (👨‍💻 10 · 🔀 20 · 📥 7.1K · 📦 3 · 📋 140 - 31% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/holochain/launcher ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/holochain/holochain-client-js">holochain-client-js</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 260) - A JavaScript client for the Holochain Conductor API. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/holochain/holochain-client-js) (👨‍💻 24 · 🔀 14 · 📦 6 · 📋 57 - 12% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/holochain/holochain-client-js ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/graphprotocol">GRT - The Graph</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 4.7K) - Indexing protocol and global API for organizing blockchain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/graphprotocol/graph-node">graph-node</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 2.8K) - Graph Node indexes data from blockchains such as Ethereum and.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/graphprotocol/graph-node) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 890 · 📥 480 · 📋 1.9K - 22% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/graphprotocol/graph-node ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/graphprotocol/indexer">graphprotocol/indexer</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 230) - Graph Protocol indexer components and infrastructure. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/graphprotocol/indexer) (👨‍💻 51 · 🔀 110 · 📥 12K · 📦 21 · 📋 340 - 38% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/graphprotocol/indexer ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/graphprotocol/graph-tooling">graph-tooling</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 370) - Monorepo for various tools used by subgraph developers. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/graphprotocol/graph-tooling) (👨‍💻 89 · 🔀 180 · 📥 5.5K · 📋 630 - 33% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/graphprotocol/graph-tooling ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/graphprotocol/contracts">graphprotocol/contracts</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 320) - Contracts repository for The Graph protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2KucAZR">GPL-2.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/graphprotocol/contracts) (👨‍💻 23 · 🔀 130 · 📦 5 · 📋 180 - 28% open · ⏱️ 25.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/graphprotocol/contracts ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethersphere">BZZ - Swarm</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 2K) - System of peer-to-peer networked nodes that create a decentralised.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethersphere/bee">ethersphere/bee</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Bee is a Swarm client implemented in Go. Its the basic.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethersphere/bee) (👨‍💻 63 · 🔀 340 · 📥 270K · 📦 140 · 📋 1.7K - 7% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethersphere/bee ``` </details> <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/maidsafe">MAID - MaidSafeCoin</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2014. MaidSafeCoin has a current..</summary> --- <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aeternity">AE - Aeternity</a></b> (🥈30 · ⭐ 1.7K) - Public, open-source blockchain protocol that enables a platform.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aeternity/aeternity">aeternity</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 1.1K) - ternity blockchain - scalable blockchain for the people - smart.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/aeternity/aeternity) (👨‍💻 82 · 🔀 230 · 📥 25K · 📋 940 - 26% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/aeternity/aeternity ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aeternity/protocol">aeternity/protocol</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 200) - Specification of the ternity blockchain protocol. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/aeternity/protocol) (👨‍💻 44 · 🔀 82 · 📋 66 - 25% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/aeternity/protocol ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/lbryio">LBC - LBRY Credits</a></b> (🥈29 · ⭐ 16K · 💤) - LBRY (pronounced Library) is a decentralized digital content..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/lbryio/lbry.com">lbry.com</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 260 · 💤) - lbry.com, the website for the LBRY protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/lbryio/lbry.com) (👨‍💻 190 · 🔀 240 · 📋 320 - 7% open · ⏱️ 23.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/lbryio/lbry.com ``` </details> <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aragon">ANT - Aragon</a></b> (🥈29 · ⭐ 4.4K) - Decentralized app (dApp) on the Ethereum blockchain that allows.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aragon/use-wallet">use-wallet</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 730 · 💤) - useWallet() All-in-one solution to connect a dapp to an Ethereum.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/aragon/use-wallet) (👨‍💻 31 · 🔀 240 · 📦 3.7K · 📋 130 - 61% open · ⏱️ 21.09.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/aragon/use-wallet ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aragon/client">client</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 830) - (Aragon 1) Create and manage decentralized organizations on Ethereum. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3pwmjO5">AGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/aragon/client) (👨‍💻 70 · 🔀 260 · 📥 34K · 📋 730 - 29% open · ⏱️ 10.11.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/aragon/client ``` </details> <br> _18 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/levelkdev">DXD - DXdao</a></b> (🥈29 · ⭐ 3.9K) - Collective that builds and governs decentralized products and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/protofire/solhint">solhint</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 990) - Solhint is an open-source project to provide a linting utility for.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/protofire/solhint) (👨‍💻 56 · 🔀 150 · 📦 51K · 📋 270 - 8% open · ⏱️ 10.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/protofire/solhint ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ArweaveTeam">AR - Arweave</a></b> (🥈29 · ⭐ 2.2K) - Welcome to the future of data storage A new data storage blockchain..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ArweaveTeam/arweave">arweave</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 880) - The Arweave server and App Developer Toolkit. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2KucAZR">GPL-2.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ArweaveTeam/arweave) (👨‍💻 51 · 🔀 170 · 📥 36K · 📋 210 - 33% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ArweaveTeam/arweave ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ArweaveTeam/arweave-js">arweave-js</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 570) - Browser and Nodejs client for general interaction with the arweave.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ArweaveTeam/arweave-js) (👨‍💻 42 · 🔀 120 · 📦 3 · 📋 99 - 9% open · ⏱️ 04.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ArweaveTeam/arweave-js ``` </details> <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/rocket-pool">RPL - Rocket Pool</a></b> (🥈29 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Rocket Pool is Ethereums most decentralised liquid staking.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/rocket-pool/rocketpool">rocketpool</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 870 · 💤) - Decentralised Ethereum Liquid Staking Protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/rocket-pool/rocketpool) (👨‍💻 19 · 🔀 210 · 📦 11 · 📋 110 - 35% open · ⏱️ 21.06.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/rocket-pool/rocketpool ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/storj">STORJ</a></b> (🥈28 · ⭐ 2K) - Open-source platform that leverages the blockchain to provide end-to-end.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/storj/drpc">drpc</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 1.4K) - drpc is a lightweight, drop-in replacement for gRPC. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/storj/drpc) (👨‍💻 15 · 🔀 47 · 📋 37 - 27% open · ⏱️ 12.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/storj/drpc ``` </details> <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/skycoin">SKY - Skycoin</a></b> (🥈28 · ⭐ 980) - Most advanced blockchain platform in the world. Developed by early..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/skycoin/skycoin">skycoin</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 590 · 💤) - Skycoin Core and Wallet. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/skycoin/skycoin) (👨‍💻 92 · 🔀 290 · 📦 78 · 📋 1.2K - 13% open · ⏱️ 10.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/skycoin/skycoin ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/radicle-dev">RAD - Radicle</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 1.5K) - Cryptocurrency . Radicle has a current supply of 99,998,580 with.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/oceanprotocol">OCEAN - Ocean Protocol</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 790) - Ecosystem for sharing data and associated services. It.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/raiden-network">RDN - Raiden Network Token</a></b> (🥈26 · ⭐ 1.9K · 💤) - Off-chain scaling solution, enabling near-instant,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/raiden-network/raiden">raiden</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 1.8K · 💤) - Raiden Network. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/raiden-network/raiden) (👨‍💻 99 · 🔀 400 · 📥 7.6K · 📦 33 · 📋 2.7K - 11% open · ⏱️ 10.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/raiden-network/raiden ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/handshake-org">HNS - Handshake</a></b> (🥈24 · ⭐ 4.1K) - Decentralized, permissionless naming protocol where every peer is..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/handshake-org/hsd">hsd</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 1.9K) - Handshake Daemon & Full Node. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/handshake-org/hsd) (👨‍💻 65 · 🔀 290 · 📥 310 · 📦 170 · 📋 360 - 34% open · ⏱️ 04.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/handshake-org/hsd ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aelfProject">ELF - aelf</a></b> (🥈24 · ⭐ 810) - Versatile business blockchain platform powered by cloud computing and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AElfProject/AElf">AElf</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 810) - A scalable cloud computing blockchain platform. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/AElfProject/AElf) (👨‍💻 86 · 🔀 240 · 📥 3.7K · 📦 43 · 📋 830 - 6% open · ⏱️ 28.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/AElfProject/AElf ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bittorrent">BTT - BitTorrent</a></b> (🥈23 · ⭐ 1.7K) - BitTorrent was initially conceived by Bram Cohen, a peer-to-peer..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bittorrent/go-btfs">go-btfs</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 200) - BTFS - The First Scalable Decentralized Storage System - A.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bittorrent/go-btfs) (👨‍💻 360 · 🔀 65 · 📥 48K · 📦 2 · 📋 190 - 2% open · ⏱️ 28.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bittorrent/go-btfs ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/axelarnetwork">AXL - Axelar</a></b> (🥈23 · ⭐ 470) - Axelar delivers secure cross-chain communication. That means dApp.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/NebulousLabs">SC - Siacoin</a></b> (🥈22 · ⭐ 580) - Decentralized cloud storage platform similar in concept to Dropbox and..</summary> --- <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/loomnetwork">LOOMOLD - Loom Network (OLD)</a></b> (🥉21 · ⭐ 890) - The Next-Generation Blockchain Application Platform.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/loomnetwork/loom-js">loom-js</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 200 · 💤) - JS library for building browser apps & NodeJS services that interact.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/loomnetwork/loom-js) (👨‍💻 24 · 🔀 40 · 📦 430 · 📋 89 - 51% open · ⏱️ 05.07.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/loomnetwork/loom-js ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/PlatONnetwork">LAT - PlatON Network</a></b> (🥉21 · ⭐ 640) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021. PlatON has a current supply..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/PlatONnetwork/PlatON-Go">PlatON-Go</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 450) - Golang implementation of the PlatON protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/PlatONnetwork/PlatON-Go) (👨‍💻 450 · 🔀 150 · 📥 570 · 📦 10 · 📋 670 - 0% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/PlatONnetwork/PlatON-Go ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Fantom-Foundation">FTM - Fantom</a></b> (🥉20 · ⭐ 880) - New DAG based Smart Contract platform that intends to solve the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/openhive-network">HIVE</a></b> (🥉20 · ⭐ 370) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2020. Hive has a current supply of 467,382,213.663. The..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/openhive-network/hive">openhive-network/hive</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 320) - Fast. Scalable. Powerful. The Blockchain for Web3. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/openhive-network/hive) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 98 · 📥 39 · ⏱️ 15.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/openhive-network/hive ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bonfida">FIDA - Bonfida</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 510) - Full product suite that bridges the gap between Serum, Solana,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/identity-com">CVC - Civic</a></b> (🥉17 · ⭐ 240) - Leading provider of identity management tools for Web3, empowering.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/crustio">CRU - Crust Network</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 520) - What is Crust Network? Crust Network provides a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/crustio/crust">crust</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 480) - Official Rust implementation of the Crust protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/crustio/crust) (👨‍💻 8 · 🔀 37 · 📥 44 · 📋 330 - 22% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/crustio/crust ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/f-o-a-m">FOAM</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 440) - Open protocol for proof of location on Ethereum. Our mission is to build a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/lidofinance">LDO - Lido DAO</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 500) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. Lido DAO.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/lidofinance/lido-dao">lido-dao</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 350) - Lido DAO smart contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/lidofinance/lido-dao) (👨‍💻 39 · 🔀 160 · 📥 35 · 📋 220 - 15% open · ⏱️ 23.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/lidofinance/lido-dao ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/wanchain">WAN - Wanchain</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 290 · 💤) - Wanchain seeks to link the present to the future, through the..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/wanchain/go-wanchain">go-wanchain</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 290 · 💤) - Wanchain Client Source Code. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/wanchain/go-wanchain) (👨‍💻 39 · 🔀 86 · 📥 78K · 📋 9 - 44% open · ⏱️ 13.09.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/wanchain/go-wanchain ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/thorchain">RUNE - THORChain</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 230 · 💤) - THORChain is building a chain-agnostic bridging protocol.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 27 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/CortexFoundation">CTXC - Cortex</a></b> (🥈22 · ⭐ 170) - Cortex is built on a new public chain called Cortex. The chain includes.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/threefoldtech">TFT - ThreeFold Token</a></b> (🥉21 · ⭐ 120) - What is ThreeFold (TFT)? Founded in 2016, ThreeFold is a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/daostack">GEN - DAOstack</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 490 · 💀) - Operational stack for DAOs, a comprehensive toolkit for.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/docknetwork">DOCK</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 140) - Decentralized data exchange protocol that lets people connect their profiles,.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/0chain">ZCN - Zus</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 100) - High performance storage network that powers limitless applications... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/aleph-im">ALEPH - Aleph.im</a></b> (🥉18 · ⭐ 100) - Decentralized cloud storage, database and computing platform,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/provable-things">PNT - pNetwork</a></b> (🥉17 · ⭐ 1.5K · 💀) - Building an Ecosysten on Solana Network. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/gxchain">GXC - GXChain</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 470 · 💀) - From the developers at Gongxinbao (GXB) comes GXChain, a public.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/marlinprotocol">POND - Marlin</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 120) - High-performance network infrastructure for modern decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/sonm-io">SNM - SONM</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 360 · 💀) - Global operating system that is also a decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/stratosnet">STOS - Stratos</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 110) - Next generation of decentralized Data Mesh that provides.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cartesi">CTSI - Cartesi</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 140) - What is Cartesi? Ease of Adoption: Developers can work in a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/keep3r-network">KP3R - Keep3rV1</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 410 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/virtualeconomy">VSYS - V Systems</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 120 · 💀) - Blockchain infrastructure provider with a focus on database and.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/Ether1Project">ETHO - Etho Protocol</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 42 · 💀) - Blockchain backed immutable storage via IPFS nodes and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Kylin-Network">KYL - Kylin Network</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 41 · 💀) - Kylin Network offers any applications and blockchains.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mathwallet">MATH</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 210) - One stop crypto solution platform which contains MathWallet, MATH VPOS Pool,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/orbs-network">ORBS</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 46 · 💀) - Orbs was built to bridge the unoccupied gap between the functionality of a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/kardiachain">KAI - KardiaChain</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 33 · 💤) - We believe Blockchain can create equal opportunities for.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum-push-notification-service">PUSH - Push Protocol</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 44) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. Push.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Sharders">SS - Sharder</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 41 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2018and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/datahighway-dhx">DHX - DataHighway</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 51 · 💀) - DataHighways community members will ultimately be.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/measurabledatatoken">MDT - Measurable Data Token</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 100 · 💀) - Measurable Data Token (MDT) is a decentralized data.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/TiesNetwork">TIE - Ties.DB</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 60 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. Ties.DB.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/liquidapps-io">DAPP - LiquidApps</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 51 · 💀) - LiquidApps mission is to promote the adoption of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/covalenthq">CQT - Covalent</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 90 · 💀) - Covalentleverages big-data technologies to create meaning from.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/bluzelle">BLZ - Bluzelle</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 68 · 💀) - Decentralized storage network for the creator economy. Bluzelle.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> </details> <br> ## Privacy Coins <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Cryptocurrencies which allow users to conduct transactions privately and anonymously._ <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/decred">DCR - Decred</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 2.7K) - Decred aims to build a community-directed digital currency whose..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/decred/dcrd">dcrd</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 730) - Decred daemon in Go (golang). <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/decred/dcrd) (👨‍💻 140 · 🔀 280 · 📦 34K · 📋 520 - 6% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/decred/dcrd ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/decred/dcrwallet">dcrwallet</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 210) - A secure Decred wallet daemon written in Go (golang). <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/decred/dcrwallet) (👨‍💻 64 · 🔀 150 · 📦 120 · 📋 720 - 19% open · ⏱️ 04.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/decred/dcrwallet ``` </details> <br> _15 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/scrtlabs">SCRT - Secret</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 3.5K) - PRIVACY FOR BLOCKCHAINS.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/scrtlabs/SecretNetwork">SecretNetwork</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 520) - The Secret Network. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/scrtlabs/SecretNetwork) (👨‍💻 62 · 🔀 180 · 📥 70K · 📦 2.3K · 📋 590 - 6% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/scrtlabs/SecretNetwork ``` </details> <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/monero-project">XMR - Monero</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 12K) - Cryptocurrency . Users are able to generate XMR through the process of..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/monero-project/monero">monero</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 8.6K) - Monero: the secure, private, untraceable cryptocurrency. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/monero-project/monero) (👨‍💻 390 · 🔀 3K · 📥 32K · 📦 21 · 📋 3.2K - 18% open · ⏱️ 12.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/monero-project/monero ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/monero-project/monero-gui">monero-gui</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 1.6K) - Monero: the secure, private, untraceable cryptocurrency. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/monero-project/monero-gui) (👨‍💻 220 · 🔀 790 · 📥 35K · 📋 1.9K - 21% open · ⏱️ 12.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/monero-project/monero-gui ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/monero-project/monero-site">monero-site</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 260) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/monero-project/monero-site) (👨‍💻 230 · 🔀 360 · 📋 740 - 13% open · ⏱️ 27.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/monero-project/monero-site ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/zcash">ZEC - Zcash</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 6.5K) - Decentralized and open-source cryptocurrency that offers privacy and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/zcash/zcash">zcash</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 4.9K) - Zcash - Internet Money. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/zcash/zcash) (👨‍💻 620 · 🔀 2K · 📥 310 · 📋 3.9K - 27% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/zcash/zcash ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/zcash/librustzcash">librustzcash</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 320) - Rust-language assets for Zcash. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/zcash/librustzcash) (👨‍💻 53 · 🔀 230 · 📦 880 · 📋 540 - 42% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/zcash/librustzcash ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/zcash/zips">zips</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 270) - Zcash Improvement Proposals. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/zcash/zips) (👨‍💻 56 · 🔀 170 · 📋 500 - 42% open · ⏱️ 23.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/zcash/zips ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/zcash/halo2">halo2</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 650) - The Halo2 zero-knowledge proving system. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/zcash/halo2) (👨‍💻 34 · 🔀 430 · 📦 250 · 📋 390 - 63% open · ⏱️ 26.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/zcash/halo2 ``` </details> <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/oxen-io">OXEN</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 5.5K) - Oxen combines a cutting-edge privacy and decentralisation software stack with.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/oxen-io/session-desktop">session-desktop</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Session Desktop - Onion routing based messenger. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/oxen-io/session-desktop) (👨‍💻 160 · 🔀 180 · 📥 5.7M · 📋 1.2K - 25% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/oxen-io/session-desktop ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/oxen-io/session-android">session-android</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 1.7K) - A private messenger for Android. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/oxen-io/session-android) (👨‍💻 250 · 🔀 160 · 📥 240K · 📋 760 - 39% open · ⏱️ 01.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/oxen-io/session-android ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/oxen-io/lokinet">lokinet</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 1.7K · 💤) - Lokinet is an anonymous, decentralized and IP based overlay.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/oxen-io/lokinet) (👨‍💻 40 · 🔀 210 · 📥 110K · 📋 610 - 26% open · ⏱️ 11.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/oxen-io/lokinet ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/oxen-io/oxen-core">oxen-core</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 300 · 💤) - Oxen core repository, containing oxend and oxen cli wallets. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/oxen-io/oxen-core) (👨‍💻 340 · 🔀 110 · 📥 35K · 📋 350 - 32% open · ⏱️ 18.05.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/oxen-io/oxen-core ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/oxen-io/session-ios">session-ios</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 380) - A private messenger for iOS. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/oxen-io/session-ios) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 86 · 📥 2.2K · 📋 300 - 30% open · ⏱️ 28.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/oxen-io/session-ios ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/mimblewimble">GRIN</a></b> (🥈30 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Private & lightweight open source project based on the mimblewimble blockchain..</summary> --- <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/HorizenOfficial">ZEN - Horizen</a></b> (🥈30 · ⭐ 1K) - Zero-knowledge-enabled network of blockchains powered by the largest..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/HorizenOfficial/zen">zen</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 260) - Horizen. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/HorizenOfficial/zen) (👨‍💻 510 · 🔀 120 · 📥 79K · 📋 160 - 9% open · ⏱️ 26.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/HorizenOfficial/zen ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ergoplatform">ERG - Ergo</a></b> (🥈28 · ⭐ 940) - Flexible blockchain protocol. Ergo is designed for developing decentralized..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ergoplatform/ergo">ergo</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 500) - Ergo protocol description & reference client implementation. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC0-1.0">CC0-1.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ergoplatform/ergo) (👨‍💻 52 · 🔀 160 · 📥 46K · 📋 910 - 20% open · ⏱️ 01.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ergoplatform/ergo ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vergecurrency">XVG - Verge</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 1.6K) - Verge coin started its cryptocurrency journey in 2014, going by the name..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vergecurrency/verge">verge</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Official Verge Core Source Code Repository. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/vergecurrency/verge) (👨‍💻 74 · 🔀 410 · 📥 630K · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/vergecurrency/verge ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/mobilecoinfoundation">MOB - MobileCoin</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Cryptocurrency . MobileCoin has a current supply of 250,000,000..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/mobilecoinfoundation/mobilecoin">mobilecoin</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Private payments for mobile devices. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/mobilecoinfoundation/mobilecoin) (👨‍💻 55 · 🔀 140 · 📥 4.6K · 📦 17 · 📋 510 - 46% open · ⏱️ 24.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/mobilecoinfoundation/mobilecoin ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dusk-network">DUSK - Dusk Network</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 1K) - High throughput permissionless blockchain aimed at.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dusk-network/plonk">plonk</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 500) - Pure Rust implementation of the PLONK ZKProof System done by the Dusk-.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3postzC">MPL-2.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dusk-network/plonk) (👨‍💻 23 · 🔀 120 · 📥 13 · 📦 280 · 📋 430 - 4% open · ⏱️ 27.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dusk-network/plonk ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dashevo">DASH</a></b> (🥈27 · ⭐ 550) - Your money, your way.</summary> --- <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/DimensionDev">MASK - Mask Network</a></b> (🥈26 · ⭐ 1.7K) - Core product of Dimension, which is positioned to become.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/DimensionDev/Maskbook">Maskbook</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 1.5K) - The portal to the new, open Internet. ([I:b]). <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3pwmjO5">AGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/DimensionDev/Maskbook) (👨‍💻 69 · 🔀 300 · 📥 2.1K · 📦 3 · 📋 2.2K - 2% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/DimensionDev/Maskbook ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/particl">PART - Particl</a></b> (🥈26 · ⭐ 360) - Open-source and decentralized privacy platform built on the blockchain..</summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nucypher">NU - NuCypher</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 1.6K) - Privacy layer for distributed systems and decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nucypher/nucypher">nucypher</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 690) - Threshold Access Control (TACo) runtimes for the Threshold Network. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3pwmjO5">AGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/nucypher/nucypher) (👨‍💻 52 · 🔀 270 · 📋 1.8K - 10% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/nucypher/nucypher ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vertcoin-project">VTC - Vertcoin</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 560) - Decentralized currency owned by its users, a P2P cryptocurrency in the..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vertcoin-project/vertcoin-core">vertcoin-core</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 350) - A digital currency with mining decentralisation and ASIC.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/vertcoin-project/vertcoin-core) (👨‍💻 1.1K · 🔀 130 · 📥 390K · 📋 110 - 11% open · ⏱️ 11.11.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/vertcoin-project/vertcoin-core ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/keep-network">KEEP - Keep Network</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 420) - Off-chain container for private data. Keeps help contracts.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/BeamMW">BEAM</a></b> (🥉24 · ⭐ 730) - Scalable, fungible, and confidential cryptocurrency based on the Mimblewimble..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/BeamMW/beam">BeamMW/beam</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 700) - Beam: Scalable Confidential Cryptocurrency. Leading the way to.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/BeamMW/beam) (👨‍💻 48 · 🔀 200 · 📥 78K · 📦 5 · 📋 1.7K - 13% open · ⏱️ 19.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/BeamMW/beam ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/firoorg">FIRO</a></b> (🥉23 · ⭐ 800) - Firo - formerly known as Zcoin, is a privacy-focused cryptocurrency that.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/firoorg/firo">firoorg/firo</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 710) - The privacy-focused cryptocurrency. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/firoorg/firo) (👨‍💻 610 · 🔀 350 · 📥 290K · 📋 530 - 3% open · ⏱️ 02.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/firoorg/firo ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hoprnet">HOPR</a></b> (🥉20 · ⭐ 200) - HOPR provides essential and compliant network-level metadata privacy for.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hoprnet/hoprnet">hoprnet</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 200) - HOPR is an open incentivized mixnet which enables privacy-preserving.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/hoprnet/hoprnet) (👨‍💻 67 · 🔀 89 · 📦 3 · 📋 2.1K - 5% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/hoprnet/hoprnet ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/deroproject">DERO</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 940) - General purpose, private and decentralized application platform that allows..</summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/scala-network">XLA - Scala</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 500) - Distributed wealth for all devices.</summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 21 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/PirateNetwork">ARRR - Pirate Chain</a></b> (🥉21 · ⭐ 140) - 100% private send cryptocurrency. It uses a privacy.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/phoreproject">PHR - Phore</a></b> (🥉20 · ⭐ 130 · 💀) - Grounded in sound technology, Phore is composed of a decentralized.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/findoranetwork">FRA - Findora</a></b> (🥉19 · ⭐ 170) - Public blockchain with programmable privacy. Originally conceptualized.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/letheanvpn">LTHN - Lethean</a></b> (🥉17 · ⭐ 180) - Web3 Transit & Data Sovereignty Virtual People Network. - <b><a href="https://github.com/btcz">BTCZ - BitcoinZ</a></b> (🥉17 · ⭐ 120) - BitcoinZ is based on Bitcoin + zkSNARKs and is a decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/NAVCoin">NAV - NavCoin</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 120 · 💤) - What is Navcoin (NAV)? Navcoin, launched in 2014, is an open-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/aleph-zero-foundation">AZERO - Aleph Zero</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 190) - Enterprise-ready, high-performance blockchain platform with a.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/ApolloFoundation">APL - Apollo Currency</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 94 · 💀) - Utilizing a community of world-class developers, managers,.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/haven-protocol-org">XHV - Haven Protocol</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 38) - Untraceable cryptocurrency with a mix of standard market.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/mwcproject">MWC - MimbleWimbleCoin</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 32) - Mimblewimble applied in the base layer. - <b><a href="https://github.com/kryptokrona">XKR - Kryptokrona</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 57) - Private, fast and secure cryptocurrency from the nordic region. - <b><a href="https://github.com/sero-cash">SERO - Super Zero</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 140 · 💀) - Worlds first privacy protection platform for decentralised.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/ryo-currency">RYO - Ryo Currency</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 77 · 💀) - Ryo is one of very few cryptonote currencies that does actual,.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/masari-project">MSR - Masari</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 73 · 💀) - Masari describes itself as a fungible, secure, and private.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/aliascash">ALIAS</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 59 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . Alias has a current supply of 27,174,521.61 with 0 in.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/turtlecoin">TRTL - TurtleCoin</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 860 · 💀) - Privacy coin that is forked from Bytecoin. Because of this,.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/CloakProject">CLOAK - CloakCoin</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 38 · 💀) - Completely secure, fully private and untraceable digital cash.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/DecentricCorp">COVAL - Circuits of Value</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 60 · 💀) - NFT platform that enables cross-chain transfers of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/DAPSCoin">DAPS - DAPS Coin</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 52 · 💀) - Privacy coin that aims to be the most private and secure.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/PIVX-Project">PIVX</a></b> (🥉1) - PIVX, a cutting edge User Data Protection oriented blockchain project and cryptocurrency,.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/hyle-team">ZANO</a></b> (🥉1) - Development of a scalable and secure coin, designed for use in e-commerce. The technology.. </details> <br> ## Automated Market Maker (AMM) <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Mechanisms used by most decentralized exchanges to facilitate permissionless trading._ <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap">UNI - Uniswap</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 28K) - Governance token for Uniswap, an Automated Market Marker DEX on.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/interface">interface</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 4.7K) - Open source interfaces for the Uniswap protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/interface) (👨‍💻 190 · 🔀 4.8K · 📋 2.2K - 33% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/interface ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/web3-react">web3-react</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 5.4K · 💤) - A simple, maximally extensible, dependency minimized.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/web3-react) (👨‍💻 55 · 🔀 1.5K · 📦 35K · 📋 490 - 33% open · ⏱️ 02.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/web3-react ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/default-token-list">default-token-list</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 300) - The Uniswap default token list. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/default-token-list) (👨‍💻 19 · 🔀 890 · 📦 3 · 📋 1.4K - 86% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/default-token-list ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/token-lists">token-lists</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 1.3K) - The Token Lists specification. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/token-lists) (👨‍💻 18 · 🔀 900 · 📋 280 - 81% open · ⏱️ 26.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/token-lists ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/smart-order-router">smart-order-router</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 370) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/smart-order-router) (👨‍💻 30 · 🔀 360 · 📦 4 · 📋 120 - 45% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/smart-order-router ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-periphery">v3-periphery</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 1.1K · 💤) - Peripheral smart contracts for interacting with Uniswap v3. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2KucAZR">GPL-2.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-periphery) (👨‍💻 16 · 🔀 1K · 📦 3 · 📋 170 - 40% open · ⏱️ 27.09.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-periphery ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/v2-sdk">v2-sdk</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 420) - An SDK for building applications on top of Uniswap V2. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/v2-sdk) (👨‍💻 10 · 🔀 1.1K · 📦 3 · 📋 58 - 32% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/v2-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-sdk">v3-sdk</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 540) - An SDK for building applications on top of Uniswap V3. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-sdk) (👨‍💻 18 · 🔀 400 · 📦 8 · 📋 98 - 45% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/v2-subgraph">v2-subgraph</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 390) - Uniswap V2 subgraph. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/v2-subgraph) (👨‍💻 15 · 🔀 700 · 📋 91 - 54% open · ⏱️ 23.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/v2-subgraph ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-staker">v3-staker</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 350) - Canonical liquidity mining contract for Uniswap V3. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-staker) (👨‍💻 11 · 🔀 200 · 📦 2 · 📋 120 - 17% open · ⏱️ 26.01.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-staker ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-subgraph">v3-subgraph</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 310) - Subgraph for Uniswap V3. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-subgraph) (👨‍💻 24 · 🔀 400 · 📋 110 - 81% open · ⏱️ 12.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/v3-subgraph ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Uniswap/docs">Uniswap/docs</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 300) - Uniswap V3 docs website. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Uniswap/docs) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 480 · 📋 240 - 68% open · ⏱️ 22.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Uniswap/docs ``` </details> <br> _28 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/osmosis-labs">OSMO - Osmosis</a></b> (🥇33 · ⭐ 1.6K) - Token of the Osmosis Hub, first DEX for IBC connected coins.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/osmosis-labs/osmosis">osmosis</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 870) - The AMM Laboratory. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/osmosis-labs/osmosis) (👨‍💻 160 · 🔀 550 · 📥 65K · 📦 21 · 📋 2.2K - 13% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/osmosis-labs/osmosis ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/osmosis-labs/osmosis-frontend">osmosis-frontend</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 210) - Web interface for Osmosis Zone. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/osmosis-labs/osmosis-frontend) (👨‍💻 190 · 🔀 380 · 📦 3 · 📋 440 - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/osmosis-labs/osmosis-frontend ``` </details> <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/pancakeswap">CAKE - PancakeSwap</a></b> (🥈31 · ⭐ 5.7K) - Automated market maker (AMM) that allows two tokens to be.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/pancakeswap/pancake-frontend">pancake-frontend</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 2.6K) - Pancake main features (farms, pools, IFO, lottery,.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/pancakeswap/pancake-frontend) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 3.5K · 📦 16 · 📋 460 - 8% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/pancakeswap/pancake-frontend ``` </details> <br> _15 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/sushiswap">SUSHI</a></b> (🥈29 · ⭐ 3.6K) - DeFi protocol that is completely community-driven, serving up delicious.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/sushiswap/sushiswap">sushiswap</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 1.9K) - Sushi 2.0. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/sushiswap/sushiswap) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 1.5K · 📦 14 · 📋 200 - 4% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/sushiswap/sushiswap ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/sushiswap/sushiswap-interface">sushiswap-interface</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 370) - An open source interface for the SushiSwap Protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/sushiswap/sushiswap-interface) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 710 · 📋 220 - 38% open · ⏱️ 10.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/sushiswap/sushiswap-interface ``` </details> <br> _15 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/balancer-labs">BAL - Balancer</a></b> (🥈29 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Non-custodial portfolio manager, liquidity provider, and price.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/balancer/balancer-v2-monorepo">balancer-v2-monorepo</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 280) - Balancer V2 Monorepo. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/balancer/balancer-v2-monorepo) (👨‍💻 29 · 🔀 290 · 📦 150 · 📋 450 - 10% open · ⏱️ 15.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/balancer-labs/balancer-v2-monorepo ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/1inch">1INCH</a></b> (🥈28 · ⭐ 3.2K) - What is 1inch Network? 1inch Network is a decentralized exchange (DEX).. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/1inch/limit-order-protocol">limit-order-protocol</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 210) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/1inch/limit-order-protocol) (👨‍💻 13 · 🔀 97 · 📦 13 · 📋 35 - 20% open · ⏱️ 26.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/1inch/limit-order-protocol ``` </details> <br> _16 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/curvefi">CRV - Curve DAO Token</a></b> (🥈24 · ⭐ 2.7K) - Similar to Uniswap, Curve Finance is an Automated.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/curvefi/curve-dao-contracts">curve-dao-contracts</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 340 · 💤) - Vyper contracts to be used by Curve DAO. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/curvefi/curve-dao-contracts) (👨‍💻 12 · 🔀 170 · 📋 12 - 75% open · ⏱️ 18.07.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/curvefi/curve-dao-contracts ``` </details> <br> _13 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bancorprotocol">BNT - Bancor</a></b> (🥉18 · ⭐ 1.1K) - What Is Bancor (BNT)? Bancor is the only decentralized staking.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bancorprotocol/contracts-solidity">contracts-solidity</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 830 · 💤) - Bancor Protocol Contracts. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bancorprotocol/contracts-solidity) (👨‍💻 25 · 🔀 420 · 📦 17 · 📋 64 - 9% open · ⏱️ 26.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/bancorprotocol/contracts-solidity ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/anyswap">ANY - Anyswap</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 590 · 💤) - Fully decentralized cross chain swap protocol, based on.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOi" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/orca-so">ORCA</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 340) - Most user-friendly DEX on Solana. Orca is one of the first general-purpose.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 8 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Sifchain">EROWAN - Sifchain</a></b> (🥉17 · ⭐ 110) - Brainchild of Sif, the Norse goddess of earth, agriculture,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/QuickSwap">QUICK - QuickSwap</a></b> (🥉16 · ⭐ 190) - Decentralized exchange (DEX) on the Polygon Network. It is a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/kybernetwork">KNC - Kyber Network</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 840 · 💀) - What Is Kyber Network (KNC)? Kyber Network is a hub of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ubeswap">UBE - Ubeswap</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 36) - Automated market maker on the Celo blockchain. - <b><a href="https://github.com/apeswapfinance">BANANA - ApeSwap</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 95 · 💀) - Decentralized finance (DeFi) platform offering a full.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/coinfi">COFI - CoinFi</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 130) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. CoinFi has a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/SpookySwap">BOO - Spookyswap</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 34 · 💀) - Token for an automated market-making (AMM) decentalized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOi" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Sakeswap">SAKE - SakeToken</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 32 · 💀) - First governance token in DeFi that supports both spot.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> </details> <br> ## Metaverse, NFTs & Gaming <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Blockchains related to Metaverse, NFTs & Gaming._ <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dfinity">ICP - Internet Computer</a></b> (🥇39 · ⭐ 6.3K) - Worlds first blockchain that is capable of running at web..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dfinity/ic">ic</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 1.5K) - Internet Computer blockchain source: the client/replica software run.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dfinity/ic) (👨‍💻 190 · 🔀 290 · 📥 2.5K · 📦 3 · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dfinity/ic ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dfinity/candid">candid</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 270) - Candid Library for the Internet Computer. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dfinity/candid) (👨‍💻 46 · 🔀 81 · 📥 130K · 📦 3.1K · 📋 140 - 36% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dfinity/candid ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dfinity/motoko">motoko</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 480) - Simple high-level language for writing Internet Computer canisters. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dfinity/motoko) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 92 · 📥 230K · 📋 890 - 39% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dfinity/motoko ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dfinity/internet-identity">internet-identity</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 370) - Internet Identity, a blockchain authentication system.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dfinity/internet-identity) (👨‍💻 56 · 🔀 120 · 📥 360K · 📦 3 · 📋 100 - 32% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dfinity/internet-identity ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dfinity/examples">dfinity/examples</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 500) - Example applications, microservices, and code samples for.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dfinity/examples) (👨‍💻 95 · 🔀 300 · 📋 84 - 70% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dfinity/examples ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dfinity/motoko-base">motoko-base</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 470) - The Motoko base library. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dfinity/motoko-base) (👨‍💻 30 · 🔀 96 · 📋 210 - 74% open · ⏱️ 19.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dfinity/motoko-base ``` </details> <br> _21 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nervosnetwork">CKB - Nervos Network</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 2.8K) - Layered crypto-economy network. Nervos separates the..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nervosnetwork/ckb">ckb</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 1.1K) - The Nervos CKB is a public permissionless blockchain, and the layer 1 of.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/nervosnetwork/ckb) (👨‍💻 58 · 🔀 220 · 📥 56K · 📦 190 · 📋 480 - 11% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/nervosnetwork/ckb ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nervosnetwork/ckb-vm">ckb-vm</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 340) - CKBs vm, based on open source RISC-V ISA. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/nervosnetwork/ckb-vm) (👨‍💻 18 · 🔀 67 · 📦 790 · 📋 38 - 13% open · ⏱️ 11.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/nervosnetwork/ckb-vm ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nervosnetwork/rfcs">rfcs</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 260) - This repository contains proposals, standards and documentations related to.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/nervosnetwork/rfcs) (👨‍💻 60 · 🔀 160 · 📋 68 - 27% open · ⏱️ 08.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/nervosnetwork/rfcs ``` </details> <br> _14 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/decentraland">MANA - Decentraland</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 3.1K) - Ethereum-powered virtual reality platform. In this.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/decentraland/marketplace">marketplace</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Decentralands NFT Marketplace. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/decentraland/marketplace) (👨‍💻 26 · 🔀 650 · 📦 12 · 📋 890 - 14% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/decentraland/marketplace ``` </details> <br> _21 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Conflux-Chain">CFX - Conflux Network</a></b> (🥈29 · ⭐ 840) - What is Conflux Conflux is a permissionless Layer 1..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Conflux-Chain/conflux-rust">conflux-rust</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 640) - The official Rust implementation of Conflux protocol... <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Conflux-Chain/conflux-rust) (👨‍💻 42 · 🔀 180 · 📥 31K · 📋 580 - 15% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Conflux-Chain/conflux-rust ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/rmrk-team">RMRK</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 370) - Most advanced nft system in the world, adding eternal liquidity and multi.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/worldwide-asset-exchange">WAXP - WAX</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 340) - Purpose-built blockchain and protocol token designed to make e-commerce..</summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/immutable">IMX - Immutable X</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 300) - Native token for the Immutable X network, the first zk-rollup.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/axieinfinity">AXS - Axie Infinity</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 260) - Governance token for the Axie Infinity game. Token holders.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aavegotchi">GHST - Aavegotchi</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 420) - Eco-governance token of Aavegotchi. Use GHST to purchase.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aavegotchi/aavegotchi-contracts">aavegotchi-contracts</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 310) - Aavegotchi diamond and its facets, deployment and.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/aavegotchi/aavegotchi-contracts) (👨‍💻 22 · 🔀 130 · 📋 91 - 15% open · ⏱️ 21.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/aavegotchi/aavegotchi-contracts ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/thesandboxgame">SAND - The Sandbox</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 210) - Community-driven platform where creators can monetize voxel.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 17 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/monacoinproject">MONA - MonaCoin</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 330 · 💀) - Native ERC-20 token for the DIGITALAX platform. It is the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/FeatherCoin">FTC - Feathercoin</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 130) - Open source cryptocurrency, published under the license of MIT /.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/gemhq">GEM - NFTmall</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 180 · 💀) - What is NFTmall (GEM)? NFTmall- Pioneers of Multichain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/enjin">ENJ - Enjin Coin</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 170 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency for virtual goods created by Enjin. Enjin.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Neos-Metaverse">NCR - Neos Credits</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 230 · 💀) - Metaverse engineered for the unknown. Its one of the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/SINOVATEblockchain">SIN - SINOVATE</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 62 · 💀) - Metaverse multi-player game built on Blockchain Technology,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/bosonprotocol">BOSON - Boson Protocol</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 69 · 💀) - Trust minimised and cost minimised protocol that.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/assetmantle">MNTL - AssetMantle</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 44) - Multi-tenant NFT marketplace framework that enables creators.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/adshares">ADS - Adshares</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 38) - Web3 protocol for monetization space in the Metaverse. Adserver.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/staratlasmeta">POLIS - Star Atlas DAO</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 39) - Next-gen gaming metaverse emerging from the confluence.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/XYOracleNetwork">XYO</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 110 · 💀) - Our project is called the XY Oracle Network (XYO Network). The XYO Network.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/allartprotocol">AART - ALL.ART</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 280 · 💀) - ALL.ART Protocol brings better NFT standards, proper ownership.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/blocklords">CWS - Crowns</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 80 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/dypfinance">DYP - DeFi Yield Protocol</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 190 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2020and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/dopedao">PAPER - Dope Wars Paper</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 110 · 💀) - A DAO for the streets. Build a character and develop.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/DefiKingdoms">JEWEL - DeFi Kingdoms</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 110 · 💀) - DeFi Kingdoms blends the appeal of decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOK" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/phantasma-io">SOUL - Phantasma</a></b> (🥉4 · 💀) - Fully interoperable, decentralized feature rich blockchain. With its.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> </details> <br> ## Top Internet of Things (IOT) <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> _Blockchains designed to facilitate the exchange of data and payment information with other IoT devices._ <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotaledger">MIOTA - IOTA</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 6.6K) - Distributed ledger for the Internet of Things. The first ledger with..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotaledger/wasp">wasp</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 280) - Node for IOTA Smart Contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iotaledger/wasp) (👨‍💻 62 · 🔀 140 · 📥 55K · 📦 2 · 📋 420 - 16% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/iotaledger/wasp ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotaledger/firefly">firefly</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 480) - The official IOTA and Shimmer wallet. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iotaledger/firefly) (👨‍💻 39 · 🔀 100 · 📥 130K · 📋 4.3K - 4% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/iotaledger/firefly ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotaledger/goshimmer">goshimmer</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 390 · 💤) - Prototype implementation of IOTA 2.0. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iotaledger/goshimmer) (👨‍💻 57 · 🔀 120 · 📥 63K · 📦 100 · 📋 760 - 8% open · ⏱️ 29.06.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/iotaledger/goshimmer ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotaledger/iota.go">iota.go</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 360) - IOTA Go API Library. Find documentation on.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iotaledger/iota.go) (👨‍💻 43 · 🔀 94 · 📦 270 · 📋 120 - 1% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/iotaledger/iota.go ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotaledger/identity.rs">identity.rs</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 280) - Implementation of the Decentralized Identity standards such as.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iotaledger/identity.rs) (👨‍💻 38 · 🔀 78 · 📦 120 · 📋 300 - 20% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/iotaledger/identity.rs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotaledger/hornet">hornet</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 310) - HORNET is a powerful IOTA fullnode software. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iotaledger/hornet) (👨‍💻 52 · 🔀 150 · 📥 14K · 📦 26 · 📋 490 - 6% open · ⏱️ 18.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/iotaledger/hornet ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotaledger/stronghold.rs">stronghold.rs</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 500 · 💤) - Stronghold is a secret management engine written in rust. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iotaledger/stronghold.rs) (👨‍💻 31 · 🔀 52 · 📥 33 · 📦 240 · 📋 81 - 13% open · ⏱️ 29.06.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/iotaledger/stronghold.rs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotaledger/iota.rs">iota.rs</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 230 · 💤) - Official IOTA Rust library. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iotaledger/iota.rs) (👨‍💻 70 · 🔀 96 · 📥 33K · 📦 4 · 📋 400 - 2% open · ⏱️ 23.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/iotaledger/iota.rs ``` </details> <br> _29 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/helium">HNT - Helium</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 3.6K) - Decentralized machine network powered by a physical blockchain. The..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/helium/gateway-rs">gateway-rs</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 270) - The Helium Gateway. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/helium/gateway-rs) (👨‍💻 34 · 🔀 110 · 📥 93K · 📦 84 · 📋 160 - 5% open · ⏱️ 22.11.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/helium/gateway-rs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/helium/denylist">denylist</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 200) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/helium/denylist) (👨‍💻 13 · 🔀 220 · 📥 6.8M · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/helium/denylist ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/helium/HIP">HIP</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 580) - Helium Improvement Proposals. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/helium/HIP) (👨‍💻 150 · 🔀 390 · 📋 210 - 11% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/helium/HIP ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/helium/helium-wallet-rs">helium-wallet-rs</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 250) - Rust implementation of a helium wallet CLI. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/helium/helium-wallet-rs) (👨‍💻 27 · 🔀 100 · 📥 23K · 📋 140 - 8% open · ⏱️ 27.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/helium/helium-wallet-rs ``` </details> <br> _22 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vechain">VET - VeChain</a></b> (🥈33 · ⭐ 3.9K) - Launched in 2015 as a private consortium network, the VeChain..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/vechain/thor">thor</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 790) - A general purpose blockchain highly compatible with Ethereums ecosystem. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/vechain/thor) (👨‍💻 30 · 🔀 240 · 📦 18 · 📋 150 - 13% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/vechain/thor ``` </details> <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotexproject">IOTX - IoTeX</a></b> (🥈30 · ⭐ 2K) - Trusted Devices, Trusted Data, Trusted DApps. $IOTX. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iotexproject/iotex-core">iotex-core</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 1.5K) - Official implementation of IoTeX blockchain protocol in Go. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iotexproject/iotex-core) (👨‍💻 93 · 🔀 320 · 📥 64K · 📦 28 · 📋 1.3K - 13% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/iotexproject/iotex-core ``` </details> <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/internxt">INXT - Internxt</a></b> (🥈25 · ⭐ 440) - Peer-To-Peer cloud computing network that allows users from all.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/streamr-dev">XDATA - Streamr XDATA</a></b> (🥉22 · ⭐ 780) - Streamr tokenizes streaming data to enable a new way for.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/streamr-dev/network">network</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 570) - Monorepo containing all the main components of Streamr Network. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/streamr-dev/network) (👨‍💻 37 · 🔀 37 · 📦 680 · 📋 41 - 68% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/streamr-dev/network ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iost-official">IOST</a></b> (🥉21 · ⭐ 640) - IOST is building an ultra-high TPS blockchain infrastructure to meet the security..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iost-official/go-iost">go-iost</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 570) - Official Go implementation of the IOST blockchain. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iost-official/go-iost) (👨‍💻 57 · 🔀 110 · 📋 93 - 51% open · ⏱️ 14.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/iost-official/go-iost ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/airalab">XRT - Robonomics Network</a></b> (🥉17 · ⭐ 400 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/airalab/robonomics">robonomics</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 220 · 💤) - Robonomics node implementation for Polkadot ecosystem. Kusama.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/airalab/robonomics) (👨‍💻 27 · 🔀 60 · 📥 19K · 📋 180 - 7% open · ⏱️ 01.07.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/airalab/robonomics ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/NodleCode">NODL - Nodle Network</a></b> (🥉15 · ⭐ 460) - Nodle Network connects the physical world to Web3 by using..</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 4 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/DigiByte-Core">DGB - DigiByte</a></b> (🥉20 · ⭐ 88) - What is DigiByte? DigiByte is more than a faster digital currency. It.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/CREDITSCOM">CS - Credits</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 150 · 💀) - CREDITS platform offers a new and unique technical implementation of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/alisproject">ALIS</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 240) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. ALIS has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ambrosus">AMB - Ambrosus</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 40 · 💀) - Decentralized autonomous organization governing the Ambrosus.. </details> <br> ## Others <a href="#contents"><img align="right" width="15" height="15" src="https://git.io/JtehR" alt="Back to top"></a> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AleoHQ">ALEO - aleo.org</a></b> (🥇37 · ⭐ 11K) - No description.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AleoHQ/snarkOS">snarkOS</a></b> (🥇33 · ⭐ 3.9K) - A Decentralized Operating System for ZK Applications. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/AleoHQ/snarkOS) (👨‍💻 90 · 🔀 2.5K · 📥 10K · 📦 280 · 📋 690 - 15% open · ⏱️ 04.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/AleoHQ/snarkOS ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AleoHQ/leo">leo</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 4.8K) - The Leo Programming Language. A Programming Language for Formally.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/AleoHQ/leo) (👨‍💻 59 · 🔀 610 · 📥 25K · 📋 21K - 1% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/AleoHQ/leo ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AleoHQ/snarkVM">snarkVM</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 960) - A Virtual Machine for Zero-Knowledge Executions. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/AleoHQ/snarkVM) (👨‍💻 57 · 🔀 1.5K · 📦 770 · 📋 330 - 36% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/AleoHQ/snarkVM ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AleoHQ/sdk">aleo</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 550) - A Software Development Kit (SDK) for Zero-Knowledge Transactions. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/AleoHQ/sdk) (👨‍💻 39 · 🔀 430 · 📥 930 · 📦 58 · 📋 140 - 34% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/AleoHQ/aleo ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AleoHQ/welcome">AleoHQ/welcome</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 310) - Welcome to Aleo. Where Applications Become Zero-Knowledge. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/AleoHQ/welcome) (👨‍💻 53 · 🔀 180 · 📋 92 - 44% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/AleoHQ/welcome ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum-optimism">OP - Optimism</a></b> (🥇37 · ⭐ 8.2K) - Token for the Optimism Collective that governs the Optimism L2..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/optimism">optimism</a></b> (🥇34 · ⭐ 5.1K) - Optimism is Ethereum, scaled. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/optimism) (👨‍💻 280 · 🔀 2.8K · 📦 21K · 📋 1K - 16% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/optimism ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/op-geth">op-geth</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 240) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/op-geth) (👨‍💻 960 · 🔀 530 · 📦 18 · 📋 48 - 54% open · ⏱️ 02.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/op-geth ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/ethereum-optimism.github.io">ethereum-optimism.github.io</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 230) - Unified token list for OP Mainnet, Base, and other OP.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/ethereum-optimism.github.io) (👨‍💻 270 · 🔀 510 · 📦 18 · 📋 66 - 56% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/ethereum-optimism.github.io ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/community-hub">community-hub</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 310) - Optimism Governance Docs. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/community-hub) (👨‍💻 140 · 🔀 410 · 📋 130 - 19% open · ⏱️ 26.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/community-hub ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/cannon">cannon</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 570 · 💤) - On chain interactive fault prover for Ethereum. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/cannon) (👨‍💻 19 · 🔀 160 · 📦 3 · 📋 77 - 6% open · ⏱️ 20.06.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/ethereum-optimism/cannon ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ava-labs">AVAX - Avalanche</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 4.7K) - High throughput smart contract blockchainplatform. Validators.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOb" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanchego">avalanchego</a></b> (🥇35 · ⭐ 2.1K) - Go implementation of an Avalanche node. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanchego) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 620 · 📥 350K · 📦 1.1K · 📋 810 - 26% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanchego ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ava-labs/subnet-evm">subnet-evm</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 240) - Launch your own EVM as an Avalanche Subnet. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ava-labs/subnet-evm) (👨‍💻 46 · 🔀 210 · 📥 1.3M · 📦 120 · 📋 260 - 21% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ava-labs/subnet-evm ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanche-faucet">avalanche-faucet</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 470) - Avalanche Faucet for Fuji Network and Subnets. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanche-faucet) (👨‍💻 28 · 🔀 180 · 📋 16 - 62% open · ⏱️ 18.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanche-faucet ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanchejs">avalanchejs</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 310) - The Avalanche Platform JavaScript Library. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanchejs) (👨‍💻 50 · 🔀 160 · 📥 70 · 📦 3 · 📋 130 - 9% open · ⏱️ 13.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanchejs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanche-wallet">avalanche-wallet</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 230 · 💤) - The Avalanche web wallet. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3aKzpTv">BSD-3</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanche-wallet) (👨‍💻 21 · 🔀 150 · 📋 100 - 68% open · ⏱️ 05.07.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/ava-labs/avalanche-wallet ``` </details> <br> _14 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/onflow">FLOW</a></b> (🥇36 · ⭐ 3.5K) - Flow by Dapper Labs(The company whichcreated CryptoKitties) is a blockchain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/onflow/flow-go">flow-go</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 530) - A fast, secure, and developer-friendly blockchain built to support.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3pwmjO5">AGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/onflow/flow-go) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 160 · 📦 340 · 📋 980 - 40% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/onflow/flow-go ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/onflow/cadence">cadence</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 520) - Cadence, the resource-oriented smart contract programming language. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/onflow/cadence) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 130 · 📦 660 · 📋 940 - 21% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/onflow/cadence ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/onflow/flow-cli">flow-cli</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 200) - The Flow CLI is a command-line interface that provides useful.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/onflow/flow-cli) (👨‍💻 68 · 🔀 60 · 📥 40K · 📦 52 · 📋 550 - 14% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/onflow/flow-cli ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/onflow/flow-go-sdk">flow-go-sdk</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 210) - Tools for building Go applications on Flow. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/onflow/flow-go-sdk) (👨‍💻 70 · 🔀 85 · 📦 630 · 📋 130 - 16% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/onflow/flow-go-sdk ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/onflow/fcl-js">fcl-js</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 320) - FCL (Flow Client Library) - The best tool for building JavaScript.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/onflow/fcl-js) (👨‍💻 75 · 🔀 110 · 📦 59 · 📋 550 - 16% open · ⏱️ 26.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/onflow/fcl-js ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/onflow/flow-nft">flow-nft</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 460) - The non-fungible token standard on the Flow blockchain. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3rvuUlR">Unlicense</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/onflow/flow-nft) (👨‍💻 30 · 🔀 160 · 📦 3 · 📋 77 - 20% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/onflow/flow-nft ``` </details> <br> _12 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aptos-labs">APTOS - AptosLabs</a></b> (🥇34 · ⭐ 6.1K) - No description.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aptos-labs/aptos-core">aptos-core</a></b> (🥇34 · ⭐ 5.8K) - Aptos is a layer 1 blockchain built to support the.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/aptos-labs/aptos-core) (👨‍💻 590 · 🔀 3.5K · 📥 94K · 📦 430 · 📋 2.2K - 25% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/aptos-labs/aptos-core ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ensdomains">ENS - Ethereum Name Service</a></b> (🥇34 · ⭐ 3.9K) - The Ethereum Name Service (ENS) is a distributed,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ensdomains/ens">ens</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 1.2K · 💤) - Implementations for ENS core functionality: The registry, registrars,.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3rqEWVr">BSD-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ensdomains/ens) (👨‍💻 42 · 🔀 500 · 📦 110K · 📋 250 - 36% open · ⏱️ 27.09.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/ensdomains/ens ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ensdomains/ens-contracts">ens-contracts</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 530) - The core contracts of the ENS protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ensdomains/ens-contracts) (👨‍💻 30 · 🔀 350 · 📦 5 · 📋 81 - 66% open · ⏱️ 01.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ensdomains/ens-contracts ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ensdomains/ens-app">ens-app</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 220) - Legacy ENS manager app. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3rqEWVr">BSD-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ensdomains/ens-app) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 270 · 📋 640 - 14% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ensdomains/ens-app ``` </details> <br> _20 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/terra-money">LUNA - Terra</a></b> (🥇34 · ⭐ 3.4K) - Terra 2.0 which will assume the Terra name is a new blockchain launched..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/terra-money/classic-core">classic-core</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 990 · 💤) - GO implementation of the Terra Protocol. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/terra-money/classic-core) (👨‍💻 43 · 🔀 300 · 📥 39K · 📦 13 · 📋 370 - 9% open · ⏱️ 29.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/terra-money/classic-core ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/terra-money/core">terra-money/core</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 380) - GO implementation of the Terra Protocol. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/terra-money/core) (👨‍💻 15 · 🔀 88 · 📥 32K · 📋 78 - 5% open · ⏱️ 07.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/terra-money/core ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/terra-money/terra.js">terra.js</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 260 · 💤) - JavaScript SDK for Terra, written in TypeScript. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/terra-money/terra.js) (👨‍💻 40 · 🔀 150 · 📦 2 · 📋 160 - 9% open · ⏱️ 29.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/terra-money/terra.js ``` </details> <br> _22 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/metaplex-foundation">MPLX - Metaplex</a></b> (🥇33 · ⭐ 5.4K) - Decentralized protocol for the creation, commerce and use of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/metaplex-foundation/metaplex-program-library">metaplex-program-library</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 560) - Smart contracts maintained by the Metaplex team. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/metaplex-foundation/metaplex-program-library) (👨‍💻 67 · 🔀 510 · 📦 11K · 📋 320 - 12% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/metaplex-foundation/metaplex-program-library ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/metaplex-foundation/js">js</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 350) - A JavaScript SDK for interacting with Metaplexs programs. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/metaplex-foundation/js) (👨‍💻 40 · 🔀 180 · 📦 6 · 📋 290 - 20% open · ⏱️ 14.11.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/metaplex-foundation/js ``` </details> <br> _12 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/celestiaorg">CELESTIA</a></b> (🥇33 · ⭐ 2.6K) - Modular consensus and data availability layer that allows anyone to build and..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/celestiaorg/celestia-app">celestia-app</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 320) - PoS application for the consensus portion of the Celestia.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/celestiaorg/celestia-app) (👨‍💻 69 · 🔀 240 · 📥 2.7K · 📦 140 · 📋 1.4K - 16% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/celestiaorg/celestia-app ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/celestiaorg/celestia-node">celestia-node</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 900) - Celestia Data Availability Nodes. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/celestiaorg/celestia-node) (👨‍💻 59 · 🔀 870 · 📥 250 · 📦 55 · 📋 1.4K - 23% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/celestiaorg/celestia-node ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/celestiaorg/celestia-core">celestia-core</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 470) - Celestia node software based on Tendermint. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/celestiaorg/celestia-core) (👨‍💻 290 · 🔀 210 · 📦 33 · 📋 450 - 19% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/celestiaorg/celestia-core ``` </details> <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MixinNetwork">XIN - Mixin</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 3.2K) - Free and lightning fast peer-to-peer transactional network for all.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MixinNetwork/android-app">android-app</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 440) - Android private messenger, crypto wallet and light node to Mixin.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/MixinNetwork/android-app) (👨‍💻 14 · 🔀 94 · 📥 33K · 📋 90 - 50% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/MixinNetwork/android-app ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MixinNetwork/mixin">mixin</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 500) - The Mixin TEE-BFT-DAG network reference implementation. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/MixinNetwork/mixin) (👨‍💻 21 · 🔀 130 · 📥 57K · 📋 66 - 12% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/MixinNetwork/mixin ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MixinNetwork/flutter-plugins">flutter-plugins</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 400) - Flutter plugins used in Mixin Messenger. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/MixinNetwork/flutter-plugins) (👨‍💻 29 · 🔀 160 · 📦 1.5K · 📋 240 - 46% open · ⏱️ 05.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/MixinNetwork/flutter-plugins ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MixinNetwork/ios-app">ios-app</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 490) - iOS private messenger, crypto wallet and light node to Mixin Network. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/MixinNetwork/ios-app) (👨‍💻 14 · 🔀 110 · 📋 66 - 50% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/MixinNetwork/ios-app ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MixinNetwork/flutter-app">flutter-app</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 260) - Mixin Messenger desktop app for macOS, iPadOS, Linux, and Windows.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/MixinNetwork/flutter-app) (👨‍💻 8 · 🔀 57 · 📥 4.1K · 📋 36 - 25% open · ⏱️ 26.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/MixinNetwork/flutter-app ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/celo-org">CELO</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 2K) - Celo enables participation on the Platform, with the opportunity to earn rewards..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/celo-org/celo-monorepo">celo-monorepo</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 680) - Official repository for core projects comprising the Celo.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/celo-org/celo-monorepo) (👨‍💻 220 · 🔀 350 · 📥 120 · 📦 2.6K · 📋 5.2K - 1% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/celo-org/celo-monorepo ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/celo-org/celo-blockchain">celo-blockchain</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 540) - Official repository for the golang Celo Blockchain. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/celo-org/celo-blockchain) (👨‍💻 720 · 🔀 190 · 📥 400 · 📦 19 · 📋 860 - 9% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/celo-org/celo-blockchain ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/livepeer">LPT - Livepeer</a></b> (🥇32 · ⭐ 1.6K) - The Livepeer project aims to deliver a live video streaming.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/livepeer/go-livepeer">go-livepeer</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 530) - Official Go implementation of the Livepeer protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/livepeer/go-livepeer) (👨‍💻 60 · 🔀 160 · 📥 23K · 📦 9 · 📋 1.6K - 15% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/livepeer/go-livepeer ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/livepeer/lpms">lpms</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 280) - Livepeer media server. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/livepeer/lpms) (👨‍💻 22 · 🔀 67 · 📦 37 · 📋 160 - 26% open · ⏱️ 02.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/livepeer/lpms ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nimiq">NIM - Nimiq</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 3.9K) - Nimiq is designed to make cryptocurrencies easy to use for everyone..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nimiq/core-js">core-js</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 990 · 💤) - Official JavaScript implementation of the Nimiq protocol. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/nimiq/core-js) (👨‍💻 46 · 🔀 210 · 📦 100 · 📋 230 - 6% open · ⏱️ 22.09.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/nimiq/core-js ``` </details> <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/golemfactory">GLM - Golem</a></b> (🥇31 · ⭐ 3.7K) - Decentralized supercomputer that is accessible by anyone. The system.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/golemfactory/yagna">yagna</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 360) - An open platform and marketplace for distributed computations. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/golemfactory/yagna) (👨‍💻 47 · 🔀 58 · 📥 15K · 📦 42 · 📋 1.5K - 18% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/golemfactory/yagna ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/matter-labs">ZKSYNC - zkSync Coin</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 12K) - Client driven zk rollup platform from Matter Labs. It is a..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/matter-labs/zksync">zksync</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 4.8K) - zkSync: trustless scaling and privacy engine for Ethereum. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/matter-labs/zksync) (👨‍💻 65 · 🔀 2.5K · 📋 390 - 21% open · ⏱️ 08.11.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/matter-labs/zksync ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/matter-labs/zksync-web-era-docs">zksync-web-v2-docs</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 930) - zkSync Era Documentation. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/matter-labs/zksync-web-era-docs) (👨‍💻 140 · 🔀 810 · 📋 95 - 41% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/matter-labs/zksync-web-v2-docs ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/matter-labs/hardhat-zksync">hardhat-zksync</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 270) - <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/matter-labs/hardhat-zksync) (👨‍💻 29 · 🔀 220 · 📦 3 · 📋 120 - 17% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/matter-labs/hardhat-zksync ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/matter-labs/zksync-wallet-vue">zksync-wallet-vue</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 500) - zkSync web wallet. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/matter-labs/zksync-wallet-vue) (👨‍💻 24 · 🔀 370 · ⏱️ 12.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/matter-labs/zksync-wallet-vue ``` </details> <br> _9 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gitcoinco">GTC - Gitcoin</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 4.7K) - Platform to fund builders looking for meaningful, open source work. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gitcoinco/passport">passport</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 900) - Passport allows users to prove their identity through a secure,.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/gitcoinco/passport) (👨‍💻 33 · 🔀 460 · 📋 1.6K - 35% open · ⏱️ 02.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/gitcoinco/passport ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gitcoinco/web">web</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 1.8K · 💤) - Grow Open Source. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/gitcoinco/web) (👨‍💻 290 · 🔀 860 · 📋 6.1K - 10% open · ⏱️ 01.08.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/gitcoinco/web ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gitcoinco/grants-stack">grants-round</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 300) - Round Manager & Grant Explorer & Project Builder of the.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/gitcoinco/grants-stack) (👨‍💻 44 · 🔀 130 · 📋 2K - 13% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/gitcoinco/grants-round ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cardano-foundation">CML - Camelcoin</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 1.4K) - The camelcoin team aims to create and develop a cryptocurrency..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cardano-foundation/cardano-token-registry">cardano-token-registry</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 260) - <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cardano-foundation/cardano-token-registry) (👨‍💻 1.8K · 🔀 1.6K · 📋 100 - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cardano-foundation/cardano-token-registry ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cardano-foundation/developer-portal">developer-portal</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 370) - The Cardano Developer Portal. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cardano-foundation/developer-portal) (👨‍💻 210 · 🔀 870 · 📋 120 - 19% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cardano-foundation/developer-portal ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cardano-foundation/CIPs">CIPs</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 460) - <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=CC-BY-4.0">CC-BY-4.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cardano-foundation/CIPs) (👨‍💻 110 · 🔀 260 · 📋 190 - 50% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cardano-foundation/CIPs ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/planetarium">WNCG - Wrapped NCG</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 920) - Open source, decentralized RPG network powered by the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/planetarium/libplanet">libplanet</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 500) - Blockchain in C#/.NET for on-chain, decentralized gaming. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=LGPL-2.1">LGPL-2.1</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/planetarium/libplanet) (👨‍💻 75 · 🔀 140 · 📥 22K · 📦 43 · 📋 870 - 8% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/planetarium/libplanet ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/planetarium/NineChronicles">NineChronicles</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 350) - Unity client application for Nine Chronicles, a fully.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3pwmjO5">AGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/planetarium/NineChronicles) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 130 · 📥 9 · 📋 770 - 24% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/planetarium/NineChronicles ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MysteriumNetwork">MYST - Mysterium</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 1.5K) - Launched on 02/03/2022 by a team based in the United States,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/mysteriumnetwork/node">mysteriumnetwork/node</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Mysterium Network Node - official implementation of.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/mysteriumnetwork/node) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 310 · 📥 4.5M · 📦 6 · 📋 3.5K - 2% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/mysteriumnetwork/node ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/mysteriumnetwork/mysterium-vpn-mobile">mysterium-vpn-mobile</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 200) - Mobile client for Mysterium Network. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/mysteriumnetwork/mysterium-vpn-mobile) (👨‍💻 27 · 🔀 45 · 📥 75K · 📋 140 - 37% open · ⏱️ 15.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/mysteriumnetwork/mysterium-vpn-mobile ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/tonlabs">EVER - Everscale</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 980) - Fast, secure and scalable network with near-zero fees, which.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _11 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/blockstream">BMN - BlockStream Mining Notes</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 3.2K) - BlockStream Mining Notes (BMN) is a cryptocurrency ...</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Blockstream/esplora">esplora</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 930) - Explorer for Bitcoin and Liquid. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Blockstream/esplora) (👨‍💻 31 · 🔀 370 · 📋 330 - 49% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Blockstream/esplora ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Blockstream/Jade">Jade</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 280) - Jade hardware wallet. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Blockstream/Jade) (👨‍💻 14 · 🔀 38 · 📋 110 - 31% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Blockstream/Jade ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Blockstream/satellite">satellite</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 960) - Blockstream Satellite. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Blockstream/satellite) (👨‍💻 6 · 🔀 150 · 📋 66 - 9% open · ⏱️ 23.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/Blockstream/satellite ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/JoinColony">CLNY - Colony Network Token</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Hybrid token that contains attributes of government.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOK" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/JoinColony/colonyNetwork">colonyNetwork</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 440) - Colony Network smart contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/JoinColony/colonyNetwork) (👨‍💻 41 · 🔀 110 · 📋 420 - 17% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/JoinColony/colonyNetwork ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/agoric">IST - ST Project</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 630) - No description.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Agoric/agoric-sdk">agoric-sdk</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 300) - monorepo for the Agoric Javascript smart contract platform. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Agoric/agoric-sdk) (👨‍💻 77 · 🔀 190 · 📥 1.7K · 📦 140 · 📋 4.4K - 33% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Agoric/agoric-sdk ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/subquery">SQT - Squidgame Token</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 19K · 📈) - Data-as-a-service provider that aggregates and organises..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/subquery/subql">subql</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 19K · 📈) - SubQuery is an Open, Flexible, Fast and Universal data indexing.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/subquery/subql) (👨‍💻 34 · 🔀 300 · 📦 9.9K · 📋 670 - 11% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/subquery/subql ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ton-blockchain">TON - Toncoin</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 4K) - The next gen network to unite all blockchains and the existing.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ton-blockchain/ton">ton</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 2.4K) - Main TON monorepo. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ton-blockchain/ton) (👨‍💻 41 · 🔀 640 · 📥 9.2K · 📋 440 - 27% open · ⏱️ 10.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ton-blockchain/ton ``` </details> <br> _16 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AudiusProject">AUDIO - Audius</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Native platform token of the Audius streaming protocol. AUDIO is.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AudiusProject/audius-protocol">audius-protocol</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 550) - The Audius Protocol - Freedom to share, monetize, and.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/AudiusProject/audius-protocol) (👨‍💻 43 · 🔀 110 · 📥 1.8K · 📦 3 · 📋 80 - 68% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/AudiusProject/audius-protocol ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Groestlcoin">GRS - Groestlcoin</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 850) - What is Groestlcoin? Groestlcoin is a proof of work cryptocurrency..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Groestlcoin/groestlcoin">groestlcoin</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 800) - Groestlcoin Core integration/staging tree. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Groestlcoin/groestlcoin) (👨‍💻 1.2K · 🔀 21 · 📥 33K · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Groestlcoin/groestlcoin ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/connext">CNXT - Connext</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 740) - No description.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/connext/monorepo">monorepo</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 280) - Connext is a modular stack for trust-minimized, generalized communication.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/connext/monorepo) (👨‍💻 54 · 🔀 140 · 📦 320 · 📋 2.7K - 7% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/connext/monorepo ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/klaytn">KLAY - Klaytn</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 700) - Public blockchain focused on the metaverse, gamefi, and the creator..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/klaytn/klaytn">klaytn</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 370) - Official Go implementation of the Klaytn protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/klaytn/klaytn) (👨‍💻 68 · 🔀 190 · 📦 77 · 📋 340 - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/klaytn/klaytn ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hummingbot">HBOT - Hummingbot</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 7.6K) - The Hummingbot Governance Token (HBOT) is a standard ERC-20.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hummingbot/hummingbot">hummingbot</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 7.3K) - Open source software that helps you create and deploy high-.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/hummingbot/hummingbot) (👨‍💻 260 · 🔀 2.5K · 📥 30 · 📋 3K - 12% open · ⏱️ 26.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/hummingbot/hummingbot ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/opencog">AGI - SingularityNET</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 4K) - The creators of Singularity also created the citizen robot..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/opencog/atomspace">atomspace</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 780) - The OpenCog (hyper-)graph database and graph rewriting system. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/opencog/atomspace) (👨‍💻 150 · 🔀 220 · 📋 610 - 12% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/opencog/atomspace ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/opencog/link-grammar">link-grammar</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 380) - The CMU Link Grammar natural language parser. <code><a href="https://tldrlegal.com/search?q=LGPL-2.1">LGPL-2.1</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/opencog/link-grammar) (👨‍💻 42 · 🔀 110 · 📋 370 - 22% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/opencog/link-grammar ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MinaProtocol">MINA - Mina Protocol</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 2.1K) - The worlds lightest blockchain, powered by participants. Mina..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/MinaProtocol/mina">mina</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 1.9K) - Mina is a cryptocurrency protocol with a constant size blockchain,.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/MinaProtocol/mina) (👨‍💻 120 · 🔀 500 · 📥 1K · 📦 3 · 📋 6.4K - 21% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/MinaProtocol/mina ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ovrclk">AKT - Akash Network</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 1.5K) - Worlds first decentralized cloud computing marketplace, and..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/akash-network/node">node</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 850) - Source code for Akash node, a secure, transparent, and peer-to-peer cloud.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/akash-network/node) (👨‍💻 31 · 🔀 200 · 📥 29K · 📦 7 · ⏱️ 01.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/akash-network/node ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoin-abc">XEC - eCash</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Derived from one of the most trusted names in the cryptocurrency space,..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Bitcoin-ABC/bitcoin-abc">bitcoin-abc</a></b> (🥇30 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Bitcoin ABC develops node software and infrastructure for the eCash.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Bitcoin-ABC/bitcoin-abc) (👨‍💻 860 · 🔀 820 · 📥 9.4K · 📦 5 · 📋 380 - 22% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Bitcoin-ABC/bitcoin-abc ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/onearmy">OAC - ONE ARMY COIN</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 1.3K) - One Army Coin (OAC) is set up to empower green projects and..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ONEARMY/community-platform">community-platform</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 1K) - A platform to build useful communities that aim to tackle.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ONEARMY/community-platform) (👨‍💻 160 · 🔀 340 · 📋 1.1K - 8% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ONEARMY/community-platform ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/TP-Lab">TPT - TokenPocket Token</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 1.1K) - TPT stands for TokenPocket Token. It is a utility.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/TP-Lab/tokens">TP-Lab/tokens</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 300) - Token assets for TokenPocket. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/TP-Lab/tokens) (👨‍💻 4K · 🔀 6K · 📋 340 - 2% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/TP-Lab/tokens ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/rsksmart">RBTC - RSK Smart Bitcoin</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 960) - First open-source smart contract platform with a 2-way..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/rsksmart/rskj">rskj</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 670) - RSKj is a Java implementation of the RSK protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/rsksmart/rskj) (👨‍💻 85 · 🔀 260 · 📥 12K · 📋 510 - 49% open · ⏱️ 03.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/rsksmart/rskj ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/spacemeshos">SMH</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 950) - No description.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/spacemeshos/go-spacemesh">go-spacemesh</a></b> (🥇29 · ⭐ 740) - Go Implementation of the Spacemesh protocol full node. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/spacemeshos/go-spacemesh) (👨‍💻 86 · 🔀 210 · 📥 1.3K · 📦 48 · 📋 2.5K - 8% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/spacemeshos/go-spacemesh ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/starcoinorg">STC - Student Coin</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 1.5K) - Starcoin is A Layered Smart Contract and Decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/starcoinorg/starcoin">starcoin</a></b> (🥇28 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Starcoin - A Move smart contract blockchain network that scales by.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/starcoinorg/starcoin) (👨‍💻 53 · 🔀 280 · 📥 9.5K · 📦 170 · 📋 1K - 16% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/starcoinorg/starcoin ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aurora-is-near">AURORA</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 970) - EVM built on the NEAR Protocol, delivering a turn-key solution for.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/aurora-is-near/aurora-engine">aurora-engine</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 320) - Aurora Engine implements an Ethereum Virtual Machine.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/aurora-is-near/aurora-engine) (👨‍💻 26 · 🔀 76 · 📥 2.6K · 📦 270 · 📋 170 - 46% open · ⏱️ 16.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/aurora-is-near/aurora-engine ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Near-One/rainbow-bridge">rainbow-bridge</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 320) - NEAR Ethereum Decentralized Bridge. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Near-One/rainbow-bridge) (👨‍💻 35 · 🔀 96 · 📦 8 · 📋 390 - 33% open · ⏱️ 28.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/aurora-is-near/rainbow-bridge ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/kaspanet">KAS - Kaspa</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 760) - Proof-of-work cryptocurrency which implements the GHOSTDAG protocol...</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/kaspanet/kaspad">kaspad</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 420) - Kaspad is the reference full node Kaspa implementation written in Go.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/kaspanet/kaspad) (👨‍💻 130 · 🔀 210 · 📥 44K · 📦 80 · 📋 430 - 49% open · ⏱️ 12.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/kaspanet/kaspad ``` </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/kaspanet/rusty-kaspa">rusty-kaspa</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 340) - Kaspa full-node and related libraries in the Rust programming.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3hkKRql">ISC</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/kaspanet/rusty-kaspa) (👨‍💻 20 · 🔀 97 · 📥 2.7K · 📋 120 - 52% open · ⏱️ 05.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/kaspanet/rusty-kaspa ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/centrifuge">CFG - Centrifuge</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 620) - The centrifuge token model powers centrifuge, providing the..</summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/witnet">WIT - Witnet</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 620) - The Witnet protocol enables smart contracts to realize their true..</summary> --- <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/irisnet">IRIS - IRISnet</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 500) - Inter-chain Service Infrastructure and Protocol Technology Foundation..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/irisnet/irishub">irishub</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 300) - A BPoS blockchain that enables cross-chain interoperability through a.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/irisnet/irishub) (👨‍💻 74 · 🔀 120 · 📥 3.1K · 📋 630 - 1% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/irisnet/irishub ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/pontem-network">PONT - Pontem Network</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 430) - No description.</summary> --- <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dapphub">CHAI</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 4K · 💤) - No description.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dapphub/dapptools">dapptools</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 2K · 💤) - Dapp, Seth, Hevm, and more. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dapphub/dapptools) (👨‍💻 100 · 🔀 340 · 📥 680 · 📋 430 - 39% open · ⏱️ 20.07.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/dapphub/dapptools ``` </details> <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/superalgos">SA - Superalgos</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 3.9K) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the BNB Smart Chain (BEP20).. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Superalgos/Superalgos">Superalgos</a></b> (🥇27 · ⭐ 3.9K) - Free, open-source crypto trading bot, automated bitcoin /.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Superalgos/Superalgos) (👨‍💻 230 · 🔀 5.4K · 📥 8.8K · 📋 460 - 17% open · ⏱️ 31.01.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Superalgos/Superalgos ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hop-protocol">HOP - Hop Protocol</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 3.2K) - Protocol for sending tokens across rollups and their shared.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hop-protocol/hop">hop</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 2.8K) - Hop Protocol Monorepo. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/hop-protocol/hop) (👨‍💻 15 · 🔀 180 · 📦 10 · 📋 240 - 13% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/hop-protocol/hop ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/skalenetwork">SKL - SKALE</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 630) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2020and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/namecoin">NMC - Namecoin</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 590) - Domain name registry service and was the first coin to fork Bitcoin...</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/namecoin/namecoin-core">namecoin-core</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 450) - Namecoin full node + wallet based on the current Bitcoin Core.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/namecoin/namecoin-core) (👨‍💻 1.2K · 🔀 150 · 📋 320 - 44% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/namecoin/namecoin-core ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Phala-Network">PHA - Phala Network</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 360) - Cryptocurrency . Phala Network has a current supply of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Phala-Network/phala-blockchain">phala-blockchain</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 330) - The Phala Network Blockchain, pRuntime and the bridge. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Phala-Network/phala-blockchain) (👨‍💻 39 · 🔀 150 · 📥 1.3K · 📦 200 · 📋 300 - 35% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Phala-Network/phala-blockchain ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/adamant-im">ADM - ADAMANT Messenger</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 2.3K) - True Blockchain messenger, independent from governments,..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Adamant-im/adamant-im">adamant-im</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 520) - ADAMANT Decentralized Messenger. Progressive Web Application (PWA). <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Adamant-im/adamant-im) (👨‍💻 30 · 🔀 56 · 📥 23K · 📋 32 - 40% open · ⏱️ 19.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Adamant-im/adamant-im ``` </details> <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/okcashpro">OK - OKCash</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 1.1K) - OK is open-source; its design is public, nobody owns or.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/okcashpro/okcash">okcash</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Okcash: Your Eco-Friendly, Multi-Chain Digital Currency. Open-source and.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/okcashpro/okcash) (👨‍💻 160 · 🔀 840 · 📥 9K · ⏱️ 16.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/okcashpro/okcash ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/unlock-protocol">UDT - Unlock Protocol</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 810) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/unlock-protocol/unlock">unlock</a></b> (🥇26 · ⭐ 810) - nlock is a protocol for memberships built on a blockchain. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/unlock-protocol/unlock) (👨‍💻 80 · 🔀 230 · 📦 4 · 📋 2.5K - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/unlock-protocol/unlock ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nknorg">NKN</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 560) - NKN is building the largest blockchain for network sharing. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _8 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/concordium">CCD - Concordium</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 530) - Concordium offers a trustable state-of-the-science solution with..</summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/symbol">XYM - Symbol</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 310) - Symbol is financial fabric for everyone. The spiritual successor to NEM,..</summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/idena-network">IDNA - Idena</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 250 · 💤) - Novel way to formalise people on the blockchain without.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/alephium">ALPH - Alephium</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 220) - First operational sharded blockchain bringing scalability, ETH-..</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/originprotocol">OGN - Origin Protocol</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 1.4K) - Governance and value accrual token for Origin Story... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OriginProtocol/origin">OriginProtocol/origin</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 650 · 💤) - Monorepo for our developer tools and decentralized.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OriginProtocol/origin) (👨‍💻 190 · 🔀 210 · 📋 1.5K - 28% open · ⏱️ 20.09.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/OriginProtocol/origin ``` </details> <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/saber-hq">SBR - Saber</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 1K) - Cross-chain stablecoin exchange on Solana. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/saber-hq/stable-swap">stable-swap</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 400) - StableSwap by Saber: an automated market maker for mean-.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/saber-hq/stable-swap) (👨‍💻 7 · 🔀 120 · 📥 1.1K · 📦 100 · 📋 15 - 26% open · ⏱️ 01.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/saber-hq/stable-swap ``` </details> <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AcalaNetwork">KAR - Karura</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 1K) - All-in-one DeFi hub of Kusama. Founded by the Acala Foundation, Karura is..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AcalaNetwork/Acala">Acala</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 720) - Acala - cross-chain DeFi hub and stablecoin based on Substrate for.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/AcalaNetwork/Acala) (👨‍💻 43 · 🔀 240 · 📥 110 · 📋 1K - 16% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/AcalaNetwork/Acala ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dappnode">NODE - Whole Network</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 630) - The DAppNode DAO will be an inclusive hub in which.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dappnode/DAppNode">DAppNode</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 570) - General repository of the project dappnode. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dappnode/DAppNode) (👨‍💻 21 · 🔀 93 · 📥 100K · 📋 430 - 17% open · ⏱️ 18.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/dappnode/DAppNode ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gridcoin-community">GRC - Gridcoin</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 580) - Cryptocurrency . Gridcoin has a current supply of 453,212,614.22992..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gridcoin-community/Gridcoin-Research">Gridcoin-Research</a></b> (🥇25 · ⭐ 580) - Gridcoin-Research. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/gridcoin-community/Gridcoin-Research) (👨‍💻 100 · 🔀 170 · 📥 110K · 📋 1K - 2% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/gridcoin-community/Gridcoin-Research ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/shapeshift">FOX - Shapeshift FOX Token</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 450) - ERC-20 token created by ShapeShift which serves as.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/shapeshift/hdwallet">shapeshift/hdwallet</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 210) - A library for interacting with hardware wallets from JS/TS. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/shapeshift/hdwallet) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 89 · 📋 120 - 36% open · ⏱️ 30.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/shapeshift/hdwallet ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/manta-network">MANTA - Manta Network</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 410) - Plug-and-play privacy-preservation protocol built to service..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Manta-Network/Manta">Manta</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 240) - The main repo for manta blockchain nodes. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Manta-Network/Manta) (👨‍💻 22 · 🔀 120 · 📥 34K · 📦 32 · 📋 660 - 29% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Manta-Network/Manta ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/forta-network">FORT - Forta</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 260) - Real-time detection network for security & operational monitoring.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/veruscoin">VRSC - Verus Coin</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 250) - Verus Coin aims to be the worlds most advanced technology, zero..</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/galacticcouncil">XHDX</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 230) - No description.</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bloxapp">SSV - SSV Network</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 230) - SSV promotes decentralization, security, and liveness across.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/syscoin">SYS - Syscoin</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 220) - Syscoin offers fast, low-cost tokens, assets, and (fractional) NFTs..</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/sunflower-land">SFL - ScarFace Lion</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 1.6K) - First meme token with real life utilities Audited KYCed.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/sunflower-land/sunflower-land">sunflower-land</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 1.5K) - <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/sunflower-land/sunflower-land) (👨‍💻 87 · 🔀 580 · 📋 680 - 6% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/sunflower-land/sunflower-land ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cybercongress">BOOT - Bostrom</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 800) - The knowledge graph of the Great Web.</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cybercongress/go-cyber">go-cyber</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 350) - Your Superintelligence. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cybercongress/go-cyber) (👨‍💻 31 · 🔀 84 · 📥 3.1K · 📦 5 · 📋 390 - 20% open · ⏱️ 27.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cybercongress/go-cyber ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/sentinel-official">DVPN - Sentinel</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 520) - Secure and decentralized VPN for the blockchain age. A modern.. <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/singnet">AGIX - SingularityNET</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 310) - Decentralized marketplace for Artificial Intelligence.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/thematters">SPACE - Space Token</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 300) - Worlds first NFT pixel art co-creation canvas where.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOx" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Polkadex-Substrate">PDEX - Polkadex</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 280) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Polkadex-Substrate/Polkadex">Polkadex</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 280) - An Orderbook-based Decentralized Exchange using the Substrate.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Polkadex-Substrate/Polkadex) (👨‍💻 25 · 🔀 93 · 📥 9.3K · 📋 320 - 2% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Polkadex-Substrate/Polkadex ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/darwinia-network">RING - Darwinia Network</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 270) - Native token of Darwinia Network. Its used to pay for.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/darwinia-network/darwinia">darwinia</a></b> (🥇22 · ⭐ 240) - Darwinia Chain, EVM+, Polkadot parachain and integrating with XCMP. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/darwinia-network/darwinia) (👨‍💻 29 · 🔀 55 · 📥 22K · 📋 570 - 4% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/darwinia-network/darwinia ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/jito-foundation">JITOSOL - Jito Staked SOL</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 250) - The first liquid staking derivative on Solana to.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/jito-foundation/jito-solana">jito-solana</a></b> (🥇24 · ⭐ 250) - Jito Foundation MEV Solana Client. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/jito-foundation/jito-solana) (👨‍💻 530 · 🔀 77 · 📥 2K · 📋 49 - 16% open · ⏱️ 27.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/jito-foundation/jito-solana ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/regen-network">REGEN</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 240) - Token for the Regen Network Platform. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/regen-network/regen-ledger">regen-ledger</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 200) - Blockchain for planetary regeneration. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/regen-network/regen-ledger) (👨‍💻 36 · 🔀 92 · 📥 14K · 📦 9 · 📋 710 - 18% open · ⏱️ 03.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/regen-network/regen-ledger ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ibax-io">IBXC - IBAX Network</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 8.2K) - ## What is IBAX Network(IBAX)? IBAX Network is a public..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/IBAX-io/go-ibax">go-ibax</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 7.9K) - An innovative Blockchain Protocol Platform, which everyone can.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/IBAX-io/go-ibax) (👨‍💻 9 · 🔀 6.6K · 📦 9 · 📋 280 - 34% open · ⏱️ 11.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/IBAX-io/go-ibax ``` </details> <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/energicryptocurrency">NRG - Energi</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 2.4K) - Next-generation proof-of-stake (PoS) cryptocurrency that combines.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/zeriontech">TBX - Tokenbox</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Platform for professionals only. Traders and Funds participating.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/zeriontech/defi-sdk">defi-sdk</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 780) - DeFi SDK Makes Money Lego Work. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/37RvQcA">LGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/zeriontech/defi-sdk) (👨‍💻 12 · 🔀 220 · 📋 58 - 56% open · ⏱️ 27.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/zeriontech/defi-sdk ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iExecBlockchainComputing">RLC - iExec RLC</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 460) - Open-source, decentralized cloud computing platform, running on.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/iExecBlockchainComputing/iexec-sdk">iexec-sdk</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 410) - CLI and JS library allowing developers to easily interact with.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/iExecBlockchainComputing/iexec-sdk) (👨‍💻 19 · 🔀 42 · 📦 140 · 📋 69 - 20% open · ⏱️ 22.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/iExecBlockchainComputing/iexec-sdk ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Minds">MINDS</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 460) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2018and operates on the Ethereum platform. Minds.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/kleros">PNK - Kleros</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 390) - Blockchain Dispute Resolution Layer that provides fast, secure and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/kleros/kleros">kleros</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 240) - Kleros smart contracts. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/kleros/kleros) (👨‍💻 26 · 🔀 79 · 📦 25 · 📋 78 - 25% open · ⏱️ 25.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/kleros/kleros ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/AmbireTech">ADX - Ambire AdEx</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 350) - Ambire AdEx (ADX), previously known as AdEx Network,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/gravity-bridge">G-WETH - Gravity Bridge WETH</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 210) - No description.</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/lukso-network">LYXE - LUKSO</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 200) - Blockchain platform specifically created for the lifestyle.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/district0x">DNT - district0x</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Collective of decentralized and autonomous marketplaces and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/district0x/ethlance">ethlance</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 690) - Ethlance is the first job market platform built entirely on the.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/district0x/ethlance) (👨‍💻 16 · 🔀 130 · 📋 210 - 12% open · ⏱️ 29.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/district0x/ethlance ``` </details> <br> _7 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoin-sv">BSV - Bitcoin SV</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 630) - Bitcoin SV (BSV) emerged following a hard fork of the Bitcoin Cash..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bitcoin-sv/bitcoin-sv">bitcoin-sv</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 630) - Bitcoin SV (Satoshi Vision) is the original Bitcoin. This.. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/bitcoin-sv/bitcoin-sv) (👨‍💻 640 · 🔀 290 · 📋 250 - 3% open · ⏱️ 15.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/bitcoin-sv/bitcoin-sv ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/shard-labs">STMATIC - Lido Staked Matic</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 500) - Liquid staking solution for MATIC backed by industry-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/0xSpaceShard/starknet-devnet">starknet-devnet</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 210) - A local testnet for Starknet. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/0xSpaceShard/starknet-devnet) (👨‍💻 32 · 🔀 73 · ⏱️ 15.12.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/Shard-Labs/starknet-devnet ``` </details> <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/RequestNetwork">REQ - Request</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 380) - What Is Request (REQ)? The Request (REQ) utility token, launched.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/RequestNetwork/requestNetwork">requestNetwork</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 380) - A JavaScript library for interacting with the Request Network.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/RequestNetwork/requestNetwork) (👨‍💻 39 · 🔀 69 · 📦 73 · 📋 170 - 54% open · ⏱️ 06.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/RequestNetwork/requestNetwork ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/brave-intl">BAT - Basic Attention Token</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 370) - Basic Attention Token (BAT) is an open-source,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/notional-labs">DIG - Dig Chain</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 290) - Real estate tokenization, fractionalization, and governance via.. <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/BlocknetDX">ABLOCK - ANY Blocknet</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 280) - No description. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/blocknetdx/blocknet">blocknet</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 220 · 💤) - Official Blocknet cryptocurrency wallet. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/blocknetdx/blocknet) (👨‍💻 770 · 🔀 100 · 📥 120K · 📋 74 - 86% open · ⏱️ 25.10.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/blocknetdx/blocknet ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/jbx-protocol">JBX - Juicebox</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 270) - Build a community around a project, fund it, and program its.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/pokt-foundation">POKT - Pocket Network</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 260) - Blockchain data platform built for applications that uses..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/pokt-network/pocket-core">pocket-core</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 200) - Official implementation of the Pocket Network Protocol. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/pokt-network/pocket-core) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 95 · 📦 21 · 📋 1K - 6% open · ⏱️ 25.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/pokt-network/pocket-core ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/likecoin">LIKE - LikeCoin</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 250) - Decentralized Publishing Infrastructure to empower content.. <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/stride-labs">STRD - Stride</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 230) - Multichain liquid staking zone (appchain) on the Cosmos Blockchain...</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/nos">NOS - Nosana</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 220) - The Nosana Network will be the leading provider of decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/developer-dao">CODE - Developer DAO</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 2K) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. CODE.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _11 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dtube">DTUBE - Dtube Coin</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 1.3K · 💤) - DTube Coin: a utility token for video, it enables.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dtube/dtube">dtube</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 800 · 💤) - d.tube app. A full-featured video sharing website, decentralized. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/dtube/dtube) (👨‍💻 23 · 🔀 190 · 📋 310 - 41% open · ⏱️ 30.06.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/dtube/dtube ``` </details> <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/blockworks-foundation">MNGO - Mango</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 1.1K) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Solana.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _10 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OrchidTechnologies">OXT - Orchid Protocol</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 650) - The Orchid Protocol organizes bandwidth sellers into a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/OrchidTechnologies/orchid">orchid</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 650) - Orchid: VPN, Personal Firewall. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3pwmjO5">AGPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/OrchidTechnologies/orchid) (👨‍💻 21 · 🔀 98 · 📥 12K · 📋 69 - 13% open · ⏱️ 07.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/OrchidTechnologies/orchid ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/yieldprotocol">YIELD - Yield Protocol</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 460 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/interlay">KINT - Kintsugi</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 290) - ## What Is Kintsugi Network (KINT)? Kintsugi is Interlays canary..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/interlay/interbtc">interbtc</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 240) - interBTC: Bitcoin Anywhere. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/interlay/interbtc) (👨‍💻 19 · 🔀 77 · 📥 2.6K · 📋 200 - 46% open · ⏱️ 01.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/interlay/interbtc ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/red">RED</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 270) - The Red community is building the worlds first fullstack and blockchain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/bit-country">NUUM - Metaverse.Network</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 240) - Metaverse.Network Continuum & Bit.Country is a platform &..</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/thetatoken">THETA - Theta Network</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 700) - Decentralized video streaming network that is powered by..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/thetatoken/theta-protocol-ledger">theta-protocol-ledger</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 360) - Reference implementation of the Theta Blockchain.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/thetatoken/theta-protocol-ledger) (👨‍💻 10 · 🔀 86 · 📋 81 - 67% open · ⏱️ 13.11.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/thetatoken/theta-protocol-ledger ``` </details> <br> _5 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/overview">WRT - WingRiders</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 440 · 💤) - Automated market maker (AMM) decentralized exchange (DEX) on..</summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cardstack">CARD - Cardstack</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 370) - Open-source framework and consensus protocol that makes.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/cardstack/cardstack">cardstack</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 330) - The mono-repo for the core Cardstack framework. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/cardstack/cardstack) (👨‍💻 45 · 🔀 65 · 📦 3 · 📋 530 - 2% open · ⏱️ 21.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/cardstack/cardstack ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hypersign-protocol">HID - Hypersign identity</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 260) - Decentralised Identity & Access Management Security.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/hypersign-protocol/hid-node">hid-node</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 220) - A permissionless blockchain network to manage digital identity and.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/hypersign-protocol/hid-node) (👨‍💻 3 · 🔀 21 · 📥 4.4K · 📦 1 · 📋 190 - 1% open · ⏱️ 13.03.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/hypersign-protocol/hid-node ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ao-libre">AOLB - Argentum Online Libre Token B</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 240) - Collaborative project using open-source as a banner...</summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/incognitochain">PRV - Incognito</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 230) - Incognito mode for your crypto. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/integritee-network">TEER - Integritee</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 210) - The Integritee platform enables firms and dApps to process their..</summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/functionland">FULA - Functionland</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 760) - **Functionland** vision is to enable the public to preside over..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/functionland/fx-fotos">fx-fotos</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 660) - Fx Fotos is an opensource gallery app in react native with the same.. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/functionland/fx-fotos) (👨‍💻 13 · 🔀 69 · 📥 26 · 📋 150 - 48% open · ⏱️ 11.04.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/functionland/fx-fotos ``` </details> <br> _1 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/dadi">DADI</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 240) - DADI decentralized web services: a new era of cloud computing services, powered by..</summary> --- <br> _2 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/subsquid">SQD - Subsquid</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 1.2K) - Motivation Decentralized applications require complex and versatile..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/subsquid/squid-sdk">squid-sdk</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 1.2K) - The main repo of the squid SDK. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/2M0xdwT">GPL-3.0</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/subsquid/squid-sdk) (👨‍💻 26 · 🔀 130 · 📦 2 · 📋 97 - 39% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/subsquid/squid-sdk ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/naturalselectionlabs">RSS3</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 720) - Next-generation feed protocol that powers decentralized social, content, and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/celer-network">CELR - Celer Network</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 530) - No description. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _6 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/opynfinance">OSQTH - Opyn Squeeth</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 480) - Opyn is building DeFi-native derivatives and options.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/newton-blockchain">TONCOIN - The Open Network</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 440) - No description.</summary> --- <br> _3 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/arbprotocol">ARB - ARB Protocol</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 440) - Decentralized arbitrage protocol. It is designed to conduct.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/ARBProtocol/solana-jupiter-bot">solana-jupiter-bot</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 440) - ARB Protocol | Automated Arbitrage Bot Using Jupiter. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/34MBwT8">MIT</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/ARBProtocol/solana-jupiter-bot) (👨‍💻 9 · 🔀 160 · 📥 260 · 📦 5 · 📋 28 - 14% open · ⏱️ 14.02.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/ARBProtocol/solana-jupiter-bot ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/uniquenetwork">QTZ - Quartz</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 440) - New user-friendly platform to test extreme innovation in NFTs and build..</summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/primecoin">XPM - Primecoin</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 320 · 💤) - Rather interesting digital currency. It was developed by Sunny..</summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/primecoin/primecoin">primecoin</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 320 · 💤) - Primecoin - Cryptocurrency with Useful PoW Consensus. <code>Unlicensed</code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/primecoin/primecoin) (👨‍💻 180 · 🔀 79 · 📥 15K · 📋 13 - 46% open · ⏱️ 05.06.2023): ``` git clone https://github.com/primecoin/primecoin ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/snowfork">BTRST - Braintrust</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 280) - First decentralized talent network that connects skilled,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/Snowfork/snowbridge">snowbridge</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 280) - A trustless bridge between Polkadot and Ethereum. <code><a href="http://bit.ly/3nYMfla">Apache-2</a></code></summary> - [GitHub](https://github.com/Snowfork/snowbridge) (👨‍💻 24 · 🔀 99 · 📦 2 · 📋 140 - 9% open · ⏱️ 08.05.2024): ``` git clone https://github.com/Snowfork/snowbridge ``` </details> --- </details> <details><summary><b><a href="https://github.com/scryInfo">DDD - Scry.info</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 250) - Worlds first blockchain-based quantitative data providing and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code></summary> --- <br> _4 projects are hidden because they don't fulfill the minimal requirements._ --- </details> <details><summary>Show 319 hidden projects...</summary> - <b><a href="https://github.com/simpleledger">HONK - Honk Honk</a></b> (🥇23 · ⭐ 200 · 💤) - The Clown World meme has been used to state the situation we.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/peggyjv">SOMM - Sommelier</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 190) - Sommelier consists of the Cosmos Stargate SDK, its.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/composablefi">PICA</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 160) - PICA Price Live Data Composable Finance aspires to build an entire ecosystem.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/desmos-labs">DSM - Desmos</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 150) - Native token on the Desmos blockchain. Built with Cosmos SDK,.. <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/provenance-io">HASH - HASH Token</a></b> (🥈21 · ⭐ 83) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/litentry">LIT - Litentry</a></b> (🥈20 · ⭐ 140) - Network that supports DID aggregation protocol and a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/rchain">RHOC - RChain</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 740 · 💀) - Blockchain platform which enables smart contracts. It differs from.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/santiment">SAN - Santiment Network Token</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 170) - Todays crypto-markets are driven by crowd sentiment... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/KILTprotocol">KILT - KILT Protocol</a></b> (🥈19 · ⭐ 170) - Open-source blockchain protocol for issuing verifiable,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9c3v" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/onyx-protocol">XCN - Onyxcoin</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 1.8K · 💀) - Web3 blockchain infrastructure protocol that enables.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/iov-one">IOV - Starname</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 1.3K · 💀) - Starname: Reserve your crypto *name. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/giveth">GIV - Giveth</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 1.2K · 💀) - Community focused on Building the Future of Giving using.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/DistributedCollective">SOV - Sovryn</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 200) - Non-custodial and permission-less smart contract based system for.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/origintrail">TRAC - OriginTrail</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 180) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2018and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/archethic-foundation">UCO - Archethic</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 120) - Layer 1 aiming to create a new Decentralized Internet. Its.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/emercoin">EMC - Emercoin</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 120) - Open-source cryptocurrency which originated from Bitcoin, Peercoin and.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/ingenuity-build">QCK - Quicksilver</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 110) - Permissionless, sovereign Cosmos SDK zone providing liquid staking.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/cheqd">CHEQ - CHEQD Network</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 62) - CHEQD NETWORK are building the trusted/authentic data.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/SelfKeyFoundation">KEY - SelfKey</a></b> (🥈18 · ⭐ 56) - SelfKey provides organizations and individuals with complete.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/DemocracyEarth">UBI - Universal Basic Income</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 2.6K · 💀) - First application to be built on top of the Proof of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/breadwallet">BRD - Bread</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 1.4K · 💀) - Blockchains are quickly becoming the modern equivalent of what.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Neufund">NEU - Neumark</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 490 · 💀) - Community-owned fundraising platform bridging the worlds of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/appstorefoundation">APPC - AppCoins</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 290 · 💀) - Protocol for the App Economy created by the Aptoide App.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/nemproject">LYL - LoyalCoin</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 280 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . LoyalCoin has a current supply of 9,000,000,000.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/factomproject">WFCT - Wrapped FCT</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 210 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/hermeznetwork">HEZ - Hermez Network</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 160 · 💀) - Decentralized zk-rollup focused on scaling payments.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/garlicoinorg">GRLC - Garlicoin</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 140 · 💀) - New, freshly baked cryptocurrency, born from the shitposts.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/X9Developers">XSN - Stakenet</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 94 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2016. Stakenet has a current supply of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/HTMLCOIN">HTML - HTMLCOIN</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 86 · 💀) - Base coin and gas that powers the Althash hybrid blockchain. The.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/qortal">QORT - Qortal</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 70) - Qortal is infrastructure that utilizes blockchain technology with a.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/fioprotocol">FIO - FIO Protocol</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 52) - Decentralized usability layer for the entire blockchain ecosystem.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/gridplus">GRID - Grid+</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 46) - Grid+ leverages the Ethereum blockchain to give consumers direct.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/gobytecoin">GBX - GoByte</a></b> (🥈17 · ⭐ 33 · 💀) - Fastest, most secure & most affordable Proof-of-Work.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mstable">MTA - Meta Finance</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 370 · 💀) - Subsidiary of a mother company that has been operating.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/DAVFoundation">DAV - DAV Coin</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 340 · 💀) - Open source software platform that allows anyone to buy or.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/MASQ-Project">MASQ</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 200) - Complete open source ecosystem for internet freedom. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/everfinance">WAR - WeStarter</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 180) - Wrapped AR introduces a new storage-based paradigm to Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/zeitgeistpm">ZTG - Zeitgeist</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 170) - Decentralized prediction market protocol. Built in Substrate, it is.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/capsule-corp-ternoa">CAPS - Ternoa</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 160) - Memories are an essential part of who we are. If memory plays an.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/energywebfoundation">EWT - Energy Web Token</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 140 · 💤) - Native token of the Energy Web Chain, a public, Proof-.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/novacoin-project">NVC - Novacoin</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 110) - Hybrid Proof of work (POW) / Proof of stake (POS) decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Medibloc">MED - MediBloc</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 100) - MediBlocs healthcare information platform is a personal data ecosystem.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/qlcchain">QLC - QLC Chain</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 100 · 💀) - Next generation public Blockchain for decentralized Network-as-.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/netboxglobal">NBX - Netbox Coin</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 99 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2019. Netbox Coin has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/graft-project">GRFT - Graft</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 82) - GRAFT Blockchain aims to bring a lasting solution to most of the problems.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/duality-solutions">DYN - Dynamic</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 59 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the BNB Smart Chain (BEP20).. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/aviannetwork">AVN - AVIAN</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 54 · 💀) - Avian Network (AVN) is driven by the community, which is fully.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/persistenceOne">XPRT - Persistence</a></b> (🥈16 · ⭐ 42) - Interoperable protocol that provides sovereign environments to.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/lux-core">LUX - LUXCoin</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 4K · 💀) - Financial tools to grow your wealth - stake and earn.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOi" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/tierion">TNT - Tierion</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 430 · 💀) - Tierion is launching a universal platform for data.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/bcnmy">BICO - Biconomy</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 340 · 💀) - Biconomy provides plug-n-play APIs to make web3.0 user-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/1hive">HNY - Honey</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 180) - DAO that issues and distributes a digital currency called Honey. Honey.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/ref-finance">REF - Ref Finance</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 140) - Built on top of the cutting-edge protocol NEAR, Ref Finance is the.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/openstfoundation">OST</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 120 · 💀) - Setting up a blockchain infrastructure is an expensive and complicated.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/CoinBlack">BLK - BlackCoin</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 80 · 💀) - BlackCoin started of as a Proof of Work coin but has evolved.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/viacoin">VIA - Viacoin</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 80 · 💀) - Script-based cryptocurrency derived from Bitcoin. Similar to Bitcoin.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/comdex-official">CMDX - Comdex</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 78) - Comdex - DeFi Infrastructure Layer for Cosmos. - <b><a href="https://github.com/wagerr">WGR - Wagerr</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 69 · 💀) - Wagerr uses distributed blockchain technology to execute.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ainblockchain">AIN - AI Network</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 68) - Blockchain-based, cloud computing network for an open,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/muteio">MUTE</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 40 · 💀) - Mute Switch: Coming Soon. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pkt-cash">WPKT - Wrapped PKT</a></b> (🥈15 · ⭐ 39) - New blockchain powered by PacketCrypt, the worlds first.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/numbersprotocol">NUM - Numbers Protocol</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 4.7K) - Native protocol token of Numbers Protocol. Numbers.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/TokenMarketNet">AMLT</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 1.4K · 💀) - Created by the recognized Blockchain Regtech leader Coinfirm, AMLT is the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/quillhash">AMPT - Amplify Protocol</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 1.3K) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2020and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cryptoblades">KING - CryptoBlades Kingdoms</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 540) - CryptoBlades Kingdoms (KING) is a cryptocurrency.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/solidproof">CRYP - CrypticCoin</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 460) - Cryptocurrency . Users are able to generate CRYP through the.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/0xcert">ZXC - 0xcert</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 340 · 💀) - Open source, a permission-less protocol for certified non-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/shardeum">SHM - Shardeum</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 310) - EVM-based, linearly scalable smart contract platform that provides low.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/exchangeunion">XUC - Exchange Union</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 220 · 💀) - Decentralized network that connects individual.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/HausDAO">HAUS - DAOhaus</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 180) - This HAUS doesnt build itself It takes a community, and HausDAO.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/hifi-finance">MFT - Mainframe</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 160) - Platform for decentralized applications. Resistant to.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/dev-protocol">DEV - Dev Protocol</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 140 · 💤) - Dev Protocol lets GitHub users tokenize their OSS.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/metafam">SEED - MetaGame</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 130) - Community currency for MetaGame. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/across-protocol">ACX - Across Protocol</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 110) - Optimistic cross-chain bridge secured by UMAs optimistic.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/oak-foundation">TUR - Turex</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 100) - Decentralized digital currency based on the Binance Smart Chain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/SmartCash">SMART - SmartCash</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 87 · 💀) - Easy to use, fast, and secure cryptocurrency that supports.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/vegaprotocol">VEGA - Vega Protocol</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 68 · 💤) - Proof-of-stake blockchain, built on top of Tendermint,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/kcc-community">WKCS - Wrapped KCS</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 46) - KRC-20 wrapped version of the Kucoin Token (KCS) used in Kucoin.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/blckchnd">GPH - GraphCoin</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 38 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . GraphCoin has a current supply of 0. The last.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/SyntropyNet">NOIA - Syntropy</a></b> (🥉14 · ⭐ 35 · 💀) - Syntropy is transforming the public internet into a secure.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cocos-bcx">COCOS - COCOS BCX</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 2.1K · 💀) - Cocos Blockchain Expedition is a DAO to enable the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/multichain">XFC - Football Coin</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 820 · 💀) - Digital currency built using technology similar to that of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/dragonchain">DRGN - Dragonchain</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 700 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/gelatodigital">GEL - Gelato</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 570) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. Gelato has a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/zeta-chain">ZETA - ZetaChain</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 410) - What Is ZetaChain (ZETA)? ZetaChain is a novel L1 that has chain-.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/crypto-expert">HBN - HoboNickels</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 360 · 💤) - Digital cryptocurrency that was cloned from the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOx" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/zigzagexchange">ZZ - ZigZag</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 320 · 💤) - Native, easy-to-use, reliable, fully secure and low fee.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/gearbox-protocol">GEAR - Gearbox</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 280) - Generalized leverage protocol: it allows you to take leverage in.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/QuarkChain">QKC - QuarkChain</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 270 · 💀) - Secure, permission-less, scalable, and decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/yoyow-org">YOYOW</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 240 · 💀) - Blockchain-based social media platform developed by senior members of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/kulupu">KLP - Kulupu</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 190 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . Kulupu has a current supply of 28,857,458 with 0 in.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/mailchain">MAILCHAIN</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 180 · 💀) - Mailchain claims to be a Multi-Blockchain Messaging Application. Send.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/saddle-finance">SDL - Saddle Finance</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 170) - Decentralized automated market maker (AMM) on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/presearchofficial">PRE - Presearch</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 170) - Open, decentralized search engine that rewards community members.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/confio">TGD - Tgrade</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 140) - Tgrade is built using revolutionary blockchain technology, smart.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/boggedfinance">BOG - Bogged Finance</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 110 · 💤) - Bogged Finance: Limit Orders, Stop Losses, Sniper,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/PalletOne">PTN - PalletOne</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 87 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/crescent-network">BCRE - Liquid Staking Crescent</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 86 · 💤) - No description. <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/projectpai">PAI - Parrot USD</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 63 · 💀) - DeFi network built on Solana that will include the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/PascalCoin">PASC - Pascal</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 60) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2016. Users are able to generate PASC through.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/Nexusoft">NXS - Nexus</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 59) - Community-driven project with the common vision of a world inspired by.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/qitmeer">PMEER - Qitmeer</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 52 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2019. Qitmeer has a current supply of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/cpchain">CPC - CPChain</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 51 · 💀) - New distributed infrastructure for next generation.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ixofoundation">IXO</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 44) - The ixo protocol defines a new open standard for producing verifiable claims.. <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/marscoin">MARS</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 39) - The protocol consists of pBTC35A tokens and MARS tokens. Each pBTC35A token.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/tokelplatform">TKL - Tokel</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 38) - The future of tokenization. - <b><a href="https://github.com/aurarad">AUR - Auroracoin</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 35) - Cryptocurrency for Iceland that is launched in February 2014... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/safex">SFT - Safex Token</a></b> (🥉13 · ⭐ 30 · 💀) - New digital asset for sport lovers, designed to be used.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/shenanigandapp">PRTCLE - Particle</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 1.7K) - Shenanigan embraces the hard work and dedication it takes to.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/yieldyak">YAK - Yield Yak</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 270) - Easy-to-use tool to earn more yield from DeFi farming on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOb" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/DOSNetwork">DOS - DOS Network</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 270 · 💀) - DOS Network - A Decentralized Oracle Service supporting.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/dappradar">RADAR - DappRadar</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 240) - The Worlds Dapp Store - tracking and ranking all.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/EveripediaNetwork">IQ - Everipedia</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 220 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency dedicated to the future of knowledge. The.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ChorusOne">STSOL - Lido Staked SOL</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 190 · 💀) - Lido-DAO governed liquid staking protocol for the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/guardaco">GETH - Guarded Ether</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 190 · 💀) - Guarded Ethers ($GETH) are ERC20 tokens issued by.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/wrkzcoin">WRKZ - WrkzCoin</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 170) - Cryptocurrency based on CryptoNote technology. The teams goal is to.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/bepronetwork">FEVR - RealFevr</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 160 · 💀) - Company established in 2015 in the fantasy markets.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/looksrare">LOOKS - LooksRare</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 160 · 💀) - Community-first NFT marketplace that actively rewards.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/firmachain">FCT - Firmachain</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 140) - Unlocking new limits of electronic contracts with blockchain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/vision-consensus">VS - Vision Metaverse</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 120) - Vision has a complete incentive and promotion.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ttceco">MARO</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 120) - Maro provides an efficient easy-to-use platform for value exchange and secure.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/fundrequest">FND - Rare FND</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 110 · 💀) - The first end-to-end crowdfunding platform in blockchain... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/liqwid-labs">LQ - Liqwid Finance</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 100) - Algorithmic and non-custodial liquidity protocol for earning.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/mangata-finance">MGX - Mangata X</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 84) - DEX parachain in the Polkadot ecosystem with the goal to make.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/team-exor">EXOR</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 79) - Cryptocurrency . EXOR has a current supply of 0. The last known price of EXOR is.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/bitsongofficial">BTSG - BitSong</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 78) - Distributed (open source) blockchain music ecosystem born in.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/semuxproject">SEM - Semux</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 76 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . Users are able to generate SEM through the process of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/securesecrets">SHD - ShardingDAO</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 66) - Array of connected privacy-preserving DeFi applications built on.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/arkadiko-dao">DIKO - Arkadiko</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 62) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021. Arkadiko Finance has a current supply.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/EpiK-Protocol">EPK - EpiK Protocol</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 50 · 💀) - EpiK Protocol envisions building a decentralized KG.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/project-bitmark">MARKS - Bitmark</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 48 · 💤) - Initiative to create an every day use alternative currency. Its.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/vcashorg">VCASH - void.cash</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 47 · 💀) - VoidCash provides transaction privacy on the blockchain by.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/etherzero-org">ETZ - Ether Zero</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 45 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2019. Users are able to generate ETZ.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/limxtec">BTDX - Bitcloud</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 42 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . Bitcloud has a current supply of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/hddcoin-network">HDD - HDDcoin</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 40 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021. HDDcoin has a current supply of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/nation3">NATION - Nation3</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 38) - Community movement towards creating a sovereign nation on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pigeoncoin">PGN - Pigeoncoin</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 37 · 💤) - Pigeoncoin was launched on March 21, 2018 with an immediate goal.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/razor-network">RAZOR - Razor Network</a></b> (🥉12 · ⭐ 35 · 💤) - Decentralized oracle network, which connects smart.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mosaicnetworks">LDXG - LondonCoinGold</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 480) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/fibosio">FO - FIBOS</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 310 · 💀) - Platform for creating and developing blockchain application ecosystems.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/MatrixAINetwork">MAN - Matrix AI Network</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 200 · 💀) - Global open-source, public, intelligent blockchain-.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/servalproject">BMH - BlockMesh</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 170 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/uinb">TAO - Fusotao</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 130) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Near platform... - <b><a href="https://github.com/saitotech">SAITO</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 100 · 💀) - Web3 Foundation grant recipient that runs blockchain applications.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cybermiles">CMT - CyberMiles</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 74 · 💀) - New blockchain platform designed to facilitate fast.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/fractalplatform">FT - Fracton Protocol</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 67 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2022and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Scorum">SCR - Scorum Coins</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 58) - Cryptocurrency . Scorum Coins has a current supply of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/windingtree">LIF - Winding Tree</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 57 · 💀) - Blockchain-based decentralized open-source travel.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/aphtoken">APH - Aphroditecoin</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 55 · 💀) - Aphelion is used to pay transaction fees on the Aphelion P2P.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/bityuan">BTY - Bityuan</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 54) - Cryptocurrency . Bityuan has a current supply of 0. The last known price.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/team-kujira">KUJI - Kujira</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 51) - Kujira is committed to levelling the playing field in decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/joystream">JOYSTREAM</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 48) - No description. - <b><a href="https://github.com/jsecoin">JSE - JSECOIN</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 47 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. JSECOIN.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pegnet">PEG - PegNet</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 41 · 💀) - Decentralized/DAO, noncustodial, stable coin and crypto token.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/e-money">NGM - e-Money</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 40 · 💀) - E-Money stablecoins are a further stage in the development of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/metahashorg">MHC - #MetaHash</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 40 · 💀) - Next-generation network based on the Blockchain 4.0 technology for.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/koinos">KOIN - Koinos</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 38) - KOIN will be the cryptocurrency that powers Koinos; a high.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/qwertycoin-org">QWC - Qwertycoin</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 35 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . Users are able to generate QWC through the.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/neutroncoin">NTRN - Neutron</a></b> (🥉11 · ⭐ 31 · 💀) - Long-Term, Original SHA256d Proof-of-Stake Coin with Masternode.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/Aircoin-official">AIR - Altair</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 2.8K · 💀) - Altair combines the industry-leading infrastructure built by.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/exzonetwork">EXZO - ExzoCoin 2.0</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 640 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the BNB.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/faceterteam">FACE - Faceter</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 380 · 💀) - Web 3.0 decentralised platform where people can create.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/euler-xyz">EUL - Euler</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 350 · 💀) - The ability to lend and borrow assets efficiently is a crucial.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/digixglobal">DGD - DigixDAO</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 220 · 💀) - Digix makes it possible to buy gold in an efficient manner.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ddnlink">DDN - Data Delivery Network</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 210 · 💤) - Den Domains lets you register the domain of your.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/axentro">AXNT - Axentro</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 190 · 💀) - No description. - <b><a href="https://github.com/HashEx">TIKI - Tiki Token</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 170) - Next evolution of a yield-generating contract on the Binance.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/reef-defi">REEF</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 140 · 💀) - Reef aims to be the future blockchain for DeFi, NFTs, and gaming. Our.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/goldfinch-eng">FIDU</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 110 · 💤) - No description. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/effectai">EFX - Effect Network</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 100) - The first Blockchain-based framework for the Future-of-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/kinecosystem">KIN</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 96 · 💀) - Kin is money for the digital world. It is an open micro-transaction platform.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/leisuremeta">LM - LeisureMeta</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 78) - LeisureMetaverse issued its own utility token, LM token to.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/bulwark-crypto">BWK - Bulwark</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 54 · 💀) - Bulwark cryptocurrency (BWK) is a privacy oriented digital currency.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/kifoundation">XKI - KI</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 45 · 💀) - Ki Foundations mission is about bridging the gap between CeFi and.. <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/boxfoundation">BOX - ContentBox</a></b> (🥉10 · ⭐ 40 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/manifoldfinance">FOLD - Manifold Finance</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 670 · 💀) - Manifold Finance provides solutions encompassing the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/artgobblers">GOO - Art Gobblers Goo</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 420 · 💀) - Primary token used in the game Gooeys! Gooeys is a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOx" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/wonderland-money">WMEMO - Wonderful Memories</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 340 · 💀) - DeFi protocol focused on venture capital investments,.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOb" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/alchemistcoin">MIST - Alchemist</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 260 · 💀) - S one and only purpose is to find the philosophers.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/faircrypto">XEN - XEN Crypto</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 220) - ERC-20 token built on the Ethereum blockchain. Its based on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/reflexer-labs">FLX - Reflexer Ungovernance Token</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 200) - Flux provides smart contracts and applications with.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ookitrade">OOKI</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 190) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Ethereum platform. Ooki.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/flowchain">DEXG - Dextoken Governance</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 140 · 💀) - Decentralized Token Swap Protocol with Speculative AMM. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/stakewise">SWISE - StakeWise</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 130) - Liquid Ethereum staking protocol that tokenizes users deposits.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/octopus-network">OCT - Octopus Network</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 130) - Cryptocurrency . OracleChain has a current supply of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/notional-finance">NOTE - DNotes</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 96) - First decentralized, Ethereum-based protocol for borrowing and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/NerveNetwork">NVT - NerveNetwork</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 88) - Decentralized digital asset service network based on the NULS.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/nftfy">NFTFY</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 88 · 💀) - Decentralized Application that provides the fractionalization of Non-.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/synapsecns">SYN - Synapse</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 86) - Cross-chain layer protocol powering frictionless interoperability.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/commerceblock">WDGLD - Wrapped-DGLD</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 79) - ERC-20 token pegged with DGLD, wDGLD opens interoperability.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/cennznet">CENNZ - Centrality</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 77 · 💀) - What is CENNZnet? CENNZnet is a New Zealand built public.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/gscsocial">GSC - Global Social Chain</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 76 · 💀) - Gunstar Metaverse uses a 2 tokens system, including.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cherrynetwork">CHER - Cherry Network</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 75 · 💀) - Decentralized Autonomous Organization developing a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/kyvenetwork">KYVE - Kyve Network</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 73 · 💀) - No description. - <b><a href="https://github.com/flare-foundation">FLR - Flare Network</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 64) - Blockchain for building applications that are interoperable with.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/Revolution-Populi">RVP - Revolution Populi</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 59 · 💤) - A decentralized user-controlled layer 1 blockchain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/tryvium-travels">TRYV - Tryvium</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 57) - Modern booking platform that offers 1.5M accommodations in over.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Ankr-network">ANKR</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 55 · 💤) - Ankr is building the future of decentralized infrastructure and multi-chain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/aresprotocols">ARES - Ares Protocol</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 55 · 💀) - On-chain-verified oracle protocol that provides secure.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pixiechain">PIX - Pixie</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 51 · 💀) - Pixie is THE WORLDS FIRST FULLY FUNCTIONAL #crypto-based photo and video.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/poseidon-network">QQQ - Poseidon Network</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 47 · 💀) - We provide decentralized CDN service, the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/decentr-net">DEC - Decentr</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 41) - Decentr is allows users to generate, reuse and exchange high quality.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/VeriBlock">VBK - VeriBlock</a></b> (🥉9 · ⭐ 37 · 💀) - VeriBlock and its novel Proof-of-Proof (PoP) consensus.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/xtblock">XTT-B20 - XTblock</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 1.1K · 💤) - A hyper-capable network, XTblock aims to deliver not only.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/sparkleloyalty">SPRKL - Sparkle Loyalty</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 380 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2017and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/sudoswap">SUDO - sudoswap</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 280 · 💀) - Governance token of the sudoAMM protocol, a concentrated liquidity.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/ipilabs">IPISTR - IPI Shorter</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 200 · 💤) - 100% on-chain infrastructure from IPI Labs. It.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/armors">ARM - Armours</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 190 · 💀) - It is claimed that Armors is a blockchain security laboratory.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/charged-particles">IONX - Charged Particles</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 99 · 💤) - Charged Particles Charged Particles is a protocol.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/defis-net">DFS - DFSCoin</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 98 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . Users are able to generate DFS through the process.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/unitedtraders">UTT - United Traders Token</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 90) - United Traders, found online at UnitedTraders.com, is.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/linkpoolio">LPL - LinkPool</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 80 · 💀) - Leading Chainlink node service provider with the goal of.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/HydroBlockchain">HYDRO</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 65 · 💀) - Hydro enables new and existing private systems to seamlessly integrate and.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mfactory-lab">JSOL - JPool</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 61) - Solana Stake Pool token issued by JPool. It represents the holders.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ultiledger">ULT - Ultiledger</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 56 · 💀) - Shardus is building distributed ledger software to remedy.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/internet-of-people">HYD - Hydraledger</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 56 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . Users are able to generate HYD through the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/zenprotocol">ZP - Zen Protocol</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 55 · 💤) - Cryptocurrency . Users are able to generate ZP through the.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/mithraiclabs">PSY - PsyOptions</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 46 · 💀) - American style options protocol built on the Solana.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/fair-exchange">SAFE - SafeCoin</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 45) - SafeCoin leverages the most advanced safety and privacy based.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/simplechain-org">SIMPLE - SimpleChain</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 39 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2019. SimpleChain has a current.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/0xguard-com">TROLLER - The Troller Coin</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 39) - First competition NFT Marketplace , Tournament gaming.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/arufa-research">BJUNO - StakeEasy bJuno</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 37 · 💤) - Liquid Staking Solution for Juno Network. StakeEasy.. <code><img src="https://cosmos.network/favicon.ico" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Arianee">ARIA20 - Arianee</a></b> (🥉8 · ⭐ 35) - Consumption behaviors are changing, new generations have a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/prepo-io">PPO - prePO</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 1.2K · 💤) - Decentralized trading platform allowing anyone to gain synthetic.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOh" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/projectchicago">GST2 - Gas Token Two</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 710 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2017and operates on the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/bc-game-project">JB - Janta Bazar Coin</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 270 · 💀) - Janta Bazar Coin aims to provide user-friendly, efficient,.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/bitindi">BNI - Bitindi Chain</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 210 · 💀) - Decentralized, high-efficiency, and energy-saving.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cruzbit">CRUZ - Cruzbit</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 130 · 💀) - New decentralized peer-to-peer ledger designed to be as simple as.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/essentiaone">ESS - Essentia</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 130 · 💀) - New governance token in the Empty Set ecosystem. This token.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cryptotwenty">C20 - CRYPTO20</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 100 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. CRYPTO20.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/scryptachain">LYRA - Lyra Finance</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 100 · 💤) - Open protocol for trading options built on Ethereum... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/polkafoundry">PKF - Firebird</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 94 · 💀) - What Is PolkaFoundry (PKF)? PolkaFoundry is a platform for.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/web3gamesofficial">W3G</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 93 · 💤) - Gaming coin, thus, it supports the gaming industry and wants to take it to the.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/automata-network">ATA - Automata Network</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 91 · 💀) - Decentralized service protocol that provides.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/buddy-works">BUD - BunnyDucky</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 91 · 💀) - Platform that tokenizes DeFi strategies as yield-bearing.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/openleveragedev">OLE - OpenLeverage</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 89) - Permissionless margin trading protocol currently deployed on.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/animeswap">ANI - Anime Token</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 84 · 💤) - We create professional ANIME artwork & NFTs. ANIME Token is.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/clover-network">CLV - Clover Finance</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 83 · 💀) - Substrate-based specialized Layer 1 chain that is EVM.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/risedle">$ETHRISE - ETHRISE</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 80 · 💀) - THRISE is ERC20 tokens that represent 1.7x-2.5x long.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOh" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/smart-chain-fr">CLAP - Cardashift</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 77 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2022and operates on the Cardano.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/PositionExchange">POSI - Position Token</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 75 · 💀) - The Next-Gen Decentralized Futures Trading Protocol. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/marinade-finance">MNDE - Marinade</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 69) - Governance token for Marinade. Marinade helps you to stake Solana.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/sirin-labs">SRN - SIRIN LABS Token</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 46 · 💀) - Crypto token developed by blockchain development.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ajuna-network">BAJU - Ajuna Network</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 37 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2022. Bajun Network has a current.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/2key">2KEY - 2key.network</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 35 · 💀) - Protocol: 2nd Layer Protocol Embedding Smart Contracts.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/gyrostable">GYFI - Gyroscope</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 34 · 💀) - ### What is GYFI? GYFI is Gyroscopes native and governance.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/coschain">COS - Contentos</a></b> (🥉7 · ⭐ 3 · 💤) - Decentralized global content ecosystem invested by Binance.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/skyward-finance">SKYWARD - Skyward Finance</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 770 · 💀) - Fully permissionless open sourced launchpad that.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/colored-coins">CLN - Colu Local Network</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 130 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/abyssfinance">ABYSS</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 100 · 💀) - Abyss.Finance provides Decentralized (DeFi) and Centralized (CeFi) Finance.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/sealchain-project">SEAL - Seal Network</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 93 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ongridsystems">CNP - Cryptonia Poker</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 92 · 💀) - No description. - <b><a href="https://github.com/sukhavati-labs">SKT - Sukhavati Network</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 92 · 💀) - Decentralized cloud service network focused on.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/denaro-coin">WDNR - Wrapped Denaro</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 89) - Decentralized cryptocurrency written in Python which uses.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/MetisProtocol">METIS - Metis Token</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 87) - Based on the spirit of Optimistic Rollup, Metis is building.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/0xmons">XMON</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 82 · 💀) - NFT platform for summoning neural net generated pixel monsters. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/verynifty">MUSE</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 71 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. Muse has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/rigelprotocol">RGP - Rigel Protocol</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 56 · 💀) - The Rigel Protocol will be built on both Binance.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/coinscope-co">XID - Sphere Identity</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 51) - International Diamond (XID) is a cryptocurrency . Users are.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/apex-protocol">APEX - ApeX Protocol</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 46) - ApeX Protocol (APEX) Decentralized Derivatives Protocol.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Switcheo">ZWAP - ZilSwap</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 42 · 💀) - The DeFi hub of Zilliqa. - <b><a href="https://github.com/raid-guild">RAID - Ancient Raid</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 41 · 💀) - Virtual universe of fantasy heroes for Play-To-Earn.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/narwallets">STNEAR - Staked NEAR</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 41 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Aurora platform. Staked.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/bismuthfoundation">BIS - Bismuth</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 38) - Bismuth, a digital distributed self-regulating database system.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/GenaroNetwork">GNX - Genaro Network</a></b> (🥉6 · ⭐ 34 · 💀) - First Turing Complete Public Chain with Decentralized.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mydexchain">DXC - Dex-Trade Coin</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 230 · 💀) - DXC is not just a coin, it is a backbone payment unit.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/moontography">MTGY - Moontography</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 170 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the BNB.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/WrappedBTC">WBTC - Wrapped Bitcoin</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 120) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform... <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/dvpnet">DVP - Decentralized Vulnerability Platform</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 90 · 💀) - DVP (Decentralized Vulnerability Platform) is an.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/l2labs">ZKS - ZKSpace</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 81 · 💀) - Based on ZK-Rollups technology, L2 Labs has launched ZKSpace, a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/UlordChain">UT - Ulord</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 61 · 💀) - Peer-to-peer value transfer public blockchain. Through building its.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/zincwork">ZINC</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 55 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. ZINC has a current.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/VideoCoin">VID - Vivid Labs</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 48 · 💀) - The VID token powers VIVID (formerly VideoCoin Network), the.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/potcoin">POT - PotCoin</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 48 · 💀) - Digital cryptocurrency aimed to empower, secure, and facilitate.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOx" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/ray-network">XRAY - Ray Network</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 42) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Cardano.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/xdao-app">XDAO</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 41) - What is XDAO? XDAO was created with the idea to make DAOs the place for crypto.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/hyperion-hyn">HYN - Hyperion</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 40 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2018. Hyperion has a current supply.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/agenorcore">AGE - Agenor</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 38 · 💀) - Agenor aims to drive the long-awaited mass adoption of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/etherorcsofficial">ZUG</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 37 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the Ethereum platform. ZUG has.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/secretblockchain">SIE - Secret</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 36 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2018and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/SwingbyProtocol">SWINGBY</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 31 · 💀) - A fast proof-of-stake protocol for inter-blockchain swaps, allowing.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/dawn-protocol">DAWN - Dawn Protocol</a></b> (🥉5 · ⭐ 31 · 💀) - Open-source protocol for gaming and competitions. Its.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/coinversation">CTO - Crypto</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 310 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency . Crypto has a current supply of 13,742,738.4040553... - <b><a href="https://github.com/oneswap">ONES - OneSwap DAO Token</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 120 · 💀) - A fully decentralized exchange protocol on Smart.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/oilernetwork">OIL - Oiler</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 96 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Arbitrum platform. Petroleum OIL.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cindicator">CND - Cindicator</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 91 · 💀) - Founded in 2015, Cindicator builds analytical and trading.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cre8rdao">CRE8R - CRE8R DAO</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 89 · 💀) - CRE8R DAO was founded in June 2021 by a group of DeFi.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/AngleProtocol">ANGLE</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 87 · 💀) - Governance token of the Angle Protocol. The Angle Protocol is a.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/mediafoundation">MEDIA - Media Network</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 83) - New protocol that bypasses traditional CDN providers.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cycloneprotocol">CYC - Cyclone Protocol</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 61 · 💀) - Multi-chain, non-custodial, privacy-preserving.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/universexyz">XYZ - Universe.XYZ</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 48 · 💀) - Initiative, which grants voting rights to the $XYZ holders.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/vntchain">VNT - VNT Chain</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 35 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency and operates on the Ethereum platform. VNT.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/pantherswap">PANTHER - PantherSwap</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 34 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2021and operates on the BNB.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/titano-finance">TITANO</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 34 · 💀) - Titano is launching the new frontier of staking tokens which will.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/cVault-finance">CORE - cVault.finance</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 33 · 💀) - Non-inflationary cryptocurrency that is designed to.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/xxfoundation">XX - XX Network</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 32) - Xx network (xx)? The xx network is a full-stack platform which.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/acria-network">ACRIA - Acria.AI</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 32 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2022and operates on the Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/banksea-finance">KSE - Banksea</a></b> (🥉4 · ⭐ 21 · 💀) - Banksea works to address issues in NFT collateral lending, such as a.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/JustLiquidity">JULD - JulSwap</a></b> (🥉3 · ⭐ 87 · 💀) - Community Token from JulSwap which allows you to participate in.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/Steemhunt">HUNT</a></b> (🥉3 · ⭐ 61 · 💀) - Gamified lifestyle DApp network for digital nomads all around the world. It.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/BNBPay">BPAY - BNBPay</a></b> (🥉3 · ⭐ 42 · 💀) - BeyondPay aims to become the next web3 point of sale.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/solanium-io">SLIM - Solanium</a></b> (🥉3 · ⭐ 34 · 💀) - Launch Pad Project (On solana) Put them on LaunchPad Category. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOa" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/neardefi">BRRR - Burrow</a></b> (🥉3 · ⭐ 32 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2022. Burrow has a current supply of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/cryptodemonz-github">LLTH - Lilith Swap</a></b> (🥉3 · ⭐ 32 · 💀) - Baseline ecosystem for a bridge between L1 Ethereum.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/getprotocol">GET - GET Protocol</a></b> (🥉3 · ⭐ 31 · 💀) - The future of ticketing. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/thinkiumgroup">TKM - Thinkium</a></b> (🥉2 · ⭐ 100 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2017. Thinkium has a current supply of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/metacartel">METACARTEL - Metacartel Ventures</a></b> (🥉2 · ⭐ 66 · 💀) - Permissioned, for-profit investment DAO coupled with.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/mylivn-gmbh">MLVC - Mylivn Coin</a></b> (🥉2 · ⭐ 52 · 💀) - ## What is Mylivn Coin (MLVC) ? Mylivn Coin (MLVC) is a token.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/entropyfi">ERP - Entropyfi</a></b> (🥉2 · ⭐ 35 · 💀) - Lossless prediction market providing user a safer platform to.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/railgun-privacy">RAIL - Railgun</a></b> (🥉1 · ⭐ 2 · 🐣) - RAILGUN secures privacy for DEX trading and lending. Built.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/bohrweb">BR - BoHr</a></b> (🥉1 · ⭐ 1 · 💀) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2020and operates on the BNB Smart Chain.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cOd" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/vitaeteam">VITAE</a></b> (🥉1) - Cryptocurrency launched in 2014. Users are able to generate VITAE through the process of.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/umee-network">UMEE</a></b> (🥉1) - Cross chain DeFi hub that interconnects between blockchains. As a base layer DeFi.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/blur-network">BLUR</a></b> (🥉1) - The NFT marketplace for pro traders. - <b><a href="https://github.com/tempus-finance">TEMP - Tempus</a></b> (🥉1) - Tempus is building the most important blocks of DeFi and Web3 in a way thats.. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/minima-global">MINIMA</a></b> (🥉1) - No description. - <b><a href="https://github.com/naboxwallet">NABOX</a></b> (🥉1) - Cross-Chain DeFi Wallet with Decentralized Identifier built for Web 3.0. <code><img src="https://git.io/J9cO9" style="display:inline;" width="13" height="13"></code> - <b><a href="https://github.com/kwenta">KWENTA</a></b> (🥉1) - Decentralized derivatives trading platform, live on Optimism, offering real-world and on-.. - <b><a href="https://github.com/canto-network">CANTO</a></b> (🥉1) - Canto presents the radical notion that core DeFi primitives should exist as Free Public.. </details> --- ## Related Resources - [**Best-of lists**](https://best-of.org): Discover other best-of lists with awesome open-source projects on all kinds of topics. - [**CoinGecko**](https://coingecko.com): World’s largest independent crypto data aggregator. - [**CoinMarketCap**](https://coinmarketcap.com): World's most-referenced price-tracking website for cryptoassets. ## Contribution Contributions are encouraged and always welcome! If you like to add or update projects, choose one of the following ways: - Open an issue by selecting one of the provided categories from the [issue page](https://github.com/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto/issues/new/choose) and fill in the requested information. - Modify the [projects.yaml](https://github.com/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto/blob/main/projects.yaml) with your additions or changes, and submit a pull request. This can also be done directly via the [Github UI](https://github.com/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto/edit/main/projects.yaml). If you like to contribute to or share suggestions regarding the project metadata collection or markdown generation, please refer to the [best-of-generator](https://github.com/best-of-lists/best-of-generator) repository. If you like to create your own best-of list, we recommend to follow [this guide](https://github.com/best-of-lists/best-of/blob/main/create-best-of-list.md). For more information on how to add or update projects, please read the [contribution guidelines](https://github.com/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md). By participating in this project, you agree to abide by its [Code of Conduct](https://github.com/LukasMasuch/best-of-crypto/blob/main/.github/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). ## License [![CC0](https://mirrors.creativecommons.org/presskit/buttons/88x31/svg/by-sa.svg)](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/)
MetalistLab_3ntryChat
README.md client README.md encrypt bridge JavascriptCloseWindowListener.java JsHandler.java JsWebChromeClient.java JsWebView.java RequestInfo.java WVJBHandler.java WVJBMessage.java WVJBMethodExistCallback.java WVJBResponseCallback.java encryption.ts contract README.md deployment deploy-chainchat.js hardhat.config.js package-lock.json package.json test chain-chat-test.js |
# Overview ### 1. How to view our work View our vedio: https://youtu.be/fnuvkmbUS0s Download our andriod APP: https://github.com/MetalistLab/3ntryChat/raw/main/client/3ntryChat_2022-11-17_19-58_release_35.apk View our code: 1) Client: https://github.com/MetalistLab/3ntryChat/tree/main/client 2) Contract: https://github.com/MetalistLab/3ntryChat/tree/main/contract<br> Contract address on Aurora network: **0x926F2AEAaae27006cb5a663B6E6FD28c9E3F186C** ### 2. Technological Implementation Encrypted chat protocol deploy on NEAR Aurora Testnet, it allows people to communicate with others without central server, all messages are stored on the chain forever, and only the communicating parties can parse the messages. Quick message sending and receiving can demonstrate the high performance of NEAR. ### 3. Design 1) To enhance the user experience, we have developed a user-friendly app for users to experience crypto chat, and we have plenty of product details to prove that we have well thought out the user experience. For example, when a user sends a message (actually sends a transaction on blockchain), we provide the option to remember the password, once the user selects this option, the user does not need to enter the private key password again when sending a message in the next 24 hours. To give the second example, when the user backs up the private key, when the user copies the private key to finish the backup, we provide a button to help the user clear the phone clipboard to avoid the private key leakage. To give the thrid example, on the message list page, the message bubbles of encrypted messages and unencrypted messages are designed differently, which is very easy to distinguish. The fourth example is that we maintain the queue of unsent messages in the client, so that users can send multiple messages at one time without disordering them. To give the last example, our project provides sender filter function that prevent users from receiving spam messages. 2) To protect users' privacy, we developed the APP without any server, users chat using anonymous wallet addresses, messages are stored encrypted so that no centralized agency can snoop, locate and censor users. ### 4. Potential impact Our project is open source. We think the use of encrypted messages is extensive. Any DAPP can integrate our protocol and SDK to provide chat functions to their users, such as games, DEFI, NFT trading market, etc. Our protocol provides sender filters where users can set up to only accept messages from senders holding specified tokens(FT or NFT), this applies to chat between influencerss/artists and their fans, but also to DAOs and communities. ### 5. Quality of the idea 1) 3ntyrChat is anonymous. Users are interacting with each DAPP through wallet addresses, which represent the user's identity ID, and chatting anonymously between wallet addresses is the trend. 2) 3ntyrChat is open. There are data silos in Web2, for example, Discord messages cannot be sent to Snapchat, while 3ntryChat stores messages on the blockchain, so users can chat across terminals and DAPPs. 3) 3ntryChat support sender filter based on token(FT or NFT). This applies to chat between influencerss/artists and their fans, but also to DAOs and communities; 4) 3ntryChat is decentralized and encrypted, chat messages are stored decentrally and encrypted, and no centralized organization can ban, monitor, or locate user messages. # Encrypted chat protocol ## 1.Getting Started ### 1.1 Installation ``` $ npm install ``` or ``` $ yarn ``` install all dependencies we need. ### 1.2 Set ENV rename .env.sample to .env, and set the value below. ``` SIGNER_PRIVATE_KEY="YOUR ACCOUNT PRIVATE KEY" NETWORK_URL="NETWORK URL" MAX_AMOUNT=10 ``` add the network you need in hardhat.config.js file like below: ``` networks: { NETWORK_NAME: { url: `${NetworkUrl}`, accounts: [`0x${SignerPrivateKey}`] } } ``` ### 1.3 Test Run all tests ``` hardhat test ``` ### 1.4 Deploying Deploy your contract on specific network ``` npx hardhat run ./deployment/deploy-chainchat.js --network NETWORK_NAME ``` Response is: ``` complete, contract deployed, address: CONTRACT_INSTANCE_ADDRESS ``` ## 2. Contract Introduction ### 2.1 Architecture ![avatar](./asset/architectureContract.png) ### 2.2 Overview Encrypted chat protocol allows people to communicate with others without central server, all message are stored on the chain and only the communicating parties can parse the messages. #### 2.2.1 IMessage.sol defined the main structure about message content and filter, and methods which need to be implemented. #### 2.2.2 ISBTFilter.sol define the method which need to implemented in specific filter, like ERC20 or ERC721 etc. #### 2.2.3 chat.sol the contract that implement IMessage, define the handler logic for message processing and is responsible for interacting with user. #### 2.2.4 Metadata | contract | network | address |------ | ------ | ----- | chat | Aurora | 0x926F2AEAaae27006cb5a663B6E6FD28c9E3F186C ## 3.Main Functions Introduction ### 3.1 chat #### 1、 function register(PubKeyPoint calldata pk) external Explanation: Users register public key on chain, can be update by user.The pk will be used for message encryption. #### 2、function sendMessage(address receiver, PubKeyPoint calldata pk, bytes calldata message) external Explanation: Users send message to receiver with user's public key.We do not care about the content of message, it will be encrypted by public key of party of communication. #### 3、function addFilters(SBTFilter[] calldata addFiltersInfo) external Explanation: Users add filters to restrict calls from people they are not interested in.The filter declares the associated contract address and asset amount. #### 4、function updateFilters(SBTFilter[] calldata updateFiltersInfo) external Explanation: Users update filters to change the limit of asset amount. #### 5、function removeFilters(address[] calldata delFiltersInfo) external Explanation: Users remove filters which they do not need anymore. #### 6、function getFilters(address user) external view returns(SBTFilter[] memory) Explanation: Get filters by user's address. #### 7、function getConversationList(address user, uint256 start, uint256 count) external view returns(ConversationInfo[] memory, uint256, bool) Explanation: Get conversation list by user's address, start means the index of begin, count means the amount of conversation. #### 8、function pullMessageInReverseOrderForMultiSession(address peer1, address[] calldata peer2,uint256[] calldata end, uint256[] calldata count) external view returns (RetrievalMessageInfo[][] memory result) Explanation: Obtain the message list of both parties in reverse order in a batch. #### 9、function pullMessageInReverseOrder(address peer1, address peer2,uint256 end, uint256 count) external view returns (RetrievalMessageInfo[] memory) Explanation: Obtain the message list of both parties in reverse order. #### 10、function pullMessageForMultiSession(address peer1, address[] calldata peer2,uint256[] calldata begin, uint256[] calldata count) external view returns (RetrievalMessageInfo[][] memory result) Explanation: Obtain the message list of both parties in a batch. #### 11、function pullMessage(address peer1, address peer2,uint256 begin, uint256 count) external view returns (RetrievalMessageInfo[] memory) Explanation: Obtain the message list of both parties. #### 12、function canSendMessageTo(address sender, address receiver) external view returns (bool) Explanation: Query whether the sender can send messages to the receiver. # 3ntryChat APP ## APK File Installation Guide 1. Download the APK file: https://github.com/MetalistLab/3ntryChat/raw/main/client/3ntryChat_2022-11-17_19-58_release_35.apk 2. Locate the file in file manager 3. Install and launch the application on your home screen ## Application Features ### Chat Message Encryption Generates an encryption string using the public key of the contact's wallet and the private key of the user's wallet. Uses the generated string as a key to encrypt chat content via AES encryption. ### Cross-terminal Access to Chat History The same account can retrieve chat history on different devices by fetching on-chain data. ## Architecture ![iShot_2022-11-17_11.17.36](https://github.com/MetalistLab/3ntryChat/blob/main/client/2022-11-17_11.17.36.png) ChatModule: Forms a chat when sending a message to a contact and receives the latest messages/new chats. MessageModule: Receives, sends, and stores messages. PendingMessageModule: Sends pending messages to the blockchain.
MoonBaseDAO_MoonBase-Dashboard
.commitlintrc.json .env .github workflows node.js.yml .huskyrc.json CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md CONTRIBUTING.md README.md assets icons aAllDaos.colors.svg aAllDaosHover.colors.svg aAstroFeed.colors.svg aAstroFeedHover.colors.svg aCreateDao.colors.svg aCreateDaoHover.colors.svg aDiscover.colors.svg aMyDaos.colors.svg aMyDaosHover.colors.svg aMyFeed.colors.svg aMyFeedHover.colors.svg account.svg alertTriangle.svg allCommunity.colors.svg allcommunities.svg app-logo.svg arrow.svg astro.svg aurora.svg back-link.svg bookmark.svg bountyApprovedClaim.svg bountyCompleteBounty.colors.svg bountyCreateClaim.svg bountyCreated.colors.svg bountyDeadlineClaim.svg bountyPendingApproval.svg bountyProposalCreated.svg briefcase-filled.svg briefcase.svg burgerMenu.svg button-add-group.svg button-add.svg button-alert.svg button-arrow-down.svg button-arrow-left.svg button-arrow-right.svg button-arrow-up.svg button-bookmark-selected.svg button-bookmark.svg button-check.svg button-copy.svg button-delete-pressed.svg button-delete.svg button-edit.svg button-external.svg button-more.svg button-refresh-pressed.svg button-refresh.svg button-report.svg button-reset-scroll.svg button-return-pressed.svg button-return.svg button-search.svg button-send-transaction.svg button-share-pressed.svg button-share.svg buttonAddUser.svg buttonDeposit.svg buttonFollow.svg buttonLink.svg buttonWithdraw.svg camera.svg captcha-flag.colors.svg captcha-hole-reg.svg captcha-hole.colors.svg captcha-reset.colors.svg carbon-email.svg carbon-phone.svg chartTrend.colors.svg chat.svg check.svg checkList.svg checkbox-checked.svg checkbox-unchecked.svg checkmark.svg claimsLink.svg clock.svg close-circle.svg close.svg comment-block.svg connection.svg copy.svg createNewDao.colors.svg createToken.colors.svg default-dao-logo.colors.svg defaultAvatar.svg delegate.svg discover.colors.svg draft-bookmark-fulfill.svg draft-bookmark.svg draft-chat.svg draft-comments.svg draft-eye.svg eyeClose.svg eyeOpen.svg feed.svg filter.svg filterBounty.svg filterCheck.svg filterClock.svg filterClose.svg filterFunction.svg filterGovernance.svg filterMembers.svg filterTransfer.svg filtersMenu.svg flag.svg funds.svg globalFeed.colors.svg goal.svg groups.svg hamburger.svg heart.svg heartFilled.svg icon-near.svg illustration-flat-organization.colors.svg illustration-groups-and-committtees.colors.svg illustration-members-only.svg illustration-open-organization.colors.svg illustration-token-weighted.colors.svg illustration-vote-per-member.colors.svg image-not-found.svg info.svg kebab-vertical.svg like-filled.svg like.svg list-filter.svg list.svg loading.svg logo-near-full.svg logo-near.svg logoUsn.svg logout.svg minus.svg multiselect.svg myDaos.colors.svg myFeed.colors.svg nav-back.svg nav-forward.svg nav-refresh.svg navSettingsConfig.colors.svg navSettingsPolicy.colors.svg navSettingsVersion.colors.svg nfts.svg no-notifications.colors.svg notVoted.colors.svg note-archive.color.svg note-bell-active-hover.colors.svg note-bell-active.colors.svg note-bell.svg note-check-double.svg note-check.svg note-delete-default.colors.svg note-delete-disabled.colors.svg note-delete-hover.colors.svg note-message-active-hover.colors.svg note-message-active.colors.svg note-message.svg note-restore.color.svg note-sound-disabled.svg note-sound-mute.svg note-sound-unmute.svg note-status-alert.colors.svg note-status-approved.colors.svg note-status-ending-soon.colors.svg note-status-rejected.colors.svg note-status-success.colors.svg note-type-add-member-default.svg note-type-add-member.svg note-type-bounty-default.svg note-type-bounty.svg note-type-comment-like.svg note-type-dao-config-default.svg note-type-dao-config.svg note-type-governance-default.svg note-type-governance.svg note-type-polls-default.svg note-type-polls.svg note-type-remove-member-default.svg note-type-remove-member.svg note-type-transfer-default.svg note-type-transfer.svg organization.svg paperAirplane.svg pencil.svg plus.svg polls.colors.svg proposal-add-member.svg proposal-bounty.svg proposal-create-group.svg proposal-function-call.svg proposal-governance.svg proposal-near-function-call.colors.svg proposal-poll.svg proposal-received-funds.svg proposal-remove-member.svg proposal-send-funds.svg refresh.colors.svg reply.svg seal-approved.colors.svg seal-closed.colors.svg seal-failed.colors.svg selectToken.colors.svg selectorEnabled.svg senderWallet.svg settings.svg sheet.svg sidebarActionsLibrary.svg sidebarActionsLibraryFilled.svg sidebarBounties.svg sidebarBountiesFilled.svg sidebarDaosAndUsers.svg sidebarDaosAndUsersFilled.svg sidebarDaosStats.svg sidebarFeedback.svg sidebarHome.svg sidebarHomeFilled.svg sidebarReleaseNotes.svg social-any-url.svg social-discord.svg social-facebook.svg social-github.svg social-instagram.svg social-placeholder.svg social-slack.svg social-telegram.svg social-twitter-alt.svg social-twitter.svg sort.svg state-add.svg state-communities.svg state-create-dao.svg state-gear.svg state-governance.svg state-home.svg state-membersgroups.svg state-overview.svg state-sign-out.svg state-tasks.svg state-treasury.svg stateAlert.svg statusSuccess.svg telegram.svg timeline.svg token-near-big.svg token-near.svg token-wizard.svg tokenDefaultIcon.svg toolbar-editor-bold.svg toolbar-editor-image.svg toolbar-editor-italic.svg toolbar-editor-list.svg transfer.svg treasury-one.colors.svg treasury-three.colors.svg treasury-two.colors.svg tweet.svg upgrade.svg upload.svg uploadFile.svg userAccount.svg voting-dismiss-alt.colors.svg voting-dismiss-checked.colors.svg voting-dismiss-disabled.colors.svg voting-dismiss.colors.svg voting-no-checked.colors.svg voting-no-disabled.colors.svg voting-no.colors.svg voting-yes-checked.colors.svg voting-yes-disabled.colors.svg voting-yes.colors.svg votingPolicy.svg white-logo.svg index.ts sidebarMarker.svg astro_2.0 components Accordion index.ts ActionButton index.ts AppFooter index.ts AppHeader components AccountDropdown components AccountPopupItem index.ts ConnectedAccountButton index.ts DisconnectButton index.ts LoginButton index.ts MyAccountButton index.ts WalletAccount index.ts WalletButton index.ts WalletDescription index.ts WalletIcon index.ts WalletSelectionModal index.ts WalletWithAccounts index.ts WalletsList index.ts index.ts NotificationsBell components NotificationsToastsContainer AnimatedNotification index.ts index.ts index.ts SearchBar components DropdownResults components ResultSection components SearchResultCommentLine index.ts SearchResultDaoCard index.ts SearchResultDraftProposalLine index.ts SearchResultPeopleCard index.ts SearchResultProposalLine index.ts index.ts index.ts index.ts SearchHints index.ts index.ts index.ts BreadCrumbs index.ts Chip index.ts ConfirmActionModal index.ts CopyButton index.ts CreationProgress index.ts DaoDetails DaoDetailsGrid components DaoDetailsSkeleton index.ts DaoInfoCard index.ts index.ts tests mock.ts DaoDetailsMinimized components DaoAction index.ts index.ts tests mock.ts index.ts DaoFlagWidget index.ts DaoWarning index.ts DaosList index.ts DefaultVotingPolicy index.ts tests mocks.ts DotsLoader index.ts EditableContent index.ts ErrorBoundary index.ts ExpandableDetails index.ts Feed components FeedFilter index.ts hooks.ts index.ts FiltersPanel index.ts Flag index.ts GenericDropdown index.ts types.ts InfoBlockWidget components InfoValue index.ts index.ts types.ts LinkToTop index.ts LoadingIndicator index.ts LocaleSelector components Locales index.ts index.ts MaintenanceWarning components Persona index.ts Star index.ts index.ts NavLink index.ts NearIcon index.ts NoResultsView index.ts NotificationCard index.ts types.ts NotificationsDisableModal index.ts PageLayout index.ts PolicyAffectedWarning index.ts ProposalCardRenderer components CreateBountyProposalContent index.ts DraftDescription index.ts DraftInfo DraftInfoItem index.ts index.ts DraftManagement index.ts InfoPanel index.ts LetterHeadWidget index.ts ProposalCard components DeleteDraftButton index.ts ProposalControlPanel components ProposalControlButton index.ts index.ts index.ts index.ts PuzzleCaptcha index.ts ReplyButton index.ts ScrollList index.ts SearchInput index.ts SelectorIcons SelectorNearIcon index.ts index.ts SenderIcon index.ts SideFilter index.ts TgasInput index.ts TokenIcon index.ts TokenWidget index.ts Tooltip index.ts TransactionDetailsWidget index.ts WarningMessage index.ts inputs radio Radio index.ts RadioGroup index.ts navigation MobileNav index.ts NavButton index.ts navConfig.ts types.ts features App404 index.ts AppHealth index.ts AppMonitoring index.ts Auth components ConnectingWalletModal index.ts hooks useAuthCheck.ts index.ts Bounties components BountiesFeed index.ts BountiesListView components AmountContent index.ts tests mock.ts ClaimRow index.ts tests mock.ts ClaimsContent index.ts CollapsableSection index.ts CompleteProposalRow index.ts CompletedContent index.ts MobileListView index.ts SectionRow index.ts UnclaimCompleteContent index.ts VotingContent index.ts index.ts tests mock.ts types.ts BountiesTimeline components DataRow index.ts Milestone index.ts StackedMilestones index.ts TimelineGroups index.ts TimelineHeader index.ts TimelineLegend index.ts TimelineRangeToggle index.ts helpers.ts index.ts types.ts utils.ts HideBountyContext index.ts ViewToggle index.ts hooks.ts Comments components Comment LikeButton index.ts index.ts CommentActions CommentAction index.ts index.ts CommentContent index.ts hooks.ts index.ts CreateDao components CustomEdit index.ts DaoAssetsForm index.ts DaoFlagForm index.ts DaoGroupsForm components DaoGroupLine index.ts index.ts DaoLegalStatus index.ts DaoLinksForm components DaoLinkLine index.ts index.ts DaoMembersForm components DaoMemberLine index.ts index.ts DaoNameForm components DaoAddress index.ts DaoNameInputSection index.ts helpers.ts index.ts DaoProposalCreationForm index.ts DaoRulesForm index.ts DaoSubmitForm helpers.ts index.ts DaoVotingPermissionsForm index.ts ImageUpload helpers.ts index.ts PreviewModal index.ts StepCounter index.ts StepWrapper index.ts SubjectRule components DaoOptionCard index.ts index.ts SubmitButton index.ts TemplateRules components TemplateLink index.ts constants.ts index.ts UnitSeparator index.ts helpers.ts hooks.ts constants.ts helpers.ts types.ts CreateExternalProposal hooks.ts index.ts tests hooks.spec.ts CreateProposal components AcceptStakingContractContent index.ts AddBountyContent index.ts tests mock.ts utils.test.ts utils.ts AddMemberToGroupContent index.ts CaptchaModal index.ts ChangeBondsContent index.ts ChangeDaoFlagContent index.ts ChangeDaoLegalInfoContent index.ts ChangeDaoNameContent index.ts ChangeDaoPurposeContent index.ts ChangeLinksContent index.ts ChangePolicyContent index.ts ChangeVotingPermissionsContent index.ts CreateDaoContent index.ts CreateGroupContent index.ts CreateProposalCard helpers.ts hooks.ts index.ts CreateTokenContent index.ts CustomFunctionCallContent components BuyNftFromMintbaseContent index.ts tests mock.ts BuyNftFromParasContent index.ts CreateRoketoStream hooks.ts index.ts CustomContent index.ts SwapsOnRefContent index.ts TransferNftFromMintbaseContent index.ts VoteInOtherDao index.ts index.ts types.ts DeployStakingContractContent index.ts DoneBountyContent index.ts ErrorIndicator index.ts GroupedSelect index.ts InputWrapper index.ts RemoveMemberFromGroupContent index.ts TokenDistributionContent GroupRow index.ts MemberRow index.ts helpers.ts index.ts TransferContent index.ts tests mock.ts utils.spec.ts utils.ts TransferFundsContent index.ts UpdateGroupContent index.ts UpdateVotePolicyToWeightVoting index.ts types.ts createProposalHelpers.ts helpers bountiesHelpers.ts index.ts initialValues.ts newProposalObject.ts permissionsHelpers.ts proposalObjectHelpers.ts proposalVariantsHelpers.ts tests bountiesHelpers.spec.ts mock.ts newProposalObject.spec.ts proposalObjectHelpers.spec.ts validation.ts hooks index.ts index.ts tests createProposalHelpers.spec.ts mocks.ts types.ts DaoDashboard DaoPurpose index.ts components DashboardChart components ChartLegend index.ts helpers.ts index.ts StatCard index.ts StatChart index.ts StatPanel index.ts hooks.ts index.ts tests mock.ts types.ts DaoDashboardHeader components CloneDaoWarning components ConfirmDismissModal index.ts WarningRenderer index.ts helpers.ts hooks.ts index.ts DaoHeaderContent index.ts DaoLetterHeadSection index.ts DaoLinks components DaoLink index.ts MoreLinksModal index.ts ShowMoreLinks index.ts index.ts DaoLogo index.ts DaoSocialLinks index.ts DepositToDaoForm components DepositButton index.ts DepositInput index.ts index.ts FollowButton index.ts JoinDaoButton index.ts hooks.ts hooks tests useJoinDao.spec.ts useJoinDao.ts index.ts tests mocks.ts DaoFeatureInfo index.ts DaoGovernance components DaoSetting index.ts DaoSettingFlowButton index.ts SettingsCard index.ts SettingsFilterToggle index.ts helper.ts index.ts tests helper.spec.ts Daos index.ts Discover components ChartInterval index.ts ChartRenderer index.ts ContentPanel index.ts ControlTabs index.ts DaosTopList components TopListItem index.ts index.ts Flow index.ts GeneralInfo index.ts Governance index.ts SelectedDaoDetails index.ts tests mock.ts Tokens index.ts TopicsFilter index.ts Tvl index.ts UsersAndActivity index.ts constants.ts helpers.ts hooks.ts types.ts DraftComments components NewComment index.ts helpers.ts index.ts Drafts components DraftWrapper index.ts DraftsProvider index.ts FeatureFlagsProvider index.ts Feed index.ts FeedProposals index.ts Groups components GroupsList index.ts index.ts hooks tests useSortMembers.spec.ts useSortMembers.ts MainLayout index.ts Notifications components NotificationCollapsableSettings index.ts NotificationText index.ts Notifications index.ts PlatformNotificationSettings index.ts hooks.ts index.ts types.ts Proposals components ProposalFilter index.ts index.ts helpers getStatusFilterOptions.ts tests getStatusFilterOptions.spec.ts TermsAndConditions config.ts index.ts types.ts ViewBounty components BountyActions index.ts BountyCard index.ts BountyProgress index.ts CardContent index.ts ClaimCard index.ts ClaimsDonutChart index.ts ClaimsInfo index.ts ClaimsStatistic index.ts CompleteProposalCard index.ts InfoPanel index.ts index.ts ViewProposal components AddBountyContent index.ts AddMemberToGroupContent index.ts BackButton index.ts ChangeBondsContent index.ts ChangeDaoFlagContent index.ts ChangeDaoLegalInfoContent index.ts ChangeDaoNameContent index.ts ChangeDaoPurposeContent index.ts ChangeLinksContent index.ts ChangePermissionsContent index.ts ChangePolicyContent index.ts ContractAcceptanceContent index.ts CreateDaoContent index.ts CreateGroupContent index.ts CustomFunctionCallContent components CommonContent index.ts ViewVoteInOtherDao index.ts index.ts FieldWrapper index.ts HistorySelector components CompareProposal index.ts CompareProposalContext index.ts CompareVersionsModal index.ts index.ts ProposalComments components Comment helpers.ts index.ts ConfirmCommentActionModal index.ts hooks.ts index.ts RemoveMemberFromGroupContent index.ts SaveFcTemplate components SaveFcTemplateModal helpers.ts index.ts index.ts TokenDistributionContent GroupRow index.ts MemberRow index.ts index.ts TransferContent index.ts UpdateVotePolicyToWeightVoting index.ts index.ts tests helpers.spec.ts dao HeaderWithFilter index.ts pages cfcLibrary components ListModal index.ts OptionsList index.ts TemplatesList components TemplatesListItem index.ts index.ts context.ts hooks.ts index.ts myAccount AccountBadge index.ts cards AllowanceKeysCard components AllowanceKeyModal index.ts AllowanceKeysRow index.ts index.ts types.ts CardLine index.ts CardTitle index.ts ConfigCard index.ts ContactInfo index.ts NotificationCard index.ts WalletIdCard components AddUserInfoModal components SaveButton index.ts SendEmail index.ts index.ts types.ts useValidationSchema.ts ContactLine index.ts UsaOnly index.ts index.ts nestedDaoPagesContent BountiesPageContent index.ts CreateDraftPageContent index.ts CreateGovernanceTokenPageContent components AmountBalanceCard index.ts ChooseExistingToken index.ts CreateGovernanceTokenWizard index.ts SubHeader index.ts TokenBalance index.ts WarningPanel index.ts steps ChangeVotingPolicy index.ts ContractAcceptance index.ts CreateToken components CreationProgress index.ts index.ts DelegateVoting index.ts Intro components AdvantageDescription index.ts index.ts SelectToken components TokenOption index.ts constants.ts index.ts StakeTokens index.ts TokenDistribution index.ts constants.ts helpers.ts hooks.ts index.ts types.ts CustomFunctionCallTemplatesPageContent components CustomFcTemplateCard components ApplyToDaos index.ts index.ts hooks.ts index.ts DaoConfigPageContent index.ts DaoPolicyPageContent components DraftSettings index.ts ManageGroups components EditGroup hooks useProcessMembersPaste.ts PermissionsSelector index.ts helpers.ts index.ts DaoVersionPageContent components UpgradeVersionWizard components ViewStepProposal index.ts helpers.ts index.ts VersionCheck index.ts hooks.ts index.ts DelegatePageContent components ControlledInput index.ts DelegateGroupTable index.ts DelegatePageContext index.ts DelegatePageWidget index.ts GoalChart index.ts MyBalanceWidget index.ts MyVotingPowerWidget index.ts QuorumErrorWarning index.ts VotingPower index.ts VotingThresholdWidget index.ts helpers.ts hooks.ts index.ts types.ts DraftsPageContent components DraftCard index.ts DraftsFilters index.ts DraftsFiltersContainer index.ts DraftsFiltersModal Filter index.ts index.ts DraftsMobileFilters index.ts DraftsPageHeader hooks.ts index.ts DraftsStatusFilter index.ts helpers.ts hooks.ts index.ts EditDraftPageContent index.ts GovernanceTokenInfoPageContent components InfoPanel index.ts StakingContract index.ts index.ts GroupsPageContent index.ts NFTsPageContent index.ts NestedDaoPageWrapper components DaoCreateProposal index.ts DaoLowBalanceWarning index.ts index.ts ProposalPageContent index.ts SettingsPageContent index.ts TokensPageContent index.ts nft NtfCard index.ts plugins PluginCard components ProposalStatusPanel index.ts index.ts UsePluginPopup components UsePluginWizard components CreateTokenView index.ts NewFunctionView index.ts PeviousFunctionsView index.ts helpers.ts index.ts index.ts types.ts astro_3.0 components AnimatedLayout index.ts AppLogoSelector index.ts ContextPopup index.ts CreateProposalSelector components DummyProposalCard index.ts index.ts DaoAssetsSelect index.ts DaoDashboardLogo index.ts FeedSort index.ts MobileFullscreenPopup index.ts SortMenu index.ts features AppHeader components AppLogo index.ts MobileDaosMenu index.ts index.ts AppVersion index.ts Bounties components BountiesFeed index.ts BountiesFeedFilters index.ts BountiesFeedNext hooks.ts index.ts BountiesFeedSort index.ts DaoBounties index.ts index.ts DaoProposalsFeed index.ts DaosNext components AdditionalDaosFilters index.ts helpers.ts index.ts DraftProposalView index.ts DraftsFeedNext components DraftsFeedFilters index.ts hooks.ts FeedLayout components FeedControlsLayout index.ts FeedTabs index.ts index.ts MainLayout index.ts MobileAppNavigation components MobileNavItem index.ts MoreInfo index.ts index.ts PollsProposalsFeed index.ts ProposalsFeed components CategoriesFeedFilter index.ts MobileFilters constants.ts index.ts ProposalsFeedFilters index.ts RadioListFilter index.ts StatusFeedFilter index.ts index.ts ProposalsFeedNext components AdditionalFilters index.ts CategoriesFeedFilter helpers.ts index.ts types.ts ProposalsFeedFilters index.ts hooks.ts index.ts SearchBar components DropdownResults components ResultSection components SearchResultDaoCard index.ts SearchResultPeopleCard index.ts SearchResultProposalLine index.ts index.ts index.ts index.ts index.ts Sidebar components SidebarActionItem index.ts SidebarDaos index.ts SidebarMarker index.ts SidebarMore index.ts SidebarNavItem index.ts helpers.ts index.ts TransactionResult hooks.ts bitbucket-pipelines.yml components AreaChartRenderer components Chart index.ts ChartTooltip index.ts chart-caption index.ts range-toggle index.ts helpers.ts hooks.ts index.ts types.ts Badge index.ts BadgeList index.ts DaoAddressLink index.ts Dropdown index.ts ExplorerLink index.ts types.ts ExternalLink index.ts Logo index.ts Pagination components NavLabel index.ts index.ts Popup index.ts Sidebar components NavItem index.ts index.ts Tabs index.ts types.ts cards TokenCard components FormattedNumericValue index.ts index.ts TransactionCard index.ts member-card GroupsRenderer index.ts MemberCard components SmileSvg index.ts Tokens index.ts index.ts MemberCardPopup index.ts types.ts inputs Checkbox index.ts Input index.ts types.ts InputFormWrapper index.ts TextArea index.ts Toggle components ToggleDisplay index.ts index.ts selects Select index.ts loader index.ts modal ModalContext.ts index.ts config aws.ts fetchConfig.ts index.ts near.ts constants common.ts cookies.ts countryPhoneCodes.ts featureFlags.ts googleTagManager.ts integrations.ts localStorage.ts proposals.ts regexp.ts routing.ts timeConstants.ts votingConstants.ts context AllTokensContext index.ts DaoSettingsContext hooks.ts index.ts DaoTokensContext index.ts WalletContext hooks useAvailableAccounts.ts usePkAndSignature.ts useWallet.ts walletSelector useSelectorLsAccount.ts useTrackSelectorAccount.ts index.ts types.ts utils initNearWallet.ts initSenderWallet.ts initWalletSelector.ts types.ts deployment app-chart templates NOTES.txt ingress.yml diff.d.ts env.d.ts errors SputnikWalletError.ts features daos helpers.ts groups helpers.ts types.ts notifications Notification index.ts NotificationContainer index.ts index.ts mock.ts notificationConstants.ts notificationUtils.ts types.ts proposal components ProposalActions components BehaviorActions index.ts NFTActions index.ts SocialActions index.ts index.ts VoicesProgressBar index.ts VoteCollapsableHeader index.ts VoteCollapsableList index.ts VoteTimeline ExtraActions index.ts FinishProposal index.ts VoteAction index.ts constants.ts hooks.ts index.ts VoterDetailsCard index.ts VotersList index.ts helpers.ts hooks.ts search search-results components CommentsTabView index.ts DraftsTabView index.ts MembersTabView constants.ts index.ts NoSearchResultsView index.ts daos-tab-view index.ts highlighter index.ts proposals-tab-view ProposalDetailsCard index.ts constants.ts helpers.ts index.ts types.ts search-results-renderer index.ts tests mock.ts index.ts treasury helpers.ts types.ts vote-policy components Group index.ts helpers.ts tests helpers.spec.ts global.d.ts hooks useAppInitialize.ts useAppVersion.ts useAvailableActionsCounters.ts useBlockchainWarning.ts useCountdown.ts useCreateDraftPermissions.ts useCustomTokens.ts useDaoContext.ts useDaoIds.ts useDaoSubscriptions.ts useDebounceUpdateEffect.ts useDeviceType.ts useDraft.ts useDraftService.ts useGetBreadcrumbsConfig.ts useIntercomAdjust.ts useIsHrefActive.ts useIsValidImage.ts useLoadDateLocale.ts useNearPrice.ts useOnClickOutside.ts useOnRouterChange.ts useProposal.ts useQuery.ts useRouterLoading.ts useSyncRefs.ts useWindowResize.ts jest.config.js jest __mocks__ fileMock.js styleMock.js mocks bountyContextData.ts notificationsData.ts pluginsPageData.ts next-i18next.config.js next.config.js package.json pages all daos index.ts api config.ts createProposal.ts health.ts nearPrice.ts server [...path].ts upload-to-s3.ts bounties index.ts cfc-library [template] index.ts index.ts dao [dao] create-draft index.ts dao index.ts delegate index.ts drafts [draft] edit-draft index.ts index.ts index.ts governance settings config index.ts custom-templates index.ts index.ts policy index.ts version index.ts groups [group] index.ts proposals [proposal] index.ts index.ts tasks bounties [bounty] index.ts feed index.ts list index.ts plugins index.ts polls index.ts treasury create-governance-token index.ts governance-token-info index.ts nfts index.ts tokens index.ts under-construction index.ts discover index.ts my-account index.ts notifications index.ts settings index.ts search-results index.ts terms-conditions index.ts plugins css-loader-config.js next-svg-sprites.js public assets captcha bg F1.svg F2.svg F3.svg slider failure.svg regular.svg success.svg illustrations bg-stars.svg club.svg cooperative.svg corporation.svg dashed-line.svg foundation.svg no-results.svg search.svg flag-mask.svg flag.svg locales en common.json notificationsPage.json ru common.json notificationsPage.json vercel.svg scripts generateAssetsIndex.js services ApiService hooks useAccountDaos.ts useAvailableActionsProposals.ts useBounties.ts useBounty.ts useDao.ts useDaoContext.ts useDaoNfts.ts useDaos.ts useDraft.ts useDraftComments.ts useDraftProposals.ts useJoiningDaoProposals.ts usePolicyAffectsProposals.ts useProposal.ts useProposals.ts useSubscribedDaos.ts useTokens.ts useUnreadDraftProposalsCount.ts AwsUploader AwsUploader.ts index.ts tests AwsUploader.failure.spec.ts AwsUploader.success.spec.ts ConfigService ConfigService.ts index.ts CookieService index.ts tests utils.spec.ts types.ts utils.ts DaoStatsService DaoStatsService.ts constants.ts index.ts types.ts DraftsService DraftsService.ts index.ts mappers.ts types.ts HttpService HttpService.ts index.ts NotificationsService NotificationsService.ts index.ts mappers notification.ts types.ts SearchService OpenSearchApiService.ts SearchService.ts builders bounties.ts dao.ts daos.ts draft.ts draftProposalComments.ts draftProposals.ts nfts.ts proposal.ts proposals.ts tokens.ts constants.ts helpers.ts index.ts mappers bounty.ts dao.ts draft.ts draftComment.ts helpers.ts nft.ts search.ts tokens.ts types.ts sputnik SputnikHttpService SputnikHttpService.ts index.ts SputnikNearService SputnikNearService.ts index.ts overrides SputnikConnectedWalletAccount.ts SputnikWalletConnection.ts types.ts services BaseService.ts GovernanceTokenService.ts NearService.ts constants.ts utils getPlainFunctionCallTransaction.ts getWalletSelectorStorageDepositTransaction.ts types.ts walletServices RpcService.ts SenderWalletService.ts SputnikWalletService.ts WalletSelectorService.ts constants.ts helpers.ts types.ts constants.ts index.ts mappers dao.ts index.ts nfts.ts proposal.ts search-results.ts tests utils getAwsImageUrl.spec.ts token.ts transaction.ts utils getAwsImageUrl.ts types api.ts bounty.ts dao.ts index.ts policy.ts proposals.ts search.ts version.ts setupTests.ts svg.d.ts tsconfig.json types api.ts auth.ts bounties.ts chart.ts config.ts context.ts dao.ts daoStats.ts draftProposal.ts memberHome.ts notification.ts policy.ts proposal.ts proposalTemplate.ts role.ts search.ts settings.ts stats.ts token.ts transaction.ts utils composeProperLinkUrl.ts copyToClipboard.ts dataConverter.ts dispatchCustomEvent.ts format.ts formatCurrency.ts fromBase64ToObj.ts ga.ts getDefaultAppVersion.ts getElementSize.ts getFeatureFlags.ts getImageFromImageFileList.ts getProposalScope.ts getRandomInt.ts getSocialLinkIcon.ts getTranslations.ts handlePressEnterBtn.ts imageValidators.ts isSelectorWalletType.ts jsonToBase64Str.ts keysToCamelCase.ts keysToSnakeCase.ts launchdarkly-server-client.ts logger.ts objects.ts proposalFilters.ts tests composeProperLinkUrl.spec.ts dispatchCustomEvent.spec.ts format.spec.ts formatCurrency.spec.ts getElementSize.spec.ts getImageFromImageFileList.spec.ts getProposalScope.spec.ts getRandomInt.spec.ts getSocialLinkIcon.spec.ts imageValidators.spec.ts jsonToBase64Str.spec.ts keysToSnakeCase.spec.ts proposalFilters.spec.ts
###### Install dependencies ```bash yarn install ``` ###### Run development server ```bash yarn dev ``` Open [http://localhost:8080](http://localhost:8080) with your browser to see the result. ##### Known issues The application can fail loading icons when running locally, in this case just build an application locally before starting development server using this command: ``` yarn build ``` #### Getting involved All change requests commits should follow the [Conventional Commits](https://www.conventionalcommits.org/en/v1.0.0/) specification. Proposed changes should be small and isolated. #### Release planning schedule We are trying to stick to two weeks schedule, the list of issues that are planning for next release can be checked in [Milestones](https://github.com/near-daos/astro-ui/milestones) section
eteu-technologies_near-converter
.eslintrc.js .github workflows deploy.yml README.md babel.config.js package.json public index.html src assets svg clipboard.svg main.ts mixins watcher.ts utils near.ts tsconfig.json vue.config.js
# NEAR Unit Converter Are you tired of trying to figure out how much yoctoNEAR is NEAR? Gas amount making your brain smoke again at 3am? Or big numbers making you trouble in general? Here's our small utility to aid with this problem - if you can use online percentage calculators, then this site shouldn't be any harder to use. Live version: https://convert.eteu.dev ## Building etc. ```shell # Project setup yarn install # Development build with HMR yarn serve # Production build yarn build # Lint yarn lint ```
near-everything_teleport-code-generators
.github workflows publish.yml test.yml .prettierrc.json .vscodeSnippets launch.json CHANGELOG.md CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md README.md examples test-samples comp-style-overrides.json component-html.json component-invalid-sample.json component-sample.json html-image-use-cases.json project-invalid-sample.json project-sample-with-dependency.json project-sample.json project-with-import-global-styles.json project-with-only-tokens.json project-with-slot.json uidl-samples component.json project-tailwind.json project.json react-project.json jest.config.js lerna.json package.json packages teleport-code-generator README.md __tests__ end2end index.ts index.ts package.json src index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-component-generator-angular README.md __tests__ end2end component-referenced-styles.ts index.ts integration component-conditional.ts component-dependency.ts component-repeat.ts component-style.ts component-with-nested-styles.json component-with-smilar-element-name-depependencies.json package.json src angular-mapping.ts index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-component-generator-html README.md __tests__ end2end index.ts package.json src index.ts plain-html-mapping.ts tsconfig.json teleport-component-generator-react README.md __tests__ end2end index.ts integration component-attrs.ts component-conditional.ts component-dependency.ts component-import-definitions.ts component-referenced-styles.ts component-repeat.ts component-slot.ts component-style.ts component-with-import-definitions.json component-with-invalid-state-styles.json component-with-nested-multiple-prop-ref-styles.json component-with-nested-single-prop-ref-styles.json component-with-nested-styles.json component-with-old-format-attributes.json component-with-smilar-element-name-depependencies.json component-with-valid-single-prop-style.json component-with-valid-state-reference.json performance big-sample.json index.ts package.json src index.ts react-mapping.ts tsconfig.json teleport-component-generator-vue README.md __tests__ end2end index.ts integration component-attrs.ts component-conditional.ts component-dependency.ts component-referenced-styles.ts component-repeat.ts component-slot.ts component-style.ts component-with-nested-styles.json component-with-old-format-attributes.json component-with-smilar-element-name-depependencies.json component-with-valid-style.json performance big-sample.json index.ts package.json src index.ts vue-mapping.ts tsconfig.json teleport-component-generator README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src assembly-line index.ts utils.ts builder generators html-to-string.ts js-ast-to-code.ts index.ts index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-github-gateway __tests__ index.ts package.json src constants.ts github-instance.ts index.ts types.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-angular-base-component README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src constants.ts index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-angular-module README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src constants.ts index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-common README.md __tests__ builders ast-builders.ts html-builders.ts style-builders.ts node-handlers node-to-html index.ts utils.ts node-to-jsx index.ts utils.ts utils ast-utils.ts style-utils.ts package.json src builders ast-builders.ts hast-builders.ts style-builders.ts index.ts node-handlers node-to-html constants.ts index.ts types.ts utils.ts node-to-jsx constants.ts index.ts types.ts utils.ts types.d.ts utils ast-utils.ts hast-utils.ts parsed-ast.ts style-utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-css-modules README.md __tests__ component-scoped.ts index.ts mocks.ts style-sheet.ts package.json src index.ts style-sheet.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-css README.md __tests__ component-scoped.ts index.ts mocks.ts referenced-styles.ts style-sheet.ts package.json src index.ts style-sheet.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-html-base-component README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src constants.ts index.ts node-handlers.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-import-statements-html README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-import-statements README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-jsx-head-config README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-jsx-inline-styles README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-jsx-next-image Readme.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-jsx-proptypes README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-react-app-routing README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-react-base-component README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src constants.ts index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-react-jss README.md __tests__ component-referenced.ts index.ts mocks.ts referenced-styles.ts style-sheet.ts package.json src index.ts style-sheet.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-react-styled-components README.md __tests__ component-scoped.ts index.ts mocks.ts referenced-styles.ts style-sheet.ts package.json src constants.ts index.ts style-sheet.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-react-styled-jsx README.md __tests__ component-scoped.ts index.ts mocks.ts referenced-styles.ts utils.ts package.json src index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-vue-app-routing README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-vue-base-component README.md __tests__ index.ts mocks.ts package.json src constants.ts index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-plugin-vue-head-config README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-postprocessor-prettier-html README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-postprocessor-prettier-js README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-postprocessor-prettier-jsx README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-postprocessor-prettier-ts README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-postprocessor-vue-file README.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-generator-angular README.md __tests__ end2end index.ts template-definition.json package.json src angular-project-mapping.ts constants.ts index.ts project-template.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-generator-html Readme.md __tests__ end2end index.ts index.ts package.json src error-page-mapping.ts index.ts path-browserisify.d.ts plugin-clone-globals.ts plugin-home-replace.ts project-template.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-generator-next README.md __tests__ end2end index.ts project-with-import-without-global-styles.json template-definition.json package.json src index.ts next-project-mapping.ts project-template.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-generator-nuxt README.md __tests__ end2end index.ts template-definition.json package.json src error-page-mapping.ts index.ts nuxt-project-mapping.ts project-template.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-generator-react README.md __tests__ end2end index.ts template-definition.json package.json src index.ts project-template.ts react-project-mapping.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-generator-vue README.md __tests__ end2end index.ts template-definition.json package.json src index.ts project-template.ts vue-project-mapping.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-generator README.md __tests__ assembly-line.ts file-handlers.ts index.ts mocks.ts utils.ts package.json src assembly-line index.ts constants.ts file-handlers.ts index.ts types.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-packer README.md __tests__ index.ts template-definition.json package.json src constants.ts index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-plugin-css-modules Readme.md package.json src index.ts next.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-plugin-custom-files Readme.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-plugin-external-embed package.json src index.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-plugin-parse-embed package.json src component-plugin.ts hast-util-to-jsx-inline-script.d.ts index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-plugin-react-jss Readme.md package.json src index.ts next.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-plugin-styled-components Readme.md package.json src constant.ts index.ts next.ts react.ts tsconfig.json teleport-project-plugin-tailwind Readme.md __tests__ index.ts package.json src angular.ts constants.ts default.ts index.ts next.ts nuxt.ts react.ts vue.ts tsconfig.json teleport-publisher-codesandbox README.md __tests__ index.ts mocks.ts utils.ts package.json src constants.ts index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-publisher-disk README.md __tests__ index.ts project-files.json package.json src index.ts path-browserisify.d.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-publisher-github __tests__ github-files-content.json index.ts project-files.json package.json src index.ts types.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-publisher-netlify README.md __tests__ index.ts project-files.json package.json src constants.ts errors.ts index.ts netlifyClient.ts tsconfig.json teleport-publisher-vercel README.md __tests__ index.ts mocks.ts package.json src hash.ts index.ts types.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-publisher-zip README.md __tests__ index.ts project-files.json package.json src index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-shared README.md __tests__ utils string-utils.ts uidl-utils-style.json uidl-utils.ts package.json src constants index.ts index.ts utils string-utils.ts uidl-utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-test config.example.json package.json src client.js codegen.js component.ts constants.ts packer.ts standalone.ts tsconfig.json webpack.config.js teleport-types README.md package.json src errors.ts generators.ts helper.ts index.ts uidl.ts vuidl.ts tsconfig.json teleport-uidl-builders README.md __tests__ component-builders.ts project-builders.ts package.json src component-builders.ts index.ts project-builders.ts tsconfig.json teleport-uidl-resolver README.md __tests__ abilities mocks.ts utils.ts embed-lottie-node index.ts index.ts mapping.json referenced-styles index.ts resolver.ts style-set-definitions index.ts utils.ts package.json src html-mapping.ts index.ts resolver.ts resolvers abilities index.ts utils.ts embed-node index.ts utils.ts referenced-styles index.ts style-set-definitions index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json teleport-uidl-validator README.md __tests__ parser componennt-with-referenced-styles.json component-parsing.ts component-referenced.ts component-with-primitive-values.json component-with-proper-values.json component-with-reusalble-styles.json validator component-element-with-empty-name.json component-invalid-sample.json component-uidl-with-event-modifier-undefined.json component-uidl-with-null-undefined.json index.ts old-project-invalid-sample.json project-invalid-sample-no-route.json project-invalid-sample.json project-sample.json package.json src decoders component-decoder.ts custom-combinators.ts index.ts project-decoder.ts utils.ts index.ts parser index.ts validator index.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json test-mocks html-whitespace-sensitive-tag-names.json tsconfig.json tslint.json
# teleport-plugin-import-statements A plugin for handling import statements in JavaScript code. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-import-statements ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-import-statements ``` # `teleport-plugin-angular-module-generator` A plugin for generating modules in Angular. Generates individual page, component and root level module with routing and dependencies. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-angular-module-generator ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-angular-module-generator ``` # teleport-component-generator-angular Component generator customization, capable of creating Angular components with styles. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-angular ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-angular ``` ## Usage ```javascript import { createAngularComponentGenerator } from '@teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-angular' const angularGenerator = createAngularComponentGenerator() const result = await angularGenerator.generateComponent(uidl) ``` # teleport-project-generator-react Project generator using React and React-Router, on top of a standard create-react-app structure. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-react ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-react ``` # teleport-uidl-resolver A small package that handles the transition from UIDL to HTML elements and has support for custom mappings. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-uidl-resolver ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-uidl-resolver ``` # teleport-plugin-jsx-proptypes A plugin for generating prop-types according to the component specification. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-jsx-proptypes ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-jsx-proptypes ``` # teleport-postprocessor-prettier-ts A post-processing function that formats ts code chunks using prettier and the ts parser. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-prettier-ts ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-prettier-ts ``` # teleport-component-generator Bare-bone component generator on top of which you can add plugins, mappings and post processing functions. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator ``` ## Usage ```javascript import generator from '@teleporthq/teleport-component-generator' generator.addMapping({ /*...*/ }) // Add a mapping object for UIDL element types generator.addPlugin(plugin1) // Add the plugins in the order in which they will be called generator.addPlugin(plugin2) /* ... */ generator.addPostProcessor(prettierJS) // Add any number of post-processor functions generator.addPostProcessor(/* ... */) const result = await generator.generateComponent(uidl) ``` # teleport-plugin-import-statements-html A plugin for handling import statements in HTML > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-import-statements-html ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-import-statements-html ``` # teleport-project-generator Generic project generator that requires a specific strategy to run on custom configurations. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator ``` # teleport-plugin-react-app-routing A plugin for handling the routing file of a React project. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-app-routing ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-app-routing ``` # teleport-publisher-vercel Publishes a generated folder structure to Vercel. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-vercel ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-vercel ``` # teleport-project-packer Bare-bone project packer that accepts any project generator and publisher. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-project-packer ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-project-packer ``` # teleport-uidl-builders A set of functions used for constructing UIDL structures. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-uidl-builders ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-uidl-builders ``` # teleport-uidl-validator A module that offers validation and parsing for non-standard UIDL structures. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-uidl-validator ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-uidl-validator ``` # teleport-shared A utility belt for the entire teleportHQ ecosystem. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-shared ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-shared ``` <p align="center"> <img src="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/blob/development/Default.png" width="250"/> </p> <h2 align="center">Code Generators v0.21.12 - Beta!</h2> <h3 align="center"> <a href="#what">What</a> <span> · </span> <a href="#quick-setup">Quick Setup</a> <span> · </span> <a href="#ecosystem">Ecosystem</a> <span> · </span> <a href="https://docs.teleporthq.io" target="_blank">Documentation</a> <span> · </span> <a href="#development">Development</a> <span> · </span> <a href="#planning">Planning</a> <span> · </span> <a href="#contributions">Contributions</a> </h3> <p align="center"> <a target="_blank" href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/@teleporthq/teleport-component-generator"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/@teleporthq/teleport-component-generator.svg" /></a> <a target="_blank" href="https://discord.gg/5pfSVWJzzX"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/chat-on%20discord-7289DA.svg" alt="Discord Chat" /></a> <a target="_blank" href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/actions/workflows/publish.yml"><img src="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/actions/workflows/publish.yml/badge.svg" /></a> <a target="_blank" href="https://codecov.io/gh/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators"><img src="https://codecov.io/gh/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/branch/development/graph/badge.svg" /></a> <a target="_blank" href="https://github.com/prettier/prettier"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/code_style-prettier-ff69b4.svg" /></a> <img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/l/@teleporthq/teleport-code-generators.svg" /> <a target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/teleporthqio"><img src="https://img.shields.io/twitter/follow/teleporthqio.svg" /></a> </p> We are not far from the **first official version** of the code generators, but meanwhile, keep in mind that some of the parts of the ecosystem are experimental. <h2 id="what">🤔 What is this?</h2> [teleportHQ](https://teleporthq.io/?ref=github) is a low-code platform that enables teams to build applications via a familiar design tool interface, in real-time. This repository holds the code generators that power the [visual editor](https://play.teleporthq.io/?ref=github) of the platform. https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3997538/123211638-63efaa00-d4cc-11eb-90b1-49bd61a95732.mp4 The glue between the platform and the code generators is the [**UIDL Standard**](https://docs.teleporthq.io/uidl/?ref=github). The **UIDL** defines the **user interfaces** in an **abstract** way, independent of any framework or even the web platform itself. Starting from the UIDL, you can convert that abstraction into different flavors of coding (e.g. React, Vue, WebComponents etc.). These code generators are part of a larger ecosystem, which we're actively building in an effort to streamline the creation of web applications. You can read more about our inception in [this article](https://teleporthq.io/blog-we-believe-in-ai-powered-code-generation). The philosophy behind the code generators is: * User interfaces are decomposed into **components**, hence the focus on component generation * What can be built with `React`, can also be built with `Vue` or on top of the `Web Components` standard - we support multiple targets * A project built with the visual editor should have a **high standard of quality** (performance, security, accessibility included) * Generated **code quality** should be as high as possible, so that any developer could pick up the work from there on and enhance the project * The code generation architecture is open and extendable, we invite everyone to contribute! Read more about the [UIDL Standard](https://docs.teleporthq.io/uidl/). <h2 id="quick-setup">🚀 Quick Setup</h2> The easiest way to jump into the **teleport ecosystem** is to try out one of the pre-configured **component generators**: ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-react npm install @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-vue npm install @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-angular ``` or using yarn: ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-react yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-vue yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-angular ``` For generating a simple component, you have to start from a **component UIDL**: ```json { "name": "My First Component", "node": { "type": "element", "content": { "elementType": "text", "children": [ { "type": "static", "content": "Hello World!" } ] } } } ``` Using the pre-configured component generators is as easy as calling an *async* function: ```javascript import ReactGenerator from '@teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-react' const uidl = { ... } // your sample here const { files } = await ReactGenerator.generateComponent(uidl) console.log(files[0].content) ``` The console output will be something like: ```javascript import React from 'react' const MyFirstComponent = (props) => { return <span>Hello World!</span> } export default MyFirstComponent ``` For other frameworks, just switch the package: ```javascript import VueGenerator from '@teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-vue' const uidl = { ... } // your sample here const { files } = await VueGenerator.generateComponent(uidl) console.log(files[0].content) ``` The console output will be something like: ```vue <template> <span>Hello World!</span> </template> <script> export default { name: 'MyFirstComponent', } </script> ``` You can play with the UIDL structure and also observe the generated code in [the online REPL](https://repl.teleporthq.io/). While there, can also check different examples of components written in the UIDL format. <h2 id="ecosystem">🌍 Ecosystem</h2> The teleport ecosystem consists of **three** main categories of packages: *component generators*, *project generators* and *project packers*. ### Component Generators We have **official** component generators for [a couple of popular web frontend frameworks](https://docs.teleporthq.io/component-generators/flavors.html). Check out the [official docs](https://docs.teleporthq.io/component-generators/) for an in depth understanding of the architecture behind the component generators. All the component generators are exposing an instance of the `teleport-component-generator` package. You can also install this package and build your own generator with [plugins](https://docs.teleporthq.io/component-generators/plugins.html), [mappings](https://docs.teleporthq.io/component-generators/mappings.html) and [postprocessors](https://docs.teleporthq.io/component-generators/post-processors.html). In the docs, you'll find a complete guide on how to [build your custom component generator](https://docs.teleporthq.io/guides/custom-component-generator.html). #### Flavors * `teleport-component-generator-react` - with styling: `css-modules`, `styled-components`, `styled-jsx`, etc. * `teleport-component-generator-vue` - generating standard `.vue` files * `teleport-component-generator-angular` - generates `.ts`, `.html` and `.css` files * `teleport-component-generator-html` - (experimental) * `teleport-component-generator-svelte` - (coming soon) #### Capabilities Here's a list of functionalities that the UIDL and the component generators are supporting at the moment, besides the obvious presentational layer: * Dynamic values (props, state) inside html nodes or at attribute level * Type definitions for component props (PropTypes in React, props in Vue) * External dependencies definition * Simple component state (using hooks in React, component instance in Vue) * Event Handlers (related to state changes) * Repeat structures (.map in React, v-for in Vue) * Support for slots ### Project Generators Project generators rely on a `ProjectUIDL` input and on a **project strategy**. The `ProjectUIDL` will contain all the information about routing, pages, components and global settings. The strategy will tell the generators where to put each file and which component generator to use. The generators will output an abstract structure with folders and files, without writing anything to disk. The project packer is tasked with taking the output of a project generator and publishing it somewhere. Check the official guides on [how to use an existing project generator](https://docs.teleporthq.io/guides/generate-your-first-project.html) or [how to create your custom configuration](https://docs.teleporthq.io/guides/customize-your-project-generator.html) #### Flavors * `teleport-project-generator-react` - `react` + `react-router` and `css-modules` on top of `create-react-app` * `teleport-project-generator-next` - based on [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/) * `teleport-project-generator-vue` - with a structure starting from the `vue-cli` * `teleport-project-generator-nuxt` - based on [Nuxt.js](https://nuxtjs.org/) * `teleport-project-generator-angular` - based on the `angular-cli` * `teleport-project-generator-html` (experimental) #### Capabilities Besides the regular files and folders generated at the end of the process, project generators are also taking care of: * Support for global settings, meta tags, style, scripts, etc. * Extracting all external dependencies and adding them to the `package.json`. * Creating the entry point for each application (it can be an `index.html` or something that is framework specific). * Creating a routing file for the client routes of the project. * Generating a web manifest for PWA support. ### Project Packers Once a generator created the code for the components and pages, the **project packer** will take that output, put it on top of an existing **project template**, add any local **assets** required and then will pass the entire result to a **publisher**. The publishers are specialized in deploying the entire folder structure to a 3rd party like `vercel` or `github`, or in creating an in-memory `zip` file or simply writing the folder to `disk`. #### Publishers * `teleport-publisher-vercel` * `teleport-publisher-github` * `teleport-publisher-codesandbox` * `teleport-publisher-zip` * `teleport-publisher-disk` * `teleport-publisher-netlify` (coming soon) ### Further Reading A few useful links to get you up to speed with the entire **teleport** ecosystem: * [Full Documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/) * [Component](https://docs.teleporthq.io/uidl-schema/v1/component.json) and [Project](https://docs.teleporthq.io/uidl-schema/v1/project.json) JSON Schemas * [Online REPL](https://repl.teleporthq.io/) <h2 id="development">💻 Development</h2> This project uses: * [TypeScript](https://www.typescriptlang.org/) for type safety and easy refactoring * [lerna](https://github.com/lerna/lerna) for managing the monorepo with multiple npm packages * [jest](https://jestjs.io/) for all types of tests and for calculating the code coverage In order to give it a spin locally, we recommend using `yarn`, as it integrates better with `lerna` and all the contributors are using it: ``` yarn ``` This installs the dependencies in the root folder, but also creates the symlinks between the independent modules inside the `packages` folder. To complete the lerna setup, you need to run: ``` yarn build ``` This will run the `build` task inside each individual package, creating the output `lib` folder. We have two outputs for each package: `cjs` - common js style modules and `esm` - modern es modules. If you want to speed up your build time, you can run just `build:cjs` to avoid the `esm` build. Running the test suite: ``` yarn test yarn test:coverage ``` Furthermore, there's a `private` package inside the lerna folder called `teleport-test`. That packages can be used to **test** the code/file generation process with any flavor of project/component generator. In order to give it a spin you will have to: ``` cd packages/teleport-test npm run standalone ``` The standalone version uses the `teleport-code-generator` package and the statically declared templates. To test with the github templates and the custom packer instance, you have to: ``` cp config.example.json config.json ``` You will have to replace the placeholder with [your own github token](https://help.github.com/en/articles/creating-a-personal-access-token-for-the-command-line). Then you can run it with: ``` npm run packer ``` This version of the packer uses the UIDLs from the `examples/uidl-sample`. If the process runs successfully, you will see the responoses from the project packer in the format: `{ success: true, payload: 'dist' }`. The task uses the `teleport-publisher-disk` package and generates four different project files in the `dist` folder. Please [open an issue](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/issues) for any irregularity, potential bug that you find while running this, or if you simply have any questions or curiosities about this project. <h2 id="planning">🤖 Planning</h2> It's not just our code that's open source, we're also planning the development of the code generators on GitHub. We have [a number of issues](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/issues) opened and we expect further contributions on this. We're especially interested in opening discussions around the issues tagged with the [`discussion`](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3Adiscussion) label. ### Official Release The official release will be a switch to version `1.0`. ETA for this is around the end of 2019. <h2 id="contributions">💕 Contributions</h2> We'd be super happy to have **community** involvement around this project. We strongly believe in the power of **open source**, so we're planning on building the best possible code generators, together with the entire development community. We envision different types of involvement from this point on: * Trying out the generators and reporting back any bugs and potential points of improvement * Contributing to the existing issues, either on the core modules or on the existing generators and plugins * Exploring and building new plugins for the existing generators * Exploring and building new generators based on the existing architecture Thanks goes to these wonderful people ([emoji key](https://allcontributors.org/docs/en/emoji-key)): <!-- ALL-CONTRIBUTORS-LIST:START - Do not remove or modify this section --> <!-- prettier-ignore-start --> <!-- markdownlint-disable --> <table> <tbody> <tr> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://medium.com/@alexnm"><img src="https://avatars0.githubusercontent.com/u/9945366?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Alex Moldovan"/><br /><sub><b>Alex Moldovan</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=alexnm" title="Code">💻</a> <a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=alexnm" title="Documentation">📖</a> <a href="#ideas-alexnm" title="Ideas, Planning, & Feedback">🤔</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/vladnicula"><img src="https://avatars3.githubusercontent.com/u/126038?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Vlad Nicula"/><br /><sub><b>Vlad Nicula</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=vladnicula" title="Code">💻</a> <a href="#ideas-vladnicula" title="Ideas, Planning, & Feedback">🤔</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/paulbrie"><img src="https://avatars2.githubusercontent.com/u/3997538?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Paul BRIE"/><br /><sub><b>Paul BRIE</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/issues?q=author%3Apaulbrie" title="Bug reports">🐛</a> <a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=paulbrie" title="Documentation">📖</a> <a href="#ideas-paulbrie" title="Ideas, Planning, & Feedback">🤔</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/mihaitaba"><img src="https://avatars3.githubusercontent.com/u/45386599?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="mihaitaba"/><br /><sub><b>mihaitaba</b></sub></a><br /><a href="#design-mihaitaba" title="Design">🎨</a> <a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=mihaitaba" title="Documentation">📖</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/mihaiserban"><img src="https://avatars2.githubusercontent.com/u/3420526?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Mihai Serban"/><br /><sub><b>Mihai Serban</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=mihaiserban" title="Code">💻</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://twitter.com/askjkrishna"><img src="https://avatars0.githubusercontent.com/u/11075561?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Jaya Krishna Namburu"/><br /><sub><b>Jaya Krishna Namburu</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=JayaKrishnaNamburu" title="Code">💻</a> <a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/issues?q=author%3AJayaKrishnaNamburu" title="Bug reports">🐛</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/anamariaoros"><img src="https://avatars0.githubusercontent.com/u/17590608?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Anamaria Oros"/><br /><sub><b>Anamaria Oros</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=anamariaoros" title="Code">💻</a></td> </tr> <tr> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/ovidiuionut94"><img src="https://avatars3.githubusercontent.com/u/11486739?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="ovidiuionut94"/><br /><sub><b>ovidiuionut94</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=ovidiuionut94" title="Code">💻</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/alexpausan"><img src="https://avatars0.githubusercontent.com/u/3284064?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="alexpausan"/><br /><sub><b>alexpausan</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=alexpausan" title="Code">💻</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/mihaisampaleanu"><img src="https://avatars1.githubusercontent.com/u/6763756?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Mihai Sampaleanu"/><br /><sub><b>Mihai Sampaleanu</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=mihaisampaleanu" title="Code">💻</a> <a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/issues?q=author%3Amihaisampaleanu" title="Bug reports">🐛</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="http://utwo.ro"><img src="https://avatars1.githubusercontent.com/u/282668?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Utwo"/><br /><sub><b>Utwo</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=Utwo" title="Code">💻</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/andreiTnu"><img src="https://avatars1.githubusercontent.com/u/51601382?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="andreiTnu"/><br /><sub><b>andreiTnu</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=andreiTnu" title="Code">💻</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://codepen.io/xavxyz"><img src="https://avatars0.githubusercontent.com/u/13962779?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Xavier Cazalot"/><br /><sub><b>Xavier Cazalot</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=xavxyz" title="Code">💻</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/chavda-bhavik"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/50201755?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Chavda Bhavik"/><br /><sub><b>Chavda Bhavik</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=chavda-bhavik" title="Code">💻</a></td> </tr> <tr> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/elizamaria"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/15130574?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Eliza Nitoi"/><br /><sub><b>Eliza Nitoi</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=elizamaria" title="Code">💻</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/TudorCe"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/101194278?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="TudorCe"/><br /><sub><b>TudorCe</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/issues?q=author%3ATudorCe" title="Bug reports">🐛</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/retyidoro"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/22962260?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="Dorottya Ferencz"/><br /><sub><b>Dorottya Ferencz</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/issues?q=author%3Aretyidoro" title="Bug reports">🐛</a></td> <td align="center" valign="top" width="14.28%"><a href="https://github.com/vylly"><img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/26410594?v=4?s=100" width="100px;" alt="William Gounot"/><br /><sub><b>William Gounot</b></sub></a><br /><a href="https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators/commits?author=vylly" title="Code">💻</a></td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <!-- markdownlint-restore --> <!-- prettier-ignore-end --> <!-- ALL-CONTRIBUTORS-LIST:END --> This project follows the [all-contributors](https://github.com/all-contributors/all-contributors) specification. Contributions of any kind welcome! <h2 id="contact">✍️ Contact</h2> Reach out to us on any of these channels: * 📧 [Write an Email](mailto:[email protected]) * 💻 [Discord](https://discord.gg/5pfSVWJzzX) * 🐦 [Drop a message on twitter](https://twitter.com/teleporthqio) * ℹ️ [Website](https://teleporthq.io/) # teleport-publisher-netlify Publishes a static site to netlify. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-netlify ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-netlify ``` # teleport-plugin-css-modules A plugin for handling the styles as a separate css-module file for React components. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-css-modules ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-css-modules ``` # teleport-project-generator-next Project generator for a standard Next.js project. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-next ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-next ``` # teleport-code-generator A standalone version of the teleport ecosystem with all the project and component generators installed. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-code-generator ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-code-generator ``` # teleport-component-generator-vue Component generator customization, capable of creating Vue components. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-vue ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-vue ``` ## Usage ```javascript import { createVueComponentGenerator } from '@teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-vue' const vueGenerator = createVueComponentGenerator() const result = await vueGenerator.generateComponent(uidl) ``` # teleport-project-generator-vue Project generator using Vue and Vue-Router. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-vue ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-vue ``` # teleport-plugin-vue-base-component A plugin for handling the skeleton/baseline for a Vue component. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-vue-base-component ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-vue-base-component ``` # teleport-plugin-react-base-component A plugin for handling the skeleton/baseline of a React component. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-base-component ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-base-component ``` # teleport-plugin-vue-head-config A plugin for generating `<head>` tags inside regular vue components > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-vue-head-config ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-vue-head-config ``` # teleport-component-generator-react Component generator customization, capable of creating React components with a number of different style flavors. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-react ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-react ``` ## Usage ```javascript import { createReactComponentGenerator, ReactStyleVariation } from '@teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-react' // other style options: "CSS", "InlineStyles", "StyledComponents", "StyledJSX", "ReactJSS" const reactGenerator = createReactComponentGenerator(ReactStyleVariation.CSSModules) const result = await reactGenerator.generateComponent(uidl) ``` # teleport-types The collection of reusable types across the entire teleport ecosystem. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-types ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-types ``` # teleport-component-generator-html Component generator customization, capable of creating Stencil components > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-html ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-html ``` ## Usage ```javascript import { createHTMLComponentGenerator } from '@teleporthq/teleport-component-generator-html' const htmlGenerator = createHTMLComponentGenerator(') const result = await htmlGenerator.generateComponent(uidl) ``` # teleport-plugin-angular-base-component A plugin for handling the skeleton/baseline of a Angular component. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-angular-base-component ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-angular-base-component ``` # teleport-plugin-react-styled-components A plugin for injecting the styles through styled-components inside React components. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-styled-components ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-styled-components ``` # teleport-plugin-jsx-inline-style A plugin for injecting the styles as inline styles inside JSX-based components. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-jsx-inline-style ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-jsx-inline-style ``` # teleport-postprocessor-prettier-jsx A post-processing function that formats jsx code chunks using prettier and the babylon and postcss parsers. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-prettier-jsx ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-prettier-jsx ``` # teleport-postprocessor-prettier-js A post-processing function that formats js code chunks using prettier and the babylon parser. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-prettier-js ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-prettier-js ``` # teleport-publisher-zip Creates an in-memory zip file from the generated project. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-zip ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-zip ``` # `teleport-project-generator-angular` Project generator using Angular, on top of a boilerplate generated using angular-cli > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-angular ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-angular ``` # teleport-plugin-common Common building and modelating functions for ASTs and HASTs. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-common ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-common ``` # teleport-plugin-css A plugin for creating the styles into external css files. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-css ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-css ``` # `@teleporthq/teleport-plugin-vue-app-routing` A plugin for generating the routing file for a Vue project. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-vue-app-routing ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-vue-app-routing ``` # teleport-postprocessor-prettier-html A post-processing function that formats html code chunks using prettier and the prettier-html plugin. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-prettier-html ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-prettier-html ``` # teleport-plugin-react-styled-jsx A plugin for injecting the styles as a styled-jsx tag inside React components. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-styled-jsx ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-styled-jsx ``` # teleport-project-generator-nuxt Project generator for a standard Nuxt.js project. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-nuxt ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-project-generator-nuxt ``` # teleport-publisher-disk Writes a project folder to disk. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-disk ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-disk ``` # teleport-plugin-jsx-head-config A plugin for generating `<head>` tags inside regular JSX-based components > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-jsx-head-config ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-jsx-head-config ``` # teleport-plugin-react-jss A plugin for injecting the styles with JSS inside React components. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-jss ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-react-jss ``` # teleport-publisher-codesandbox Send your generated project to codesandbox. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-codesandbox ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-publisher-codesandbox ``` # teleport-postprocessor-vue-file A post-processing function that concatenates html/js/css code chunks into a single code chunk of type vue. > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-vue-file ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-postprocessor-vue-file ``` # teleport-plugin-html-base-component A plugin for handling the skeleton/baseline of a base html component > This package is part of the [teleport ecosystem](https://github.com/teleporthq/teleport-code-generators). For a complete guide, check out the [official documentation](https://docs.teleporthq.io/). ## Install ```bash npm install @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-html-base-component ``` or ```bash yarn add @teleporthq/teleport-plugin-html-base-component ```
NearDeFi_mantle-gateway-template
.devcontainer devcontainer.json .eslintrc.json README.md next.config.js package.json public next.svg vercel.svg src-tauri Cargo.toml build.rs src main.rs tauri.conf.json src assets images near_social_combo.svg near_social_icon.svg vs_code_icon.svg components lib Spinner index.ts Toast README.md api.ts index.ts store.ts styles.ts data bos-components.ts links.ts web3.ts hooks useBosComponents.ts useBosLoaderInitializer.ts useClearCurrentComponent.ts useFlags.ts useHashUrlBackwardsCompatibility.ts useSignInRedirect.ts index.d.ts lib selector setup.js wallet.js stores auth.ts bos-loader.ts current-component.ts vm.ts styles globals.css theme.css utils auth.js config.ts firebase.ts form-validation.ts keypom-options.ts navigation.ts types.ts tsconfig.json
# BOS Gateway Template This repository contains a clean, light-weight gateawy for the [Blockchain Operating System](https://near.org/blog/near-announces-the-blockchain-operating-system) (BOS). It serves as a great starting point for launching a customized BOS gateway. Contributions are most welcome! ## Setup & Development 1. Initialize repo: ```bash pnpm i ``` 2. Add .env file: ```bash cp .env.example .env ``` 3. The entry component is ```BosMain``` and it's located at ```/src/components/index.tsx``` It loads the ```ciocan.near/widget/hello-world``` BOS component. The source can be found [here](https://near.org/near/widget/ComponentDetailsPage?src=ciocan.near/widget/hello-world&tab=source). 4. Edit ```web3.js``` and change the projectId and dappUrl for WalletConnect (dappUrl is required by WalletConnect to work with the MetaMask on mobile) Start development version: ```bash pnpm dev ``` ## Deployment This is a [Next.js](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/) app and a fork of [NEAR Discovery](https://github.com/near/near-discovery) gateway app. For static exports just run ```next build``` and upload the build files to your hosting provider. More info [here](https://nextjs.org/docs/pages/building-your-application/deploying/static-exports). For Vercel, Cloudflare or others that supports a Next app just connect the repo and follow the deploy steps from the dashboards. More info on Next.js deployments [here](https://nextjs.org/docs/pages/building-your-application/deploying/static-exports). ## Running with docker ```bash docker build -t bos-gateway-template . docker run -p 3000:3000 bos-gateway-template ``` ## Building the native apps We use [Tauri](https://tauri.app/) to build the native apps. ### Prerequisites The first step is to install Rust and system dependencies. More info here [here](https://tauri.app/v1/guides/getting-started/prerequisites). ### Building Edit the ```src-tauri/tauri.conf.json``` file and change: - ```productName``` from ```BOS Gateway Template``` to your gateway name. - ```identifier``` from ```com.bos-gateway-template``` to your gateway identifier. - ```icon``` array to your gateway icons. - ```windows.title``` from ```BOS Gateway Template``` to your gateway name. Then run: ```bash pnpm build-tauri ``` The native app will be located in ```src-tauri/target/release/bundle```. Note: Tauri relies heavily on native libraries and toolchains, so meaningful cross-compilation is not possible at the current moment. The next best option is to compile utilizing a CI/CD pipeline More info [here](https://tauri.app/v1/guides/building/cross-platform). To distribute the native app you need Code Signing for specific platforms. More info [here](https://tauri.app/v1/guides/distribution/sign-macos). # Toast Implemented via Radix primitives: https://www.radix-ui.com/docs/primitives/components/toast _If the current props and Stitches style overrides aren't enough to cover your use case, feel free to implement your own component using the Radix primitives directly._ ## Example Using the `openToast` API allows you to easily open a toast from any context: ```tsx import { openToast } from '@/components/lib/Toast'; ... <Button onClick={() => openToast({ type: 'ERROR', title: 'Toast Title', description: 'This is a great toast description.', }) } > Open a Toast </Button> ``` You can pass other options too: ```tsx <Button onClick={() => openToast({ type: 'SUCCESS', // SUCCESS | INFO | ERROR title: 'Toast Title', description: 'This is a great toast description.', icon: 'ph-bold ph-pizza', // https://phosphoricons.com/ duration: 20000, // milliseconds (pass Infinity to disable auto close) }) } > Open a Toast </Button> ``` ## Deduplicate If you need to ensure only a single instance of a toast is ever displayed at once, you can deduplicate by passing a unique `id` key. If a toast with the passed `id` is currently open, a new toast will not be opened: ```tsx <Button onClick={() => openToast({ id: 'my-unique-toast', title: 'Toast Title', description: 'This is a great toast description.', }) } > Deduplicated Toast </Button> ``` ## Custom Toast If you need something more custom, you can render a custom toast using `lib/Toast/Toaster.tsx` as an example like so: ```tsx import * as Toast from '@/components/lib/Toast'; ... <Toast.Provider duration={5000}> <Toast.Root open={isOpen} onOpenChange={setIsOpen}> <Toast.Title>My Title</Toast.Title> <Toast.Description>My Description</Toast.Description> <Toast.CloseButton /> </Toast.Root> <Toast.Viewport /> </Toast.Provider> ```
NEARBuilders_ChatGPTDoesNEAR
GetNFTTokenHolders.js README.md RainbowBridgeNEARtoAurora.js
# ChatGPTContracts ChatGPT Does NEAR
Gabriel9009_Hello_In_near
Cargo.toml src lib.rs target .rustc_info.json debug .fingerprint Inflector-700b9618865a4af8 lib-inflector.json ahash-9fc0ef3a3c3e8976 lib-ahash.json aho-corasick-4f726f2802425d53 lib-aho_corasick.json autocfg-fa9eea2020077f56 lib-autocfg.json base64-d13cb76eaf5f76a5 lib-base64.json block-buffer-d1c83c0c8269387a lib-block-buffer.json block-padding-1b556f94009a83c0 lib-block-padding.json borsh-2d5dac95535e61b2 lib-borsh.json borsh-derive-2ed3d300cda840c5 lib-borsh-derive.json borsh-derive-internal-a21c695e7f92fd5b lib-borsh-derive-internal.json borsh-schema-derive-internal-328fcdf01f18b35c lib-borsh-schema-derive-internal.json bs58-4656d9e1b4571d56 lib-bs58.json byteorder-55e6c2d34285e0c3 lib-byteorder.json cfg-if-d62f86f9531dae72 lib-cfg-if.json cfg-if-fa0d38a03582caa4 lib-cfg-if.json convert_case-33f8cf0853895763 lib-convert_case.json cpufeatures-ac7d048e37dc733b lib-cpufeatures.json derive_more-57e0e077188a3854 lib-derive_more.json digest-e5853c840c936d27 lib-digest.json generic-array-13cfcd5cdf0c07eb lib-generic_array.json generic-array-14b436bbb52c2736 run-build-script-build-script-build.json generic-array-fe4ee2093a68dd86 build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-7023808090bfa6a4 lib-hashbrown.json hashbrown-9b7e3f41491c9539 lib-hashbrown.json hello_in_near-2b77ae46714afeba test-lib-hello_in_near.json hello_in_near-c1c7b2ee2a27fb85 lib-hello_in_near.json hex-20668d43b3be4a9d lib-hex.json indexmap-1387ed5929fd6b48 lib-indexmap.json indexmap-2e02a1d47839d5d9 run-build-script-build-script-build.json indexmap-d504533aee7a0b10 build-script-build-script-build.json itoa-c81e903ae4da985e lib-itoa.json keccak-97f996bbf804acbb lib-keccak.json lazy_static-3a8cd441589d8bb8 lib-lazy_static.json libc-01ef04704ee9d6d6 run-build-script-build-script-build.json libc-6e532f3e28e4fecd build-script-build-script-build.json libc-96df1d26e1235cd1 lib-libc.json memchr-0c2d17e75a62c41d build-script-build-script-build.json memchr-4b43828fec892511 lib-memchr.json memchr-67458b3569d6441a run-build-script-build-script-build.json memory_units-91e632afc413457e lib-memory_units.json near-primitives-core-e9e9997cd8047a7c lib-near-primitives-core.json near-rpc-error-core-dbfb1c521fae00e5 lib-near-rpc-error-core.json near-rpc-error-macro-94b5312d9b77cfe7 lib-near-rpc-error-macro.json near-runtime-utils-c38113dbb778f681 lib-near-runtime-utils.json near-sdk-91943804a4f2ed5c lib-near-sdk.json near-sdk-core-9ddfa28f322c5b85 lib-near-sdk-core.json near-sdk-macros-044f45d111492fe2 lib-near-sdk-macros.json near-vm-errors-ef7380494539fd15 lib-near-vm-errors.json near-vm-logic-4ccfc3e0a90ffb02 lib-near-vm-logic.json num-bigint-66b505d5f44fed50 build-script-build-script-build.json num-bigint-6b02ca0838c68ea4 lib-num-bigint.json num-bigint-f2369a4752c66831 run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-integer-ae061f21d739e25a run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-integer-d151a4d469e12b84 build-script-build-script-build.json num-integer-dbd54423ed21b2f2 lib-num-integer.json num-rational-9627e639793e6025 run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-rational-ca0ae87a4ef6414c lib-num-rational.json num-rational-e97f16f5663f0a08 build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-022126431cd5bf1d build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-0bf6aeb0cdc6e96c run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-4e2ff91e61abc207 lib-num-traits.json opaque-debug-d49d077e73959851 lib-opaque-debug.json proc-macro-crate-ba00982c3563f11f lib-proc-macro-crate.json proc-macro2-5dc4db19fc0d1058 build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro2-a70689af42ffb9d6 lib-proc-macro2.json proc-macro2-a84e0aab638613f4 run-build-script-build-script-build.json quote-4eacb5bf90af0013 run-build-script-build-script-build.json quote-887fb36b55c28f1c build-script-build-script-build.json quote-b7a2d1a4b46d556e lib-quote.json regex-0d776592171c07d4 lib-regex.json regex-syntax-a173cda7ca84e08e lib-regex-syntax.json ryu-0a94d2f1151bbb6c lib-ryu.json serde-09e2bbf1fded614d build-script-build-script-build.json serde-0d50eefa30114805 lib-serde.json serde-79c0ba557c47dd03 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_derive-074e97292086c8b0 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_derive-07c170c3a78caf2b lib-serde_derive.json serde_derive-765e0417558eed68 build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-06f04a93917cba68 build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-0f443676fafdb5c8 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-4243595b6990fa7d lib-serde_json.json serde_json-63bcb107225a7beb run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-6c5a7c94dfb4e3da build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-7be1618846c42b3a lib-serde_json.json sha2-87827d7ea3fcc0fa lib-sha2.json sha3-07066d097eab5328 lib-sha3.json syn-051c87ca9da6b12f lib-syn.json syn-234ed9ac04c00314 build-script-build-script-build.json syn-ce3904d9d2429ed7 run-build-script-build-script-build.json toml-17aff56a8457aafe lib-toml.json typenum-108629286d9244c6 lib-typenum.json typenum-2e9c4606bc59b89d run-build-script-build-script-main.json typenum-4cd690c0211b2847 build-script-build-script-main.json unicode-ident-c00232aaee5f290a lib-unicode-ident.json unicode-xid-77016854d7edd0f4 lib-unicode-xid.json version_check-221f2cb7404a3736 lib-version_check.json wee_alloc-2b0894e5ca9408f4 lib-wee_alloc.json wee_alloc-44d60a0043a09747 build-script-build-script-build.json wee_alloc-c4baad36186a21ac run-build-script-build-script-build.json build num-bigint-f2369a4752c66831 out radix_bases.rs typenum-2e9c4606bc59b89d out consts.rs op.rs tests.rs wee_alloc-c4baad36186a21ac out wee_alloc_static_array_backend_size_bytes.txt release .fingerprint Inflector-6cf59532d66cda8f lib-inflector.json autocfg-8a1b1f4e4b64a762 lib-autocfg.json borsh-derive-066edb3e3c4e2686 lib-borsh-derive.json borsh-derive-internal-1e4ab3fcdcc1c33e lib-borsh-derive-internal.json borsh-schema-derive-internal-c313fe2e74f2ce3a lib-borsh-schema-derive-internal.json convert_case-1e6860726b1e3722 lib-convert_case.json derive_more-3f84c758d3e45261 lib-derive_more.json generic-array-c8baf966406602df build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-ec718edb866ca095 lib-hashbrown.json indexmap-1f5c6ec0ebabd8f4 lib-indexmap.json indexmap-61bfba4bd07b1687 run-build-script-build-script-build.json indexmap-62ebb762e9c88647 build-script-build-script-build.json itoa-13e9f682ceff2f4c lib-itoa.json memchr-9a7e59a7401e0d6d build-script-build-script-build.json near-rpc-error-core-6e2b5919c081f0b3 lib-near-rpc-error-core.json near-rpc-error-macro-6786fdf9846b242b lib-near-rpc-error-macro.json near-sdk-core-5810f50389011466 lib-near-sdk-core.json near-sdk-macros-92a4ad26ede5d291 lib-near-sdk-macros.json num-bigint-78050052f7335d46 build-script-build-script-build.json num-integer-7963e247442535e8 build-script-build-script-build.json num-rational-a5d58af133f957f9 build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-2cd7f97c7f23c694 build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro-crate-1389f2a394449f85 lib-proc-macro-crate.json proc-macro2-0522d0d17aec11f9 run-build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro2-73d884ff09c8763a build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro2-98d4c68d20795af4 lib-proc-macro2.json quote-16af9baf0cc92460 lib-quote.json quote-88d93bfaa2b0b7ee run-build-script-build-script-build.json quote-a210d4f0ce806590 build-script-build-script-build.json ryu-94ea01ecf05a4864 lib-ryu.json serde-b17702e2a186c904 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde-c8961e6e57ddf1c2 build-script-build-script-build.json serde-fdce56a352c2e8e3 lib-serde.json serde_derive-1b78fec38c6b1431 build-script-build-script-build.json serde_derive-867abe53120f21e6 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_derive-c740e05d0e1f0e42 lib-serde_derive.json serde_json-5017a9b85c0a6da8 lib-serde_json.json serde_json-5984364a2ead516f run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-8b198696bfea0ac4 build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-9f416db2aa502895 build-script-build-script-build.json syn-5db4a5efee1aa8a6 build-script-build-script-build.json syn-c5fa172acb92bd97 run-build-script-build-script-build.json syn-f7cf185b02cd981a lib-syn.json toml-dac66d353e0153a3 lib-toml.json typenum-a448472842e89d64 build-script-build-script-main.json unicode-ident-c585adfd9530b08d lib-unicode-ident.json unicode-xid-0f56e0e62954cb9e lib-unicode-xid.json version_check-0e8e84eb2fb1fbb0 lib-version_check.json wee_alloc-f1000ade3465fc2d build-script-build-script-build.json wasm32-unknown-unknown release .fingerprint ahash-39f5665bf717d448 lib-ahash.json aho-corasick-a07b2d85c74b6822 lib-aho_corasick.json base64-795d8830df3b06d3 lib-base64.json block-buffer-dc5e4fc83e1c3db9 lib-block-buffer.json block-padding-fbe28ab6287c224d lib-block-padding.json borsh-3c853a5cf08d7c73 lib-borsh.json bs58-41f5677f2886c4bf lib-bs58.json byteorder-bd90eb82c5a2d3c2 lib-byteorder.json cfg-if-53683a8675657422 lib-cfg-if.json cfg-if-7eb32ed241b41960 lib-cfg-if.json digest-92208eccf439bbcd lib-digest.json generic-array-4194ae7992d1f102 lib-generic_array.json generic-array-f8507b9135f611cd run-build-script-build-script-build.json hashbrown-0ce707d21a5213c0 lib-hashbrown.json hello_in_near-c1c7b2ee2a27fb85 lib-hello_in_near.json hex-cd741e9627dee0b8 lib-hex.json itoa-27efcf591a05bedd lib-itoa.json keccak-daffcfd489acbed8 lib-keccak.json lazy_static-4f531c4a20c9eb33 lib-lazy_static.json memchr-1a7c4bea3a1448b2 run-build-script-build-script-build.json memchr-c66d529f1297c518 lib-memchr.json memory_units-d5400ad1372f2f21 lib-memory_units.json near-primitives-core-c681e633901836a8 lib-near-primitives-core.json near-runtime-utils-7f1b09c714ba515b lib-near-runtime-utils.json near-sdk-49038f7c5bfd1568 lib-near-sdk.json near-vm-errors-5bb75a227096ad50 lib-near-vm-errors.json near-vm-logic-498e6020d26f14bc lib-near-vm-logic.json num-bigint-0f262fc6a2578cfc run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-bigint-9f399e7f15390b18 lib-num-bigint.json num-integer-14f21da6916582ee run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-integer-acd32157bddcdc41 lib-num-integer.json num-rational-a61d2ff4ab69bcea run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-rational-a8bbb2d9ce824137 lib-num-rational.json num-traits-33e668342d549546 run-build-script-build-script-build.json num-traits-53718e546a2007f6 lib-num-traits.json opaque-debug-164fd2d8c0f4410b lib-opaque-debug.json regex-5cd6acb119b579b1 lib-regex.json regex-syntax-22222a314289f185 lib-regex-syntax.json ryu-58716cdffb646a0a lib-ryu.json serde-470af5f62728b17f run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde-64ee315989cb0410 lib-serde.json serde_json-34f7271ec0213441 lib-serde_json.json serde_json-a748ea4bd26bfd2c run-build-script-build-script-build.json sha2-5dd3a70930578132 lib-sha2.json sha3-5e2fa1ea9a1297df lib-sha3.json typenum-0194c069034285de run-build-script-build-script-main.json typenum-c3fb22c792baa59f lib-typenum.json wee_alloc-1116a004da82f3bb lib-wee_alloc.json wee_alloc-284e709a6a4b3a76 run-build-script-build-script-build.json build num-bigint-0f262fc6a2578cfc out radix_bases.rs typenum-0194c069034285de out consts.rs op.rs tests.rs wee_alloc-284e709a6a4b3a76 out wee_alloc_static_array_backend_size_bytes.txt
metanear_sdk-js
README.md package.json src .eslintrc.yml sdk.js
# Meta NEAR SDK JS Javascript SDK library to interact with Meta NEAR contracts on NEAR Protocol blockchain ### Build ``` yarn ```
luvnft_NEAR-Block-Dice
README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json package.json scripts 1.deploy.sh 10.get_active_games.sh 11.get_completed_games.sh 12.get_created_games.sh 2.create_new_game.sh 3.join_game.sh 4.roll_dice.sh 5.get_winners.sh 6.claim_winnings.sh 7.get_game_details.sh 8.get_players_details.sh 9.get_profile_details.sh README.md src as-pect.d.ts as_types.d.ts block-dice README.md __tests__ README.md index.unit.spec.ts asconfig.json assembly index.ts model.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json
## Unit tests Unit tests can be run from the top level folder using the following command: ``` yarn test:unit ``` ### Tests for Contract in `index.unit.spec.ts` ``` [Describe]: Checks for creating account [Success]: ✔ creates a new game [Success]: ✔ creates throws when fee is not attached [Describe]: Checks for joining a game [Success]: ✔ allows a new user join a game [Success]: ✔ can't when join when fee is zero [Success]: ✔ can't when join when completed [Describe]: Rolling dice [Success]: ✔ rolls the dice [Success]: ✔ Doesn't return rolls if game has not ended [Success]: ✔ can't roll the dice twice [Describe]: Claiming winning error catch [Success]: ✔ verifies if game has ended before win is claimed [Describe]: Claiming winning [Success]: ✔ claims win if among winners [Success]: ✔ verifies winners [Success]: ✔ cant claims win if not among winners [Success]: ✔ cannot claim winnings twice [File]: src/block-dice/__tests__/index.unit.spec.ts [Groups]: 6 pass, 6 total [Result]: ✔ PASS [Snapshot]: 0 total, 0 added, 0 removed, 0 different [Summary]: 13 pass, 0 fail, 13 total [Time]: 318.942ms ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ [Result]: ✔ PASS [Files]: 1 total [Groups]: 6 count, 6 pass [Tests]: 13 pass, 0 fail, 13 total [Time]: 16963.038ms ✨ Done in 17.81s. ``` ![Near, Inc. logo](https://near.org/wp-content/themes/near-19/assets/img/logo.svg?t=1553011311) ## Design ### Interface ```ts function createNewGame ``` - "Change" function (ie. a function that alters contract state) - Creates a new game and returns the unique id for that game ```ts function joinGame ``` - "Change" function (ie. a function that alters contract state) - Recieves a game's unique id as parameter - Allows the account initiating the contract call tp join the game with id passed in ```ts function rollDice ``` - "Change" function (ie. a function that alters contract state) - Recieves a game's unique id as parameter - Allows the account initiating the contract call to roll dice for the game - Once the first dice is rolled in a game, it becomes active - Each active game lasts for 30 minutes on being active ```ts function getWinners ``` - "View" function - Recieves a game's unique id as parameter - Returns an array with the account id of the winners for the game id passed in ```ts function claimWinnings ``` - "Change" function (ie. a function that alters contract state) - Recieves a game's unique id as parameter - Allows the account initiating the contract call to claim winning for the game - Panics if account has already claimed winnings or is not a winner - Returns true if winnings was successfully claimed ```ts function getGameDetails ``` - "View" function - Recieves a game's unique id as parameter - Returns details of the game id passed in ```ts function getPlayersDetails ``` - "View" function - Recieves a game's unique id as parameter - Returns details of the players for the game id passed in ```ts function getProfileDetails ``` - "View" function - Returns details of the profile of the user calling the contract ```ts function getActiveGames ``` - "Change" function - Returns active games ```ts function getCompletedGames ``` - "Change" function - Returns completed games ```ts function getCreatedGames ``` - "Change" function - Returns created games # Block-Dice This repository includes a complete Smart Contract for a dice game built on the NEAR blockchain. This is a second sample that corrects a leak in the initial sample. - The error in the initial smart contract is that you can see what other players rolled before a game has ended, this gives those joining late an edge as they can make a decision based on what other players rolled. We are correcting this by only revealing a players roll if a game has ended. For additional informtion on the smart contract methods view [here](src/block-dice/) ``` It's a simple contract demonstrating how to build a dic game on the NEAR blockchain using assembly script: - Why you should avoid leaks and have data restrictions on your smart contracts - How to implement random number generation and id checks on the NEAR block chain ## Usage ### Getting started 1. clone this repo to a local folder 2. run `yarn` 3. run `yarn test:unit` ### Top-level `yarn` commands - run `yarn test` to run all tests - (!) be sure to run `yarn build:release` at least once before: - run `yarn test:unit` to run only unit tests - run `yarn test:simulate` to run only simulation tests - run `yarn build` to quickly verify build status - run `yarn clean` to clean up build folder ### Other documentation - Sample contract and test documentation - see `/src/block-dice/README` for contract interface - see `/src/block-dice/__tests__/README` for Sample unit testing details ``` ## Deploying contract through your terminal The `deploy.sh` file within the scripts folder demonstrates a simple way of deploying a smart contract to the testnet. ```sh [ -z "$CONTRACT" ] && echo "Missing \$CONTRACT environment variable" [ -z "$OWNER" ] && echo "Missing \$OWNER environment variable" ``` The above commands searches the environment variables for `$CONTRACT` and `$OWNER` variables. ```sh echo "deleting $CONTRACT and setting $OWNER as beneficiary" echo near delete $CONTRACT $OWNER ``` These commands deletes the two environment variable , `$CONTRACT` and `$OWNER` if any is found in the codebase, resolving the conflict of having two set of `$CONTRACT` and `$OWNER` variables. ```sh echo -------------------------------------------- echo echo "cleaning up the /neardev folder" echo rm -rf ./neardev ``` The above shell commands deletes the `./neardev` folder. This folder contains details about the smart contract once deploy, expample is the `CONTRACT_NAME` found in the `dev-account.env` file. This way we can always generate a new `./neardev` folder on every deploy. ```sh echo -------------------------------------------- echo echo "rebuilding the contract (release build)" echo yarn build:release ``` These commands compiles/builds the AssemlyScript code down to WebAssembly code. This action generates a file with `.wasm` extension that contains the WebAssembly code. ```sh echo -------------------------------------------- echo echo "redeploying the contract" echo near dev-deploy ../build/release/block-dice.wasm ``` These commands deploys/redeploys the resulting WebAssembly file from the previous action, `yarn build:release`. This file is deployed to the Near blockchain. ```sh echo -------------------------------------------- echo run the following commands echo echo 'export CONTRACT=__new_contract_account_id__' echo echo ``` These final commands prompts the developer to export the exported interfaces, making it available for consumption on the local machine.
himanigulati01_block-vote
.gitpod.yml README.md babel.config.js contract README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts main.spec.ts as_types.d.ts index.ts tsconfig.json compile.js package-lock.json package.json package.json src App.js Components Home.js NewPoll.js PollingStation.js __mocks__ fileMock.js assets blockvotelogo.svg loadingcircles.svg logo-black.svg logo-white.svg config.js global.css index.html index.js jest.init.js main.test.js utils.js wallet login index.html
blockvote ================== This [React] app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Install dependencies: `yarn install` 3. Run the local development server: `yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `yarn run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `yarn install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: yarn install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `blockvote.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `blockvote.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account blockvote.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'blockvote.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [React]: https://reactjs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages # blockvotetutorial2 blockvote Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [AssemblyScript] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install [Node.js] ≥ 12 Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `assembly/index.ts`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard AssemblyScript tests using [as-pect]. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [AssemblyScript]: https://www.assemblyscript.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [as-pect]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli
phongnguyen2012_staking-contract
Cargo.toml build.sh ft_contract.sh src account.rs config.rs core_impl.rs enumeration.rs internal.rs lib.rs utils.rs t2 200k staking_contract.sh
near-examples_storage-examples
README.md storage-js README.md babel.config.json integration test-storage.ava.js package.json src index.ts storage-rs README.md contract Cargo.toml README.md src lib.rs map.rs set.rs storage.rs tree.rs vector.rs package.json
# Donation in RUST An example contract writen in RUST Storage Smart Contract ====================== A [smart contract] written in [RUST] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. You can compile by running `cargo build`. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests by doing `cargo test`. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/ [RUST]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/title-page.html # Docs Snippets This repository holds all the code snippets that are displayed in [near-docs.io](near-docs.io). # Cross-Contract JavaScript An example on how to write JS cross-contract code
icerove_caller
.gitpod.yml .travis.yml LICENSE-APACHE.txt LICENSE-MIT.txt README-Gitpod.md README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.js assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts example.spec.ts token.spec.ts as_types.d.ts main.ts model.ts tsconfig.json dist index.html index.js main.1f19ae8e.js neardev shared-test-staging test.near.json shared-test test.near.json package.json src config.js index.html loader.html main.js test.js
Token Contract in AssemblyScript ================================ [![Open in Gitpod](https://gitpod.io/button/open-in-gitpod.svg)](https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/near-examples/token-contract-as) <!-- MAGIC COMMENT: DO NOT DELETE! Everything above this line is hidden on NEAR Examples page --> This project contains an implementation of a token contract similar to [ERC20](https://theethereum.wiki/w/index.php/ERC20_Token_Standard) but simpler. We'll visit a page, sign in and use your browser's console to run commands to initialize, send, and get the balance of a custom token. Getting started =============== There's a button at the top of this file that says "Open in Gitpod." If you want to try out this project as fast as possible, that's what you want. It will open the project in your browser with a complete integrated development environment configured for you. If you want to run the project yourself locally, read on. There are two ways to run this project locally. The first is quick, and a good way to instantly become familiar with this example. Once familiar, the next step is to create your own NEAR account and deploy the contract to testnet. Quick option --------------- 1. Install dependencies: yarn 2. Build and deploy this smart contract to a development account. This development account will be created automatically and is not intended for reuse: yarn dev Standard deploy option ---------------------- In this second option, the smart contract will get deployed to a specific account created with the NEAR Wallet. 1. Ensure `near-shell` is installed by running: near --version If needed, install `near-shell`: npm install near-shell -g 2. If you do not have a NEAR account, please create one with [NEAR Wallet](https://wallet.nearprotocol.com). Then, in the project root, login with `near-shell` by following the instructions after this command: near login 3. Modify the top of `src/config.js`, changing the `CONTRACT_NAME` to be the NEAR account that you just used to log in. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'YOUR_ACCOUNT_NAME_HERE'; /* TODO: fill this in! */ 4. Start the example! yarn start Exploring The Code ================== 1. The backend code lives in the `/assembly` folder. This code gets deployed to the NEAR blockchain when you run `yarn deploy:contract`. This sort of code-that-runs-on-a-blockchain is called a "smart contract" – [learn more about NEAR smart contracts][smart contract docs]. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. [/src/index.html](/src/index.html) is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/main.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and backend. The backend code gets tested with the [asp] command for running the backend AssemblyScript tests, and [jest] for running frontend tests. You can run both of these at once with `yarn test`. Both contract and client-side code will auto-reload as you change source files. [smart contract docs]: https://docs.nearprotocol.com/docs/roles/developer/contracts/assemblyscript [asp]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli [jest]: https://jestjs.io/
hdriqi_paras-backend
Cron.js Mail.js MailTemplate notifyEmail.js verifyEmail.js walletEmail.js Near.js State.js Storage.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts main.spec.ts memento.spec.ts user.spec.ts main.ts model.ts utils.ts config.js controllers Auth.js Balance.js Explore.js Feed.js Transaction.js Verification.js deploy.js index.js middleware admin.js authenticate.js package.json tsconfig.json utils common.js
near-everything_api
.eslintrc.js LICENSE.txt README.md babel.config.js docker-compose.yml docker sql 00-create-admin-role.sql 01-create-database.sql 03-create-schema.sql 04-create-extensions.sql 05-create-tables.sql 06-create-roles.sql 07-grant-privileges.sql 08-create-policies.sql 09-create-functions.sql 10-create-triggers.sql migrations 000-replace-feedback.sql package-lock.json package.json src app.ts controllers file.controllers.ts thing.controllers.ts index.ts middleware index.ts installAuth.ts installAuthErrorHandler.ts installCSRFProtection.ts installCors.ts installCreate.ts installCypressServerCommand.ts installDatabasePools.ts installErrorHandler.ts installForceSSL.ts installHelmet.ts installLogging.ts installPostGraphile.ts installSameOrigin.ts installWorkerUtils.ts plugins AttributeMutationsPlugin.ts MediaMutationsPlugin.ts OptionMutationsPlugin.ts PrimaryKeyMutationsOnlyPlugin.ts RemoveQueryQueryPlugin.ts ThingMutationsPlugin.ts UserMutationsPlugin.ts routes file.routes.ts thing.routes.ts services file.services.ts thing.services.ts shutdownActions.ts utils handleErrors.ts index.ts tsconfig.json
<div id="top"></div> <!-- PROJECT SHIELDS --> [![Contributors][contributors-shield]][contributors-url] [![Forks][forks-shield]][forks-url] [![Stargazers][stars-shield]][stars-url] [![Issues][issues-shield]][issues-url] [![MIT License][license-shield]][license-url] <!-- PROJECT LOGO --> <br /> <div align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/near-everything/api"> <img src="images/everything.png" alt="Logo" width="80" height="80"> </a> <h2 align="center">everything api</h3> <p align="center"> The GraphQL API to the inventory of everything. <br /> <!-- <a href="https://documentation.everything.dev"><strong>Explore the docs »</strong></a> --> <!-- <br /> --> <br /> <a href="https://everything.dev">Use App</a> · <a href="https://github.com/near-everything/api/issues">Report Bug</a> · <a href="https://github.com/near-everything/api/issues">Request Feature</a> </p> </div> <!-- TABLE OF CONTENTS --> <details> <summary>Table of Contents</summary> <ol> <li> <a href="#about-the-project">About The Project</a> </li> <li> <a href="#getting-started">Getting Started</a> <ul> <li><a href="#prerequisites">Prerequisites</a></li> <li><a href="#installation">Installation</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a href="#usage">Usage</a></li> <li><a href="#roadmap">Roadmap</a></li> <li><a href="#contributing">Contributing</a></li> <li><a href="#license">License</a></li> <li><a href="#contact">Contact</a></li> <li><a href="#acknowledgments">Acknowledgments</a></li> </ol> </details> <!-- ABOUT THE PROJECT --> ## About The Project <!-- [![Product Name Screen Shot][product-screenshot]](https://example.com) --> The everything api is the interface of the [inventory of everything](https://everything.dev): a centralized database of real, tangible assets that can then be used as the foundation for decentralized marketplaces, services, tools-- in the effort to create a circular economy that makes sense for everyone. <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> ### Built With - [![Node][node.js]][node-url] - [![Express][express.js]][express-url] - [![PostgreSQL][postgresql]][postgres-url] - [![Firebase][firebase]][firebase-url] - [![GraphQL][graphql]][graphql-url] through using [Postgraphile](postgraphile-url) <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- GETTING STARTED --> ## Getting Started ### Prerequisites Ensure you have these packages and tools installed on your machine before installing this project. * [npm](https://www.npmjs.com) ```sh npm install npm@latest -g ``` * [Docker Desktop](https://www.docker.com/products/docker-desktop/) ### Installation 1. Clone the repo ```sh git clone https://github.com/near-everything/api.git ``` 2. Install NPM packages ```sh npm install ``` <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- USAGE EXAMPLES --> ## Usage 1. Start docker - this will start and bootstrap the [PostgreSQL](https://www.postgresql.org) database, pgAdmin web, and firebase emulators for authentication and storage ```sh npm run docker:up ``` 2. Run the server: ```sh npm start dev ``` 3. Explore: Access to GraphiQL: * `http://localhost:4050/graphiql` _TROUBLESHOOTING: Since GraphiQL authorization headers are not yet connected to firebase auth, you will need to comment out the token verification in index.ts pgSettings (comment out whole block) in order to successfully run queries_ Access to PostgreSQL: * `localhost:5432` * **Username:** postgres (as a default) * **Password:** changeme (as a default) Access to pgAdmin: * **URL:** `http://localhost:5050` * **Username:** [email protected] (as a default) * **Password:** admin (as a default) _pgAdmin can also be accessed via the desktop app, which can be downloaded [here](https://www.pgadmin.org)._ <br/> <!-- _For more examples, please refer to the [Documentation](https://example.com)_ --> <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- ROADMAP --> ## Roadmap - [ ] TBD... See the [open issues](https://github.com/near-everything/api/issues) for a full list of proposed features (and known issues). <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- CONTRIBUTING --> ## Contributing Contributions are what make the open source community such an amazing place to learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make are **greatly appreciated**. If you have a suggestion that would make this better, please fork the repo and create a pull request. You can also simply open an issue with the tag "enhancement". Don't forget to give the project a star! Thanks again! 1. Fork the Project 2. Create your Feature Branch (`git checkout -b feature/AmazingFeature`) 3. Commit your Changes (`git commit -m 'Add some AmazingFeature'`) 4. Push to the Branch (`git push origin feature/AmazingFeature`) 5. Open a Pull Request <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- LICENSE --> ## License Distributed under the MIT License. See `LICENSE.txt` for more information. <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- CONTACT --> ## Contact Elliot Braem - [email protected] <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS --> ## Acknowledgments * Postgres, PgAdmin, docker setup referenced from [compose-postgres](https://github.com/khezen/compose-postgres). <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- MARKDOWN LINKS & IMAGES --> <!-- https://www.markdownguide.org/basic-syntax/#reference-style-links --> [contributors-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/contributors/near-everything/api.svg?style=for-the-badge [contributors-url]: https://github.com/near-everything/api/graphs/contributors [forks-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/forks/near-everything/api.svg?style=for-the-badge [forks-url]: https://github.com/near-everything/api/network/members [stars-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/stars/near-everything/api.svg?style=for-the-badge [stars-url]: https://github.com/near-everything/api/stargazers [issues-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/issues/near-everything/api.svg?style=for-the-badge [issues-url]: https://github.com/near-everything/api/issues [license-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/license/near-everything/api.svg?style=for-the-badge [license-url]: https://github.com/near-everything/api/blob/main/LICENSE.txt [product-screenshot]: images/screenshot.png [node.js]: https://img.shields.io/badge/Node.js-339933?style=for-the-badge&logo=nodedotjs&logoColor=white [node-url]: https://nodejs.org [express.js]: https://img.shields.io/badge/Express.js-000000?style=for-the-badge&logo=express&logoColor=white [express-url]: https://expressjs.com [postgresql]: https://img.shields.io/badge/PostgreSQL-316192?style=for-the-badge&logo=postgresql&logoColor=white [postgres-url]: https://www.postgresql.org [postgraphile-url]: https://www.graphile.org/postgraphile/ [firebase]: https://img.shields.io/badge/firebase-ffca28?style=for-the-badge&logo=firebase&logoColor=black [firebase-url]: https://firebase.google.com [graphql]: https://img.shields.io/badge/GraphQl-E10098?style=for-the-badge&logo=graphql&logoColor=white [graphql-url]: https://graphql.org
Jeremicarose_seed-farm
.env .history README_20230530221203.md README_20230602210819.md contract scripts call_20230519210034.sh call_20230603202712.sh call_20230603211323.sh call_20230603213150.sh call_20230603213712.sh call_20230603213844.sh call_20230603213939.sh call_20230603214218.sh src webpack_config_20230602205005.js webpack_config_20230602205029.js webpack_config_20230602205645.js webpack_config_20230602205736.js webpack_config_20230602210254.js README.md contract Cargo.toml README.md scripts build.sh call.sh deploy.sh src avocado_product.rs lib.rs target .rustc_info.json release .fingerprint Inflector-22f9d3d66d01b83a lib-inflector.json ahash-22bd81b1bcf15b44 build-script-build-script-build.json borsh-derive-5a7a12b3e06f3b99 lib-borsh-derive.json borsh-derive-internal-a6d3e1f96a3be1ec lib-borsh-derive-internal.json borsh-schema-derive-internal-11ceac5f86e8ee07 lib-borsh-schema-derive-internal.json crunchy-27f192bc106f2930 build-script-build-script-build.json near-sdk-macros-a94f5c3d75b33343 lib-near-sdk-macros.json proc-macro-crate-614f8acdd597a6ce lib-proc-macro-crate.json proc-macro2-58e0f8a1cbd002c9 build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro2-978c02b076823284 run-build-script-build-script-build.json proc-macro2-b84463297b652ae0 lib-proc-macro2.json quote-1d94438de6db281c run-build-script-build-script-build.json quote-a8e7b76fce8733c2 lib-quote.json quote-dd8b016aadae5d19 build-script-build-script-build.json serde-945f30eb307b3da9 lib-serde.json serde-9cd72590c29a82d0 build-script-build-script-build.json serde-b471d4d945dace55 build-script-build-script-build.json serde-f80db75b9d914c8e run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_derive-6dd012f28f01c12e build-script-build-script-build.json serde_derive-e36cf4ce988ddfd2 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_derive-f7826db7dca725e2 lib-serde_derive.json serde_json-bee7f920bc90263c build-script-build-script-build.json syn-0a0af29e14963f73 run-build-script-build-script-build.json syn-11f6564052528ba7 lib-syn.json syn-5aaad2ad73d169d7 build-script-build-script-build.json toml-311f69999193789f lib-toml.json unicode-ident-b0c9c974cfad974d lib-unicode-ident.json version_check-8cf53cf3b71c836c lib-version_check.json wee_alloc-5ac3c69ca47e0fe7 build-script-build-script-build.json wasm32-unknown-unknown release .fingerprint ahash-090daeba5cf65e17 lib-ahash.json ahash-b1a40a14f893324e run-build-script-build-script-build.json base64-9adaaa094efe1e31 lib-base64.json borsh-fde72558eba5ccda lib-borsh.json bs58-285535bc3ac54b0a lib-bs58.json byteorder-2a2ecfa3adde7854 lib-byteorder.json cfg-if-2dd57157fa136f19 lib-cfg-if.json crunchy-1275cfc76e46def3 lib-crunchy.json crunchy-fee699d89f9fee2b run-build-script-build-script-build.json greeter-d5cbb7d1e1b2873c lib-greeter.json hashbrown-a0287a2b87cf1b95 lib-hashbrown.json hex-a82b3d198b8dbe7a lib-hex.json itoa-9273e939f344576a lib-itoa.json memory_units-0384fb5abc05abbc lib-memory_units.json near-sdk-3c1587151f81d9a1 lib-near-sdk.json near-sys-71cc4b4f823990c6 lib-near-sys.json once_cell-b7f52d71e3a33d2e lib-once_cell.json ryu-ce51b8f991ea300f lib-ryu.json serde-35ea379bbe6259b5 lib-serde.json serde-b443451f17d80d90 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-23a4bc3cfed665d2 run-build-script-build-script-build.json serde_json-97f6ad3a4acf6860 lib-serde_json.json static_assertions-13eac0dacca0a66c lib-static_assertions.json uint-c7e7f2f670b51dc0 lib-uint.json wee_alloc-c8460eb1b0e30f18 lib-wee_alloc.json wee_alloc-ff0e1f30233cf401 run-build-script-build-script-build.json build crunchy-fee699d89f9fee2b out lib.rs wee_alloc-ff0e1f30233cf401 out wee_alloc_static_array_backend_size_bytes.txt neardev dev-account.env shared-test test.near.json package.json public index.html manifest.json robots.txt src App.css App.js App.test.js components Addova.js Navigation.js Product.js Products.js index.css index.js logo.svg reportWebVitals.js setupTests.js util Cover.js Loder.js Notification.js cover.css wallet.js utils config.js marketplace.js near.js
## Inspiration 💡 Most of the time, Farmers sells there product at a throwing price because of For that they will lose a lot of money feeling discourage and this will force them to venture to any othe bussiness. As a result, there is the need for a secure and efficient system to help farmers and buyers link without any middlemen. ## ❓ What it does 💡 Fruitfull is a decentralized and secure farming marketplace system. Its built on the Near blockchain and securely stores all farm product transaction records. The avocado products and transaction are securely stored in the ledger and can be accessed by the farmer or the buyer. First, on the app, either the farmer or the buy will connect their near wallet to the fruitfull app. If this is the farmer he or she is require to post her product unlike the buyer who can not post. On the other hand the buyer can purchase any ovacados. ## ⚙ How it was built - React for the frontend - Near, Rust Web3 for the Blockchain and smart contracts - Near for building the smart contracts in Rust programming language - Near blockchain for the ledger ## 🚧 Challenges 🚧 - Implementing the smart contracts in Rust programming language was a challenge. - Ran into bugs while building the smart contracts especially while building the smart contract. near-blank-project Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html ## Inspiration 💡 Most of the time, Farmers sells there product at a throwing price because of For that they will lose a lot of money feeling discourage and this will force them to venture to any othe bussiness. As a result, there is the need for a secure and efficient system to help farmers and buyers link without any middlemen. ## ❓ What it does 💡 Fruitfull is a decentralized and secure farming marketplace system. Its built on the Near blockchain and securely stores all farm product transaction records. The avocado products and transaction are securely stored in the ledger and can be accessed by the farmer or the buyer. First, on the app, either the farmer or the buy will connect their near wallet to the fruitfull app. If this is the farmer he or she is require to post her product unlike the buyer who can not post. On the other hand the buyer can purchase any ovacados. ## ⚙ How it was built - React for the frontend - Near, Rust Web3 for the Blockchain and smart contracts - Near for building the smart contracts in Rust programming language - Near blockchain for the ledger ## 🚧 Challenges 🚧 - Implementing the smart contracts in Rust programming language was a challenge. - Ran into bugs while building the smart contracts especially while building the smart contract. near-blank-project Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html
LearningGame2_MVCSD-Learning-Game-2
Documentation Brainstorming.txt Initial Meeting Questions.txt Notes From Meetings.txt README.md DuckHuntTest DuckHunt-JS-master README.md dist audio.json index.html sprites.json eslint eslint-babel.json eslint-defaults.json gulpfile.js main.js package-lock.json package.json s3policy.json src data levels.json libs levelCreator.js utils.js modules Character.js Dog.js Duck.js Game.js Hud.js Sound.js Stage.js vendor audiosprite.js webpack.config.js HexGL-master .htaccess README.md bkcore.coffee ImageData.coffee ImageData.js Timer.coffee Timer.js Utils.coffee Utils.js controllers GamepadController.coffee GamepadController.js OrientationController.coffee OrientationController.js TouchController.coffee TouchController.js tests.html threejs Particles.coffee Particles.js bkcore Audio.js hexgl CameraChase.js Gameplay.js HUD.js HexGL.js Ladder.js RaceData.js ShipControls.js ShipEffects.js tracks Cityscape.js threejs Loader.js Particles.js Preloader.js RenderManager.js Shaders.js css BebasNeue-webfont.svg fonts.css multi.css touchcontroller.css geometries bonus base base.js booster booster.js ships feisar feisar.js tracks cityscape bonus speed.js scrapers1.js scrapers2.js start.js startbanner.js track.js edge track.js index.html launch.coffee launch.js libs DAT.GUI.min.js Detector.js Editor.html Editor_files App.js CanvasRenderer.js Diagram.js Iterator.js Links.js ModuleList.js Node.js Parser.js Project.js Timer.js ace.js class.js editor.css font.css gamecore.js hashlist.js jhashtable.js jquery-1.8.js kinetic.js main.css mode-json.js pooled.js theme-monokai.js ShaderExtras.js Stats.js Three.dev.js Three.r53.js leap-0.4.1.min.js postprocessing BloomPass.js DotScreenPass.js EffectComposer.js FilmPass.js MaskPass.js RenderPass.js SavePass.js ShaderPass.js TexturePass.js replays cityscape-casual bkcore.replay.json astronautInTrouble-main .vscode launch.json README.md full_comp.svg index.html newMain.js packabunchas-main Readme.md game.js index.html space-jump-master BACKLOG.md README.md assembly as-pect.config.js as_types.d.ts asconfig.json main.ts model.ts package.json tsconfig.json index.html package-lock.json package.json src Audio.ts Background.ts Game.ts Globals.ts LocalStorage.ts Main.ts Near.ts Ranking.ts tsconfig.json webpack.config.js Test Attempt3 ButtonAnimCorrect.css EndGame.php Game.css Home.php Instructions.php Level1.php Level2.php Level3.php Level4.php Level5.php Login1.php LoginStyle.css More.php notes.txt OR
# MVCSD-Learning-Game-2 HexGL ========= Source code of [HexGL](http://hexgl.bkcore.com), the futuristic HTML5 racing game by [Thibaut Despoulain](http://bkcore.com) ## Branches * **[Master](https://github.com/BKcore/HexGL)** - Public release (stable). ## License Unless specified in the file, HexGL's code and resources are now licensed under the *MIT License*. ## Installation cd ~/ git clone git://github.com/BKcore/HexGL.git cd HexGL python -m SimpleHTTPServer chromium index.html To use full size textures, swap the two textures/ and textures.full/ directories. ## Note The development of HexGL is in a hiatus for now until I find some time and interest to work on it again. That said, feel free to post issues, patches, or anything to make the game better and I'll gladly review and merge them. # Astronaut in Trouble <img align="right" src="raw.githubusercontent.com/dougkusanagi/astronautInTrouble/main/Prancheta1.png"> <p align="left"> <h3>Controls:</h3><br> <strong>Start the Game:</strong> Enter or touch in mobile<br> <strong>Jump:</strong> Space bar or touch in mobile<br> <strong>Full Screen:</strong> F11 or touch Left top icon </p> # Space Jump This game was developed in order to participate on the js13kgames 2021 competition. You can check the game [here](https://thiagorb.github.io/space-jump/). In the game you control an astronaut, and your goal is to survive as long as possible, by jumping through the platforms. # DUCK HUNT JS v3.0 [Play the game](http://duckhuntjs.com) This is an implementation of DuckHunt in Javascript and HTML5. It uses the PixiJS rendering engine, Green Sock Animations, Howler, and Bluebird Promises. ## Rendering This game supports WebGL and Canvas rendering via the PixiJS rendering engine. ## Audio This game will attempt to use the WebAudioAPI and fallback to HTML5 Audio if necessary. Audio is loaded and controlled via HowlerJS. ## Tweening The animations in this game are a combination of PixiJS MovieClips built from sprite images and tweens. Since PixiJS doesn't provide a tweening API, Green Sock was used. ## Game Logic The flow of this game is managed using Javascript. The main chunks of business logic are implemented as ES6 classes which are transpiled to ES5 using Babel. ## Working With This Repo - You must have [nodejs](https://nodejs.org/) installed. - Clone the repo into a directory of your choice - `cd` into that directory and run `npm install` - Use `npm start` to start a local webserver which will make the site available at http://localhost:8080/. Cross origin errors prevent this project from being accessed in the browser with the `file://` protocol. This will also trigger automatic builds and reloads of the page when changes are detected in the `src` directory. - If you want to manually cut a build of the application code run `npm run build` ## Working With Audio and Visual Assets This repo ships with committed dist files to make it easy for developers to get up and running. If you really want to get into some leet haxing and change the way this game looks and sounds then you'll need to work with audio and image sprites. The following tasks make that possible: - To rebuild audio assets use `npm run audio` (there is a hard dependency on [ffmpeg](https://ffmpeg.org/download.html) to run this task) - To rebuild image assets use `npm run images` (there is a hard dependency on [texturepacker](https://www.codeandweb.com/texturepacker/download) to run this task) ## Bugs Please report bugs as [issues](https://github.com/MattSurabian/DuckHunt-JS/issues). ## Contributing Pull requests are welcome! Please ensure code style and quality compliance with `npm run lint` and include any built files.
jkeohan_SputnikDao-AS-Contract
README.md sputnikdao-as-factory README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts main.spec.ts as_types.d.ts index.ts models.ts tsconfig.json types.ts compile.js package.json sputnikdao-as README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts main.spec.ts as_types.d.ts index.ts models.ts tsconfig.json types.ts compile.js package.json
sputnikdao-factory Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [AssemblyScript] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install [Node.js] ≥ 12 Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `assembly/index.ts`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard AssemblyScript tests using [as-pect]. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/roles/developer/contracts/intro [AssemblyScript]: https://www.assemblyscript.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [as-pect]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli Sputnik Dao Contracts (in AssemblyScript) ========================================== A [smart contract] written in [AssemblyScript] for an app initialized with [create-near-app]. One of the NEAR Protocol contracts and part of the series covering [NEAR Contracts written in AssemblyScript](https://vitalpoint.ai/course/sputnikdao-contract/) Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install [Node.js] ≥ 12 Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `assembly/index.ts`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard AssemblyScript tests using [as-pect]. sputnikdao-factory Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [AssemblyScript] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install [Node.js] ≥ 12 Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `assembly/index.ts`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard AssemblyScript tests using [as-pect]. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/roles/developer/contracts/intro [AssemblyScript]: https://www.assemblyscript.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [as-pect]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@as-pect/cli
Peersyst_react-native-modal
.eslintrc.js .github CONTRIBUTING.md ISSUE_TEMPLATE BUG_REPORT.md PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md workflows release.yml test.yml .prettierrc.js ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md LICENSE.md README.md | example android app src androidTest java com modalexample DetoxTest.java debug AndroidManifest.xml main AndroidManifest.xml java com modalexample MainActivity.java MainApplication.java res values strings.xml styles.xml gradlew.bat app.json babel.config.js e2e allTests.spec.js config.json init.js index.js ios ModalExample AppDelegate.h Images.xcassets AppIcon.appiconset Contents.json Contents.json metro.config.js package.json tsconfig.json package.json src index.ts modal.style.ts types.ts utils.ts tsconfig.json
### Announcements - 📣 We're looking for maintainers and contributors! See [#598](https://github.com/react-native-modal/react-native-modal/discussions/598) - 💡 We're brainstorming if/how we can make a JavaScript-only version of `react-native-modal`. See [#597](https://github.com/react-native-modal/react-native-modal/discussions/597) - 🙏 If you have a question, please [start a new discussion](https://github.com/react-native-modal/react-native-modal/discussions) instead of opening a new issue. # react-native-modal [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/react-native-modal.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/js/react-native-modal) [![styled with prettier](https://img.shields.io/badge/styled_with-prettier-ff69b4.svg)](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) > If you're new to the React Native world, please notice that React Native itself offers a [<Modal /> component that works out-of-the-box](https://reactnative.dev/docs/modal). An enhanced, animated, customizable React Native modal. The goal of `react-native-modal` is expanding the original React Native `<Modal>` component by adding animations, style customization options, and new features, while still providing a simple API. <p align="center"> <img src="/.github/images/example-modal.gif" height="500" /> </p> ## Features - Smooth enter/exit animations - Plain simple and flexible APIs - Customizable backdrop opacity, color and timing - Listeners for the modal animations ending - Resize itself correctly on device rotation - Swipeable - Scrollable ## Setup This library is available on npm, install it with: `npm i react-native-modal` or `yarn add react-native-modal`. ## Usage Since `react-native-modal` is an extension of the [original React Native modal](https://reactnative.dev/docs/modal.html), it works in a similar fashion. 1. Import `react-native-modal`: ```javascript import Modal from "react-native-modal"; ``` 2. Create a `<Modal>` component and nest its content inside of it: ```javascript function WrapperComponent() { return ( <View> <Modal> <View style={{ flex: 1 }}> <Text>I am the modal content!</Text> </View> </Modal> </View> ); } ``` 3. Then, show the modal by setting the `isVisible` prop to `true`: ```javascript function WrapperComponent() { return ( <View> <Modal isVisible={true}> <View style={{ flex: 1 }}> <Text>I am the modal content!</Text> </View> </Modal> </View> ); } ``` The `isVisible` prop is the only prop you'll really need to make the modal work: you should control this prop value by saving it in your wrapper component state and setting it to `true` or `false` when needed. ## A complete example The following example consists in a component (`ModalTester`) with a button and a modal. The modal is controlled by the `isModalVisible` state variable and it is initially hidden, since its value is `false`. Pressing the button sets `isModalVisible` to true, making the modal visible. Inside the modal there is another button that, when pressed, sets `isModalVisible` to false, hiding the modal. ```javascript import React, { useState } from "react"; import { Button, Text, View } from "react-native"; import Modal from "react-native-modal"; function ModalTester() { const [isModalVisible, setModalVisible] = useState(false); const toggleModal = () => { setModalVisible(!isModalVisible); }; return ( <View style={{ flex: 1 }}> <Button title="Show modal" onPress={toggleModal} /> <Modal isVisible={isModalVisible}> <View style={{ flex: 1 }}> <Text>Hello!</Text> <Button title="Hide modal" onPress={toggleModal} /> </View> </Modal> </View> ); } export default ModalTester; ``` For a more complex example take a look at the `/example` directory. ## Available props | Name | Type | Default | Description | | -------------------------------- | -------------------- | ------------------------------ | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | `animationIn` | `string` or `object` | `"slideInUp"` | Modal show animation | | `animationInTiming` | `number` | `300` | Timing for the modal show animation (in ms) | | `animationOut` | `string` or `object` | `"slideOutDown"` | Modal hide animation | | `animationOutTiming` | `number` | `300` | Timing for the modal hide animation (in ms) | | `avoidKeyboard` | `bool` | `false` | Move the modal up if the keyboard is open | | `coverScreen` | `bool` | `true` | Will use RN `Modal` component to cover the entire screen wherever the modal is mounted in the component hierarchy | | `hasBackdrop` | `bool` | `true` | Render the backdrop | | `backdropColor` | `string` | `"black"` | The backdrop background color | | `backdropOpacity` | `number` | `0.70` | The backdrop opacity when the modal is visible | | `backdropTransitionInTiming` | `number` | `300` | The backdrop show timing (in ms) | | `backdropTransitionOutTiming` | `number` | `300` | The backdrop hide timing (in ms) | | `customBackdrop` | `node` | `null` | The custom backdrop element | | `children` | `node` | **REQUIRED** | The modal content | | `deviceHeight` | `number` | `null` | Device height (useful on devices that can hide the navigation bar) | | `deviceWidth` | `number` | `null` | Device width (useful on devices that can hide the navigation bar) | | `isVisible` | `bool` | **REQUIRED** | Show the modal? | | `onBackButtonPress` | `func` | `() => null` | Called when the Android back button is pressed | | `onBackdropPress` | `func` | `() => null` | Called when the backdrop is pressed | | `onModalWillHide` | `func` | `() => null` | Called before the modal hide animation begins | | `onModalHide` | `func` | `() => null` | Called when the modal is completely hidden | | `onModalWillShow` | `func` | `() => null` | Called before the modal show animation begins | | `onModalShow` | `func` | `() => null` | Called when the modal is completely visible | | `onSwipeStart` | `func` | `() => null` | Called when the swipe action started | | `onSwipeMove` | `func` | `(percentageShown) => null` | Called on each swipe event | | `onSwipeComplete` | `func` | `({ swipingDirection }) => null` | Called when the `swipeThreshold` has been reached | | `onSwipeCancel` | `func` | `() => null` | Called when the `swipeThreshold` has not been reached | | `panResponderThreshold` | `number` | `4` | The threshold for when the panResponder should pick up swipe events | | `scrollOffset` | `number` | `0` | When > 0, disables swipe-to-close, in order to implement scrollable content | | `scrollOffsetMax` | `number` | `0` | Used to implement overscroll feel when content is scrollable. See `/example` directory | | `scrollTo` | `func` | `null` | Used to implement scrollable modal. See `/example` directory for reference on how to use it | | `scrollHorizontal` | `bool` | `false` | Set to true if your scrollView is horizontal (for a correct scroll handling) | | `swipeThreshold` | `number` | `100` | Swiping threshold that when reached calls `onSwipeComplete` | | `swipeDirection` | `string` or `array` | `null` | Defines the direction where the modal can be swiped. Can be 'up', 'down', 'left, or 'right', or a combination of them like `['up','down']` | | `useNativeDriver` | `bool` | `false` | Defines if animations should use native driver | | `useNativeDriverForBackdrop` | `bool` | `null` | Defines if animations for backdrop should use native driver (to avoid flashing on android) | | `hideModalContentWhileAnimating` | `bool` | `false` | Enhances the performance by hiding the modal content until the animations complete | | `propagateSwipe` | `bool` or `func` | `false` | Allows swipe events to propagate to children components (eg a ScrollView inside a modal) | | `style` | `any` | `null` | Style applied to the modal | ## Frequently Asked Questions ### The component is not working as expected Under the hood `react-native-modal` uses react-native original [Modal component](https://reactnative.dev/docs/modal). Before reporting a bug, try swapping `react-native-modal` with react-native original Modal component and, if the issue persists, check if it has already been reported as a [react-native issue](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues). ### The backdrop is not completely filled/covered on some Android devices (Galaxy, for one) React-Native has a few issues detecting the correct device width/height of some devices. If you're experiencing this issue, you'll need to install [`react-native-extra-dimensions-android`](https://github.com/Sunhat/react-native-extra-dimensions-android). Then, provide the real window height (obtained from `react-native-extra-dimensions-android`) to the modal: ```javascript const deviceWidth = Dimensions.get("window").width; const deviceHeight = Platform.OS === "ios" ? Dimensions.get("window").height : require("react-native-extra-dimensions-android").get( "REAL_WINDOW_HEIGHT" ); function WrapperComponent() { const [isModalVisible, setModalVisible] = useState(true); return ( <Modal isVisible={isModalVisible} deviceWidth={deviceWidth} deviceHeight={deviceHeight} > <View style={{ flex: 1 }}> <Text>I am the modal content!</Text> </View> </Modal> ); } ``` ### How can I hide the modal by pressing outside of its content? The prop `onBackdropPress` allows you to handle this situation: ```javascript <Modal isVisible={isModalVisible} onBackdropPress={() => setModalVisible(false)} > <View style={{ flex: 1 }}> <Text>I am the modal content!</Text> </View> </Modal> ``` ### How can I hide the modal by swiping it? The prop `onSwipeComplete` allows you to handle this situation (remember to set `swipeDirection` too!): ```javascript <Modal isVisible={isModalVisible} onSwipeComplete={() => setModalVisible(false)} swipeDirection="left" > <View style={{ flex: 1 }}> <Text>I am the modal content!</Text> </View> </Modal> ``` Note that when using `useNativeDriver={true}` the modal won't drag correctly. This is a [known issue](https://github.com/react-native-community/react-native-modal/issues/163#issuecomment-409760695). ### The modal flashes in a weird way when animating Unfortunately this is a [known issue](https://github.com/react-native-community/react-native-modal/issues/92) that happens when `useNativeDriver=true` and must still be solved. In the meanwhile as a workaround you can set the `hideModalContentWhileAnimating` prop to `true`: this seems to solve the issue. Also, do not assign a `backgroundColor` property directly to the Modal. Prefer to set it on the child container. ### The modal background doesn't animate properly Are you sure you named the `isVisible` prop correctly? Make sure it is spelled correctly: `isVisible`, not `visible`. ### The modal doesn't change orientation Add a `supportedOrientations={['portrait', 'landscape']}` prop to the component, as described [in the React Native documentation](https://reactnative.dev/docs/modal.html#supportedorientations). Also, if you're providing the `deviceHeight` and `deviceWidth` props you'll have to manually update them when the layout changes. ### I can't show multiple modals one after another Unfortunately right now react-native doesn't allow multiple modals to be displayed at the same time. This means that, in `react-native-modal`, if you want to immediately show a new modal after closing one you must first make sure that the modal that your closing has completed its hiding animation by using the `onModalHide` prop. ### I can't show multiple modals at the same time See the question above. Showing multiple modals (or even alerts/dialogs) at the same time is not doable because of a react-native bug. That said, I would strongly advice against using multiple modals at the same time because, most often than not, this leads to a bad UX, especially on mobile (just my opinion). ### The StatusBar style changes when the modal shows up This issue has been discussed [here](https://github.com/react-native-community/react-native-modal/issues/50). The TLDR is: it's a know React-Native issue with the Modal component 😞 ### The modal is not covering the entire screen The modal style applied by default has a small margin. If you want the modal to cover the entire screen you can easily override it this way: ```js <Modal style={{ margin: 0 }}>...</Modal> ``` ### I can't scroll my ScrollView inside of the modal Enable propagateSwipe to allow your child components to receive swipe events: ```js <Modal propagateSwipe>...</Modal> ``` Please notice that this is still a WIP fix and might not fix your issue yet, see [issue #236](https://github.com/react-native-community/react-native-modal/issues/236). ### The modal enter/exit animation flickers Make sure your `animationIn` and `animationOut` are set correctly. We noticed that, for example, using `fadeIn` as an exit animation makes the modal flicker (it should be `fadeOut`!). Also, some users have noticed that setting backdropTransitionOutTiming={0} can fix the flicker without affecting the animation. ### The custom backdrop doesn't fill the entire screen You need to specify the size of your custom backdrop component. You can also make it expand to fill the entire screen by adding a `flex: 1` to its style: ```javascript <Modal isVisible={isModalVisible} customBackdrop={<View style={{ flex: 1 }} />}> <View style={{ flex: 1 }}> <Text>I am the modal content!</Text> </View> </Modal> ``` ### The custom backdrop doesn't dismiss the modal on press You can provide an event handler to the custom backdrop element to dismiss the modal. The prop `onBackdropPress` is not supported for a custom backdrop. ```javascript <Modal isVisible={isModalVisible} customBackdrop={ <TouchableWithoutFeedback onPress={dismissModalHandler}> <View style={{ flex: 1 }} /> </TouchableWithoutFeedback> } /> ``` ## Available animations Take a look at [react-native-animatable](https://github.com/oblador/react-native-animatable) to see the dozens of animations available out-of-the-box. You can also pass in custom animation definitions and have them automatically register with react-native-animatable. For more information on creating custom animations, see the react-native-animatable [animation definition schema](https://github.com/oblador/react-native-animatable#animation-definition-schema). ## Alternatives - [React Native's built-in `<Modal>` component](https://reactnative.dev/docs/modal.html) - [React Native Paper `<Modal>` component](https://callstack.github.io/react-native-paper/modal.html) - [React Native Modalfy](https://github.com/colorfy-software/react-native-modalfy) ## Acknowledgements Thanks [@oblador](https://github.com/oblador) for react-native-animatable, [@brentvatne](https://github.com/brentvatne) for the npm namespace and to anyone who contributed to this library! Pull requests, feedbacks and suggestions are welcome!
ioustamora_fisha
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github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1038,"byte_end":1133,"line_start":22,"line_end":22,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode` | Returns a new `String` | Always |","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1134,"byte_end":1229,"line_start":23,"line_end":23,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode_config` | Returns a new `String` | Always |","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1230,"byte_end":1325,"line_start":24,"line_end":24,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode_config_buf` | Appends to provided `String` | Only if `String` needs to grow |","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1326,"byte_end":1421,"line_start":25,"line_end":25,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" | `encode_config_slice` | Writes to provided `&[u8]` | Never |","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1422,"byte_end":1517,"line_start":26,"line_end":26,"column_start":1,"column_end":96}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1518,"byte_end":1521,"line_start":27,"line_end":27,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" All of the encoding functions that take a `Config` will pad as per the config.","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1522,"byte_end":1604,"line_start":28,"line_end":28,"column_start":1,"column_end":83}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1605,"byte_end":1608,"line_start":29,"line_end":29,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" # Decoding","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1609,"byte_end":1623,"line_start":30,"line_end":30,"column_start":1,"column_end":15}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1624,"byte_end":1627,"line_start":31,"line_end":31,"column_start":1,"column_end":4}},{"value":" Just as for encoding, there are different decoding functions available.","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src lib.rs","byte_start":1628,"byte_end":1703,"line_start":32,"line_end":32,"column_start":1,"column_end":76}},{"value":" ","span":{"file_name":" home user .cargo registry src github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823 base64-0.13.0 src 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fisha Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html fisha ================== This [Vue] app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Install dependencies: `yarn install` 3. Run the local development server: `yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/main.js` is a great place to start exploring. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `yarn run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `yarn install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: yarn install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `fisha.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `fisha.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account fisha.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'fisha.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [Vue]: https://vuejs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages # FISHA Token NEP-141 Token Contract ## Technicalities This is a NEP-141 Standard Token Contract plus: * fisha game contract will be able to mint tokens here * FISHA tokens are "virtual" in the fisha game contract and can be "harvested" by minting here NEP-141 tokens * separate contract is needed so the users can see FISHA in wallets and use FISHA in ather DEFI contracts/apps * this contract will be deployed at token.fisha.game.(near|testnet)
Learn-NEAR_bin
.travis.yml README.md
Maintenance scripts =================== A couple scripts to quickly fetch & update all repositories in this organization. `pull` script is written to work with all repositories in the same organization as this repository. ![demo running status and pull](https://repository-images.githubusercontent.com/272589316/ebb9e480-af59-11ea-8aee-ad0a44455a8b) _NOTE: These scripts have only been tested on macOS_ Use it ====== First, set up a token for pulling repositories: * Go to https://github.com/settings/tokens * Click "Generate new token" * Give it a good "Note", like "why does GitHub v4 require a token just to view public repositories omg" * Don't check any boxes; it's just pulling public repos * Scroll down and hit "Generate token" * In your `~/.bashrc` or equivalent, export an environment variable called `GITHUB_TOKEN` with the value of your new token GITHUB_TOKEN=the_value_github_gave_you Now install some dependencies & clone this repo into a sensible location: * Install prerequisites: `brew install jq` * Must have [ssh key added to GitHub](https://help.github.com/en/github/authenticating-to-github/adding-a-new-ssh-key-to-your-github-account) * Set up a new directory where you want to clone _only_ the repositories in this org * Clone this repository into that new directory * Optionally: add `./bin` to your PATH If you've done the last step, you can change into that local folder and: * run `pull` to fetch the latest `main` for all repositories * run `status` to quickly find out if all projects have `master` checked out with a clean working tree. You can pass options that you would normally pass to `git status`, such as `-s` for short output. * run `run some command` to run "some command" in each repository * use `dirty` to do things like quickly commit a bunch of changes. Example: for x in $(dirty); do (cd $x && git add --all && git commit -m "cool" && git push); done If you don't complete the last step, you will have to type `./bin/pull` and `./bin/status` instead.
Oliver-65535_near-lake-microservice
.eslintrc.js README.md docker-compose.yml nest-cli.json package.json src app.controller.spec.ts app.controller.ts app.module.ts app.service.ts main.ts near-lake near-lake.module.ts near-lake.service.spec.ts near-lake.service.ts tsconfig.build.json tsconfig.json
<p align="center"> <a href="http://nestjs.com/" target="blank"><img src="https://nestjs.com/img/logo-small.svg" width="200" alt="Nest Logo" /></a> </p> [circleci-image]: https://img.shields.io/circleci/build/github/nestjs/nest/master?token=abc123def456 [circleci-url]: https://circleci.com/gh/nestjs/nest <p align="center">A progressive <a href="http://nodejs.org" target="_blank">Node.js</a> framework for building efficient and scalable server-side applications.</p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/~nestjscore" target="_blank"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/@nestjs/core.svg" alt="NPM Version" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/~nestjscore" target="_blank"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/l/@nestjs/core.svg" alt="Package License" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/~nestjscore" target="_blank"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/@nestjs/common.svg" alt="NPM Downloads" /></a> <a href="https://circleci.com/gh/nestjs/nest" target="_blank"><img src="https://img.shields.io/circleci/build/github/nestjs/nest/master" alt="CircleCI" /></a> <a href="https://coveralls.io/github/nestjs/nest?branch=master" target="_blank"><img src="https://coveralls.io/repos/github/nestjs/nest/badge.svg?branch=master#9" alt="Coverage" /></a> <a href="https://discord.gg/G7Qnnhy" target="_blank"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/discord-online-brightgreen.svg" alt="Discord"/></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/nest#backer" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/nest/backers/badge.svg" alt="Backers on Open Collective" /></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/nest#sponsor" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/nest/sponsors/badge.svg" alt="Sponsors on Open Collective" /></a> <a href="https://paypal.me/kamilmysliwiec" target="_blank"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Donate-PayPal-ff3f59.svg"/></a> <a href="https://opencollective.com/nest#sponsor" target="_blank"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Support%20us-Open%20Collective-41B883.svg" alt="Support us"></a> <a href="https://twitter.com/nestframework" target="_blank"><img src="https://img.shields.io/twitter/follow/nestframework.svg?style=social&label=Follow"></a> </p> <!--[![Backers on Open Collective](https://opencollective.com/nest/backers/badge.svg)](https://opencollective.com/nest#backer) [![Sponsors on Open Collective](https://opencollective.com/nest/sponsors/badge.svg)](https://opencollective.com/nest#sponsor)--> ## Description [Nest](https://github.com/nestjs/nest) framework TypeScript starter repository. ## Installation ```bash $ npm install ``` ## Running the app ```bash # development $ npm run start # watch mode $ npm run start:dev # production mode $ npm run start:prod ``` ## Test ```bash # unit tests $ npm run test # e2e tests $ npm run test:e2e # test coverage $ npm run test:cov ``` ## Support Nest is an MIT-licensed open source project. It can grow thanks to the sponsors and support by the amazing backers. If you'd like to join them, please [read more here](https://docs.nestjs.com/support). ## Stay in touch - Author - [Kamil Myśliwiec](https://kamilmysliwiec.com) - Website - [https://nestjs.com](https://nestjs.com/) - Twitter - [@nestframework](https://twitter.com/nestframework) ## License Nest is [MIT licensed](LICENSE).
kujtimprenkuSQA_guest-book-nextjs
.eslintrc.json README.md constants.ts interfaces.ts next.config.js package.json pages api hello.ts public next.svg thirteen.svg vercel.svg styles Home.module.css globals.css tsconfig.json
This is a [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/) project bootstrapped with [`create-next-app`](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/tree/canary/packages/create-next-app). ## Getting Started First, run the development server: ```bash npm run dev # or yarn dev # or pnpm dev ``` Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) with your browser to see the result. You can start editing the page by modifying `pages/index.tsx`. The page auto-updates as you edit the file. [API routes](https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introduction) can be accessed on [http://localhost:3000/api/hello](http://localhost:3000/api/hello). This endpoint can be edited in `pages/api/hello.ts`. The `pages/api` directory is mapped to `/api/*`. Files in this directory are treated as [API routes](https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introduction) instead of React pages. This project uses [`next/font`](https://nextjs.org/docs/basic-features/font-optimization) to automatically optimize and load Inter, a custom Google Font. ## Learn More To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources: - [Next.js Documentation](https://nextjs.org/docs) - learn about Next.js features and API. - [Learn Next.js](https://nextjs.org/learn) - an interactive Next.js tutorial. You can check out [the Next.js GitHub repository](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/) - your feedback and contributions are welcome! ## Deploy on Vercel The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the [Vercel Platform](https://vercel.com/new?utm_medium=default-template&filter=next.js&utm_source=create-next-app&utm_campaign=create-next-app-readme) from the creators of Next.js. Check out our [Next.js deployment documentation](https://nextjs.org/docs/deployment) for more details.
kiskesis_volunteergame
.idea modules.xml README.md build asset-manifest.json index.html manifest.json robots.txt static css main.39c46984.chunk.css js 2.d6f39df7.chunk.js 2.d6f39df7.chunk.js.LICENSE.txt main.2de32450.chunk.js runtime-main.1b120f44.js media Fifth.9748a025.svg First.12b11c06.svg Food.42cb1384.svg Fourth.4889d72f.svg LoadingBorders (1).09b46704.svg LoadingZone (1).aa7e9080.svg Second.286d27a8.svg Third.09fe534d.svg logo-black.47b91dd0.svg logo-white.a3d61d15.svg craco.config.js package.json public index.html manifest.json robots.txt src assets CarLoader.svg LoadingZone (1).svg logo-black.svg logo-white.svg components NFT index.css index.js loading index.css index.js pageWrapper index.css index.js config.js global.css index.html index.js pages gamePage assets Basic volunteer.svg Humanitarian.svg ItemBorder.svg Left Arrow.svg LoadingBorders (1).svg LoadingBorders.svg LoadingZone.svg Right Arrow.svg items Armor.svg Bicycle.svg Car.svg CarLoader.svg Helmet.svg Scooter.svg components attribute index.css index.js attributes index.css index.js character index.css index.js eventModal index.css index.js experience index.css index.js humanitarian index.css index.js itemShop index.css index.js itemsBar index.css index.js index.css index.js login index.css index.js mint index.css index.js utils hooks.js utils.js volunteer-game-contract README.md market-contract Cargo.toml README.md build.sh src external.rs internal.rs lib.rs nft_callbacks.rs sale.rs sale_views.rs nft-contract Cargo.toml README.md build.sh src approval.rs attributes.rs enumeration.rs events.rs game.rs game_shop.rs internal.rs lib.rs metadata.rs mint.rs nft_core.rs royalty.rs utils.rs package.json | |
# TBD # TBD # Getting Started with Create React App This project was bootstrapped with [Create React App](https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app). ## Available Scripts In the project directory, you can run: ### `yarn start` Runs the app in the development mode.\ Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) to view it in the browser. The page will reload if you make edits.\ You will also see any lint errors in the console. ### `yarn test` Launches the test runner in the interactive watch mode.\ See the section about [running tests](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/running-tests) for more information. ### `yarn build` Builds the app for production to the `build` folder.\ It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance. The build is minified and the filenames include the hashes.\ Your app is ready to be deployed! See the section about [deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) for more information. ### `yarn eject` **Note: this is a one-way operation. Once you `eject`, you can’t go back!** If you aren’t satisfied with the build tool and configuration choices, you can `eject` at any time. This command will remove the single build dependency from your project. Instead, it will copy all the configuration files and the transitive dependencies (webpack, Babel, ESLint, etc) right into your project so you have full control over them. All of the commands except `eject` will still work, but they will point to the copied scripts so you can tweak them. At this point you’re on your own. You don’t have to ever use `eject`. The curated feature set is suitable for small and middle deployments, and you shouldn’t feel obligated to use this feature. However we understand that this tool wouldn’t be useful if you couldn’t customize it when you are ready for it. ## Learn More You can learn more in the [Create React App documentation](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/getting-started). To learn React, check out the [React documentation](https://reactjs.org/). ### Code Splitting This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/code-splitting) ### Analyzing the Bundle Size This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/analyzing-the-bundle-size) ### Making a Progressive Web App This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/making-a-progressive-web-app) ### Advanced Configuration This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/advanced-configuration) ### Deployment This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/deployment) ### `yarn build` fails to minify This section has moved here: [https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify](https://facebook.github.io/create-react-app/docs/troubleshooting#npm-run-build-fails-to-minify) # NEAR NFT-Tutorial Welcome to NEAR's NFT tutorial, where we will help you parse the details around NEAR's [NEP-171 standard](https://nomicon.io/Standards/NonFungibleToken/Core.html) (Non-Fungible Token Standard), and show you how to build your own NFT smart contract from the ground up, improving your understanding about the NFT standard along the way. ## Prerequisites * [NEAR Wallet Account](wallet.testnet.near.org) * [Rust Toolchain](https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/rust/intro#installing-the-rust-toolchain) * [NEAR-CLI](https://docs.near.org/docs/tools/near-cli#setup) * [yarn](https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/docs/install#mac-stable) ## Tutorial Stages Each branch you will find in this repo corresponds to various stages of this tutorial with a partially completed contract at each stage. You are welcome to start from any stage you want to learn the most about. | Branch | Docs Tutorial | Description | | ------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | ----------- | | 1.skeleton | [Contract Architecture](https://docs.near.org/docs/tutorials/contracts/nfts/skeleton) | You'll learn the basic architecture of the NFT smart contract, and you'll compile this skeleton code with the Rust toolchain. | | 2.minting | [Minting](https://docs.near.org/docs/tutorials/contracts/nfts/minting) |Here you'll flesh out the skeleton so the smart contract can mint a non-fungible token | | 3.enumeration | [Enumeration](https://docs.near.org/docs/tutorials/contracts/nfts/enumeration) | Here you'll find different enumeration methods that can be used to return the smart contract's states. | | 4.core | [Core](https://docs.near.org/docs/tutorials/contracts/nfts/core) | In this tutorial you'll extend the NFT contract using the core standard, which will allow you to transfer non-fungible tokens. | | 5.approval | [Approval](https://docs.near.org/docs/tutorials/contracts/nfts/approvals) | Here you'll expand the contract allowing other accounts to transfer NFTs on your behalf. | | 6.royalty | [Royalty](https://docs.near.org/docs/tutorials/contracts/nfts/royalty) |Here you'll add the ability for non-fungible tokens to have royalties. This will allow people to get a percentage of the purchase price when an NFT is purchased. | | 7.events | ----------- | This allows indexers to know what functions are being called and make it easier and more reliable to keep track of information that can be used to populate the collectibles tab in the wallet for example. (tutorial docs have yet to be implemented ) | | 8.marketplace | ----------- | ----------- | The tutorial series also contains a very helpful section on [**Upgrading Smart Contracts**](https://docs.near.org/docs/tutorials/contracts/nfts/upgrade-contract). Definitely go and check it out as this is a common pain point. # Quick-Start If you want to see the full completed contract go ahead and clone and build this repo using ```=bash git clone https://github.com/near-examples/nft-tutorial.git cd nft-tutorial git switch 6.royalty yarn build ``` Now that you've cloned and built the contract we can try a few things. ## Mint An NFT Once you've created your near wallet go ahead and login to your wallet with your cli and follow the on-screen prompts ```=bash near login ``` Once your logged in you have to deploy the contract. Make a subaccount with the name of your choosing ```=bash near create-account nft-example.your-account.testnet --masterAccount your-account.testnet --initialBalance 10 ``` After you've created your sub account deploy the contract to that sub account, set this variable to your sub account name ```=bash NFT_CONTRACT_ID=nft-example.your-account.testnet MAIN_ACCOUNT=your-account.testnet ``` Verify your new variable has the correct value ```=bash echo $NFT_CONTRACT_ID echo $MAIN_ACCOUNT ``` ### Deploy Your Contract ```=bash near deploy --accountId $NFT_CONTRACT_ID --wasmFile out/main.wasm ``` ### Initialize Your Contract ```=bash near call $NFT_CONTRACT_ID new_default_meta '{"owner_id": "'$NFT_CONTRACT_ID'"}' --accountId $NFT_CONTRACT_ID ``` ### View Contracts Meta Data ```=bash near view $NFT_CONTRACT_ID nft_metadata ``` ### Minting Token ```bash= near call $NFT_CONTRACT_ID nft_mint '{"token_id": "token-1", "metadata": {"title": "My Non Fungible Team Token", "description": "The Team Most Certainly Goes :)", "media": "https://bafybeiftczwrtyr3k7a2k4vutd3amkwsmaqyhrdzlhvpt33dyjivufqusq.ipfs.dweb.link/goteam-gif.gif"}, "receiver_id": "'$MAIN_ACCOUNT'"}' --accountId $MAIN_ACCOUNT --amount 0.1 ``` After you've minted the token go to wallet.testnet.near.org to `your-account.testnet` and look in the collections tab and check out your new sample NFT! ## View NFT Information After you've minted your NFT you can make a view call to get a response containing the `token_id` `owner_id` and the `metadata` ```bash= near view $NFT_CONTRACT_ID nft_token '{"token_id": "token-1"}' ``` ## Transfering NFTs To transfer an NFT go ahead and make another [testnet wallet account](https://wallet.testnet.near.org). Then run the following ```bash= MAIN_ACCOUNT_2=your-second-wallet-account.testnet ``` Verify the correct variable names with this ```=bash echo $NFT_CONTRACT_ID echo $MAIN_ACCOUNT echo $MAIN_ACCOUNT_2 ``` To initiate the transfer.. ```bash= near call $NFT_CONTRACT_ID nft_transfer '{"receiver_id": "$MAIN_ACCOUNT_2", "token_id": "token-1", "memo": "Go Team :)"}' --accountId $MAIN_ACCOUNT --depositYocto 1 ``` In this call you are depositing 1 yoctoNEAR for security and so that the user will be redirected to the NEAR wallet. ## Errata Large Changes: * **2022-02-12**: updated the enumeration methods `nft_tokens` and `nft_tokens_for_owner` to no longer use any `to_vector` operations to save GAS. In addition, the default limit was changed from 0 to 50. PR found [here](https://github.com/near-examples/nft-tutorial/pull/17). Small Changes: * **2022-02-22**: changed `token_id` parameter type in nft_payout from `String` to `TokenId` for consistency as per pythonicode's suggestion
pagoda-gallery-repos_nft-drop
.github ISSUE_TEMPLATE 01_BUG_REPORT.md 02_FEATURE_REQUEST.md 03_CODEBASE_IMPROVEMENT.md 04_SUPPORT_QUESTION.md config.yml PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md labels.yml workflows codeql.yml deploy-to-console.yml labels.yml lint.yml lock.yml pr-labels.yml stale.yml README.md contracts check-deploy.sh dev-deploy.sh docs CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md CONTRIBUTING.md SECURITY.md frontend .env .eslintrc.json .prettierrc.json README.md constants.ts contracts contract.ts keypom-contract.ts nft-series-contract.ts types.ts keyStore.ts links.ts near-seed-phrase.types.d.ts next.config.js package-lock.json package.json postcss.config.js public next.svg thirteen.svg vercel.svg styles globals.css tailwind.config.js tsconfig.json web3storage.ts package-lock.json package.json
<h1 align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom"> <picture> <source media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)" srcset="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/main/docs/images/pagoda_logo_light.png"> <source media="(prefers-color-scheme: light)" srcset="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/main/docs/images/pagoda_logo_dark.png"> <img alt="" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/main/docs/images/pagoda_logo_dark.png"> </picture> </a> </h1> <div align="center"> Boilerplate Template React <br /> <br /> <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/issues/new?assignees=&labels=bug&template=01_BUG_REPORT.md&title=bug%3A+">Report a Bug</a> · <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/issues/new?assignees=&labels=enhancement&template=02_FEATURE_REQUEST.md&title=feat%3A+">Request a Feature</a> . <a href="https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/issues/new?assignees=&labels=question&template=04_SUPPORT_QUESTION.md&title=support%3A+">Ask a Question</a> </div> <div align="center"> <br /> [![Pull Requests welcome](https://img.shields.io/badge/PRs-welcome-ff69b4.svg?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3A%22help+wanted%22) [![code with love by near](https://img.shields.io/badge/%3C%2F%3E%20with%20%E2%99%A5%20by-near-ff1414.svg?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/near) </div> <details open="open"> <summary>Table of Contents</summary> - [Getting Started](#getting-started) - [Prerequisites](#prerequisites) - [Installation](#installation) - [Usage](#usage) - [Exploring The Code](#exploring-the-code) - [Deploy](#deploy) - [Step 0: Install near-cli (optional)](#step-0-install-near-cli-optional) - [Step 1: Create an account for the contract](#step-1-create-an-account-for-the-contract) - [Step 2: deploy the contract](#step-2-deploy-the-contract) - [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) - [Roadmap](#roadmap) - [Support](#support) - [Project assistance](#project-assistance) - [Contributing](#contributing) - [Authors \& contributors](#authors--contributors) - [Security](#security) </details> --- ## About This project is created for easy-to-start as a React + IPFS skeleton template in the Pagoda Gallery. It was initialized with [create-near-app]. Clone it and start to build your own gallery project! ### Built With [create-near-app], [amazing-github-template](https://github.com/dec0dOS/amazing-github-template) Getting Started ================== ### Prerequisites Make sure you have a [current version of Node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/) installed – we are targeting versions `16+`. Read about other [prerequisites](https://docs.near.org/develop/prerequisites) in our docs. Optionally create an account on [web3.storage](https://web3.storage) in order to upload files directly to IPFS from the frontend. Generate an API token on web3.storage by following [this guide](https://web3.storage/docs/how-tos/generate-api-token/) and, finally, store the token in your `frontend/.env.local` as `NEXT_PUBLIC_WEB3_STORAGE_AUTH_TOKEN`. Note this means the API token will be available to anyone who has access to your website. This might not be ideal for a production application but works great for prototyping. ### Installation Install all dependencies: npm install Deploy your NFT contracts to TestNet with a temporary dev account: npm run deploy Initialize the NFT contract (customize this to your needs): near call <neardev-account> new '{"owner_id":"<YOUR_ACCOUNT>","metadata": {"spec":"nft-1.0.99","name":"<YOUR_NFT_NAME>","symbol":"<YOUR_UNIQUE_SYMBOL>","base_uri":"https://cloudflare-ipfs.com/ipfs/"}}' --accountId <YOUR_ACCOUNT> You also need to add keypom as an approved minter to mint NFTs on your behalf, add approved minters to NFT series contract: near call <neardev-account> add_approved_minter '{"account_id":"beta.keypom.testnet"}' --accountId <YOUR_ACCOUNT> By default, only the owner will be able to create NFT series on this contract. You can optionally add anyone else as an approved creator by running: near call <neardev-account> add_approved_creator '{"account_id":"<APPROVED_ACCOUNT>"}' --accountId <YOUR_ACCOUNT> Usage ===== Start your frontend in development mode: npm run dev Start your frontend in production mode: npm run start Exploring The Code ================== 1. The pre-built smart-contract code lives in the `/contracts` folder. This app is built from [Keypom's NFT tutorial series app](https://github.com/keypom/nft-tutorial-series). In blockchain apps the smart contract is the "backend" of your app. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/frontend` folder. `/frontend/pages/index.tsx` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it uses `/frontend/contracts/keypom-contract.ts`, this is your entrypoint to learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `npm run deploy`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a temporary dev account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how: Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `npm install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: npm install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `near-blank-project.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `near-blank-project.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account near-blank-project.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: deploy the contract --------------------------- Use the CLI to deploy the contract to TestNet with your account ID. near deploy --accountId near-blank-project.YOUR-NAME.testnet --wasmFile ./contracts/nft-series/nft-series.wasm Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/concepts/basics/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages ## Roadmap See the [open issues](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/issues) for a list of proposed features (and known issues). - [Top Feature Requests](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/issues?q=label%3Aenhancement+is%3Aopen+sort%3Areactions-%2B1-desc) (Add your votes using the 👍 reaction) - [Top Bugs](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3Abug+sort%3Areactions-%2B1-desc) (Add your votes using the 👍 reaction) - [Newest Bugs](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Abug) ## Support Reach out to the maintainer: - [GitHub issues](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/issues/new?assignees=&labels=question&template=04_SUPPORT_QUESTION.md&title=support%3A+) ## Project assistance If you want to say **thank you** or/and support active development of Boilerplate Template React: - Add a [GitHub Star](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom) to the project. - Tweet about the Boilerplate Template React. - Write interesting articles about the project on [Dev.to](https://dev.to/), [Medium](https://medium.com/) or your personal blog. Together, we can make Boilerplate Template React **better**! ## Contributing First off, thanks for taking the time to contribute! Contributions are what make the open-source community such an amazing place to learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make will benefit everybody else and are **greatly appreciated**. Please read [our contribution guidelines](docs/CONTRIBUTING.md), and thank you for being involved! ## Authors & contributors The original setup of this repository is by [Jonathan Lewis](https://github.com/jon-lewis). For a full list of all authors and contributors, see [the contributors page](https://github.com/near/boilerplate-template-keypom/contributors). ## Security Boilerplate Template React follows good practices of security, but 100% security cannot be assured. Boilerplate Template React is provided **"as is"** without any **warranty**. Use at your own risk. _For more information and to report security issues, please refer to our [security documentation](docs/SECURITY.md)._ This is a [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/) project bootstrapped with [`create-next-app`](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/tree/canary/packages/create-next-app) and [`tailwindcss`](https://tailwindcss.com/docs/guides/nextjs). ## Getting Started First, run the development server: ```bash npm run dev # or yarn dev ``` Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) with your browser to see the result. You can start editing the page by modifying `pages/index.tsx`. The page auto-updates as you edit the file. [API routes](https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introduction) can be accessed on [http://localhost:3000/api/hello](http://localhost:3000/api/hello). This endpoint can be edited in `pages/api/hello.ts`. The `pages/api` directory is mapped to `/api/*`. Files in this directory are treated as [API routes](https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introduction) instead of React pages. This project uses [`next/font`](https://nextjs.org/docs/basic-features/font-optimization) to automatically optimize and load Inter, a custom Google Font. ## Learn More To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources: - [Next.js Documentation](https://nextjs.org/docs) - learn about Next.js features and API. - [Learn Next.js](https://nextjs.org/learn) - an interactive Next.js tutorial. You can check out [the Next.js GitHub repository](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/) - your feedback and contributions are welcome! ## Deploy on Vercel The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the [Vercel Platform](https://vercel.com/new?utm_medium=default-template&filter=next.js&utm_source=create-next-app&utm_campaign=create-next-app-readme) from the creators of Next.js. Check out our [Next.js deployment documentation](https://nextjs.org/docs/deployment) for more details.
NEAR-Hispano_near-e-sports
.gitpod.yml README.md babel.config.js contract Cargo.toml README.md compile.js src approval.rs enumeration.rs events.rs internal.rs lib.rs metadata.rs mint.rs nft_core.rs royalty.rs firebase.json jsconfig.json package.json public 404.html index.html src App.js __mocks__ fileMock.js assets css argon-design-system.css argon-design-system.min.css nucleo-icons.css nucleo-svg.css demo demo.css demo.js fonts nucleo-icons.svg img icons common github.svg google.svg ill 1.svg 404.svg 500.svg bg4-1.svg bg5-1.svg bg6-2.svg bg_contactus3.svg bg_pricing5.svg example-3.svg index_bg.svg inn.svg linth3.svg p2.svg p31.svg p51.svg p7.svg p8.svg pattern_pricing1.svg pattern_pricing5.svg pattern_pricing6.svg pricing_bg.svg reset.svg testimonial_bg.svg logo-black.svg logo-white.svg components About.js AdministrarEmparejamiento.js AdministrarEmparejamientoRev.js Brackets.js BracketsRev.js CrearEquipo.js CrearEquipo2.js CrearTorneo.js Explorar.js Footer.js Home.js HomeOld.js Navbar.js Perfil.js PerfilRev.js Run.js TournamentDetails.js TournamentDetailsRev.js VerTorneos.js blogs Blogs7.js cards PricingCard3.js ProfileCard3.js ProfileCardEquipo.js ddd.js navbars Navbar2.js random.js soporte.js upload Upload.js config.js firebase firebaseConfig.js global.css index.html index.js jest.init.js main.test.js models Team.ts Tournament.ts routers AppRouter.js utils.js wallet login index.html Metodos para Testing Manejo de COMBOBOX Opciones Arreglos y Map COMBOBOX Manejo de Selecciones en el frontend MENU EDICION Cambiar Puntajes en el menu edicion Logica general FIN Logica general Rellenar el impar que falto FIN Rellenar Impar PROFILE CARD 1
Near-tournaments Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html Near-tournaments =========== Near Tournament ESPORTS es una DApp que provee un ambiente seguro para el desarrollo de torneos de videojuegos, de esta forma los videojugadores/Streamers/Patrocionadores/Empresas tienen la posibilidad de crear y gestionar torneos de un determinado juego con la finalidad de que los mismos se desarrollen de forma cómoda, organizada, se fomente el ambiente competitivo entre los videojugadores y los mismos puedan recibir algun tipo de reumeneracion o recompensas por su desempeño durante el evento. Las funcionalidades actuales implementadas en el contrato son las siguientes: Crear Torneos Crear Equipo Agregar equipo al Torneo Ver Torneos Ver equipos Enviar premios ================== Link Medium: https://medium.com/@carlos.maikol1/near-e-sports-tournament-50d87bf0bc33 ================== Link playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLixWO0N_iFTM1E0ok5l7a6bd570QE_KDk
onchezz_counterdapp
Cargo.toml README.md build.sh deploy.sh dev-deploy.sh init-args.js rustfmt.toml src contract.rs lib.rs utils.rs
# NEAR Smart Contract Rust Template Project structure for writing smart contracts in Rust for NEAR Protocol # Required Software - Rust 1.58 + cargo - Node.js - NEAR CLI 3.1 # Authors - Jacob Lindahl <[email protected]> [@sudo_build](https://twitter.com/sudo_build)
NEAR-Hispano_nomicon.io
0000-template.md README.md book.toml build.sh specs Architecture.md BlockchainLayer EpochManager Epoch.md EpochManager.md README.md Staking.md Transaction.md Transactions.md ChainSpec Consensus.md LightClient.md README.md Transactions.md Upgradability.md CoreDataTypes.md DataStructures AccessKey.md Account.md MerkleProof.md README.md Transaction.md DataTypes.md Economics README.md GenesisConfig ExtCostsConfig.md GenesisConfig.md RuntimeConfig.md RuntimeFeeConfig.md RuntimeFeeConfig AccessKeyCreationConfig.md ActionCreationConfig.md DataReceiptCreationConfig.md Fee.md Fraction.md StorageUsageConfig.md StateRecord.md VMConfig.md NetworkSpec Messages.md NetworkSpec.md RoutingTableExchangeAlgorithm.md Proposals 0005-access-keys.md 0006-bindings.md 0008-transaction-refactoring.md 0013-system-methods.md 0017-execution-outcome.md 0018-view-change-method.md 0033-economics.md README.md README.md Runtime.md RuntimeSpec AccountStorage.md Actions.md ApplyingChunk.md Components BindingsSpec BindingsSpec.md ContextAPI.md EconomicsAPI.md MathAPI.md MiscellaneousAPI.md PromisesAPI.md RegistersAPI.md TrieAPI.md Components.md RuntimeCrate.md Fees Fees.md FunctionCall.md README.md Receipts.md Refunds.md Runtime.md Scenarios CrossContractCall.md FinancialTransaction.md Scenarios.md Transactions.md SUMMARY.md Standards FungibleToken Core.md Metadata.md README.md NonFungibleToken ApprovalManagement.md Core.md Enumeration.md Event.md Metadata.md Payout.md README.md README.md StorageManagement.md Terminology.md images receipt_flow_diagram.svg runtime_architecture.svg
# NEAR Protocol Specifications and Standards This repository hosts the current NEAR Protocol specification and standards. This includes the core protocol specification, APIs, contract standards, processes, and workflows. Changes to the protocol specification and standards are called NEAR Enhancement Proposals (NEPs). This repository uses [mdBook](https://rust-lang.github.io/mdBook) for the [Nomicon website](https://nomicon.io). ## Specification NEAR Specification is under active development. Specification defines how any NEAR client should be connecting, producing blocks, reaching consensus, processing state transitions, using runtime APIs, and implementing smart contract standards as well. ## Standards & Processes Standards refer to various common interfaces and APIs that are used by smart contract developers on top of the NEAR Protocol. For example, such standards include SDK for Rust, API for fungible tokens or how to manage user's social graph. Processes include release process for spec, clients or how standards are updated. ### Contributing #### Expectations Ideas presented ultimately as NEPs will need to be driven by the author through the process. It's an exciting opportunity with a fair amount of responsibility from the contributor(s). Please put care into the details. NEPs that do not present convincing motivation, demonstrate understanding of the impact of the design, or are disingenuous about the drawbacks or alternatives tend to be poorly received. Again, by the time the NEP makes it to the pull request, it has a clear plan and path forward based on the discussions in the governance forum. #### Process Spec changes are ultimately done via pull requests to this repository. However, in an effort to keep the pull request clean and readable, please follow these instructions to flesh out an idea. 1. Sign up for the [governance site](https://gov.near.org/) and make a post to the appropriate section. For instance, during the ideation phase of a standard, one might start a new conversation in the [Development » Standards section](https://gov.near.org/c/dev/standards/29). The other suggested category in the governance forum is the [Development » Proposals section](https://gov.near.org/c/dev/proposals/68). 2. The forum has comment threading which allows the community and NEAR Collective to ideate, ask questions, wrestle with approaches, etc. If more immediate responses are desired, consider bringing the conversation [to Discord](https://near.chat). 3. When the governance conversations have reached a point where a clear plan is evident, create a pull request, using the instructions below. Pull request (only when governance discussion has concluded) * Clone this repository and create a branch with "my-feature". * Update relevant content in the current specification that are affected by the proposal. * Create PR, where information of the PR follows [0000-template.md](0000-template.md) to describe motivation and details of the change to the protocol. The file will be added to `specs/Proposals`, using the pull request number padded with zeroes. For instance, the pull request `19` might be created as `specs/Proposals/0019-short-slug-description.md`. * Post pre-approval of the spec change, present a PR for NEAR Protocol client(s) that implements this specification change. * Receive final approval and merge change into the `master` to be included in the next release. Tip: build consensus and integrate feedback. NEPs that have broad support are much more likely to make progress than those that don't receive any comments. Feel free to reach out to the NEP assignee in particular to get help identify stakeholders and obstacles. ### Running mdBook For Linux and OS X, you may run: `./build.sh` For Windows: ```bash cargo install mdbook mdbook build ``` To quickly iterate, you may also use the command: `mdbook serve` # Primitivos - [Cuenta](Account.md) - [ID de cuenta](Account.md#account-id) - [Cuenta](Account.md#account) - [Llaves de acceso](AccessKey.md) - [Transacciones](Transaction.md) - [Pruebas Merkle](MerkleProof.md) # Economía **Esto está bajo fuerte desarrollo.** ## Units | Name | Value | | - | - | | yoctoNEAR | monto indivisible más chico de la moneda nativa *NEAR*. | | NEAR | `10**24` yoctoNEAR | | block | unidad de tiempo más pequeña en la cadena | | gas | unidad para medir el uso de la blockchain | ## Parámetros generales | Name | Value | | - | - | | `INITIAL_SUPPLY` | `10**33` yoctoNEAR | | `MIN_GAS_PRICE` | `10**5` yoctoNEAR | | `REWARD_PCT_PER_YEAR` | `0.05` | | `EPOCH_LENGTH` | `43,200` bloques | | `EPOCHS_A_YEAR` | `730` epochs | | `INITIAL_MAX_STORAGE` | `10 * 2**40` bytes == `10` TB | | `TREASURY_PCT` | `0.1` | | `TREASURY_ACCOUNT_ID` | `treasury` | | `CONTRACT_PCT` | `0.3` | | `INVALID_STATE_SLASH_PCT` | `0.05` | | `ADJ_FEE` | `0.001` | | `TOTAL_SEATS` | `100` | | `ONLINE_THRESHOLD_MIN` | `0.9` | | `ONLINE_THRESHOLD_MAX` | `0.99` | | `BLOCK_PRODUCER_KICKOUT_THRESHOLD` | `0.9` | | `CHUNK_PRODUCER_KICKOUT_THRESHOLD` | `0.6` | ## Variables generales | Name | Description | Initial value | | - | - | - | | `totalSupply[t]` | Suministro total de NEAR en un epoch[t] dado | `INITIAL_SUPPLY` | | `gasPrice[t]` | El costo de 1 unidad de *gas* en tokens NEAR (vea la sección Tarifas de transacción a continuación) | `MIN_GAS_PRICE` | | `storageAmountPerByte[t]` | keeping constant, `INITIAL_SUPPLY / INITIAL_MAX_STORAGE` | `~9.09 * 10**19` yoctoNEAR | ## Emisión El protocolo establece un techo para la emisión máxima de tokens, y dinámicamente decrementa esta emisión dependiendo en el monto total de tarifas en el sistema. | Name | Description | | - | - | | `reward[t]` | `totalSupply[t]` * ((`1 + REWARD_PCT_PER_YEAR`) ** (`1/EPOCHS_A_YEAR`) - `1`) | | `epochFee[t]` | `sum([(1 - DEVELOPER_PCT_PER_YEAR) * block.txFee + block.stateFee for block in epoch[t]])` | | `issuance[t]` | La cantidad de token emitido en un cierto epoch[t], `issuance[t] = reward[t] - epochFee[t]` | Donde `totalSupply[t]` es el número total de tokens en el sistema en un tiempo *t* dado. Si `epochFee[t] > reward[t]` la emisión es negativa, por lo tanto `totalSupply[t]` se decrementa en el epoch dado. ## Tarifas de transacción Cada transacción debe comprar el gas suficiente para cubrir el costo de la banda ancha y ejecución antes de ser incluída. El gas unifica la ejecución y los bytes del uso de la banda ancha de la blockchain. Cada instrucción WASM o función pre-compilada se le asigna una cantidad de gas basado en medidas de computadora de denominador común. Lo mismo ocurre con el peso del ancho de banda utilizado en función de los costos unificados generales. Para un mapeo específico de los números de gas vea [???](). El gas se le asigna su precio dinámicamente en tokens `NEAR`. En cada bloque `t`, actualizamos `gasPrice[t] = gasPrice[t - 1] * (gasUsed[t - 1] / gasLimit[t - 1] - 0.5) * ADJ_FEE`. Donde `gasUsed[t] = sum([sum([gas(tx) for tx in chunk]) for chunk in block[t]])`. `gasLimit[t]` es definido como `gasLimit[t] = gasLimit[t - 1] + validatorGasDiff[t - 1]`, donde `validatorGasDiff` es un parámetro el que cada fragmento productor puede incrementar o decrementar el límite del gas basado en cuanto tarde en ejecutar el fragmento anterior. `validatorGasDiff[t]` solo puede estar dentro del `±0.1%` del `gasLimit[t]` y solo si `gasUsed[t - 1] > 0.9 * gasLimit[t - 1]`. ## Participación en el estado El monto de `NEAR` en una cuenta representa el derecho de esta de tomar una porción del estado global de la blockchain. Las transacciones fallan si la cuenta no tiene el balance suficiente para cubrir el almacenamiento requerido para la cuenta dada. ```python def check_storage_cost(account): # Calcula requiredAmount dado el tamaño de la cuent. requiredAmount = sizeOf(account) * storageAmountPerByte return Ok() if account.amount + account.locked >= requiredAmount else Error(requiredAmount) # Revisa cuando una transacción es recibida y verifica que es válida. def verify_transaction(tx, signer_account): # ... # Actualiza la cuenta que firma con el monto que tendrá después de ejecutar esta tx. update_post_amount(signer_account, tx) result = check_storage_cost(signer_account) # Si el balance es suficiente O si la cuenta ha sido borrada por el dueño. if not result.ok() or DeleteAccount(tx.signer_id) in tx.actions: assert LackBalanceForState(signer_id: tx.signer_id, amount: result.err()) # Después de tocar / cambiar la cuenta, verificamos si todavía tiene el balance suficienta para cubrir su almacenamiento. def on_account_change(block_height, account): # ... ejecutar transacciones / cambios en recibos ... # Validar poscondición y revertir si falla. result = check_storage_cost(sender_account) if not result.ok(): assert LackBalanceForState(signer_id: tx.signer_id, amount: result.err()) ``` Donde `sizeOf(account)` inclute el tamaño de `account_id`, la estructura de `account` y el tamaño de todos los datos guardados bajo la cuenta. La cuenta puede terminar sin saldo suficiente en caso de que se reduzca. La cuenta se volverá inusable dado que todas las transacciones que se puedan originar fallarán (incluyendo la eliminación de la cuenta). La única manera de recuperarla en este caso es mandando fondos extra desde diferentes cuentas. ## Validadores Los validadores NEAR proveen sus recursos a cambio de una recompensa `epochReward[t]`, donde [t] representa el epoch considerado | Name | Description | | - | - | | `epochReward[t]` | `= coinbaseReward[t] + epochFee[t]` | | `coinbaseReward[t]` | La inflación máxima por epoch[t], en función de `REWARD_PCT_PER_YEAR / EPOCHS_A_YEAR` | ### Selección de validador | Name | Description | | - | - | | `proposals: Proposal[]` | El arreglo de todas las nuevas transacciones apiladas que han pasado durante el epoch (si una cuenta tiene varias, solo la última es usada) | | `current_validators` | El arreglo de todos los validadores existentes durante el epoch | | `epoch[T]` | El epoch cuando el validator[v] es seleccionado de el arreglo de subasta `proposals` | | `seat_price` | La participación mínima necesaria para convertirse en validador en el epoch[T] | | `stake[v]` | La cantidad en tokens NEAR stakeados por el validador[v] durante la subasta al final de epoch[T-2], menos `INCLUSION_FEE` | | `shard[v]` | El fragmento es asignado aleatoriamente al validator[v] en el epoch[T-1], para que así su nodo puede descargar y sincronizarse con su estado | | `num_allocated_seats[v]` | Número de asientos asignados al validator[v], calculados desde stake[v]/seatPrice | | `validatorAssignments` | El arreglo ordenado resultante de todas las `proposals` con un stake mayor que el `seatPrice` | ```rust struct Proposal { account_id: AccountId, stake: Balance, public_key: PublicKey, } ``` Durante el epoch, la salida de stakear transacciones produce `proposals`, que son recolectadas en la forma de `Proposal`s. Al final de cada epoch `T`, el siguiente algoritmo es ejecutado para determinar los validadores para el epoch `T + 2`: 1. Para cada validador en `current_validators` determina `num_blocks_produced`, `num_chunks_produced` basado en lo que produjeron durante el epoch. 2. Remueve validadores, para quienes `num_blocks_produced < num_blocks_expected * BLOCK_PRODUCER_KICKOUT_THRESHOLD` o `num_chunks_produced < num_chunks_expected * CHUNK_PRODUCER_KICKOUT_THRESHOLD`. 3. Agrega validadores de `proposals`, si el validador está también en `current_validators`, el stakeo considerado de la propuesta es `0 if proposal.stake == 0 else proposal.stake + reward[proposal.account_id]`. 4. Encuentra el precio asiento `seat_price = findSeatPrice(current_validators - kickedout_validators + proposals, num_seats)`, donde cada validador obtiene `floor(stake[v] / seat_price)` asientos y `seat_price` es el número entero más grande tal que el número total de asientos es al menos `num_seats`. 5. Filtra validadores y propuestas a solo esos con stake mayor o igual al precio asiento. 6. Para cada validador, los replica por número de asientos que obtienen `floor(stake[v] / seat_price)`. 7. Barajar aleatoriamente con la semilla de la aleatoriedad generada en el último bloque del epoch actual (a través de `VRF(block_producer.private_key, block_hash)`). 8. Quitar todos los asientso que están sobre el `num_seats` que se necesita. 10. Usa este conjunto para productores de bloques y cambia la ventana sobre él como productores de fragmentos ```python def findSeatPrice(stakes, num_seats): """Encuentre el precio del asiento dado el conjunto de stakes y la cantidad de asientos requeridos. El precio asiento es el número entero más alto tal que si sumamos `floor(stakes[i] / seat_price)` sea al menos `num_seats`. """ stakes = sorted(stakes) total_stakes = sum(stakes) assert total_stakes >= num_seats, "Total stakes should be above number of seats" left, right = 1, total_stakes + 1 while True: if left == right - 1: return left mid = (left + right) // 2 sum = 0 for stake in stakes: sum += stake // mid if sum >= num_seats: left = mid break right = mid ``` ### Cálculo de las recompensas del validador Nota: todos lo cálculos son hechas con números Racionales. La recompensa total en cada epoch `t` es igual a: ```python total_reward[t] = floor(totalSupply * max_inflation_rate * num_blocks_per_year / epoch_length) ``` donde `max_inflation_rate`, `num_blocks_per_year`, `epoch_length` son parámetros génesis y `totalSupply` es tomado del último bloque en el epoch. Después de que una fracción de la recompensa va a la tesorería y el monto restante será usado para calcular las recompensas del validador: ```python treasury_reward[t] = floor(reward[t] * protocol_reward_rate) validator_reward[t] = total_reward[t] - treasury_reward[t] ``` Los validadores que no llegaron al umbral para los bloques o fragmentos se sacan y no obtienen ninguna recompensa, de lo contrario el tiempo de actividad de un validador es calculado: ```python pct_online[t][j] = (num_produced_blocks[t][j] / expected_produced_blocks[t][j] + num_produced_chunks[t][j] / expected_produced_chunks[t][j]) / 2 if pct_online > ONLINE_THRESHOLD: uptime[t][j] = min(1, (pct_online[t][j] - ONLINE_THRESHOLD_MIN) / (ONLINE_THRESHOLD_MAX - ONLINE_THRESHOLD_MIN)) else: uptime[t][j] = 0 ``` Donde `expected_produced_blocks` y `expected_produced_chunks` es el número de bloques y fragmentos respectivos que se espera sean producidos por el validador `j` dado en el epoch `t`. La recompensa específica del `validator[t][j]` para el epoch `t` es pues proporcional a la fracción de stake de este validador del stake total: ```python validatorReward[t][j] = floor(uptime[t][j] * stake[t][j] * validator_reward[t] / total_stake[t]) ``` ### Slashing #### ChunkProofs (pruebas de fragmento) ```python # Verifica que el fragmento es inválido, porque las pruebas en el encabezado no coincide con el cuerpo. def chunk_proofs_condition(chunk): # TODO # Al final del epoch, ejecuta actualizar validadores y # determina cuanto se recortarán los validadores. def end_of_epoch_update_validators(validators): # ... for validator in validators: if validator.is_slashed: validator.stake -= INVALID_STATE_SLASH_PCT * validator.stake ``` #### ChunkState (estado del fragmento) ```python # Verifica que la raíz del estado de la publicación del encabezado del fragmento sea inválida, # porque la ejecución del fragmento anterior no lleva a eso. def chunk_state_condition(prev_chunk, prev_state, chunk_header): # TODO # Al final del epoch, ejecuta actualizar validadores y # determina cuanto se recortarán los validadores. def end_of_epoch(..., validators): # ... for validator in validators: if validator.is_slashed: validator.stake -= INVALID_STATE_SLASH_PCT * validator.stake ``` ## Protocolo de tesorería La cuenta de tesorería `TREASURY_ACCOUNT_ID` recibe una fracción de recompensa cada epoch `t`: ```python # Al final del epoch, actualizar tesorería def end_of_epoch(..., reward): # ... accounts[TREASURY_ACCOUNT_ID].amount = treasury_reward[t] ``` ## Recompensas de contrato La cuenta contrato es recompensada con el 30% del gas quemado durante la ejecución de sus funciones. La recompensa se acredita a la cuenta contrato después de aplicar el recibo correspondiente con [`FunctionCallAction`](../RuntimeSpec/Actions.md#functioncallaction), el gas es convertido a tokens usando el precio del gas del bloque actual. Puede leer más sobre: - [ejecución de recibos](../RuntimeSpec/Receipts.md); - [tarifas de tiempo de ejecución](../RuntimeSpec/Fees/Fees.md) con la descripción de [como se cobra el gas](../RuntimeSpec/Fees/Fees.md#gas-tracking). # The NEAR Protocol Specification Near Protocol es el protocolo escalable de blockchain. Para una mejor comprensión, lea los siguientes documentos en orden numérico. 1. [Terminología](Terminology.md) 2. [Estructuras de datos](DataStructures/README.md) 3. [Arquitectura](Architecture.md) 4. [Especificación de cadena](ChainSpec/README.md) 5. [Especificación de tiempo de ejecución](RuntimeSpec/README.md) 6. [Especificación de red](NetworkSpec/NetworkSpec.md) 7. [Economía](Economics/README.md) ## Estándares Los estándares como “Fungible Token Standard” (estándar del token fungible) pueden ser encontrados en la página de [Estándares](Standards/README.md). ## Estándar del token fungible - [Núcleo del token fungible](Core.md) - [Metadata del token fungible](Metadata.md) # Runtime Specification Vea: - [Tiempo de ejecución](Runtime.md) - [ApplyingChunk](ApplyingChunk.md) - [Llamadas de función](FunctionCall.md) - [Transacciones](Transactions.md) - [Acciones](Actions.md) - [Recibos](Receipts.md) - [Reembolso](Refunds.md) - [Escenarios](Scenarios/Scenarios.md) - [Componentes](Components/Components.md) # Especificación de cadena ## Tokens no fungibles - [Núcleo de token no fungible](Core.md) - [Metadatos de tokens no fungibles](Metadata.md) - [Gestión de aprobación de tokens no fungibles](ApprovalManagement.md) - [Enumeración de tokens no fungibles](Enumeration.md) - [Pago de regalías de tokens no fungibles](Payout.md) - [Eventos de tokens no fungibles](Event.md) ## Estándares - [Token fungible](FungibleToken/README.md) - [Estándar básico](FungibleToken/Core.md) - [Metadata](FungibleToken/Metadata.md) - [Token No Fungible](NonFungibleToken/README.md) - [Estándar básico](NonFungibleToken/Core.md) - [Metadata](NonFungibleToken/Metadata.md) - [Gestión de aprobación](NonFungibleToken/ApprovalManagement.md) - [Enumeración](NonFungibleToken/Enumeration.md) - [Pago de regalías](NonFungibleToken/Payout.md) - [Eventos](NonFungibleToken/Event.md) - [Gestión de almacenamiento](StorageManagement.md) ## Proposals This section contains the NEAR Enhancement Proposals (NEPs) that cover a fleshed out concept for NEAR. Before an idea is turned into a proposal, it will be fleshed out and discussed on the [NEAR Governance Forum](https://gov.near.org). These subcategories are great places to start such a discussion: - [Standards](https://gov.near.org/c/dev/standards/29) — examples might include new protocol standards, token standards, etc. - [Proposals](https://gov.near.org/c/dev/proposals/68) — ecosystem proposals that may touch tooling, node experience, wallet usage, and so on. Once and idea has been thoroughly discussed and vetted, a pull request should be made according to the instructions at the [NEP repository](https://github.com/near/NEPs). The proposals shown in this section have been merged and exist to offer as much information as possible including historical motivations, drawbacks, approaches, future concerns, etc. Once a proposal has been fully implemented it can be added as a specification, but will remain a proposal until that time. # Epochs y staking - [Epoch](Epoch.md) - [EpochManager](EpochManager.md) - [Staking](Staking.md)
mingderwang_test-near-wallet
.dependabot config.yml .github workflows tests.yml .gitpod.yml .travis.yml LICENSE-APACHE.txt LICENSE-MIT.txt README-Gitpod.md README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts main.spec.ts as_types.d.ts index.ts model.ts tsconfig.json neardev shared-test-staging test.near.json shared-test test.near.json package.json src config.js index.html loader.html main.js styles.css test-setup.js test.js
Example of NEAR Wallet integration ================================== [![Open in Gitpod](https://gitpod.io/button/open-in-gitpod.svg)](https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/near-examples/wallet-example) <!-- MAGIC COMMENT: DO NOT DELETE! Everything above this line is hidden on NEAR Examples page --> This example demonstrates how to integrate your application with NEAR Wallet. The contract is quite simple. It can store the account_id of last sender and return it. It also shows how you can debug contracts using logs. ## Getting started There are two ways to run this project. The first is the quick and a good way to instantly become familiar with this example. Once familiar, the next step is for a developer to create their own NEAR account and deploy the contract to testnet. This is covered in the following section. There's a button at the top of this file that says "Open in Gitpod." This will open the project in a new tab with an integrated development environment. The other option is to clone this repository and follow the same instructions. ### Quickest option 1. Install dependencies: ``` yarn --frozen-lockfile ``` 2. Build and deploy this smart contract to a development account. This development account will be created automatically and is not intended for reuse: ``` yarn dev ``` Your command line which will display a link to localhost similar to: ```bash Server running at http://localhost:1234 ``` Please open that link your browser to continue and see how to log in with NEAR Wallet in a simple webapp. ### Standard deploy option In this second option, the smart contract will get deployed to a specific account created with the NEAR Wallet. 1. Ensure `near-cli` is installed by running: ``` near --version ``` If needed, install `near-cli`: ``` npm install near-cli -g ``` 2. If you do not have a NEAR account, please create one with [NEAR Wallet](https://wallet.nearprotocol.com). In the project root, login with `near-cli` by following the instructions after this command: ``` near login ``` 3. Modify the top of `src/config.js`, changing the `CONTRACT_NAME` to be the NEAR account that was just used to log in. ```javascript … const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'YOUR_ACCOUNT_NAME_HERE'; /* TODO: fill this in! */ … ``` 4. Start the example! ``` yarn start ``` ## To Test ``` yarn asp // as-pect tests yarn jest // integration tests yarn test // both ``` ## To Explore - `assembly/main.ts` for the contract code - `src/index.html` for the front-end HTML - `src/main.js` for the JavaScript front-end code and how to integrate contracts - `src/test.js` for the JS tests for the contract ## Data collection By using Gitpod in this project, you agree to opt-in to basic, anonymous analytics. No personal information is transmitted. Instead, these usage statistics aid in discovering potential bugs and user flow information.
ninetwozreo_nep141_tool
README.md tool .gitpod.yml README.md babel.config.js contract Cargo.toml README.md compile.js index.html src lib.rs package.json src App.js __mocks__ fileMock.js assets logo-black.svg logo-white.svg config.js global.css index.html index.js jest.init.js main.test.js utils.js wallet login index.html
tool ================== This [React] app was initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== To run this project locally: 1. Prerequisites: Make sure you've installed [Node.js] ≥ 12 2. Install dependencies: `yarn install` 3. Run the local development server: `yarn dev` (see `package.json` for a full list of `scripts` you can run with `yarn`) Now you'll have a local development environment backed by the NEAR TestNet! Go ahead and play with the app and the code. As you make code changes, the app will automatically reload. Exploring The Code ================== 1. The "backend" code lives in the `/contract` folder. See the README there for more info. 2. The frontend code lives in the `/src` folder. `/src/index.html` is a great place to start exploring. Note that it loads in `/src/index.js`, where you can learn how the frontend connects to the NEAR blockchain. 3. Tests: there are different kinds of tests for the frontend and the smart contract. See `contract/README` for info about how it's tested. The frontend code gets tested with [jest]. You can run both of these at once with `yarn run test`. Deploy ====== Every smart contract in NEAR has its [own associated account][NEAR accounts]. When you run `yarn dev`, your smart contract gets deployed to the live NEAR TestNet with a throwaway account. When you're ready to make it permanent, here's how. Step 0: Install near-cli (optional) ------------------------------------- [near-cli] is a command line interface (CLI) for interacting with the NEAR blockchain. It was installed to the local `node_modules` folder when you ran `yarn install`, but for best ergonomics you may want to install it globally: yarn install --global near-cli Or, if you'd rather use the locally-installed version, you can prefix all `near` commands with `npx` Ensure that it's installed with `near --version` (or `npx near --version`) Step 1: Create an account for the contract ------------------------------------------ Each account on NEAR can have at most one contract deployed to it. If you've already created an account such as `your-name.testnet`, you can deploy your contract to `tool.your-name.testnet`. Assuming you've already created an account on [NEAR Wallet], here's how to create `tool.your-name.testnet`: 1. Authorize NEAR CLI, following the commands it gives you: near login 2. Create a subaccount (replace `YOUR-NAME` below with your actual account name): near create-account tool.YOUR-NAME.testnet --masterAccount YOUR-NAME.testnet Step 2: set contract name in code --------------------------------- Modify the line in `src/config.js` that sets the account name of the contract. Set it to the account id you used above. const CONTRACT_NAME = process.env.CONTRACT_NAME || 'tool.YOUR-NAME.testnet' Step 3: deploy! --------------- One command: yarn deploy As you can see in `package.json`, this does two things: 1. builds & deploys smart contract to NEAR TestNet 2. builds & deploys frontend code to GitHub using [gh-pages]. This will only work if the project already has a repository set up on GitHub. Feel free to modify the `deploy` script in `package.json` to deploy elsewhere. Troubleshooting =============== On Windows, if you're seeing an error containing `EPERM` it may be related to spaces in your path. Please see [this issue](https://github.com/zkat/npx/issues/209) for more details. [React]: https://reactjs.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [Node.js]: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/ [jest]: https://jestjs.io/ [NEAR accounts]: https://docs.near.org/docs/concepts/account [NEAR Wallet]: https://wallet.testnet.near.org/ [near-cli]: https://github.com/near/near-cli [gh-pages]: https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages # nep141_tool a tool to enlightened nep141 tool Smart Contract ================== A [smart contract] written in [Rust] for an app initialized with [create-near-app] Quick Start =========== Before you compile this code, you will need to install Rust with [correct target] Exploring The Code ================== 1. The main smart contract code lives in `src/lib.rs`. You can compile it with the `./compile` script. 2. Tests: You can run smart contract tests with the `./test` script. This runs standard Rust tests using [cargo] with a `--nocapture` flag so that you can see any debug info you print to the console. [smart contract]: https://docs.near.org/docs/develop/contracts/overview [Rust]: https://www.rust-lang.org/ [create-near-app]: https://github.com/near/create-near-app [correct target]: https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites [cargo]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-03-hello-cargo.html
irenepeace_Hotel-Management-System
Cargo.toml README.md build.bat build.sh src lib.rs test.sh
# introduction A hotel management system that assist customers to order and pay for their meals at their own convinience ## Getting started 1. Click the "Use this template" button to create a new repo based on this template 2. Update line 2 of `Cargo.toml` with your project name 3. Update line 4 of `Cargo.toml` with your project author names 4. Set up the [prerequisites](https://github.com/near/near-sdk-rs#pre-requisites) 5. Begin writing your smart contract in `src/lib.rs` 6. Test the contract `cargo test -- --nocapture` 8. Build the contract `RUSTFLAGS='-C link-arg=-s' cargo build --target wasm32-unknown-unknown --release` **Get more info at:** * [Rust Smart Contract Quick Start](https://docs.near.org/develop/prerequisites) * [Rust SDK Book](https://www.near-sdk.io/)
Learn-NEAR_NCD--lucky-quote
README.md Follow 3. to 6. or check scripts in `. scripts` as-pect.config.js asconfig.json package.json scripts 1.dev-deploy.sh 2.use-contract.sh 3.cleanup.sh README.md src as_types.d.ts singleton asconfig.json assembly index.ts tsconfig.json utils.ts
# NEAR Lucky Quote - NEAR Blockchain example app for [NEAR Certificated Developer I](https://hackmd.io/@nearly-learning/ncd-1-1d) certificate 1. Clone repo with `git clone` 2. Install dependencies `yarn` --- Follow 3. to 6. or check scripts in `./scripts` --- 3. Build Web Assembly file `yarn build:release` 4. Deploy to NEAR testnet `near dev-deploy ./build/release/singleton.wasm` and copy temporary account id 5. Set CONTRACT env variable with that account id `export CONTRACT=<dev-123-456>` 6. Call method from deployed smart contract `near call $CONTRACT generateLuckyQuote --accountId $CONTRACT` Check out [front end code](https://github.com/Seva98/near-lucky-quote-frontend) from [NEAR Certificated Developer II](https://hackmd.io/@nearly-learning/ncd-2-1d) that this application is using ## Setting up your terminal The scripts in this folder are designed to help you demonstrate the behavior of the contract(s) in this project. It uses the following setup: ```sh # set your terminal up to have 2 windows, A and B like this: ┌─────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ A │ B │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘ ``` ### Terminal **A** *This window is used to compile, deploy and control the contract* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment export OWNER= # any account you control # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 # export OWNER=sherif.testnet ``` - Commands _helper scripts_ ```sh 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts ``` ### Terminal **B** *This window is used to render the contract account storage* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 ``` - Commands ```sh # monitor contract storage using near-account-utils # https://github.com/near-examples/near-account-utils watch -d -n 1 yarn storage $CONTRACT ``` --- ## OS Support ### Linux - The `watch` command is supported natively on Linux - To learn more about any of these shell commands take a look at [explainshell.com](https://explainshell.com) ### MacOS - Consider `brew info visionmedia-watch` (or `brew install watch`) ### Windows - Consider this article: [What is the Windows analog of the Linux watch command?](https://superuser.com/questions/191063/what-is-the-windows-analog-of-the-linuo-watch-command#191068)
hoangtheanhhp_scv-chain-near
Cargo.toml build.sh deploy.sh near_call.sh src lib.rs
NearDeFi_token-prices
.github workflows fetch-prices.yml README.md package.json ref-prices.json src get-prices.js
# token-prices
mileself_NDC-Practice-1
README.md as-pect.config.js asconfig.json neardev dev-account.env node_modules @as-pect assembly README.md assembly index.ts internal Actual.ts Expectation.ts Expected.ts Reflect.ts ReflectedValueType.ts Test.ts assert.ts call.ts comparison toIncludeComparison.ts toIncludeEqualComparison.ts log.ts noOp.ts package.json types as-pect.d.ts as-pect.portable.d.ts env.d.ts cli README.md init as-pect.config.js env.d.ts example.spec.ts init-types.d.ts portable-types.d.ts lib as-pect.cli.amd.d.ts as-pect.cli.amd.js help.d.ts help.js index.d.ts index.js init.d.ts init.js portable.d.ts portable.js run.d.ts run.js test.d.ts test.js types.d.ts types.js util CommandLineArg.d.ts CommandLineArg.js IConfiguration.d.ts IConfiguration.js asciiArt.d.ts asciiArt.js collectReporter.d.ts collectReporter.js getTestEntryFiles.d.ts getTestEntryFiles.js removeFile.d.ts removeFile.js strings.d.ts strings.js writeFile.d.ts writeFile.js worklets ICommand.d.ts ICommand.js compiler.d.ts compiler.js package.json core README.md lib as-pect.core.amd.d.ts as-pect.core.amd.js index.d.ts index.js reporter CombinationReporter.d.ts CombinationReporter.js EmptyReporter.d.ts EmptyReporter.js IReporter.d.ts IReporter.js SummaryReporter.d.ts SummaryReporter.js VerboseReporter.d.ts VerboseReporter.js test IWarning.d.ts IWarning.js TestContext.d.ts TestContext.js TestNode.d.ts TestNode.js transform assemblyscript.d.ts assemblyscript.js createAddReflectedValueKeyValuePairsMember.d.ts createAddReflectedValueKeyValuePairsMember.js createGenericTypeParameter.d.ts createGenericTypeParameter.js createStrictEqualsMember.d.ts createStrictEqualsMember.js emptyTransformer.d.ts emptyTransformer.js hash.d.ts hash.js index.d.ts index.js util IAspectExports.d.ts IAspectExports.js IWriteable.d.ts IWriteable.js ReflectedValue.d.ts ReflectedValue.js TestNodeType.d.ts TestNodeType.js rTrace.d.ts rTrace.js stringifyReflectedValue.d.ts stringifyReflectedValue.js timeDifference.d.ts timeDifference.js wasmTools.d.ts wasmTools.js package.json csv-reporter index.ts lib as-pect.csv-reporter.amd.d.ts as-pect.csv-reporter.amd.js index.d.ts index.js package.json readme.md tsconfig.json json-reporter index.ts lib as-pect.json-reporter.amd.d.ts as-pect.json-reporter.amd.js index.d.ts index.js package.json readme.md tsconfig.json snapshots __tests__ snapshot.spec.ts jest.config.js lib Snapshot.d.ts Snapshot.js SnapshotDiff.d.ts SnapshotDiff.js SnapshotDiffResult.d.ts SnapshotDiffResult.js as-pect.core.amd.d.ts as-pect.core.amd.js index.d.ts index.js parser grammar.d.ts grammar.js package.json src Snapshot.ts SnapshotDiff.ts SnapshotDiffResult.ts index.ts parser grammar.ts tsconfig.json @assemblyscript loader README.md index.d.ts index.js package.json umd index.d.ts index.js package.json ansi-regex index.d.ts index.js package.json readme.md ansi-styles index.d.ts index.js package.json readme.md as-bignum .travis.yml README.md as-pect.config.js assembly __tests__ as-pect.d.ts safe_u128.spec.as.ts u128.spec.as.ts 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# cliui [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/cliui.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/cliui) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/yargs/cliui/badge.svg?branch=)](https://coveralls.io/r/yargs/cliui?branch=) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/cliui.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cliui) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) easily create complex multi-column command-line-interfaces. ## Example ```js var ui = require('cliui')() ui.div('Usage: $0 [command] [options]') ui.div({ text: 'Options:', padding: [2, 0, 2, 0] }) ui.div( { text: "-f, --file", width: 20, padding: [0, 4, 0, 4] }, { text: "the file to load." + chalk.green("(if this description is long it wraps).") , width: 20 }, { text: chalk.red("[required]"), align: 'right' } ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` <img width="500" src="screenshot.png"> ## Layout DSL cliui exposes a simple layout DSL: If you create a single `ui.div`, passing a string rather than an object: * `\n`: characters will be interpreted as new rows. * `\t`: characters will be interpreted as new columns. * `\s`: characters will be interpreted as padding. **as an example...** ```js var ui = require('./')({ width: 60 }) ui.div( 'Usage: node ./bin/foo.js\n' + ' <regex>\t provide a regex\n' + ' <glob>\t provide a glob\t [required]' ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` **will output:** ```shell Usage: node ./bin/foo.js <regex> provide a regex <glob> provide a glob [required] ``` ## Methods ```js cliui = require('cliui') ``` ### cliui({width: integer}) Specify the maximum width of the UI being generated. If no width is provided, cliui will try to get the current window's width and use it, and if that doesn't work, width will be set to `80`. ### cliui({wrap: boolean}) Enable or disable the wrapping of text in a column. ### cliui.div(column, column, column) Create a row with any number of columns, a column can either be a string, or an object with the following options: * **text:** some text to place in the column. * **width:** the width of a column. * **align:** alignment, `right` or `center`. * **padding:** `[top, right, bottom, left]`. * **border:** should a border be placed around the div? ### cliui.span(column, column, column) Similar to `div`, except the next row will be appended without a new line being created. ### cliui.resetOutput() Resets the UI elements of the current cliui instance, maintaining the values set for `width` and `wrap`. # axios // core The modules found in `core/` should be modules that are specific to the domain logic of axios. These modules would most likely not make sense to be consumed outside of the axios module, as their logic is too specific. Some examples of core modules are: - Dispatching requests - Managing interceptors - Handling config discontinuous-range =================== ``` DiscontinuousRange(1, 10).subtract(4, 6); // [ 1-3, 7-10 ] ``` [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/dtudury/discontinuous-range.png)](https://travis-ci.org/dtudury/discontinuous-range) this is a pretty simple module, but it exists to service another project so this'll be pretty lacking documentation. reading the test to see how this works may help. otherwise, here's an example that I think pretty much sums it up ###Example ``` var all_numbers = new DiscontinuousRange(1, 100); var bad_numbers = DiscontinuousRange(13).add(8).add(60,80); var good_numbers = all_numbers.clone().subtract(bad_numbers); console.log(good_numbers.toString()); //[ 1-7, 9-12, 14-59, 81-100 ] var random_good_number = good_numbers.index(Math.floor(Math.random() * good_numbers.length)); ``` # brace-expansion [Brace expansion](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Brace-Expansion.html), as known from sh/bash, in JavaScript. [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/juliangruber/brace-expansion.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/juliangruber/brace-expansion) [![downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/brace-expansion.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/brace-expansion) [![Greenkeeper badge](https://badges.greenkeeper.io/juliangruber/brace-expansion.svg)](https://greenkeeper.io/) [![testling badge](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/brace-expansion.png)](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/brace-expansion) ## Example ```js var expand = require('brace-expansion'); expand('file-{a,b,c}.jpg') // => ['file-a.jpg', 'file-b.jpg', 'file-c.jpg'] expand('-v{,,}') // => ['-v', '-v', '-v'] expand('file{0..2}.jpg') // => ['file0.jpg', 'file1.jpg', 'file2.jpg'] expand('file-{a..c}.jpg') // => ['file-a.jpg', 'file-b.jpg', 'file-c.jpg'] expand('file{2..0}.jpg') // => ['file2.jpg', 'file1.jpg', 'file0.jpg'] expand('file{0..4..2}.jpg') // => ['file0.jpg', 'file2.jpg', 'file4.jpg'] expand('file-{a..e..2}.jpg') // => ['file-a.jpg', 'file-c.jpg', 'file-e.jpg'] expand('file{00..10..5}.jpg') // => ['file00.jpg', 'file05.jpg', 'file10.jpg'] expand('{{A..C},{a..c}}') // => ['A', 'B', 'C', 'a', 'b', 'c'] expand('ppp{,config,oe{,conf}}') // => ['ppp', 'pppconfig', 'pppoe', 'pppoeconf'] ``` ## API ```js var expand = require('brace-expansion'); ``` ### var expanded = expand(str) Return an array of all possible and valid expansions of `str`. If none are found, `[str]` is returned. Valid expansions are: ```js /^(.*,)+(.+)?$/ // {a,b,...} ``` A comma separated list of options, like `{a,b}` or `{a,{b,c}}` or `{,a,}`. ```js /^-?\d+\.\.-?\d+(\.\.-?\d+)?$/ // {x..y[..incr]} ``` A numeric sequence from `x` to `y` inclusive, with optional increment. If `x` or `y` start with a leading `0`, all the numbers will be padded to have equal length. Negative numbers and backwards iteration work too. ```js /^-?\d+\.\.-?\d+(\.\.-?\d+)?$/ // {x..y[..incr]} ``` An alphabetic sequence from `x` to `y` inclusive, with optional increment. `x` and `y` must be exactly one character, and if given, `incr` must be a number. For compatibility reasons, the string `${` is not eligible for brace expansion. ## Installation With [npm](https://npmjs.org) do: ```bash npm install brace-expansion ``` ## Contributors - [Julian Gruber](https://github.com/juliangruber) - [Isaac Z. Schlueter](https://github.com/isaacs) ## Sponsors This module is proudly supported by my [Sponsors](https://github.com/juliangruber/sponsors)! Do you want to support modules like this to improve their quality, stability and weigh in on new features? Then please consider donating to my [Patreon](https://www.patreon.com/juliangruber). Not sure how much of my modules you're using? Try [feross/thanks](https://github.com/feross/thanks)! ## License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2013 Julian Gruber &lt;[email protected]&gt; Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # axios [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/axios) [![build status](https://img.shields.io/travis/axios/axios/master.svg?style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/axios/axios) [![code coverage](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/mzabriskie/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://coveralls.io/r/mzabriskie/axios) [![install size](https://packagephobia.now.sh/badge?p=axios)](https://packagephobia.now.sh/result?p=axios) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](http://npm-stat.com/charts.html?package=axios) [![gitter chat](https://img.shields.io/gitter/room/mzabriskie/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://gitter.im/mzabriskie/axios) [![code helpers](https://www.codetriage.com/axios/axios/badges/users.svg)](https://www.codetriage.com/axios/axios) Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js ## Features - Make [XMLHttpRequests](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/XMLHttpRequest) from the browser - Make [http](http://nodejs.org/api/http.html) requests from node.js - Supports the [Promise](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise) API - Intercept request and response - Transform request and response data - Cancel requests - Automatic transforms for JSON data - Client side support for protecting against [XSRF](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery) ## Browser Support ![Chrome](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/chrome/chrome_48x48.png) | ![Firefox](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/firefox/firefox_48x48.png) | ![Safari](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/safari/safari_48x48.png) | ![Opera](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/opera/opera_48x48.png) | ![Edge](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/edge/edge_48x48.png) | ![IE](https://raw.github.com/alrra/browser-logos/master/src/archive/internet-explorer_9-11/internet-explorer_9-11_48x48.png) | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | 11 ✔ | [![Browser Matrix](https://saucelabs.com/open_sauce/build_matrix/axios.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/axios) ## Installing Using npm: ```bash $ npm install axios ``` Using bower: ```bash $ bower install axios ``` Using yarn: ```bash $ yarn add axios ``` Using cdn: ```html <script src="https://unpkg.com/axios/dist/axios.min.js"></script> ``` ## Example ### note: CommonJS usage In order to gain the TypeScript typings (for intellisense / autocomplete) while using CommonJS imports with `require()` use the following approach: ```js const axios = require('axios').default; // axios.<method> will now provide autocomplete and parameter typings ``` Performing a `GET` request ```js const axios = require('axios'); // Make a request for a user with a given ID axios.get('/user?ID=12345') .then(function (response) { // handle success console.log(response); }) .catch(function (error) { // handle error console.log(error); }) .finally(function () { // always executed }); // Optionally the request above could also be done as axios.get('/user', { params: { ID: 12345 } }) .then(function (response) { console.log(response); }) .catch(function (error) { console.log(error); }) .finally(function () { // always executed }); // Want to use async/await? Add the `async` keyword to your outer function/method. async function getUser() { try { const response = await axios.get('/user?ID=12345'); console.log(response); } catch (error) { console.error(error); } } ``` > **NOTE:** `async/await` is part of ECMAScript 2017 and is not supported in Internet > Explorer and older browsers, so use with caution. Performing a `POST` request ```js axios.post('/user', { firstName: 'Fred', lastName: 'Flintstone' }) .then(function (response) { console.log(response); }) .catch(function (error) { console.log(error); }); ``` Performing multiple concurrent requests ```js function getUserAccount() { return axios.get('/user/12345'); } function getUserPermissions() { return axios.get('/user/12345/permissions'); } axios.all([getUserAccount(), getUserPermissions()]) .then(axios.spread(function (acct, perms) { // Both requests are now complete })); ``` ## axios API Requests can be made by passing the relevant config to `axios`. ##### axios(config) ```js // Send a POST request axios({ method: 'post', url: '/user/12345', data: { firstName: 'Fred', lastName: 'Flintstone' } }); ``` ```js // GET request for remote image axios({ method: 'get', url: 'http://bit.ly/2mTM3nY', responseType: 'stream' }) .then(function (response) { response.data.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('ada_lovelace.jpg')) }); ``` ##### axios(url[, config]) ```js // Send a GET request (default method) axios('/user/12345'); ``` ### Request method aliases For convenience aliases have been provided for all supported request methods. ##### axios.request(config) ##### axios.get(url[, config]) ##### axios.delete(url[, config]) ##### axios.head(url[, config]) ##### axios.options(url[, config]) ##### axios.post(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios.put(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios.patch(url[, data[, config]]) ###### NOTE When using the alias methods `url`, `method`, and `data` properties don't need to be specified in config. ### Concurrency Helper functions for dealing with concurrent requests. ##### axios.all(iterable) ##### axios.spread(callback) ### Creating an instance You can create a new instance of axios with a custom config. ##### axios.create([config]) ```js const instance = axios.create({ baseURL: 'https://some-domain.com/api/', timeout: 1000, headers: {'X-Custom-Header': 'foobar'} }); ``` ### Instance methods The available instance methods are listed below. The specified config will be merged with the instance config. ##### axios#request(config) ##### axios#get(url[, config]) ##### axios#delete(url[, config]) ##### axios#head(url[, config]) ##### axios#options(url[, config]) ##### axios#post(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios#put(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios#patch(url[, data[, config]]) ##### axios#getUri([config]) ## Request Config These are the available config options for making requests. Only the `url` is required. Requests will default to `GET` if `method` is not specified. ```js { // `url` is the server URL that will be used for the request url: '/user', // `method` is the request method to be used when making the request method: 'get', // default // `baseURL` will be prepended to `url` unless `url` is absolute. // It can be convenient to set `baseURL` for an instance of axios to pass relative URLs // to methods of that instance. baseURL: 'https://some-domain.com/api/', // `transformRequest` allows changes to the request data before it is sent to the server // This is only applicable for request methods 'PUT', 'POST', 'PATCH' and 'DELETE' // The last function in the array must return a string or an instance of Buffer, ArrayBuffer, // FormData or Stream // You may modify the headers object. transformRequest: [function (data, headers) { // Do whatever you want to transform the data return data; }], // `transformResponse` allows changes to the response data to be made before // it is passed to then/catch transformResponse: [function (data) { // Do whatever you want to transform the data return data; }], // `headers` are custom headers to be sent headers: {'X-Requested-With': 'XMLHttpRequest'}, // `params` are the URL parameters to be sent with the request // Must be a plain object or a URLSearchParams object params: { ID: 12345 }, // `paramsSerializer` is an optional function in charge of serializing `params` // (e.g. https://www.npmjs.com/package/qs, http://api.jquery.com/jquery.param/) paramsSerializer: function (params) { return Qs.stringify(params, {arrayFormat: 'brackets'}) }, // `data` is the data to be sent as the request body // Only applicable for request methods 'PUT', 'POST', and 'PATCH' // When no `transformRequest` is set, must be of one of the following types: // - string, plain object, ArrayBuffer, ArrayBufferView, URLSearchParams // - Browser only: FormData, File, Blob // - Node only: Stream, Buffer data: { firstName: 'Fred' }, // syntax alternative to send data into the body // method post // only the value is sent, not the key data: 'Country=Brasil&City=Belo Horizonte', // `timeout` specifies the number of milliseconds before the request times out. // If the request takes longer than `timeout`, the request will be aborted. timeout: 1000, // default is `0` (no timeout) // `withCredentials` indicates whether or not cross-site Access-Control requests // should be made using credentials withCredentials: false, // default // `adapter` allows custom handling of requests which makes testing easier. // Return a promise and supply a valid response (see lib/adapters/README.md). adapter: function (config) { /* ... */ }, // `auth` indicates that HTTP Basic auth should be used, and supplies credentials. // This will set an `Authorization` header, overwriting any existing // `Authorization` custom headers you have set using `headers`. // Please note that only HTTP Basic auth is configurable through this parameter. // For Bearer tokens and such, use `Authorization` custom headers instead. auth: { username: 'janedoe', password: 's00pers3cret' }, // `responseType` indicates the type of data that the server will respond with // options are: 'arraybuffer', 'document', 'json', 'text', 'stream' // browser only: 'blob' responseType: 'json', // default // `responseEncoding` indicates encoding to use for decoding responses // Note: Ignored for `responseType` of 'stream' or client-side requests responseEncoding: 'utf8', // default // `xsrfCookieName` is the name of the cookie to use as a value for xsrf token xsrfCookieName: 'XSRF-TOKEN', // default // `xsrfHeaderName` is the name of the http header that carries the xsrf token value xsrfHeaderName: 'X-XSRF-TOKEN', // default // `onUploadProgress` allows handling of progress events for uploads onUploadProgress: function (progressEvent) { // Do whatever you want with the native progress event }, // `onDownloadProgress` allows handling of progress events for downloads onDownloadProgress: function (progressEvent) { // Do whatever you want with the native progress event }, // `maxContentLength` defines the max size of the http response content in bytes allowed maxContentLength: 2000, // `validateStatus` defines whether to resolve or reject the promise for a given // HTTP response status code. If `validateStatus` returns `true` (or is set to `null` // or `undefined`), the promise will be resolved; otherwise, the promise will be // rejected. validateStatus: function (status) { return status >= 200 && status < 300; // default }, // `maxRedirects` defines the maximum number of redirects to follow in node.js. // If set to 0, no redirects will be followed. maxRedirects: 5, // default // `socketPath` defines a UNIX Socket to be used in node.js. // e.g. '/var/run/docker.sock' to send requests to the docker daemon. // Only either `socketPath` or `proxy` can be specified. // If both are specified, `socketPath` is used. socketPath: null, // default // `httpAgent` and `httpsAgent` define a custom agent to be used when performing http // and https requests, respectively, in node.js. This allows options to be added like // `keepAlive` that are not enabled by default. httpAgent: new http.Agent({ keepAlive: true }), httpsAgent: new https.Agent({ keepAlive: true }), // 'proxy' defines the hostname and port of the proxy server. // You can also define your proxy using the conventional `http_proxy` and // `https_proxy` environment variables. If you are using environment variables // for your proxy configuration, you can also define a `no_proxy` environment // variable as a comma-separated list of domains that should not be proxied. // Use `false` to disable proxies, ignoring environment variables. // `auth` indicates that HTTP Basic auth should be used to connect to the proxy, and // supplies credentials. // This will set an `Proxy-Authorization` header, overwriting any existing // `Proxy-Authorization` custom headers you have set using `headers`. proxy: { host: '127.0.0.1', port: 9000, auth: { username: 'mikeymike', password: 'rapunz3l' } }, // `cancelToken` specifies a cancel token that can be used to cancel the request // (see Cancellation section below for details) cancelToken: new CancelToken(function (cancel) { }) } ``` ## Response Schema The response for a request contains the following information. ```js { // `data` is the response that was provided by the server data: {}, // `status` is the HTTP status code from the server response status: 200, // `statusText` is the HTTP status message from the server response statusText: 'OK', // `headers` the headers that the server responded with // All header names are lower cased headers: {}, // `config` is the config that was provided to `axios` for the request config: {}, // `request` is the request that generated this response // It is the last ClientRequest instance in node.js (in redirects) // and an XMLHttpRequest instance in the browser request: {} } ``` When using `then`, you will receive the response as follows: ```js axios.get('/user/12345') .then(function (response) { console.log(response.data); console.log(response.status); console.log(response.statusText); console.log(response.headers); console.log(response.config); }); ``` When using `catch`, or passing a [rejection callback](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise/then) as second parameter of `then`, the response will be available through the `error` object as explained in the [Handling Errors](#handling-errors) section. ## Config Defaults You can specify config defaults that will be applied to every request. ### Global axios defaults ```js axios.defaults.baseURL = 'https://api.example.com'; axios.defaults.headers.common['Authorization'] = AUTH_TOKEN; axios.defaults.headers.post['Content-Type'] = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'; ``` ### Custom instance defaults ```js // Set config defaults when creating the instance const instance = axios.create({ baseURL: 'https://api.example.com' }); // Alter defaults after instance has been created instance.defaults.headers.common['Authorization'] = AUTH_TOKEN; ``` ### Config order of precedence Config will be merged with an order of precedence. The order is library defaults found in [lib/defaults.js](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/lib/defaults.js#L28), then `defaults` property of the instance, and finally `config` argument for the request. The latter will take precedence over the former. Here's an example. ```js // Create an instance using the config defaults provided by the library // At this point the timeout config value is `0` as is the default for the library const instance = axios.create(); // Override timeout default for the library // Now all requests using this instance will wait 2.5 seconds before timing out instance.defaults.timeout = 2500; // Override timeout for this request as it's known to take a long time instance.get('/longRequest', { timeout: 5000 }); ``` ## Interceptors You can intercept requests or responses before they are handled by `then` or `catch`. ```js // Add a request interceptor axios.interceptors.request.use(function (config) { // Do something before request is sent return config; }, function (error) { // Do something with request error return Promise.reject(error); }); // Add a response interceptor axios.interceptors.response.use(function (response) { // Any status code that lie within the range of 2xx cause this function to trigger // Do something with response data return response; }, function (error) { // Any status codes that falls outside the range of 2xx cause this function to trigger // Do something with response error return Promise.reject(error); }); ``` If you need to remove an interceptor later you can. ```js const myInterceptor = axios.interceptors.request.use(function () {/*...*/}); axios.interceptors.request.eject(myInterceptor); ``` You can add interceptors to a custom instance of axios. ```js const instance = axios.create(); instance.interceptors.request.use(function () {/*...*/}); ``` ## Handling Errors ```js axios.get('/user/12345') .catch(function (error) { if (error.response) { // The request was made and the server responded with a status code // that falls out of the range of 2xx console.log(error.response.data); console.log(error.response.status); console.log(error.response.headers); } else if (error.request) { // The request was made but no response was received // `error.request` is an instance of XMLHttpRequest in the browser and an instance of // http.ClientRequest in node.js console.log(error.request); } else { // Something happened in setting up the request that triggered an Error console.log('Error', error.message); } console.log(error.config); }); ``` Using the `validateStatus` config option, you can define HTTP code(s) that should throw an error. ```js axios.get('/user/12345', { validateStatus: function (status) { return status < 500; // Reject only if the status code is greater than or equal to 500 } }) ``` Using `toJSON` you get an object with more information about the HTTP error. ```js axios.get('/user/12345') .catch(function (error) { console.log(error.toJSON()); }); ``` ## Cancellation You can cancel a request using a *cancel token*. > The axios cancel token API is based on the withdrawn [cancelable promises proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-cancelable-promises). You can create a cancel token using the `CancelToken.source` factory as shown below: ```js const CancelToken = axios.CancelToken; const source = CancelToken.source(); axios.get('/user/12345', { cancelToken: source.token }).catch(function (thrown) { if (axios.isCancel(thrown)) { console.log('Request canceled', thrown.message); } else { // handle error } }); axios.post('/user/12345', { name: 'new name' }, { cancelToken: source.token }) // cancel the request (the message parameter is optional) source.cancel('Operation canceled by the user.'); ``` You can also create a cancel token by passing an executor function to the `CancelToken` constructor: ```js const CancelToken = axios.CancelToken; let cancel; axios.get('/user/12345', { cancelToken: new CancelToken(function executor(c) { // An executor function receives a cancel function as a parameter cancel = c; }) }); // cancel the request cancel(); ``` > Note: you can cancel several requests with the same cancel token. ## Using application/x-www-form-urlencoded format By default, axios serializes JavaScript objects to `JSON`. To send data in the `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` format instead, you can use one of the following options. ### Browser In a browser, you can use the [`URLSearchParams`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URLSearchParams) API as follows: ```js const params = new URLSearchParams(); params.append('param1', 'value1'); params.append('param2', 'value2'); axios.post('/foo', params); ``` > Note that `URLSearchParams` is not supported by all browsers (see [caniuse.com](http://www.caniuse.com/#feat=urlsearchparams)), but there is a [polyfill](https://github.com/WebReflection/url-search-params) available (make sure to polyfill the global environment). Alternatively, you can encode data using the [`qs`](https://github.com/ljharb/qs) library: ```js const qs = require('qs'); axios.post('/foo', qs.stringify({ 'bar': 123 })); ``` Or in another way (ES6), ```js import qs from 'qs'; const data = { 'bar': 123 }; const options = { method: 'POST', headers: { 'content-type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' }, data: qs.stringify(data), url, }; axios(options); ``` ### Node.js In node.js, you can use the [`querystring`](https://nodejs.org/api/querystring.html) module as follows: ```js const querystring = require('querystring'); axios.post('http://something.com/', querystring.stringify({ foo: 'bar' })); ``` You can also use the [`qs`](https://github.com/ljharb/qs) library. ###### NOTE The `qs` library is preferable if you need to stringify nested objects, as the `querystring` method has known issues with that use case (https://github.com/nodejs/node-v0.x-archive/issues/1665). ## Semver Until axios reaches a `1.0` release, breaking changes will be released with a new minor version. For example `0.5.1`, and `0.5.4` will have the same API, but `0.6.0` will have breaking changes. ## Promises axios depends on a native ES6 Promise implementation to be [supported](http://caniuse.com/promises). If your environment doesn't support ES6 Promises, you can [polyfill](https://github.com/jakearchibald/es6-promise). ## TypeScript axios includes [TypeScript](http://typescriptlang.org) definitions. ```typescript import axios from 'axios'; axios.get('/user?ID=12345'); ``` ## Resources * [Changelog](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md) * [Upgrade Guide](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/UPGRADE_GUIDE.md) * [Ecosystem](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/ECOSYSTEM.md) * [Contributing Guide](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) * [Code of Conduct](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md) ## Credits axios is heavily inspired by the [$http service](https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$http) provided in [Angular](https://angularjs.org/). Ultimately axios is an effort to provide a standalone `$http`-like service for use outside of Angular. ## License [MIT](LICENSE) # whatwg-url whatwg-url is a full implementation of the WHATWG [URL Standard](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/). It can be used standalone, but it also exposes a lot of the internal algorithms that are useful for integrating a URL parser into a project like [jsdom](https://github.com/tmpvar/jsdom). ## Specification conformance whatwg-url is currently up to date with the URL spec up to commit [7ae1c69](https://github.com/whatwg/url/commit/7ae1c691c96f0d82fafa24c33aa1e8df9ffbf2bc). For `file:` URLs, whose [origin is left unspecified](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-origin), whatwg-url chooses to use a new opaque origin (which serializes to `"null"`). ## API ### The `URL` and `URLSearchParams` classes The main API is provided by the [`URL`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#url-class) and [`URLSearchParams`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#interface-urlsearchparams) exports, which follows the spec's behavior in all ways (including e.g. `USVString` conversion). Most consumers of this library will want to use these. ### Low-level URL Standard API The following methods are exported for use by places like jsdom that need to implement things like [`HTMLHyperlinkElementUtils`](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#htmlhyperlinkelementutils). They mostly operate on or return an "internal URL" or ["URL record"](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url) type. - [URL parser](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-parser): `parseURL(input, { baseURL, encodingOverride })` - [Basic URL parser](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-basic-url-parser): `basicURLParse(input, { baseURL, encodingOverride, url, stateOverride })` - [URL serializer](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-serializer): `serializeURL(urlRecord, excludeFragment)` - [Host serializer](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-host-serializer): `serializeHost(hostFromURLRecord)` - [Serialize an integer](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#serialize-an-integer): `serializeInteger(number)` - [Origin](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-origin) [serializer](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/origin.html#ascii-serialisation-of-an-origin): `serializeURLOrigin(urlRecord)` - [Set the username](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#set-the-username): `setTheUsername(urlRecord, usernameString)` - [Set the password](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#set-the-password): `setThePassword(urlRecord, passwordString)` - [Cannot have a username/password/port](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#cannot-have-a-username-password-port): `cannotHaveAUsernamePasswordPort(urlRecord)` - [Percent decode](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#percent-decode): `percentDecode(buffer)` The `stateOverride` parameter is one of the following strings: - [`"scheme start"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#scheme-start-state) - [`"scheme"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#scheme-state) - [`"no scheme"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#no-scheme-state) - [`"special relative or authority"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-relative-or-authority-state) - [`"path or authority"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#path-or-authority-state) - [`"relative"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#relative-state) - [`"relative slash"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#relative-slash-state) - [`"special authority slashes"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-authority-slashes-state) - [`"special authority ignore slashes"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#special-authority-ignore-slashes-state) - [`"authority"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#authority-state) - [`"host"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#host-state) - [`"hostname"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#hostname-state) - [`"port"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#port-state) - [`"file"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#file-state) - [`"file slash"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#file-slash-state) - [`"file host"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#file-host-state) - [`"path start"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#path-start-state) - [`"path"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#path-state) - [`"cannot-be-a-base-URL path"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#cannot-be-a-base-url-path-state) - [`"query"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#query-state) - [`"fragment"`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#fragment-state) The URL record type has the following API: - [`scheme`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-scheme) - [`username`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-username) - [`password`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-password) - [`host`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-host) - [`port`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-port) - [`path`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-path) (as an array) - [`query`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-query) - [`fragment`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-url-fragment) - [`cannotBeABaseURL`](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#url-cannot-be-a-base-url-flag) (as a boolean) These properties should be treated with care, as in general changing them will cause the URL record to be in an inconsistent state until the appropriate invocation of `basicURLParse` is used to fix it up. You can see examples of this in the URL Standard, where there are many step sequences like "4. Set context object’s url’s fragment to the empty string. 5. Basic URL parse _input_ with context object’s url as _url_ and fragment state as _state override_." In between those two steps, a URL record is in an unusable state. The return value of "failure" in the spec is represented by `null`. That is, functions like `parseURL` and `basicURLParse` can return _either_ a URL record _or_ `null`. ## Development instructions First, install [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/). Then, fetch the dependencies of whatwg-url, by running from this directory: npm install To run tests: npm test To generate a coverage report: npm run coverage To build and run the live viewer: npm run build npm run build-live-viewer Serve the contents of the `live-viewer` directory using any web server. ## Supporting whatwg-url The jsdom project (including whatwg-url) is a community-driven project maintained by a team of [volunteers](https://github.com/orgs/jsdom/people). You could support us by: - [Getting professional support for whatwg-url](https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/npm-whatwg-url?utm_source=npm-whatwg-url&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=readme) as part of a Tidelift subscription. Tidelift helps making open source sustainable for us while giving teams assurances for maintenance, licensing, and security. - Contributing directly to the project. <p align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><img width="100" src="https://avatars1.githubusercontent.com/u/28916798?s=200&v=4" alt="AssemblyScript logo"></a> </p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/actions?query=workflow%3ATest"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/Test/master?label=test&logo=github" alt="Test status" /></a> <a href="https://github.com/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/actions?query=workflow%3APublish"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript/Publish/master?label=publish&logo=github" alt="Publish status" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/assemblyscript"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/assemblyscript.svg?label=compiler&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm compiler version" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/@assemblyscript/loader"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/@assemblyscript/loader.svg?label=loader&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm loader version" /></a> <a href="https://discord.gg/assemblyscript"><img src="https://img.shields.io/discord/721472913886281818.svg?label=&logo=discord&logoColor=ffffff&color=7389D8&labelColor=6A7EC2" alt="Discord online" /></a> </p> <p align="justify"><strong>AssemblyScript</strong> compiles a strict variant of <a href="http://www.typescriptlang.org">TypeScript</a> (basically JavaScript with types) to <a href="http://webassembly.org">WebAssembly</a> using <a href="https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen">Binaryen</a>. It generates lean and mean WebAssembly modules while being just an <code>npm install</code> away.</p> <h3 align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org">About</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/introduction.html">Introduction</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/quick-start.html">Quick&nbsp;start</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/examples.html">Examples</a> &nbsp;·&nbsp; <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/development.html">Development&nbsp;instructions</a> </h3> <br> <h2 align="center">Contributors</h2> <p align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/#contributors"><img src="https://assemblyscript.org/contributors.svg" alt="Contributor logos" width="720" /></a> </p> <h2 align="center">Thanks to our sponsors!</h2> <p align="justify">Most of the core team members and most contributors do this open source work in their free time. If you use AssemblyScript for a serious task or plan to do so, and you'd like us to invest more time on it, <a href="https://opencollective.com/assemblyscript/donate" target="_blank" rel="noopener">please donate</a> to our <a href="https://opencollective.com/assemblyscript" target="_blank" rel="noopener">OpenCollective</a>. By sponsoring this project, your logo will show up below. Thank you so much for your support!</p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://assemblyscript.org/#sponsors"><img src="https://assemblyscript.org/sponsors.svg" alt="Sponsor logos" width="720" /></a> </p> # jsdiff [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/kpdecker/jsdiff.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/kpdecker/jsdiff) [![Sauce Test Status](https://saucelabs.com/buildstatus/jsdiff)](https://saucelabs.com/u/jsdiff) A javascript text differencing implementation. Based on the algorithm proposed in ["An O(ND) Difference Algorithm and its Variations" (Myers, 1986)](http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.4.6927). ## Installation ```bash npm install diff --save ``` ## API * `Diff.diffChars(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing character by character. Returns a list of change objects (See below). Options * `ignoreCase`: `true` to ignore casing difference. Defaults to `false`. * `Diff.diffWords(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing word by word, ignoring whitespace. Returns a list of change objects (See below). Options * `ignoreCase`: Same as in `diffChars`. * `Diff.diffWordsWithSpace(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing word by word, treating whitespace as significant. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffLines(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing line by line. Options * `ignoreWhitespace`: `true` to ignore leading and trailing whitespace. This is the same as `diffTrimmedLines` * `newlineIsToken`: `true` to treat newline characters as separate tokens. This allows for changes to the newline structure to occur independently of the line content and to be treated as such. In general this is the more human friendly form of `diffLines` and `diffLines` is better suited for patches and other computer friendly output. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffTrimmedLines(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing line by line, ignoring leading and trailing whitespace. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffSentences(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing sentence by sentence. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffCss(oldStr, newStr[, options])` - diffs two blocks of text, comparing CSS tokens. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffJson(oldObj, newObj[, options])` - diffs two JSON objects, comparing the fields defined on each. The order of fields, etc does not matter in this comparison. Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.diffArrays(oldArr, newArr[, options])` - diffs two arrays, comparing each item for strict equality (===). Options * `comparator`: `function(left, right)` for custom equality checks Returns a list of change objects (See below). * `Diff.createTwoFilesPatch(oldFileName, newFileName, oldStr, newStr, oldHeader, newHeader)` - creates a unified diff patch. Parameters: * `oldFileName` : String to be output in the filename section of the patch for the removals * `newFileName` : String to be output in the filename section of the patch for the additions * `oldStr` : Original string value * `newStr` : New string value * `oldHeader` : Additional information to include in the old file header * `newHeader` : Additional information to include in the new file header * `options` : An object with options. Currently, only `context` is supported and describes how many lines of context should be included. * `Diff.createPatch(fileName, oldStr, newStr, oldHeader, newHeader)` - creates a unified diff patch. Just like Diff.createTwoFilesPatch, but with oldFileName being equal to newFileName. * `Diff.structuredPatch(oldFileName, newFileName, oldStr, newStr, oldHeader, newHeader, options)` - returns an object with an array of hunk objects. This method is similar to createTwoFilesPatch, but returns a data structure suitable for further processing. Parameters are the same as createTwoFilesPatch. The data structure returned may look like this: ```js { oldFileName: 'oldfile', newFileName: 'newfile', oldHeader: 'header1', newHeader: 'header2', hunks: [{ oldStart: 1, oldLines: 3, newStart: 1, newLines: 3, lines: [' line2', ' line3', '-line4', '+line5', '\\ No newline at end of file'], }] } ``` * `Diff.applyPatch(source, patch[, options])` - applies a unified diff patch. Return a string containing new version of provided data. `patch` may be a string diff or the output from the `parsePatch` or `structuredPatch` methods. The optional `options` object may have the following keys: - `fuzzFactor`: Number of lines that are allowed to differ before rejecting a patch. Defaults to 0. - `compareLine(lineNumber, line, operation, patchContent)`: Callback used to compare to given lines to determine if they should be considered equal when patching. Defaults to strict equality but may be overridden to provide fuzzier comparison. Should return false if the lines should be rejected. * `Diff.applyPatches(patch, options)` - applies one or more patches. This method will iterate over the contents of the patch and apply to data provided through callbacks. The general flow for each patch index is: - `options.loadFile(index, callback)` is called. The caller should then load the contents of the file and then pass that to the `callback(err, data)` callback. Passing an `err` will terminate further patch execution. - `options.patched(index, content, callback)` is called once the patch has been applied. `content` will be the return value from `applyPatch`. When it's ready, the caller should call `callback(err)` callback. Passing an `err` will terminate further patch execution. Once all patches have been applied or an error occurs, the `options.complete(err)` callback is made. * `Diff.parsePatch(diffStr)` - Parses a patch into structured data Return a JSON object representation of the a patch, suitable for use with the `applyPatch` method. This parses to the same structure returned by `Diff.structuredPatch`. * `convertChangesToXML(changes)` - converts a list of changes to a serialized XML format All methods above which accept the optional `callback` method will run in sync mode when that parameter is omitted and in async mode when supplied. This allows for larger diffs without blocking the event loop. This may be passed either directly as the final parameter or as the `callback` field in the `options` object. ### Change Objects Many of the methods above return change objects. These objects consist of the following fields: * `value`: Text content * `added`: True if the value was inserted into the new string * `removed`: True if the value was removed from the old string Note that some cases may omit a particular flag field. Comparison on the flag fields should always be done in a truthy or falsy manner. ## Examples Basic example in Node ```js require('colors'); const Diff = require('diff'); const one = 'beep boop'; const other = 'beep boob blah'; const diff = Diff.diffChars(one, other); diff.forEach((part) => { // green for additions, red for deletions // grey for common parts const color = part.added ? 'green' : part.removed ? 'red' : 'grey'; process.stderr.write(part.value[color]); }); console.log(); ``` Running the above program should yield <img src="images/node_example.png" alt="Node Example"> Basic example in a web page ```html <pre id="display"></pre> <script src="diff.js"></script> <script> const one = 'beep boop', other = 'beep boob blah', color = ''; let span = null; const diff = Diff.diffChars(one, other), display = document.getElementById('display'), fragment = document.createDocumentFragment(); diff.forEach((part) => { // green for additions, red for deletions // grey for common parts const color = part.added ? 'green' : part.removed ? 'red' : 'grey'; span = document.createElement('span'); span.style.color = color; span.appendChild(document .createTextNode(part.value)); fragment.appendChild(span); }); display.appendChild(fragment); </script> ``` Open the above .html file in a browser and you should see <img src="images/web_example.png" alt="Node Example"> **[Full online demo](http://kpdecker.github.com/jsdiff)** ## Compatibility [![Sauce Test Status](https://saucelabs.com/browser-matrix/jsdiff.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/jsdiff) jsdiff supports all ES3 environments with some known issues on IE8 and below. Under these browsers some diff algorithms such as word diff and others may fail due to lack of support for capturing groups in the `split` operation. ## License See [LICENSE](https://github.com/kpdecker/jsdiff/blob/master/LICENSE). # fs.realpath A backwards-compatible fs.realpath for Node v6 and above In Node v6, the JavaScript implementation of fs.realpath was replaced with a faster (but less resilient) native implementation. That raises new and platform-specific errors and cannot handle long or excessively symlink-looping paths. This module handles those cases by detecting the new errors and falling back to the JavaScript implementation. On versions of Node prior to v6, it has no effect. ## USAGE ```js var rp = require('fs.realpath') // async version rp.realpath(someLongAndLoopingPath, function (er, real) { // the ELOOP was handled, but it was a bit slower }) // sync version var real = rp.realpathSync(someLongAndLoopingPath) // monkeypatch at your own risk! // This replaces the fs.realpath/fs.realpathSync builtins rp.monkeypatch() // un-do the monkeypatching rp.unmonkeypatch() ``` # y18n [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) The bare-bones internationalization library used by yargs. Inspired by [i18n](https://www.npmjs.com/package/i18n). ## Examples _simple string translation:_ ```js const __ = require('y18n')().__; console.log(__('my awesome string %s', 'foo')); ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _using tagged template literals_ ```js const __ = require('y18n')().__; const str = 'foo'; console.log(__`my awesome string ${str}`); ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _pluralization support:_ ```js const __n = require('y18n')().__n; console.log(__n('one fish %s', '%d fishes %s', 2, 'foo')); ``` output: `2 fishes foo` ## Deno Example As of `v5` `y18n` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno): ```typescript import y18n from "https://deno.land/x/y18n/deno.ts"; const __ = y18n({ locale: 'pirate', directory: './test/locales' }).__ console.info(__`Hi, ${'Ben'} ${'Coe'}!`) ``` You will need to run with `--allow-read` to load alternative locales. ## JSON Language Files The JSON language files should be stored in a `./locales` folder. File names correspond to locales, e.g., `en.json`, `pirate.json`. When strings are observed for the first time they will be added to the JSON file corresponding to the current locale. ## Methods ### require('y18n')(config) Create an instance of y18n with the config provided, options include: * `directory`: the locale directory, default `./locales`. * `updateFiles`: should newly observed strings be updated in file, default `true`. * `locale`: what locale should be used. * `fallbackToLanguage`: should fallback to a language-only file (e.g. `en.json`) be allowed if a file matching the locale does not exist (e.g. `en_US.json`), default `true`. ### y18n.\_\_(str, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string, `%s` will be replaced with `arg`s. This function can also be used as a tag for a template literal. You can use it like this: <code>__&#96;hello ${'world'}&#96;</code>. This will be equivalent to `__('hello %s', 'world')`. ### y18n.\_\_n(singularString, pluralString, count, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string with appropriate pluralization. If `%d` is provided in the string, the `count` will replace this placeholder. ### y18n.setLocale(str) Set the current locale being used. ### y18n.getLocale() What locale is currently being used? ### y18n.updateLocale(obj) Update the current locale with the key value pairs in `obj`. ## Supported Node.js Versions Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track [Node.js' release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/). Here's [a post on why we think this is important](https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/maintainers-should-consider-following-node-js-release-schedule-ab08ed4de71a). ## License ISC [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/y18n [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/y18n.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: https://github.com/feross/standard # AssemblyScript Loader A convenient loader for [AssemblyScript](https://assemblyscript.org) modules. Demangles module exports to a friendly object structure compatible with TypeScript definitions and provides useful utility to read/write data from/to memory. [Documentation](https://assemblyscript.org/loader.html) # minipass A _very_ minimal implementation of a [PassThrough stream](https://nodejs.org/api/stream.html#stream_class_stream_passthrough) [It's very fast](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1oObKSrVwLX_7Ut4Z6g3fZW-AX1j1-k6w-cDsrkaSbHM/edit#gid=0) for objects, strings, and buffers. Supports pipe()ing (including multi-pipe() and backpressure transmission), buffering data until either a `data` event handler or `pipe()` is added (so you don't lose the first chunk), and most other cases where PassThrough is a good idea. There is a `read()` method, but it's much more efficient to consume data from this stream via `'data'` events or by calling `pipe()` into some other stream. Calling `read()` requires the buffer to be flattened in some cases, which requires copying memory. There is also no `unpipe()` method. Once you start piping, there is no stopping it! If you set `objectMode: true` in the options, then whatever is written will be emitted. Otherwise, it'll do a minimal amount of Buffer copying to ensure proper Streams semantics when `read(n)` is called. `objectMode` can also be set by doing `stream.objectMode = true`, or by writing any non-string/non-buffer data. `objectMode` cannot be set to false once it is set. This is not a `through` or `through2` stream. It doesn't transform the data, it just passes it right through. If you want to transform the data, extend the class, and override the `write()` method. Once you're done transforming the data however you want, call `super.write()` with the transform output. For some examples of streams that extend Minipass in various ways, check out: - [minizlib](http://npm.im/minizlib) - [fs-minipass](http://npm.im/fs-minipass) - [tar](http://npm.im/tar) - [minipass-collect](http://npm.im/minipass-collect) - [minipass-flush](http://npm.im/minipass-flush) - [minipass-pipeline](http://npm.im/minipass-pipeline) - [tap](http://npm.im/tap) - [tap-parser](http://npm.im/tap) - [treport](http://npm.im/tap) - [minipass-fetch](http://npm.im/minipass-fetch) - [pacote](http://npm.im/pacote) - [make-fetch-happen](http://npm.im/make-fetch-happen) - [cacache](http://npm.im/cacache) - [ssri](http://npm.im/ssri) - [npm-registry-fetch](http://npm.im/npm-registry-fetch) - [minipass-json-stream](http://npm.im/minipass-json-stream) - [minipass-sized](http://npm.im/minipass-sized) ## Differences from Node.js Streams There are several things that make Minipass streams different from (and in some ways superior to) Node.js core streams. Please read these caveats if you are familiar with noode-core streams and intend to use Minipass streams in your programs. ### Timing Minipass streams are designed to support synchronous use-cases. Thus, data is emitted as soon as it is available, always. It is buffered until read, but no longer. Another way to look at it is that Minipass streams are exactly as synchronous as the logic that writes into them. This can be surprising if your code relies on `PassThrough.write()` always providing data on the next tick rather than the current one, or being able to call `resume()` and not have the entire buffer disappear immediately. However, without this synchronicity guarantee, there would be no way for Minipass to achieve the speeds it does, or support the synchronous use cases that it does. Simply put, waiting takes time. This non-deferring approach makes Minipass streams much easier to reason about, especially in the context of Promises and other flow-control mechanisms. ### No High/Low Water Marks Node.js core streams will optimistically fill up a buffer, returning `true` on all writes until the limit is hit, even if the data has nowhere to go. Then, they will not attempt to draw more data in until the buffer size dips below a minimum value. Minipass streams are much simpler. The `write()` method will return `true` if the data has somewhere to go (which is to say, given the timing guarantees, that the data is already there by the time `write()` returns). If the data has nowhere to go, then `write()` returns false, and the data sits in a buffer, to be drained out immediately as soon as anyone consumes it. ### Hazards of Buffering (or: Why Minipass Is So Fast) Since data written to a Minipass stream is immediately written all the way through the pipeline, and `write()` always returns true/false based on whether the data was fully flushed, backpressure is communicated immediately to the upstream caller. This minimizes buffering. Consider this case: ```js const {PassThrough} = require('stream') const p1 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) const p2 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) const p3 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) const p4 = new PassThrough({ highWaterMark: 1024 }) p1.pipe(p2).pipe(p3).pipe(p4) p4.on('data', () => console.log('made it through')) // this returns false and buffers, then writes to p2 on next tick (1) // p2 returns false and buffers, pausing p1, then writes to p3 on next tick (2) // p3 returns false and buffers, pausing p2, then writes to p4 on next tick (3) // p4 returns false and buffers, pausing p3, then emits 'data' and 'drain' // on next tick (4) // p3 sees p4's 'drain' event, and calls resume(), emitting 'resume' and // 'drain' on next tick (5) // p2 sees p3's 'drain', calls resume(), emits 'resume' and 'drain' on next tick (6) // p1 sees p2's 'drain', calls resume(), emits 'resume' and 'drain' on next // tick (7) p1.write(Buffer.alloc(2048)) // returns false ``` Along the way, the data was buffered and deferred at each stage, and multiple event deferrals happened, for an unblocked pipeline where it was perfectly safe to write all the way through! Furthermore, setting a `highWaterMark` of `1024` might lead someone reading the code to think an advisory maximum of 1KiB is being set for the pipeline. However, the actual advisory buffering level is the _sum_ of `highWaterMark` values, since each one has its own bucket. Consider the Minipass case: ```js const m1 = new Minipass() const m2 = new Minipass() const m3 = new Minipass() const m4 = new Minipass() m1.pipe(m2).pipe(m3).pipe(m4) m4.on('data', () => console.log('made it through')) // m1 is flowing, so it writes the data to m2 immediately // m2 is flowing, so it writes the data to m3 immediately // m3 is flowing, so it writes the data to m4 immediately // m4 is flowing, so it fires the 'data' event immediately, returns true // m4's write returned true, so m3 is still flowing, returns true // m3's write returned true, so m2 is still flowing, returns true // m2's write returned true, so m1 is still flowing, returns true // No event deferrals or buffering along the way! m1.write(Buffer.alloc(2048)) // returns true ``` It is extremely unlikely that you _don't_ want to buffer any data written, or _ever_ buffer data that can be flushed all the way through. Neither node-core streams nor Minipass ever fail to buffer written data, but node-core streams do a lot of unnecessary buffering and pausing. As always, the faster implementation is the one that does less stuff and waits less time to do it. ### Immediately emit `end` for empty streams (when not paused) If a stream is not paused, and `end()` is called before writing any data into it, then it will emit `end` immediately. If you have logic that occurs on the `end` event which you don't want to potentially happen immediately (for example, closing file descriptors, moving on to the next entry in an archive parse stream, etc.) then be sure to call `stream.pause()` on creation, and then `stream.resume()` once you are ready to respond to the `end` event. ### Emit `end` When Asked One hazard of immediately emitting `'end'` is that you may not yet have had a chance to add a listener. In order to avoid this hazard, Minipass streams safely re-emit the `'end'` event if a new listener is added after `'end'` has been emitted. Ie, if you do `stream.on('end', someFunction)`, and the stream has already emitted `end`, then it will call the handler right away. (You can think of this somewhat like attaching a new `.then(fn)` to a previously-resolved Promise.) To prevent calling handlers multiple times who would not expect multiple ends to occur, all listeners are removed from the `'end'` event whenever it is emitted. ### Impact of "immediate flow" on Tee-streams A "tee stream" is a stream piping to multiple destinations: ```js const tee = new Minipass() t.pipe(dest1) t.pipe(dest2) t.write('foo') // goes to both destinations ``` Since Minipass streams _immediately_ process any pending data through the pipeline when a new pipe destination is added, this can have surprising effects, especially when a stream comes in from some other function and may or may not have data in its buffer. ```js // WARNING! WILL LOSE DATA! const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') src.pipe(dest1) // 'foo' chunk flows to dest1 immediately, and is gone src.pipe(dest2) // gets nothing! ``` The solution is to create a dedicated tee-stream junction that pipes to both locations, and then pipe to _that_ instead. ```js // Safe example: tee to both places const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') const tee = new Minipass() tee.pipe(dest1) tee.pipe(dest2) src.pipe(tee) // tee gets 'foo', pipes to both locations ``` The same caveat applies to `on('data')` event listeners. The first one added will _immediately_ receive all of the data, leaving nothing for the second: ```js // WARNING! WILL LOSE DATA! const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') src.on('data', handler1) // receives 'foo' right away src.on('data', handler2) // nothing to see here! ``` Using a dedicated tee-stream can be used in this case as well: ```js // Safe example: tee to both data handlers const src = new Minipass() src.write('foo') const tee = new Minipass() tee.on('data', handler1) tee.on('data', handler2) src.pipe(tee) ``` ## USAGE It's a stream! Use it like a stream and it'll most likely do what you want. ```js const Minipass = require('minipass') const mp = new Minipass(options) // optional: { encoding, objectMode } mp.write('foo') mp.pipe(someOtherStream) mp.end('bar') ``` ### OPTIONS * `encoding` How would you like the data coming _out_ of the stream to be encoded? Accepts any values that can be passed to `Buffer.toString()`. * `objectMode` Emit data exactly as it comes in. This will be flipped on by default if you write() something other than a string or Buffer at any point. Setting `objectMode: true` will prevent setting any encoding value. ### API Implements the user-facing portions of Node.js's `Readable` and `Writable` streams. ### Methods * `write(chunk, [encoding], [callback])` - Put data in. (Note that, in the base Minipass class, the same data will come out.) Returns `false` if the stream will buffer the next write, or true if it's still in "flowing" mode. * `end([chunk, [encoding]], [callback])` - Signal that you have no more data to write. This will queue an `end` event to be fired when all the data has been consumed. * `setEncoding(encoding)` - Set the encoding for data coming of the stream. This can only be done once. * `pause()` - No more data for a while, please. This also prevents `end` from being emitted for empty streams until the stream is resumed. * `resume()` - Resume the stream. If there's data in the buffer, it is all discarded. Any buffered events are immediately emitted. * `pipe(dest)` - Send all output to the stream provided. There is no way to unpipe. When data is emitted, it is immediately written to any and all pipe destinations. * `on(ev, fn)`, `emit(ev, fn)` - Minipass streams are EventEmitters. Some events are given special treatment, however. (See below under "events".) * `promise()` - Returns a Promise that resolves when the stream emits `end`, or rejects if the stream emits `error`. * `collect()` - Return a Promise that resolves on `end` with an array containing each chunk of data that was emitted, or rejects if the stream emits `error`. Note that this consumes the stream data. * `concat()` - Same as `collect()`, but concatenates the data into a single Buffer object. Will reject the returned promise if the stream is in objectMode, or if it goes into objectMode by the end of the data. * `read(n)` - Consume `n` bytes of data out of the buffer. If `n` is not provided, then consume all of it. If `n` bytes are not available, then it returns null. **Note** consuming streams in this way is less efficient, and can lead to unnecessary Buffer copying. * `destroy([er])` - Destroy the stream. If an error is provided, then an `'error'` event is emitted. If the stream has a `close()` method, and has not emitted a `'close'` event yet, then `stream.close()` will be called. Any Promises returned by `.promise()`, `.collect()` or `.concat()` will be rejected. After being destroyed, writing to the stream will emit an error. No more data will be emitted if the stream is destroyed, even if it was previously buffered. ### Properties * `bufferLength` Read-only. Total number of bytes buffered, or in the case of objectMode, the total number of objects. * `encoding` The encoding that has been set. (Setting this is equivalent to calling `setEncoding(enc)` and has the same prohibition against setting multiple times.) * `flowing` Read-only. Boolean indicating whether a chunk written to the stream will be immediately emitted. * `emittedEnd` Read-only. Boolean indicating whether the end-ish events (ie, `end`, `prefinish`, `finish`) have been emitted. Note that listening on any end-ish event will immediateyl re-emit it if it has already been emitted. * `writable` Whether the stream is writable. Default `true`. Set to `false` when `end()` * `readable` Whether the stream is readable. Default `true`. * `buffer` A [yallist](http://npm.im/yallist) linked list of chunks written to the stream that have not yet been emitted. (It's probably a bad idea to mess with this.) * `pipes` A [yallist](http://npm.im/yallist) linked list of streams that this stream is piping into. (It's probably a bad idea to mess with this.) * `destroyed` A getter that indicates whether the stream was destroyed. * `paused` True if the stream has been explicitly paused, otherwise false. * `objectMode` Indicates whether the stream is in `objectMode`. Once set to `true`, it cannot be set to `false`. ### Events * `data` Emitted when there's data to read. Argument is the data to read. This is never emitted while not flowing. If a listener is attached, that will resume the stream. * `end` Emitted when there's no more data to read. This will be emitted immediately for empty streams when `end()` is called. If a listener is attached, and `end` was already emitted, then it will be emitted again. All listeners are removed when `end` is emitted. * `prefinish` An end-ish event that follows the same logic as `end` and is emitted in the same conditions where `end` is emitted. Emitted after `'end'`. * `finish` An end-ish event that follows the same logic as `end` and is emitted in the same conditions where `end` is emitted. Emitted after `'prefinish'`. * `close` An indication that an underlying resource has been released. Minipass does not emit this event, but will defer it until after `end` has been emitted, since it throws off some stream libraries otherwise. * `drain` Emitted when the internal buffer empties, and it is again suitable to `write()` into the stream. * `readable` Emitted when data is buffered and ready to be read by a consumer. * `resume` Emitted when stream changes state from buffering to flowing mode. (Ie, when `resume` is called, `pipe` is called, or a `data` event listener is added.) ### Static Methods * `Minipass.isStream(stream)` Returns `true` if the argument is a stream, and false otherwise. To be considered a stream, the object must be either an instance of Minipass, or an EventEmitter that has either a `pipe()` method, or both `write()` and `end()` methods. (Pretty much any stream in node-land will return `true` for this.) ## EXAMPLES Here are some examples of things you can do with Minipass streams. ### simple "are you done yet" promise ```js mp.promise().then(() => { // stream is finished }, er => { // stream emitted an error }) ``` ### collecting ```js mp.collect().then(all => { // all is an array of all the data emitted // encoding is supported in this case, so // so the result will be a collection of strings if // an encoding is specified, or buffers/objects if not. // // In an async function, you may do // const data = await stream.collect() }) ``` ### collecting into a single blob This is a bit slower because it concatenates the data into one chunk for you, but if you're going to do it yourself anyway, it's convenient this way: ```js mp.concat().then(onebigchunk => { // onebigchunk is a string if the stream // had an encoding set, or a buffer otherwise. }) ``` ### iteration You can iterate over streams synchronously or asynchronously in platforms that support it. Synchronous iteration will end when the currently available data is consumed, even if the `end` event has not been reached. In string and buffer mode, the data is concatenated, so unless multiple writes are occurring in the same tick as the `read()`, sync iteration loops will generally only have a single iteration. To consume chunks in this way exactly as they have been written, with no flattening, create the stream with the `{ objectMode: true }` option. ```js const mp = new Minipass({ objectMode: true }) mp.write('a') mp.write('b') for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // a, b } mp.write('c') mp.write('d') for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // c, d } mp.write('e') mp.end() for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // e } for (let letter of mp) { console.log(letter) // nothing } ``` Asynchronous iteration will continue until the end event is reached, consuming all of the data. ```js const mp = new Minipass({ encoding: 'utf8' }) // some source of some data let i = 5 const inter = setInterval(() => { if (i --> 0) mp.write(Buffer.from('foo\n', 'utf8')) else { mp.end() clearInterval(inter) } }, 100) // consume the data with asynchronous iteration async function consume () { for await (let chunk of mp) { console.log(chunk) } return 'ok' } consume().then(res => console.log(res)) // logs `foo\n` 5 times, and then `ok` ``` ### subclass that `console.log()`s everything written into it ```js class Logger extends Minipass { write (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('WRITE', chunk, encoding) return super.write(chunk, encoding, callback) } end (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('END', chunk, encoding) return super.end(chunk, encoding, callback) } } someSource.pipe(new Logger()).pipe(someDest) ``` ### same thing, but using an inline anonymous class ```js // js classes are fun someSource .pipe(new (class extends Minipass { emit (ev, ...data) { // let's also log events, because debugging some weird thing console.log('EMIT', ev) return super.emit(ev, ...data) } write (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('WRITE', chunk, encoding) return super.write(chunk, encoding, callback) } end (chunk, encoding, callback) { console.log('END', chunk, encoding) return super.end(chunk, encoding, callback) } })) .pipe(someDest) ``` ### subclass that defers 'end' for some reason ```js class SlowEnd extends Minipass { emit (ev, ...args) { if (ev === 'end') { console.log('going to end, hold on a sec') setTimeout(() => { console.log('ok, ready to end now') super.emit('end', ...args) }, 100) } else { return super.emit(ev, ...args) } } } ``` ### transform that creates newline-delimited JSON ```js class NDJSONEncode extends Minipass { write (obj, cb) { try { // JSON.stringify can throw, emit an error on that return super.write(JSON.stringify(obj) + '\n', 'utf8', cb) } catch (er) { this.emit('error', er) } } end (obj, cb) { if (typeof obj === 'function') { cb = obj obj = undefined } if (obj !== undefined) { this.write(obj) } return super.end(cb) } } ``` ### transform that parses newline-delimited JSON ```js class NDJSONDecode extends Minipass { constructor (options) { // always be in object mode, as far as Minipass is concerned super({ objectMode: true }) this._jsonBuffer = '' } write (chunk, encoding, cb) { if (typeof chunk === 'string' && typeof encoding === 'string' && encoding !== 'utf8') { chunk = Buffer.from(chunk, encoding).toString() } else if (Buffer.isBuffer(chunk)) chunk = chunk.toString() } if (typeof encoding === 'function') { cb = encoding } const jsonData = (this._jsonBuffer + chunk).split('\n') this._jsonBuffer = jsonData.pop() for (let i = 0; i < jsonData.length; i++) { let parsed try { super.write(parsed) } catch (er) { this.emit('error', er) continue } } if (cb) cb() } } ``` # `near-sdk-as` Starter Kit This is a good project to use as a starting point for your AssemblyScript project. ## Samples This repository includes a complete project structure for AssemblyScript contracts targeting the NEAR platform. The example here is very basic. It's a simple contract demonstrating the following concepts: - a single contract - the difference between `view` vs. `change` methods - basic contract storage There are 2 AssemblyScript contracts in this project, each in their own folder: - **simple** in the `src/simple` folder - **singleton** in the `src/singleton` folder ### Simple We say that an AssemblyScript contract is written in the "simple style" when the `index.ts` file (the contract entry point) includes a series of exported functions. In this case, all exported functions become public contract methods. ```ts // return the string 'hello world' export function helloWorld(): string {} // read the given key from account (contract) storage export function read(key: string): string {} // write the given value at the given key to account (contract) storage export function write(key: string, value: string): string {} // private helper method used by read() and write() above private storageReport(): string {} ``` ### Singleton We say that an AssemblyScript contract is written in the "singleton style" when the `index.ts` file (the contract entry point) has a single exported class (the name of the class doesn't matter) that is decorated with `@nearBindgen`. In this case, all methods on the class become public contract methods unless marked `private`. Also, all instance variables are stored as a serialized instance of the class under a special storage key named `STATE`. AssemblyScript uses JSON for storage serialization (as opposed to Rust contracts which use a custom binary serialization format called borsh). ```ts @nearBindgen export class Contract { // return the string 'hello world' helloWorld(): string {} // read the given key from account (contract) storage read(key: string): string {} // write the given value at the given key to account (contract) storage @mutateState() write(key: string, value: string): string {} // private helper method used by read() and write() above private storageReport(): string {} } ``` ## Usage ### Getting started (see below for video recordings of each of the following steps) INSTALL `NEAR CLI` first like this: `npm i -g near-cli` 1. clone this repo to a local folder 2. run `yarn` 3. run `./scripts/1.dev-deploy.sh` 3. run `./scripts/2.use-contract.sh` 4. run `./scripts/2.use-contract.sh` (yes, run it to see changes) 5. run `./scripts/3.cleanup.sh` ### Videos **`1.dev-deploy.sh`** This video shows the build and deployment of the contract. [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/409575.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/409575) **`2.use-contract.sh`** This video shows contract methods being called. You should run the script twice to see the effect it has on contract state. [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/409577.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/409577) **`3.cleanup.sh`** This video shows the cleanup script running. Make sure you add the `BENEFICIARY` environment variable. The script will remind you if you forget. ```sh export BENEFICIARY=<your-account-here> # this account receives contract account balance ``` [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/409580.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/409580) ### Other documentation - See `./scripts/README.md` for documentation about the scripts - Watch this video where Willem Wyndham walks us through refactoring a simple example of a NEAR smart contract written in AssemblyScript https://youtu.be/QP7aveSqRPo ``` There are 2 "styles" of implementing AssemblyScript NEAR contracts: - the contract interface can either be a collection of exported functions - or the contract interface can be the methods of a an exported class We call the second style "Singleton" because there is only one instance of the class which is serialized to the blockchain storage. Rust contracts written for NEAR do this by default with the contract struct. 0:00 noise (to cut) 0:10 Welcome 0:59 Create project starting with "npm init" 2:20 Customize the project for AssemblyScript development 9:25 Import the Counter example and get unit tests passing 18:30 Adapt the Counter example to a Singleton style contract 21:49 Refactoring unit tests to access the new methods 24:45 Review and summary ``` ## The file system ```sh ├── README.md # this file ├── as-pect.config.js # configuration for as-pect (AssemblyScript unit testing) ├── asconfig.json # configuration for AssemblyScript compiler (supports multiple contracts) ├── package.json # NodeJS project manifest ├── scripts │   ├── 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts │   ├── 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise │   ├── 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts │   └── README.md # documentation for helper scripts ├── src │   ├── as_types.d.ts # AssemblyScript headers for type hints │   ├── simple # Contract 1: "Simple example" │   │   ├── __tests__ │   │   │   ├── as-pect.d.ts # as-pect unit testing headers for type hints │   │   │   └── index.unit.spec.ts # unit tests for contract 1 │   │   ├── asconfig.json # configuration for AssemblyScript compiler (one per contract) │   │   └── assembly │   │   └── index.ts # contract code for contract 1 │   ├── singleton # Contract 2: "Singleton-style example" │   │   ├── __tests__ │   │   │   ├── as-pect.d.ts # as-pect unit testing headers for type hints │   │   │   └── index.unit.spec.ts # unit tests for contract 2 │   │   ├── asconfig.json # configuration for AssemblyScript compiler (one per contract) │   │   └── assembly │   │   └── index.ts # contract code for contract 2 │   ├── tsconfig.json # Typescript configuration │   └── utils.ts # common contract utility functions └── yarn.lock # project manifest version lock ``` You may clone this repo to get started OR create everything from scratch. Please note that, in order to create the AssemblyScript and tests folder structure, you may use the command `asp --init` which will create the following folders and files: ``` ./assembly/ ./assembly/tests/ ./assembly/tests/example.spec.ts ./assembly/tests/as-pect.d.ts ``` # yargs-parser [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/yargs-parser.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/yargs-parser) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs-parser.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs-parser) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) The mighty option parser used by [yargs](https://github.com/yargs/yargs). visit the [yargs website](http://yargs.js.org/) for more examples, and thorough usage instructions. <img width="250" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yargs/yargs-parser/master/yargs-logo.png"> ## Example ```sh npm i yargs-parser --save ``` ```js var argv = require('yargs-parser')(process.argv.slice(2)) console.log(argv) ``` ```sh node example.js --foo=33 --bar hello { _: [], foo: 33, bar: 'hello' } ``` _or parse a string!_ ```js var argv = require('yargs-parser')('--foo=99 --bar=33') console.log(argv) ``` ```sh { _: [], foo: 99, bar: 33 } ``` Convert an array of mixed types before passing to `yargs-parser`: ```js var parse = require('yargs-parser') parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].join(' ')) // <-- array to string parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].map(String)) // <-- array of strings ``` ## API ### require('yargs-parser')(args, opts={}) Parses command line arguments returning a simple mapping of keys and values. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing the options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args` should be parsed: * `opts.alias`: an object representing the set of aliases for a key: `{alias: {foo: ['f']}}`. * `opts.array`: indicate that keys should be parsed as an array: `{array: ['foo', 'bar']}`.<br> Indicate that keys should be parsed as an array and coerced to booleans / numbers:<br> `{array: [{ key: 'foo', boolean: true }, {key: 'bar', number: true}]}`. * `opts.boolean`: arguments should be parsed as booleans: `{boolean: ['x', 'y']}`. * `opts.coerce`: provide a custom synchronous function that returns a coerced value from the argument provided (or throws an error). For arrays the function is called only once for the entire array:<br> `{coerce: {foo: function (arg) {return modifiedArg}}}`. * `opts.config`: indicate a key that represents a path to a configuration file (this file will be loaded and parsed). * `opts.configObjects`: configuration objects to parse, their properties will be set as arguments:<br> `{configObjects: [{'x': 5, 'y': 33}, {'z': 44}]}`. * `opts.configuration`: provide configuration options to the yargs-parser (see: [configuration](#configuration)). * `opts.count`: indicate a key that should be used as a counter, e.g., `-vvv` = `{v: 3}`. * `opts.default`: provide default values for keys: `{default: {x: 33, y: 'hello world!'}}`. * `opts.envPrefix`: environment variables (`process.env`) with the prefix provided should be parsed. * `opts.narg`: specify that a key requires `n` arguments: `{narg: {x: 2}}`. * `opts.normalize`: `path.normalize()` will be applied to values set to this key. * `opts.number`: keys should be treated as numbers. * `opts.string`: keys should be treated as strings (even if they resemble a number `-x 33`). **returns:** * `obj`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. ### require('yargs-parser').detailed(args, opts={}) Parses a command line string, returning detailed information required by the yargs engine. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args`, inputs are identical to `require('yargs-parser')(args, opts={})`. **returns:** * `argv`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. * `error`: populated with an error object if an exception occurred during parsing. * `aliases`: the inferred list of aliases built by combining lists in `opts.alias`. * `newAliases`: any new aliases added via camel-case expansion: * `boolean`: `{ fooBar: true }` * `defaulted`: any new argument created by `opts.default`, no aliases included. * `boolean`: `{ foo: true }` * `configuration`: given by default settings and `opts.configuration`. <a name="configuration"></a> ### Configuration The yargs-parser applies several automated transformations on the keys provided in `args`. These features can be turned on and off using the `configuration` field of `opts`. ```js var parsed = parser(['--no-dice'], { configuration: { 'boolean-negation': false } }) ``` ### short option groups * default: `true`. * key: `short-option-groups`. Should a group of short-options be treated as boolean flags? ```sh node example.js -abc { _: [], a: true, b: true, c: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -abc { _: [], abc: true } ``` ### camel-case expansion * default: `true`. * key: `camel-case-expansion`. Should hyphenated arguments be expanded into camel-case aliases? ```sh node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true, fooBar: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true } ``` ### dot-notation * default: `true` * key: `dot-notation` Should keys that contain `.` be treated as objects? ```sh node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], foo: { bar: true } } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], "foo.bar": true } ``` ### parse numbers * default: `true` * key: `parse-numbers` Should keys that look like numbers be treated as such? ```sh node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: 99.3 } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: "99.3" } ``` ### boolean negation * default: `true` * key: `boolean-negation` Should variables prefixed with `--no` be treated as negations? ```sh node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --no-foo { _: [], "no-foo": true } ``` ### combine arrays * default: `false` * key: `combine-arrays` Should arrays be combined when provided by both command line arguments and a configuration file. ### duplicate arguments array * default: `true` * key: `duplicate-arguments-array` Should arguments be coerced into an array when duplicated: ```sh node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: 2 } ``` ### flatten duplicate arrays * default: `true` * key: `flatten-duplicate-arrays` Should array arguments be coerced into a single array when duplicated: ```sh node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [1, 2, 3, 4] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [[1, 2], [3, 4]] } ``` ### greedy arrays * default: `true` * key: `greedy-arrays` Should arrays consume more than one positional argument following their flag. ```sh node example --arr 1 2 { _[], arr: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```sh node example --arr 1 2 { _[2], arr: [1] } ``` **Note: in `v18.0.0` we are considering defaulting greedy arrays to `false`.** ### nargs eats options * default: `false` * key: `nargs-eats-options` Should nargs consume dash options as well as positional arguments. ### negation prefix * default: `no-` * key: `negation-prefix` The prefix to use for negated boolean variables. ```sh node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if set to `quux`:_ ```sh node example.js --quuxfoo { _: [], foo: false } ``` ### populate -- * default: `false`. * key: `populate--` Should unparsed flags be stored in `--` or `_`. _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a', 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a' ], '--': [ 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` ### set placeholder key * default: `false`. * key: `set-placeholder-key`. Should a placeholder be added for keys not set via the corresponding CLI argument? _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, c: 2 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, b: undefined, c: 2 } ``` ### halt at non-option * default: `false`. * key: `halt-at-non-option`. Should parsing stop at the first positional argument? This is similar to how e.g. `ssh` parses its command line. _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b' ], a: 'run', x: 'y' } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b', '-x', 'y' ], a: 'run' } ``` ### strip aliased * default: `false` * key: `strip-aliased` Should aliases be removed before returning results? _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1, 'test-alias': 1, testAlias: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` ### strip dashed * default: `false` * key: `strip-dashed` Should dashed keys be removed before returning results? This option has no effect if `camel-case-expansion` is disabled. _If disabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```sh node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], testField: 1 } ``` ### unknown options as args * default: `false` * key: `unknown-options-as-args` Should unknown options be treated like regular arguments? An unknown option is one that is not configured in `opts`. _If disabled_ ```sh node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: [], unknownOption: true, knownOption: 2, stringOption: '', unknownOption2: true } ``` _If enabled_ ```sh node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: ['--unknown-option'], knownOption: 2, stringOption: '--unknown-option2' } ``` ## Special Thanks The yargs project evolves from optimist and minimist. It owes its existence to a lot of James Halliday's hard work. Thanks [substack](https://github.com/substack) **beep** **boop** \o/ ## License ISC # assemblyscript-json ![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/assemblyscript-json) ![npm downloads per month](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/assemblyscript-json) JSON encoder / decoder for AssemblyScript. Special thanks to https://github.com/MaxGraey/bignum.wasm for basic unit testing infra for AssemblyScript. ## Installation `assemblyscript-json` is available as a [npm package](https://www.npmjs.com/package/assemblyscript-json). You can install `assemblyscript-json` in your AssemblyScript project by running: `npm install --save assemblyscript-json` ## Usage ### Parsing JSON ```typescript import { JSON } from "assemblyscript-json"; // Parse an object using the JSON object let jsonObj: JSON.Obj = <JSON.Obj>(JSON.parse('{"hello": "world", "value": 24}')); // We can then use the .getX functions to read from the object if you know it's type // This will return the appropriate JSON.X value if the key exists, or null if the key does not exist let worldOrNull: JSON.Str | null = jsonObj.getString("hello"); // This will return a JSON.Str or null if (worldOrNull != null) { // use .valueOf() to turn the high level JSON.Str type into a string let world: string = worldOrNull.valueOf(); } let numOrNull: JSON.Num | null = jsonObj.getNum("value"); if (numOrNull != null) { // use .valueOf() to turn the high level JSON.Num type into a f64 let value: f64 = numOrNull.valueOf(); } // If you don't know the value type, get the parent JSON.Value let valueOrNull: JSON.Value | null = jsonObj.getValue("hello"); if (valueOrNull != null) { let value: JSON.Value = changetype<JSON.Value>(valueOrNull); // Next we could figure out what type we are if(value.isString) { // value.isString would be true, so we can cast to a string let stringValue: string = changetype<JSON.Str>(value).toString(); // Do something with string value } } ``` ### Encoding JSON ```typescript import { JSONEncoder } from "assemblyscript-json"; // Create encoder let encoder = new JSONEncoder(); // Construct necessary object encoder.pushObject("obj"); encoder.setInteger("int", 10); encoder.setString("str", ""); encoder.popObject(); // Get serialized data let json: Uint8Array = encoder.serialize(); // Or get serialized data as string let jsonString: string = encoder.toString(); assert(jsonString, '"obj": {"int": 10, "str": ""}'); // True! ``` ### Custom JSON Deserializers ```typescript import { JSONDecoder, JSONHandler } from "assemblyscript-json"; // Events need to be received by custom object extending JSONHandler. // NOTE: All methods are optional to implement. class MyJSONEventsHandler extends JSONHandler { setString(name: string, value: string): void { // Handle field } setBoolean(name: string, value: bool): void { // Handle field } setNull(name: string): void { // Handle field } setInteger(name: string, value: i64): void { // Handle field } setFloat(name: string, value: f64): void { // Handle field } pushArray(name: string): bool { // Handle array start // true means that nested object needs to be traversed, false otherwise // Note that returning false means JSONDecoder.startIndex need to be updated by handler return true; } popArray(): void { // Handle array end } pushObject(name: string): bool { // Handle object start // true means that nested object needs to be traversed, false otherwise // Note that returning false means JSONDecoder.startIndex need to be updated by handler return true; } popObject(): void { // Handle object end } } // Create decoder let decoder = new JSONDecoder<MyJSONEventsHandler>(new MyJSONEventsHandler()); // Create a byte buffer of our JSON. NOTE: Deserializers work on UTF8 string buffers. let jsonString = '{"hello": "world"}'; let jsonBuffer = Uint8Array.wrap(String.UTF8.encode(jsonString)); // Parse JSON decoder.deserialize(jsonBuffer); // This will send events to MyJSONEventsHandler ``` Feel free to look through the [tests](https://github.com/nearprotocol/assemblyscript-json/tree/master/assembly/__tests__) for more usage examples. ## Reference Documentation Reference API Documentation can be found in the [docs directory](./docs). ## License [MIT](./LICENSE) The AssemblyScript Runtime ========================== The runtime provides the functionality necessary to dynamically allocate and deallocate memory of objects, arrays and buffers, as well as collect garbage that is no longer used. The current implementation is either a Two-Color Mark & Sweep (TCMS) garbage collector that must be called manually when the execution stack is unwound or an Incremental Tri-Color Mark & Sweep (ITCMS) garbage collector that is fully automated with a shadow stack, implemented on top of a Two-Level Segregate Fit (TLSF) memory manager. It's not designed to be the fastest of its kind, but intentionally focuses on simplicity and ease of integration until we can replace it with the real deal, i.e. Wasm GC. Interface --------- ### Garbage collector / `--exportRuntime` * **__new**(size: `usize`, id: `u32` = 0): `usize`<br /> Dynamically allocates a GC object of at least the specified size and returns its address. Alignment is guaranteed to be 16 bytes to fit up to v128 values naturally. GC-allocated objects cannot be used with `__realloc` and `__free`. * **__pin**(ptr: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Pins the object pointed to by `ptr` externally so it and its directly reachable members and indirectly reachable objects do not become garbage collected. * **__unpin**(ptr: `usize`): `void`<br /> Unpins the object pointed to by `ptr` externally so it can become garbage collected. * **__collect**(): `void`<br /> Performs a full garbage collection. ### Internals * **__alloc**(size: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Dynamically allocates a chunk of memory of at least the specified size and returns its address. Alignment is guaranteed to be 16 bytes to fit up to v128 values naturally. * **__realloc**(ptr: `usize`, size: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Dynamically changes the size of a chunk of memory, possibly moving it to a new address. * **__free**(ptr: `usize`): `void`<br /> Frees a dynamically allocated chunk of memory by its address. * **__renew**(ptr: `usize`, size: `usize`): `usize`<br /> Like `__realloc`, but for `__new`ed GC objects. * **__link**(parentPtr: `usize`, childPtr: `usize`, expectMultiple: `bool`): `void`<br /> Introduces a link from a parent object to a child object, i.e. upon `parent.field = child`. * **__visit**(ptr: `usize`, cookie: `u32`): `void`<br /> Concrete visitor implementation called during traversal. Cookie can be used to indicate one of multiple operations. * **__visit_globals**(cookie: `u32`): `void`<br /> Calls `__visit` on each global that is of a managed type. * **__visit_members**(ptr: `usize`, cookie: `u32`): `void`<br /> Calls `__visit` on each member of the object pointed to by `ptr`. * **__typeinfo**(id: `u32`): `RTTIFlags`<br /> Obtains the runtime type information for objects with the specified runtime id. Runtime type information is a set of flags indicating whether a type is managed, an array or similar, and what the relevant alignments when creating an instance externally are etc. * **__instanceof**(ptr: `usize`, classId: `u32`): `bool`<br /> Tests if the object pointed to by `ptr` is an instance of the specified class id. ITCMS / `--runtime incremental` ----- The Incremental Tri-Color Mark & Sweep garbage collector maintains a separate shadow stack of managed values in the background to achieve full automation. Maintaining another stack introduces some overhead compared to the simpler Two-Color Mark & Sweep garbage collector, but makes it independent of whether the execution stack is unwound or not when it is invoked, so the garbage collector can run interleaved with the program. There are several constants one can experiment with to tweak ITCMS's automation: * `--use ASC_GC_GRANULARITY=1024`<br /> How often to interrupt. The default of 1024 means "interrupt each 1024 bytes allocated". * `--use ASC_GC_STEPFACTOR=200`<br /> How long to interrupt. The default of 200% means "run at double the speed of allocations". * `--use ASC_GC_IDLEFACTOR=200`<br /> How long to idle. The default of 200% means "wait for memory to double before kicking in again". * `--use ASC_GC_MARKCOST=1`<br /> How costly it is to mark one object. Budget per interrupt is `GRANULARITY * STEPFACTOR / 100`. * `--use ASC_GC_SWEEPCOST=10`<br /> How costly it is to sweep one object. Budget per interrupt is `GRANULARITY * STEPFACTOR / 100`. TCMS / `--runtime minimal` ---- If automation and low pause times aren't strictly necessary, using the Two-Color Mark & Sweep garbage collector instead by invoking collection manually at appropriate times when the execution stack is unwound may be more performant as it simpler and has less overhead. The execution stack is typically unwound when invoking the collector externally, at a place that is not indirectly called from Wasm. STUB / `--runtime stub` ---- The stub is a maximally minimal runtime substitute, consisting of a simple and fast bump allocator with no means of freeing up memory again, except when freeing the respective most recently allocated object on top of the bump. Useful where memory is not a concern, and/or where it is sufficient to destroy the whole module including any potential garbage after execution. See also: [Garbage collection](https://www.assemblyscript.org/garbage-collection.html) Compiler frontend for node.js ============================= Usage ----- For an up to date list of available command line options, see: ``` $> asc --help ``` API --- The API accepts the same options as the CLI but also lets you override stdout and stderr and/or provide a callback. Example: ```js const asc = require("assemblyscript/cli/asc"); asc.ready.then(() => { asc.main([ "myModule.ts", "--binaryFile", "myModule.wasm", "--optimize", "--sourceMap", "--measure" ], { stdout: process.stdout, stderr: process.stderr }, function(err) { if (err) throw err; ... }); }); ``` Available command line options can also be obtained programmatically: ```js const options = require("assemblyscript/cli/asc.json"); ... ``` You can also compile a source string directly, for example in a browser environment: ```js const asc = require("assemblyscript/cli/asc"); asc.ready.then(() => { const { binary, text, stdout, stderr } = asc.compileString(`...`, { optimize: 2 }); }); ... ``` # cliui ![ci](https://github.com/yargs/cliui/workflows/ci/badge.svg) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/cliui.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cliui) [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) ![nycrc config on GitHub](https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/cliui) easily create complex multi-column command-line-interfaces. ## Example ```js const ui = require('cliui')() ui.div('Usage: $0 [command] [options]') ui.div({ text: 'Options:', padding: [2, 0, 1, 0] }) ui.div( { text: "-f, --file", width: 20, padding: [0, 4, 0, 4] }, { text: "the file to load." + chalk.green("(if this description is long it wraps).") , width: 20 }, { text: chalk.red("[required]"), align: 'right' } ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` ## Deno/ESM Support As of `v7` `cliui` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno) and [ESM](https://nodejs.org/api/esm.html#esm_ecmascript_modules): ```typescript import cliui from "https://deno.land/x/cliui/deno.ts"; const ui = cliui({}) ui.div('Usage: $0 [command] [options]') ui.div({ text: 'Options:', padding: [2, 0, 1, 0] }) ui.div({ text: "-f, --file", width: 20, padding: [0, 4, 0, 4] }) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` <img width="500" src="screenshot.png"> ## Layout DSL cliui exposes a simple layout DSL: If you create a single `ui.div`, passing a string rather than an object: * `\n`: characters will be interpreted as new rows. * `\t`: characters will be interpreted as new columns. * `\s`: characters will be interpreted as padding. **as an example...** ```js var ui = require('./')({ width: 60 }) ui.div( 'Usage: node ./bin/foo.js\n' + ' <regex>\t provide a regex\n' + ' <glob>\t provide a glob\t [required]' ) console.log(ui.toString()) ``` **will output:** ```shell Usage: node ./bin/foo.js <regex> provide a regex <glob> provide a glob [required] ``` ## Methods ```js cliui = require('cliui') ``` ### cliui({width: integer}) Specify the maximum width of the UI being generated. If no width is provided, cliui will try to get the current window's width and use it, and if that doesn't work, width will be set to `80`. ### cliui({wrap: boolean}) Enable or disable the wrapping of text in a column. ### cliui.div(column, column, column) Create a row with any number of columns, a column can either be a string, or an object with the following options: * **text:** some text to place in the column. * **width:** the width of a column. * **align:** alignment, `right` or `center`. * **padding:** `[top, right, bottom, left]`. * **border:** should a border be placed around the div? ### cliui.span(column, column, column) Similar to `div`, except the next row will be appended without a new line being created. ### cliui.resetOutput() Resets the UI elements of the current cliui instance, maintaining the values set for `width` and `wrap`. # randexp.js randexp will generate a random string that matches a given RegExp Javascript object. [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/fent/randexp.js.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/fent/randexp.js) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/fent/randexp.js.svg)](https://david-dm.org/fent/randexp.js) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/randexp.js/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/randexp.js) # Usage ```js var RandExp = require('randexp'); // supports grouping and piping new RandExp(/hello+ (world|to you)/).gen(); // => hellooooooooooooooooooo world // sets and ranges and references new RandExp(/<([a-z]\w{0,20})>foo<\1>/).gen(); // => <m5xhdg>foo<m5xhdg> // wildcard new RandExp(/random stuff: .+/).gen(); // => random stuff: l3m;Hf9XYbI [YPaxV>U*4-_F!WXQh9>;rH3i l!8.zoh?[utt1OWFQrE ^~8zEQm]~tK // ignore case new RandExp(/xxx xtreme dragon warrior xxx/i).gen(); // => xxx xtReME dRAGON warRiOR xXX // dynamic regexp shortcut new RandExp('(sun|mon|tue|wednes|thurs|fri|satur)day', 'i'); // is the same as new RandExp(new RegExp('(sun|mon|tue|wednes|thurs|fri|satur)day', 'i')); ``` If you're only going to use `gen()` once with a regexp and want slightly shorter syntax for it ```js var randexp = require('randexp').randexp; randexp(/[1-6]/); // 4 randexp('great|good( job)?|excellent'); // great ``` If you miss the old syntax ```js require('randexp').sugar(); /yes|no|maybe|i don't know/.gen(); // maybe ``` # Motivation Regular expressions are used in every language, every programmer is familiar with them. Regex can be used to easily express complex strings. What better way to generate a random string than with a language you can use to express the string you want? Thanks to [String-Random](http://search.cpan.org/~steve/String-Random-0.22/lib/String/Random.pm) for giving me the idea to make this in the first place and [randexp](https://github.com/benburkert/randexp) for the sweet `.gen()` syntax. # Default Range The default generated character range includes printable ASCII. In order to add or remove characters, a `defaultRange` attribute is exposed. you can `subtract(from, to)` and `add(from, to)` ```js var randexp = new RandExp(/random stuff: .+/); randexp.defaultRange.subtract(32, 126); randexp.defaultRange.add(0, 65535); randexp.gen(); // => random stuff: 湐箻ໜ䫴␩⶛㳸長���邓蕲뤀쑡篷皇硬剈궦佔칗븛뀃匫鴔事좍ﯣ⭼ꝏ䭍詳蒂䥂뽭 ``` # Custom PRNG The default randomness is provided by `Math.random()`. If you need to use a seedable or cryptographic PRNG, you can override `RandExp.prototype.randInt` or `randexp.randInt` (where `randexp` is an instance of `RandExp`). `randInt(from, to)` accepts an inclusive range and returns a randomly selected number within that range. # Infinite Repetitionals Repetitional tokens such as `*`, `+`, and `{3,}` have an infinite max range. In this case, randexp looks at its min and adds 100 to it to get a useable max value. If you want to use another int other than 100 you can change the `max` property in `RandExp.prototype` or the RandExp instance. ```js var randexp = new RandExp(/no{1,}/); randexp.max = 1000000; ``` With `RandExp.sugar()` ```js var regexp = /(hi)*/; regexp.max = 1000000; ``` # Bad Regular Expressions There are some regular expressions which can never match any string. * Ones with badly placed positionals such as `/a^/` and `/$c/m`. Randexp will ignore positional tokens. * Back references to non-existing groups like `/(a)\1\2/`. Randexp will ignore those references, returning an empty string for them. If the group exists only after the reference is used such as in `/\1 (hey)/`, it will too be ignored. * Custom negated character sets with two sets inside that cancel each other out. Example: `/[^\w\W]/`. If you give this to randexp, it will return an empty string for this set since it can't match anything. # Projects based on randexp.js ## JSON-Schema Faker Use generators to populate JSON Schema samples. See: [jsf on github](https://github.com/json-schema-faker/json-schema-faker/) and [jsf demo page](http://json-schema-faker.js.org/). # Install ### Node.js npm install randexp ### Browser Download the [minified version](https://github.com/fent/randexp.js/releases) from the latest release. # Tests Tests are written with [mocha](https://mochajs.org) ```bash npm test ``` # License MIT # minizlib A fast zlib stream built on [minipass](http://npm.im/minipass) and Node.js's zlib binding. This module was created to serve the needs of [node-tar](http://npm.im/tar) and [minipass-fetch](http://npm.im/minipass-fetch). Brotli is supported in versions of node with a Brotli binding. ## How does this differ from the streams in `require('zlib')`? First, there are no convenience methods to compress or decompress a buffer. If you want those, use the built-in `zlib` module. This is only streams. That being said, Minipass streams to make it fairly easy to use as one-liners: `new zlib.Deflate().end(data).read()` will return the deflate compressed result. This module compresses and decompresses the data as fast as you feed it in. It is synchronous, and runs on the main process thread. Zlib and Brotli operations can be high CPU, but they're very fast, and doing it this way means much less bookkeeping and artificial deferral. Node's built in zlib streams are built on top of `stream.Transform`. They do the maximally safe thing with respect to consistent asynchrony, buffering, and backpressure. See [Minipass](http://npm.im/minipass) for more on the differences between Node.js core streams and Minipass streams, and the convenience methods provided by that class. ## Classes - Deflate - Inflate - Gzip - Gunzip - DeflateRaw - InflateRaw - Unzip - BrotliCompress (Node v10 and higher) - BrotliDecompress (Node v10 and higher) ## USAGE ```js const zlib = require('minizlib') const input = sourceOfCompressedData() const decode = new zlib.BrotliDecompress() const output = whereToWriteTheDecodedData() input.pipe(decode).pipe(output) ``` ## REPRODUCIBLE BUILDS To create reproducible gzip compressed files across different operating systems, set `portable: true` in the options. This causes minizlib to set the `OS` indicator in byte 9 of the extended gzip header to `0xFF` for 'unknown'. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/rimraf.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/rimraf) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf.svg)](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf) [![devDependency Status](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf/dev-status.svg)](https://david-dm.org/isaacs/rimraf#info=devDependencies) The [UNIX command](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rm_(Unix)) `rm -rf` for node. Install with `npm install rimraf`, or just drop rimraf.js somewhere. ## API `rimraf(f, [opts], callback)` The first parameter will be interpreted as a globbing pattern for files. If you want to disable globbing you can do so with `opts.disableGlob` (defaults to `false`). This might be handy, for instance, if you have filenames that contain globbing wildcard characters. The callback will be called with an error if there is one. Certain errors are handled for you: * Windows: `EBUSY` and `ENOTEMPTY` - rimraf will back off a maximum of `opts.maxBusyTries` times before giving up, adding 100ms of wait between each attempt. The default `maxBusyTries` is 3. * `ENOENT` - If the file doesn't exist, rimraf will return successfully, since your desired outcome is already the case. * `EMFILE` - Since `readdir` requires opening a file descriptor, it's possible to hit `EMFILE` if too many file descriptors are in use. In the sync case, there's nothing to be done for this. But in the async case, rimraf will gradually back off with timeouts up to `opts.emfileWait` ms, which defaults to 1000. ## options * unlink, chmod, stat, lstat, rmdir, readdir, unlinkSync, chmodSync, statSync, lstatSync, rmdirSync, readdirSync In order to use a custom file system library, you can override specific fs functions on the options object. If any of these functions are present on the options object, then the supplied function will be used instead of the default fs method. Sync methods are only relevant for `rimraf.sync()`, of course. For example: ```javascript var myCustomFS = require('some-custom-fs') rimraf('some-thing', myCustomFS, callback) ``` * maxBusyTries If an `EBUSY`, `ENOTEMPTY`, or `EPERM` error code is encountered on Windows systems, then rimraf will retry with a linear backoff wait of 100ms longer on each try. The default maxBusyTries is 3. Only relevant for async usage. * emfileWait If an `EMFILE` error is encountered, then rimraf will retry repeatedly with a linear backoff of 1ms longer on each try, until the timeout counter hits this max. The default limit is 1000. If you repeatedly encounter `EMFILE` errors, then consider using [graceful-fs](http://npm.im/graceful-fs) in your program. Only relevant for async usage. * glob Set to `false` to disable [glob](http://npm.im/glob) pattern matching. Set to an object to pass options to the glob module. The default glob options are `{ nosort: true, silent: true }`. Glob version 6 is used in this module. Relevant for both sync and async usage. * disableGlob Set to any non-falsey value to disable globbing entirely. (Equivalent to setting `glob: false`.) ## rimraf.sync It can remove stuff synchronously, too. But that's not so good. Use the async API. It's better. ## CLI If installed with `npm install rimraf -g` it can be used as a global command `rimraf <path> [<path> ...]` which is useful for cross platform support. ## mkdirp If you need to create a directory recursively, check out [mkdirp](https://github.com/substack/node-mkdirp). <p align="center"> <img width="250" src="/yargs-logo.png"> </p> <h1 align="center"> Yargs </h1> <p align="center"> <b >Yargs be a node.js library fer hearties tryin' ter parse optstrings</b> </p> <br> [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Coverage][coverage-image]][coverage-url] [![Conventional Commits][conventional-commits-image]][conventional-commits-url] [![Slack][slack-image]][slack-url] ## Description : Yargs helps you build interactive command line tools, by parsing arguments and generating an elegant user interface. It gives you: * commands and (grouped) options (`my-program.js serve --port=5000`). * a dynamically generated help menu based on your arguments. > <img width="400" src="/screen.png"> * bash-completion shortcuts for commands and options. * and [tons more](/docs/api.md). ## Installation Stable version: ```bash npm i yargs ``` Bleeding edge version with the most recent features: ```bash npm i yargs@next ``` ## Usage : ### Simple Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node const {argv} = require('yargs') if (argv.ships > 3 && argv.distance < 53.5) { console.log('Plunder more riffiwobbles!') } else { console.log('Retreat from the xupptumblers!') } ``` ```bash $ ./plunder.js --ships=4 --distance=22 Plunder more riffiwobbles! $ ./plunder.js --ships 12 --distance 98.7 Retreat from the xupptumblers! ``` ### Complex Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node require('yargs') // eslint-disable-line .command('serve [port]', 'start the server', (yargs) => { yargs .positional('port', { describe: 'port to bind on', default: 5000 }) }, (argv) => { if (argv.verbose) console.info(`start server on :${argv.port}`) serve(argv.port) }) .option('verbose', { alias: 'v', type: 'boolean', description: 'Run with verbose logging' }) .argv ``` Run the example above with `--help` to see the help for the application. ## TypeScript yargs has type definitions at [@types/yargs][type-definitions]. ``` npm i @types/yargs --save-dev ``` See usage examples in [docs](/docs/typescript.md). ## Webpack See usage examples of yargs with webpack in [docs](/docs/webpack.md). ## Community : Having problems? want to contribute? join our [community slack](http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com). ## Documentation : ### Table of Contents * [Yargs' API](/docs/api.md) * [Examples](/docs/examples.md) * [Parsing Tricks](/docs/tricks.md) * [Stop the Parser](/docs/tricks.md#stop) * [Negating Boolean Arguments](/docs/tricks.md#negate) * [Numbers](/docs/tricks.md#numbers) * [Arrays](/docs/tricks.md#arrays) * [Objects](/docs/tricks.md#objects) * [Quotes](/docs/tricks.md#quotes) * [Advanced Topics](/docs/advanced.md) * [Composing Your App Using Commands](/docs/advanced.md#commands) * [Building Configurable CLI Apps](/docs/advanced.md#configuration) * [Customizing Yargs' Parser](/docs/advanced.md#customizing) * [Contributing](/contributing.md) [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/yargs/yargs [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/yargs/yargs/master.svg [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: http://standardjs.com/ [conventional-commits-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg [conventional-commits-url]: https://conventionalcommits.org/ [slack-image]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com/badge.svg [slack-url]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com [type-definitions]: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/master/types/yargs [coverage-image]: https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/yargs [coverage-url]: https://github.com/yargs/yargs/blob/master/.nycrc # Glob Match files using the patterns the shell uses, like stars and stuff. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-glob.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-glob/) [![Build Status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/kd7f3yftf7unxlsx?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/isaacs/node-glob) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/isaacs/node-glob/badge.svg?branch=master&service=github)](https://coveralls.io/github/isaacs/node-glob?branch=master) This is a glob implementation in JavaScript. It uses the `minimatch` library to do its matching. ![](logo/glob.png) ## Usage Install with npm ``` npm i glob ``` ```javascript var glob = require("glob") // options is optional glob("**/*.js", options, function (er, files) { // files is an array of filenames. // If the `nonull` option is set, and nothing // was found, then files is ["**/*.js"] // er is an error object or null. }) ``` ## Glob Primer "Globs" are the patterns you type when you do stuff like `ls *.js` on the command line, or put `build/*` in a `.gitignore` file. Before parsing the path part patterns, braced sections are expanded into a set. Braced sections start with `{` and end with `}`, with any number of comma-delimited sections within. Braced sections may contain slash characters, so `a{/b/c,bcd}` would expand into `a/b/c` and `abcd`. The following characters have special magic meaning when used in a path portion: * `*` Matches 0 or more characters in a single path portion * `?` Matches 1 character * `[...]` Matches a range of characters, similar to a RegExp range. If the first character of the range is `!` or `^` then it matches any character not in the range. * `!(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches anything that does not match any of the patterns provided. * `?(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches zero or one occurrence of the patterns provided. * `+(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches one or more occurrences of the patterns provided. * `*(a|b|c)` Matches zero or more occurrences of the patterns provided * `@(pattern|pat*|pat?erN)` Matches exactly one of the patterns provided * `**` If a "globstar" is alone in a path portion, then it matches zero or more directories and subdirectories searching for matches. It does not crawl symlinked directories. ### Dots If a file or directory path portion has a `.` as the first character, then it will not match any glob pattern unless that pattern's corresponding path part also has a `.` as its first character. For example, the pattern `a/.*/c` would match the file at `a/.b/c`. However the pattern `a/*/c` would not, because `*` does not start with a dot character. You can make glob treat dots as normal characters by setting `dot:true` in the options. ### Basename Matching If you set `matchBase:true` in the options, and the pattern has no slashes in it, then it will seek for any file anywhere in the tree with a matching basename. For example, `*.js` would match `test/simple/basic.js`. ### Empty Sets If no matching files are found, then an empty array is returned. This differs from the shell, where the pattern itself is returned. For example: $ echo a*s*d*f a*s*d*f To get the bash-style behavior, set the `nonull:true` in the options. ### See Also: * `man sh` * `man bash` (Search for "Pattern Matching") * `man 3 fnmatch` * `man 5 gitignore` * [minimatch documentation](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch) ## glob.hasMagic(pattern, [options]) Returns `true` if there are any special characters in the pattern, and `false` otherwise. Note that the options affect the results. If `noext:true` is set in the options object, then `+(a|b)` will not be considered a magic pattern. If the pattern has a brace expansion, like `a/{b/c,x/y}` then that is considered magical, unless `nobrace:true` is set in the options. ## glob(pattern, [options], cb) * `pattern` `{String}` Pattern to be matched * `options` `{Object}` * `cb` `{Function}` * `err` `{Error | null}` * `matches` `{Array<String>}` filenames found matching the pattern Perform an asynchronous glob search. ## glob.sync(pattern, [options]) * `pattern` `{String}` Pattern to be matched * `options` `{Object}` * return: `{Array<String>}` filenames found matching the pattern Perform a synchronous glob search. ## Class: glob.Glob Create a Glob object by instantiating the `glob.Glob` class. ```javascript var Glob = require("glob").Glob var mg = new Glob(pattern, options, cb) ``` It's an EventEmitter, and starts walking the filesystem to find matches immediately. ### new glob.Glob(pattern, [options], [cb]) * `pattern` `{String}` pattern to search for * `options` `{Object}` * `cb` `{Function}` Called when an error occurs, or matches are found * `err` `{Error | null}` * `matches` `{Array<String>}` filenames found matching the pattern Note that if the `sync` flag is set in the options, then matches will be immediately available on the `g.found` member. ### Properties * `minimatch` The minimatch object that the glob uses. * `options` The options object passed in. * `aborted` Boolean which is set to true when calling `abort()`. There is no way at this time to continue a glob search after aborting, but you can re-use the statCache to avoid having to duplicate syscalls. * `cache` Convenience object. Each field has the following possible values: * `false` - Path does not exist * `true` - Path exists * `'FILE'` - Path exists, and is not a directory * `'DIR'` - Path exists, and is a directory * `[file, entries, ...]` - Path exists, is a directory, and the array value is the results of `fs.readdir` * `statCache` Cache of `fs.stat` results, to prevent statting the same path multiple times. * `symlinks` A record of which paths are symbolic links, which is relevant in resolving `**` patterns. * `realpathCache` An optional object which is passed to `fs.realpath` to minimize unnecessary syscalls. It is stored on the instantiated Glob object, and may be re-used. ### Events * `end` When the matching is finished, this is emitted with all the matches found. If the `nonull` option is set, and no match was found, then the `matches` list contains the original pattern. The matches are sorted, unless the `nosort` flag is set. * `match` Every time a match is found, this is emitted with the specific thing that matched. It is not deduplicated or resolved to a realpath. * `error` Emitted when an unexpected error is encountered, or whenever any fs error occurs if `options.strict` is set. * `abort` When `abort()` is called, this event is raised. ### Methods * `pause` Temporarily stop the search * `resume` Resume the search * `abort` Stop the search forever ### Options All the options that can be passed to Minimatch can also be passed to Glob to change pattern matching behavior. Also, some have been added, or have glob-specific ramifications. All options are false by default, unless otherwise noted. All options are added to the Glob object, as well. If you are running many `glob` operations, you can pass a Glob object as the `options` argument to a subsequent operation to shortcut some `stat` and `readdir` calls. At the very least, you may pass in shared `symlinks`, `statCache`, `realpathCache`, and `cache` options, so that parallel glob operations will be sped up by sharing information about the filesystem. * `cwd` The current working directory in which to search. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. * `root` The place where patterns starting with `/` will be mounted onto. Defaults to `path.resolve(options.cwd, "/")` (`/` on Unix systems, and `C:\` or some such on Windows.) * `dot` Include `.dot` files in normal matches and `globstar` matches. Note that an explicit dot in a portion of the pattern will always match dot files. * `nomount` By default, a pattern starting with a forward-slash will be "mounted" onto the root setting, so that a valid filesystem path is returned. Set this flag to disable that behavior. * `mark` Add a `/` character to directory matches. Note that this requires additional stat calls. * `nosort` Don't sort the results. * `stat` Set to true to stat *all* results. This reduces performance somewhat, and is completely unnecessary, unless `readdir` is presumed to be an untrustworthy indicator of file existence. * `silent` When an unusual error is encountered when attempting to read a directory, a warning will be printed to stderr. Set the `silent` option to true to suppress these warnings. * `strict` When an unusual error is encountered when attempting to read a directory, the process will just continue on in search of other matches. Set the `strict` option to raise an error in these cases. * `cache` See `cache` property above. Pass in a previously generated cache object to save some fs calls. * `statCache` A cache of results of filesystem information, to prevent unnecessary stat calls. While it should not normally be necessary to set this, you may pass the statCache from one glob() call to the options object of another, if you know that the filesystem will not change between calls. (See "Race Conditions" below.) * `symlinks` A cache of known symbolic links. You may pass in a previously generated `symlinks` object to save `lstat` calls when resolving `**` matches. * `sync` DEPRECATED: use `glob.sync(pattern, opts)` instead. * `nounique` In some cases, brace-expanded patterns can result in the same file showing up multiple times in the result set. By default, this implementation prevents duplicates in the result set. Set this flag to disable that behavior. * `nonull` Set to never return an empty set, instead returning a set containing the pattern itself. This is the default in glob(3). * `debug` Set to enable debug logging in minimatch and glob. * `nobrace` Do not expand `{a,b}` and `{1..3}` brace sets. * `noglobstar` Do not match `**` against multiple filenames. (Ie, treat it as a normal `*` instead.) * `noext` Do not match `+(a|b)` "extglob" patterns. * `nocase` Perform a case-insensitive match. Note: on case-insensitive filesystems, non-magic patterns will match by default, since `stat` and `readdir` will not raise errors. * `matchBase` Perform a basename-only match if the pattern does not contain any slash characters. That is, `*.js` would be treated as equivalent to `**/*.js`, matching all js files in all directories. * `nodir` Do not match directories, only files. (Note: to match *only* directories, simply put a `/` at the end of the pattern.) * `ignore` Add a pattern or an array of glob patterns to exclude matches. Note: `ignore` patterns are *always* in `dot:true` mode, regardless of any other settings. * `follow` Follow symlinked directories when expanding `**` patterns. Note that this can result in a lot of duplicate references in the presence of cyclic links. * `realpath` Set to true to call `fs.realpath` on all of the results. In the case of a symlink that cannot be resolved, the full absolute path to the matched entry is returned (though it will usually be a broken symlink) * `absolute` Set to true to always receive absolute paths for matched files. Unlike `realpath`, this also affects the values returned in the `match` event. ## Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations While strict compliance with the existing standards is a worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between node-glob and other implementations, and are intentional. The double-star character `**` is supported by default, unless the `noglobstar` flag is set. This is supported in the manner of bsdglob and bash 4.3, where `**` only has special significance if it is the only thing in a path part. That is, `a/**/b` will match `a/x/y/b`, but `a/**b` will not. Note that symlinked directories are not crawled as part of a `**`, though their contents may match against subsequent portions of the pattern. This prevents infinite loops and duplicates and the like. If an escaped pattern has no matches, and the `nonull` flag is set, then glob returns the pattern as-provided, rather than interpreting the character escapes. For example, `glob.match([], "\\*a\\?")` will return `"\\*a\\?"` rather than `"*a?"`. This is akin to setting the `nullglob` option in bash, except that it does not resolve escaped pattern characters. If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before any other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern like `+(a|{b),c)}`, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is expanded **first** into the set of `+(a|b)` and `+(a|c)`, and those patterns are checked for validity. Since those two are valid, matching proceeds. ### Comments and Negation Previously, this module let you mark a pattern as a "comment" if it started with a `#` character, or a "negated" pattern if it started with a `!` character. These options were deprecated in version 5, and removed in version 6. To specify things that should not match, use the `ignore` option. ## Windows **Please only use forward-slashes in glob expressions.** Though windows uses either `/` or `\` as its path separator, only `/` characters are used by this glob implementation. You must use forward-slashes **only** in glob expressions. Back-slashes will always be interpreted as escape characters, not path separators. Results from absolute patterns such as `/foo/*` are mounted onto the root setting using `path.join`. On windows, this will by default result in `/foo/*` matching `C:\foo\bar.txt`. ## Race Conditions Glob searching, by its very nature, is susceptible to race conditions, since it relies on directory walking and such. As a result, it is possible that a file that exists when glob looks for it may have been deleted or modified by the time it returns the result. As part of its internal implementation, this program caches all stat and readdir calls that it makes, in order to cut down on system overhead. However, this also makes it even more susceptible to races, especially if the cache or statCache objects are reused between glob calls. Users are thus advised not to use a glob result as a guarantee of filesystem state in the face of rapid changes. For the vast majority of operations, this is never a problem. ## Glob Logo Glob's logo was created by [Tanya Brassie](http://tanyabrassie.com/). Logo files can be found [here](https://github.com/isaacs/node-glob/tree/master/logo). The logo is licensed under a [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). ## Contributing Any change to behavior (including bugfixes) must come with a test. Patches that fail tests or reduce performance will be rejected. ``` # to run tests npm test # to re-generate test fixtures npm run test-regen # to benchmark against bash/zsh npm run bench # to profile javascript npm run prof ``` ![](oh-my-glob.gif) # ASBuild A simple build tool for [AssemblyScript](https://assemblyscript.org) projects, similar to `cargo`, etc. ## Usage ``` asb [entry file] [options] -- [args passed to asc] ``` ### Background AssemblyScript greater than v0.14.4 provides a `asconfig.json` configuration file that can be used to describe the options for building a project. ASBuild uses this and some defaults to create an easier CLI interface. ### Defaults #### Project structure ``` project/ package.json asconfig.json assembly/ index.ts build/ release/ project.wasm debug/ project.wasm ``` - If no entry file passed and no `entry` field is in `asconfig.json`, `project/assembly/index.ts` is assumed. - `asconfig.json` allows for options for different compile targets, e.g. release, debug, etc. `asc` defaults to the release target. - The default build directory is `./build`, and artifacts are placed at `./build/<target>/packageName.wasm`. ### Workspaces If a `workspace` field is added to a top level `asconfig.json` file, then each path in the array is built and placed into the top level `outDir`. For example, `asconfig.json`: ```json { "workspaces": ["a", "b"] } ``` Running `asb` in the directory below will use the top level build directory to place all the binaries. ``` project/ package.json asconfig.json a/ asconfig.json assembly/ index.ts b/ asconfig.json assembly/ index.ts build/ release/ a.wasm b.wasm debug/ a.wasm b.wasm ``` To see an example in action check out the [test workspace](./test) Browser-friendly inheritance fully compatible with standard node.js [inherits](http://nodejs.org/api/util.html#util_util_inherits_constructor_superconstructor). This package exports standard `inherits` from node.js `util` module in node environment, but also provides alternative browser-friendly implementation through [browser field](https://gist.github.com/shtylman/4339901). Alternative implementation is a literal copy of standard one located in standalone module to avoid requiring of `util`. It also has a shim for old browsers with no `Object.create` support. While keeping you sure you are using standard `inherits` implementation in node.js environment, it allows bundlers such as [browserify](https://github.com/substack/node-browserify) to not include full `util` package to your client code if all you need is just `inherits` function. It worth, because browser shim for `util` package is large and `inherits` is often the single function you need from it. It's recommended to use this package instead of `require('util').inherits` for any code that has chances to be used not only in node.js but in browser too. ## usage ```js var inherits = require('inherits'); // then use exactly as the standard one ``` ## note on version ~1.0 Version ~1.0 had completely different motivation and is not compatible neither with 2.0 nor with standard node.js `inherits`. If you are using version ~1.0 and planning to switch to ~2.0, be careful: * new version uses `super_` instead of `super` for referencing superclass * new version overwrites current prototype while old one preserves any existing fields on it # wrappy Callback wrapping utility ## USAGE ```javascript var wrappy = require("wrappy") // var wrapper = wrappy(wrapperFunction) // make sure a cb is called only once // See also: http://npm.im/once for this specific use case var once = wrappy(function (cb) { var called = false return function () { if (called) return called = true return cb.apply(this, arguments) } }) function printBoo () { console.log('boo') } // has some rando property printBoo.iAmBooPrinter = true var onlyPrintOnce = once(printBoo) onlyPrintOnce() // prints 'boo' onlyPrintOnce() // does nothing // random property is retained! assert.equal(onlyPrintOnce.iAmBooPrinter, true) ``` Standard library ================ Standard library components for use with `tsc` (portable) and `asc` (assembly). Base configurations (.json) and definition files (.d.ts) are relevant to `tsc` only and not used by `asc`. # once Only call a function once. ## usage ```javascript var once = require('once') function load (file, cb) { cb = once(cb) loader.load('file') loader.once('load', cb) loader.once('error', cb) } ``` Or add to the Function.prototype in a responsible way: ```javascript // only has to be done once require('once').proto() function load (file, cb) { cb = cb.once() loader.load('file') loader.once('load', cb) loader.once('error', cb) } ``` Ironically, the prototype feature makes this module twice as complicated as necessary. To check whether you function has been called, use `fn.called`. Once the function is called for the first time the return value of the original function is saved in `fn.value` and subsequent calls will continue to return this value. ```javascript var once = require('once') function load (cb) { cb = once(cb) var stream = createStream() stream.once('data', cb) stream.once('end', function () { if (!cb.called) cb(new Error('not found')) }) } ``` ## `once.strict(func)` Throw an error if the function is called twice. Some functions are expected to be called only once. Using `once` for them would potentially hide logical errors. In the example below, the `greet` function has to call the callback only once: ```javascript function greet (name, cb) { // return is missing from the if statement // when no name is passed, the callback is called twice if (!name) cb('Hello anonymous') cb('Hello ' + name) } function log (msg) { console.log(msg) } // this will print 'Hello anonymous' but the logical error will be missed greet(null, once(msg)) // once.strict will print 'Hello anonymous' and throw an error when the callback will be called the second time greet(null, once.strict(msg)) ``` # color-convert [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/Qix-/color-convert.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/Qix-/color-convert) Color-convert is a color conversion library for JavaScript and node. It converts all ways between `rgb`, `hsl`, `hsv`, `hwb`, `cmyk`, `ansi`, `ansi16`, `hex` strings, and CSS `keyword`s (will round to closest): ```js var convert = require('color-convert'); convert.rgb.hsl(140, 200, 100); // [96, 48, 59] convert.keyword.rgb('blue'); // [0, 0, 255] var rgbChannels = convert.rgb.channels; // 3 var cmykChannels = convert.cmyk.channels; // 4 var ansiChannels = convert.ansi16.channels; // 1 ``` # Install ```console $ npm install color-convert ``` # API Simply get the property of the _from_ and _to_ conversion that you're looking for. All functions have a rounded and unrounded variant. By default, return values are rounded. To get the unrounded (raw) results, simply tack on `.raw` to the function. All 'from' functions have a hidden property called `.channels` that indicates the number of channels the function expects (not including alpha). ```js var convert = require('color-convert'); // Hex to LAB convert.hex.lab('DEADBF'); // [ 76, 21, -2 ] convert.hex.lab.raw('DEADBF'); // [ 75.56213190997677, 20.653827952644754, -2.290532499330533 ] // RGB to CMYK convert.rgb.cmyk(167, 255, 4); // [ 35, 0, 98, 0 ] convert.rgb.cmyk.raw(167, 255, 4); // [ 34.509803921568626, 0, 98.43137254901961, 0 ] ``` ### Arrays All functions that accept multiple arguments also support passing an array. Note that this does **not** apply to functions that convert from a color that only requires one value (e.g. `keyword`, `ansi256`, `hex`, etc.) ```js var convert = require('color-convert'); convert.rgb.hex(123, 45, 67); // '7B2D43' convert.rgb.hex([123, 45, 67]); // '7B2D43' ``` ## Routing Conversions that don't have an _explicitly_ defined conversion (in [conversions.js](conversions.js)), but can be converted by means of sub-conversions (e.g. XYZ -> **RGB** -> CMYK), are automatically routed together. This allows just about any color model supported by `color-convert` to be converted to any other model, so long as a sub-conversion path exists. This is also true for conversions requiring more than one step in between (e.g. LCH -> **LAB** -> **XYZ** -> **RGB** -> Hex). Keep in mind that extensive conversions _may_ result in a loss of precision, and exist only to be complete. For a list of "direct" (single-step) conversions, see [conversions.js](conversions.js). # Contribute If there is a new model you would like to support, or want to add a direct conversion between two existing models, please send us a pull request. # License Copyright &copy; 2011-2016, Heather Arthur and Josh Junon. Licensed under the [MIT License](LICENSE). Shims used when bundling asc for browser usage. # base-x [![NPM Package](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/base-x.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/base-x) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/cryptocoinjs/base-x.svg?branch=master&style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/cryptocoinjs/base-x) [![js-standard-style](https://cdn.rawgit.com/feross/standard/master/badge.svg)](https://github.com/feross/standard) Fast base encoding / decoding of any given alphabet using bitcoin style leading zero compression. **WARNING:** This module is **NOT RFC3548** compliant, it cannot be used for base16 (hex), base32, or base64 encoding in a standards compliant manner. ## Example Base58 ``` javascript var BASE58 = '123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz' var bs58 = require('base-x')(BASE58) var decoded = bs58.decode('5Kd3NBUAdUnhyzenEwVLy9pBKxSwXvE9FMPyR4UKZvpe6E3AgLr') console.log(decoded) // => <Buffer 80 ed db dc 11 68 f1 da ea db d3 e4 4c 1e 3f 8f 5a 28 4c 20 29 f7 8a d2 6a f9 85 83 a4 99 de 5b 19> console.log(bs58.encode(decoded)) // => 5Kd3NBUAdUnhyzenEwVLy9pBKxSwXvE9FMPyR4UKZvpe6E3AgLr ``` ### Alphabets See below for a list of commonly recognized alphabets, and their respective base. Base | Alphabet ------------- | ------------- 2 | `01` 8 | `01234567` 11 | `0123456789a` 16 | `0123456789abcdef` 32 | `0123456789ABCDEFGHJKMNPQRSTVWXYZ` 32 | `ybndrfg8ejkmcpqxot1uwisza345h769` (z-base-32) 36 | `0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz` 58 | `123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz` 62 | `0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ` 64 | `ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/` 66 | `ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789-_.!~` ## How it works It encodes octet arrays by doing long divisions on all significant digits in the array, creating a representation of that number in the new base. Then for every leading zero in the input (not significant as a number) it will encode as a single leader character. This is the first in the alphabet and will decode as 8 bits. The other characters depend upon the base. For example, a base58 alphabet packs roughly 5.858 bits per character. This means the encoded string 000f (using a base16, 0-f alphabet) will actually decode to 4 bytes unlike a canonical hex encoding which uniformly packs 4 bits into each character. While unusual, this does mean that no padding is required and it works for bases like 43. ## LICENSE [MIT](LICENSE) A direct derivation of the base58 implementation from [`bitcoin/bitcoin`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/f1e2f2a85962c1664e4e55471061af0eaa798d40/src/base58.cpp), generalized for variable length alphabets. # binary-install Install .tar.gz binary applications via npm ## Usage This library provides a single class `Binary` that takes a download url and some optional arguments. You **must** provide either `name` or `installDirectory` when creating your `Binary`. | option | decription | | ---------------- | --------------------------------------------- | | name | The name of your binary | | installDirectory | A path to the directory to install the binary | If an `installDirectory` is not provided, the binary will be installed at your OS specific config directory. On MacOS it defaults to `~/Library/Preferences/${name}-nodejs` After your `Binary` has been created, you can run `.install()` to install the binary, and `.run()` to run it. ### Example This is meant to be used as a library - create your `Binary` with your desired options, then call `.install()` in the `postinstall` of your `package.json`, `.run()` in the `bin` section of your `package.json`, and `.uninstall()` in the `preuninstall` section of your `package.json`. See [this example project](/example) to see how to create an npm package that installs and runs a binary using the Github releases API. # Near Bindings Generator Transforms the Assembyscript AST to serialize exported functions and add `encode` and `decode` functions for generating and parsing JSON strings. ## Using via CLI After installling, `npm install nearprotocol/near-bindgen-as`, it can be added to the cli arguments of the assemblyscript compiler you must add the following: ```bash asc <file> --transform near-bindgen-as ... ``` This module also adds a binary `near-asc` which adds the default arguments required to build near contracts as well as the transformer. ```bash near-asc <input file> <output file> ``` ## Using a script to compile Another way is to add a file such as `asconfig.js` such as: ```js const compile = require("near-bindgen-as/compiler").compile; compile("assembly/index.ts", // input file "out/index.wasm", // output file [ // "-O1", // Optional arguments "--debug", "--measure" ], // Prints out the final cli arguments passed to compiler. {verbose: true} ); ``` It can then be built with `node asconfig.js`. There is an example of this in the test directory. # which-module > Find the module object for something that was require()d [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/nexdrew/which-module.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/nexdrew/which-module) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/nexdrew/which-module/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/nexdrew/which-module?branch=master) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) Find the `module` object in `require.cache` for something that was `require()`d or `import`ed - essentially a reverse `require()` lookup. Useful for libs that want to e.g. lookup a filename for a module or submodule that it did not `require()` itself. ## Install and Usage ``` npm install --save which-module ``` ```js const whichModule = require('which-module') console.log(whichModule(require('something'))) // Module { // id: '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/index.js', // exports: [Function], // parent: ..., // filename: '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/index.js', // loaded: true, // children: [], // paths: [ '/path/to/project/node_modules/something/node_modules', // '/path/to/project/node_modules', // '/path/to/node_modules', // '/path/node_modules', // '/node_modules' ] } ``` ## API ### `whichModule(exported)` Return the [`module` object](https://nodejs.org/api/modules.html#modules_the_module_object), if any, that represents the given argument in the `require.cache`. `exported` can be anything that was previously `require()`d or `import`ed as a module, submodule, or dependency - which means `exported` is identical to the `module.exports` returned by this method. If `exported` did not come from the `exports` of a `module` in `require.cache`, then this method returns `null`. ## License ISC © Contributors # Visitor utilities for AssemblyScript Compiler transformers ## Example ### List Fields The transformer: ```ts import { ClassDeclaration, FieldDeclaration, MethodDeclaration, } from "../../as"; import { ClassDecorator, registerDecorator } from "../decorator"; import { toString } from "../utils"; class ListMembers extends ClassDecorator { visitFieldDeclaration(node: FieldDeclaration): void { if (!node.name) console.log(toString(node) + "\n"); const name = toString(node.name); const _type = toString(node.type!); this.stdout.write(name + ": " + _type + "\n"); } visitMethodDeclaration(node: MethodDeclaration): void { const name = toString(node.name); if (name == "constructor") { return; } const sig = toString(node.signature); this.stdout.write(name + ": " + sig + "\n"); } visitClassDeclaration(node: ClassDeclaration): void { this.visit(node.members); } get name(): string { return "list"; } } export = registerDecorator(new ListMembers()); ``` assembly/foo.ts: ```ts @list class Foo { a: u8; b: bool; i: i32; } ``` And then compile with `--transform` flag: ``` asc assembly/foo.ts --transform ./dist/examples/list --noEmit ``` Which prints the following to the console: ``` a: u8 b: bool i: i32 ``` # fs-minipass Filesystem streams based on [minipass](http://npm.im/minipass). 4 classes are exported: - ReadStream - ReadStreamSync - WriteStream - WriteStreamSync When using `ReadStreamSync`, all of the data is made available immediately upon consuming the stream. Nothing is buffered in memory when the stream is constructed. If the stream is piped to a writer, then it will synchronously `read()` and emit data into the writer as fast as the writer can consume it. (That is, it will respect backpressure.) If you call `stream.read()` then it will read the entire file and return the contents. When using `WriteStreamSync`, every write is flushed to the file synchronously. If your writes all come in a single tick, then it'll write it all out in a single tick. It's as synchronous as you are. The async versions work much like their node builtin counterparts, with the exception of introducing significantly less Stream machinery overhead. ## USAGE It's just streams, you pipe them or read() them or write() to them. ```js const fsm = require('fs-minipass') const readStream = new fsm.ReadStream('file.txt') const writeStream = new fsm.WriteStream('output.txt') writeStream.write('some file header or whatever\n') readStream.pipe(writeStream) ``` ## ReadStream(path, options) Path string is required, but somewhat irrelevant if an open file descriptor is passed in as an option. Options: - `fd` Pass in a numeric file descriptor, if the file is already open. - `readSize` The size of reads to do, defaults to 16MB - `size` The size of the file, if known. Prevents zero-byte read() call at the end. - `autoClose` Set to `false` to prevent the file descriptor from being closed when the file is done being read. ## WriteStream(path, options) Path string is required, but somewhat irrelevant if an open file descriptor is passed in as an option. Options: - `fd` Pass in a numeric file descriptor, if the file is already open. - `mode` The mode to create the file with. Defaults to `0o666`. - `start` The position in the file to start reading. If not specified, then the file will start writing at position zero, and be truncated by default. - `autoClose` Set to `false` to prevent the file descriptor from being closed when the stream is ended. - `flags` Flags to use when opening the file. Irrelevant if `fd` is passed in, since file won't be opened in that case. Defaults to `'a'` if a `pos` is specified, or `'w'` otherwise. A JSON with color names and its values. Based on http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-color/#named-colors. [![NPM](https://nodei.co/npm/color-name.png?mini=true)](https://nodei.co/npm/color-name/) ```js var colors = require('color-name'); colors.red //[255,0,0] ``` <a href="LICENSE"><img src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0c/MIT_logo.svg" width="120"/></a> # universal-url [![NPM Version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Dependency Monitor][greenkeeper-image]][greenkeeper-url] > WHATWG [`URL`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/API/URL) for Node & Browser. * For Node.js versions `>= 8`, the native implementation will be used. * For Node.js versions `< 8`, a [shim](https://npmjs.com/whatwg-url) will be used. * For web browsers without a native implementation, the same shim will be used. ## Installation [Node.js](http://nodejs.org/) `>= 6` is required. To install, type this at the command line: ```shell npm install universal-url ``` ## Usage ```js const {URL, URLSearchParams} = require('universal-url'); const url = new URL('http://domain/'); const params = new URLSearchParams('?param=value'); ``` Global shim: ```js require('universal-url').shim(); const url = new URL('http://domain/'); const params = new URLSearchParams('?param=value'); ``` ## Browserify/etc The bundled file size of this library can be large for a web browser. If this is a problem, try using [universal-url-lite](https://npmjs.com/universal-url-lite) in your build as an alias for this module. [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/universal-url.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/universal-url [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/stevenvachon/universal-url.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/stevenvachon/universal-url [greenkeeper-image]: https://badges.greenkeeper.io/stevenvachon/universal-url.svg [greenkeeper-url]: https://greenkeeper.io/ <p align="center"> <img width="250" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yargs/yargs/master/yargs-logo.png"> </p> <h1 align="center"> Yargs </h1> <p align="center"> <b >Yargs be a node.js library fer hearties tryin' ter parse optstrings</b> </p> <br> ![ci](https://github.com/yargs/yargs/workflows/ci/badge.svg) [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Coverage][coverage-image]][coverage-url] [![Conventional Commits][conventional-commits-image]][conventional-commits-url] [![Slack][slack-image]][slack-url] ## Description Yargs helps you build interactive command line tools, by parsing arguments and generating an elegant user interface. It gives you: * commands and (grouped) options (`my-program.js serve --port=5000`). * a dynamically generated help menu based on your arguments: ``` mocha [spec..] Run tests with Mocha Commands mocha inspect [spec..] Run tests with Mocha [default] mocha init <path> create a client-side Mocha setup at <path> Rules & Behavior --allow-uncaught Allow uncaught errors to propagate [boolean] --async-only, -A Require all tests to use a callback (async) or return a Promise [boolean] ``` * bash-completion shortcuts for commands and options. * and [tons more](/docs/api.md). ## Installation Stable version: ```bash npm i yargs ``` Bleeding edge version with the most recent features: ```bash npm i yargs@next ``` ## Usage ### Simple Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node const yargs = require('yargs/yargs') const { hideBin } = require('yargs/helpers') const argv = yargs(hideBin(process.argv)).argv if (argv.ships > 3 && argv.distance < 53.5) { console.log('Plunder more riffiwobbles!') } else { console.log('Retreat from the xupptumblers!') } ``` ```bash $ ./plunder.js --ships=4 --distance=22 Plunder more riffiwobbles! $ ./plunder.js --ships 12 --distance 98.7 Retreat from the xupptumblers! ``` ### Complex Example ```javascript #!/usr/bin/env node const yargs = require('yargs/yargs') const { hideBin } = require('yargs/helpers') yargs(hideBin(process.argv)) .command('serve [port]', 'start the server', (yargs) => { yargs .positional('port', { describe: 'port to bind on', default: 5000 }) }, (argv) => { if (argv.verbose) console.info(`start server on :${argv.port}`) serve(argv.port) }) .option('verbose', { alias: 'v', type: 'boolean', description: 'Run with verbose logging' }) .argv ``` Run the example above with `--help` to see the help for the application. ## Supported Platforms ### TypeScript yargs has type definitions at [@types/yargs][type-definitions]. ``` npm i @types/yargs --save-dev ``` See usage examples in [docs](/docs/typescript.md). ### Deno As of `v16`, `yargs` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno): ```typescript import yargs from 'https://deno.land/x/yargs/deno.ts' import { Arguments } from 'https://deno.land/x/yargs/deno-types.ts' yargs(Deno.args) .command('download <files...>', 'download a list of files', (yargs: any) => { return yargs.positional('files', { describe: 'a list of files to do something with' }) }, (argv: Arguments) => { console.info(argv) }) .strictCommands() .demandCommand(1) .argv ``` ### ESM As of `v16`,`yargs` supports ESM imports: ```js import yargs from 'yargs' import { hideBin } from 'yargs/helpers' yargs(hideBin(process.argv)) .command('curl <url>', 'fetch the contents of the URL', () => {}, (argv) => { console.info(argv) }) .demandCommand(1) .argv ``` ### Usage in Browser See examples of using yargs in the browser in [docs](/docs/browser.md). ## Community Having problems? want to contribute? join our [community slack](http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com). ## Documentation ### Table of Contents * [Yargs' API](/docs/api.md) * [Examples](/docs/examples.md) * [Parsing Tricks](/docs/tricks.md) * [Stop the Parser](/docs/tricks.md#stop) * [Negating Boolean Arguments](/docs/tricks.md#negate) * [Numbers](/docs/tricks.md#numbers) * [Arrays](/docs/tricks.md#arrays) * [Objects](/docs/tricks.md#objects) * [Quotes](/docs/tricks.md#quotes) * [Advanced Topics](/docs/advanced.md) * [Composing Your App Using Commands](/docs/advanced.md#commands) * [Building Configurable CLI Apps](/docs/advanced.md#configuration) * [Customizing Yargs' Parser](/docs/advanced.md#customizing) * [Bundling yargs](/docs/bundling.md) * [Contributing](/contributing.md) ## Supported Node.js Versions Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track [Node.js' release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/). Here's [a post on why we think this is important](https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/maintainers-should-consider-following-node-js-release-schedule-ab08ed4de71a). [npm-url]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: http://standardjs.com/ [conventional-commits-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg [conventional-commits-url]: https://conventionalcommits.org/ [slack-image]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com/badge.svg [slack-url]: http://devtoolscommunity.herokuapp.com [type-definitions]: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/master/types/yargs [coverage-image]: https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/yargs [coverage-url]: https://github.com/yargs/yargs/blob/master/.nycrc # y18n [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] [![Coverage Status][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url] [![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![js-standard-style][standard-image]][standard-url] [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) The bare-bones internationalization library used by yargs. Inspired by [i18n](https://www.npmjs.com/package/i18n). ## Examples _simple string translation:_ ```js var __ = require('y18n').__ console.log(__('my awesome string %s', 'foo')) ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _using tagged template literals_ ```js var __ = require('y18n').__ var str = 'foo' console.log(__`my awesome string ${str}`) ``` output: `my awesome string foo` _pluralization support:_ ```js var __n = require('y18n').__n console.log(__n('one fish %s', '%d fishes %s', 2, 'foo')) ``` output: `2 fishes foo` ## JSON Language Files The JSON language files should be stored in a `./locales` folder. File names correspond to locales, e.g., `en.json`, `pirate.json`. When strings are observed for the first time they will be added to the JSON file corresponding to the current locale. ## Methods ### require('y18n')(config) Create an instance of y18n with the config provided, options include: * `directory`: the locale directory, default `./locales`. * `updateFiles`: should newly observed strings be updated in file, default `true`. * `locale`: what locale should be used. * `fallbackToLanguage`: should fallback to a language-only file (e.g. `en.json`) be allowed if a file matching the locale does not exist (e.g. `en_US.json`), default `true`. ### y18n.\_\_(str, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string, `%s` will be replaced with `arg`s. This function can also be used as a tag for a template literal. You can use it like this: <code>__&#96;hello ${'world'}&#96;</code>. This will be equivalent to `__('hello %s', 'world')`. ### y18n.\_\_n(singularString, pluralString, count, arg, arg, arg) Print a localized string with appropriate pluralization. If `%d` is provided in the string, the `count` will replace this placeholder. ### y18n.setLocale(str) Set the current locale being used. ### y18n.getLocale() What locale is currently being used? ### y18n.updateLocale(obj) Update the current locale with the key value pairs in `obj`. ## License ISC [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/yargs/y18n [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/yargs/y18n.svg [coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/github/yargs/y18n [coveralls-image]: https://img.shields.io/coveralls/yargs/y18n.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/y18n [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/y18n.svg [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: https://github.com/feross/standard # near-sdk-core This package contain a convenient interface for interacting with NEAR's host runtime. To see the functions that are provided by the host node see [`env.ts`](./assembly/env/env.ts). # hasurl [![NPM Version][npm-image]][npm-url] [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url] > Determine whether Node.js' native [WHATWG `URL`](https://nodejs.org/api/url.html#url_the_whatwg_url_api) implementation is available. ## Installation [Node.js](http://nodejs.org/) `>= 4` is required. To install, type this at the command line: ```shell npm install hasurl ``` ## Usage ```js const hasURL = require('hasurl'); if (hasURL()) { // supported } else { // fallback } ``` [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/hasurl.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/hasurl [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/stevenvachon/hasurl.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/stevenvachon/hasurl # minimatch A minimal matching utility. [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/isaacs/minimatch.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/isaacs/minimatch) This is the matching library used internally by npm. It works by converting glob expressions into JavaScript `RegExp` objects. ## Usage ```javascript var minimatch = require("minimatch") minimatch("bar.foo", "*.foo") // true! minimatch("bar.foo", "*.bar") // false! minimatch("bar.foo", "*.+(bar|foo)", { debug: true }) // true, and noisy! ``` ## Features Supports these glob features: * Brace Expansion * Extended glob matching * "Globstar" `**` matching See: * `man sh` * `man bash` * `man 3 fnmatch` * `man 5 gitignore` ## Minimatch Class Create a minimatch object by instantiating the `minimatch.Minimatch` class. ```javascript var Minimatch = require("minimatch").Minimatch var mm = new Minimatch(pattern, options) ``` ### Properties * `pattern` The original pattern the minimatch object represents. * `options` The options supplied to the constructor. * `set` A 2-dimensional array of regexp or string expressions. Each row in the array corresponds to a brace-expanded pattern. Each item in the row corresponds to a single path-part. For example, the pattern `{a,b/c}/d` would expand to a set of patterns like: [ [ a, d ] , [ b, c, d ] ] If a portion of the pattern doesn't have any "magic" in it (that is, it's something like `"foo"` rather than `fo*o?`), then it will be left as a string rather than converted to a regular expression. * `regexp` Created by the `makeRe` method. A single regular expression expressing the entire pattern. This is useful in cases where you wish to use the pattern somewhat like `fnmatch(3)` with `FNM_PATH` enabled. * `negate` True if the pattern is negated. * `comment` True if the pattern is a comment. * `empty` True if the pattern is `""`. ### Methods * `makeRe` Generate the `regexp` member if necessary, and return it. Will return `false` if the pattern is invalid. * `match(fname)` Return true if the filename matches the pattern, or false otherwise. * `matchOne(fileArray, patternArray, partial)` Take a `/`-split filename, and match it against a single row in the `regExpSet`. This method is mainly for internal use, but is exposed so that it can be used by a glob-walker that needs to avoid excessive filesystem calls. All other methods are internal, and will be called as necessary. ### minimatch(path, pattern, options) Main export. Tests a path against the pattern using the options. ```javascript var isJS = minimatch(file, "*.js", { matchBase: true }) ``` ### minimatch.filter(pattern, options) Returns a function that tests its supplied argument, suitable for use with `Array.filter`. Example: ```javascript var javascripts = fileList.filter(minimatch.filter("*.js", {matchBase: true})) ``` ### minimatch.match(list, pattern, options) Match against the list of files, in the style of fnmatch or glob. If nothing is matched, and options.nonull is set, then return a list containing the pattern itself. ```javascript var javascripts = minimatch.match(fileList, "*.js", {matchBase: true})) ``` ### minimatch.makeRe(pattern, options) Make a regular expression object from the pattern. ## Options All options are `false` by default. ### debug Dump a ton of stuff to stderr. ### nobrace Do not expand `{a,b}` and `{1..3}` brace sets. ### noglobstar Disable `**` matching against multiple folder names. ### dot Allow patterns to match filenames starting with a period, even if the pattern does not explicitly have a period in that spot. Note that by default, `a/**/b` will **not** match `a/.d/b`, unless `dot` is set. ### noext Disable "extglob" style patterns like `+(a|b)`. ### nocase Perform a case-insensitive match. ### nonull When a match is not found by `minimatch.match`, return a list containing the pattern itself if this option is set. When not set, an empty list is returned if there are no matches. ### matchBase If set, then patterns without slashes will be matched against the basename of the path if it contains slashes. For example, `a?b` would match the path `/xyz/123/acb`, but not `/xyz/acb/123`. ### nocomment Suppress the behavior of treating `#` at the start of a pattern as a comment. ### nonegate Suppress the behavior of treating a leading `!` character as negation. ### flipNegate Returns from negate expressions the same as if they were not negated. (Ie, true on a hit, false on a miss.) ## Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations While strict compliance with the existing standards is a worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between minimatch and other implementations, and are intentional. If the pattern starts with a `!` character, then it is negated. Set the `nonegate` flag to suppress this behavior, and treat leading `!` characters normally. This is perhaps relevant if you wish to start the pattern with a negative extglob pattern like `!(a|B)`. Multiple `!` characters at the start of a pattern will negate the pattern multiple times. If a pattern starts with `#`, then it is treated as a comment, and will not match anything. Use `\#` to match a literal `#` at the start of a line, or set the `nocomment` flag to suppress this behavior. The double-star character `**` is supported by default, unless the `noglobstar` flag is set. This is supported in the manner of bsdglob and bash 4.1, where `**` only has special significance if it is the only thing in a path part. That is, `a/**/b` will match `a/x/y/b`, but `a/**b` will not. If an escaped pattern has no matches, and the `nonull` flag is set, then minimatch.match returns the pattern as-provided, rather than interpreting the character escapes. For example, `minimatch.match([], "\\*a\\?")` will return `"\\*a\\?"` rather than `"*a?"`. This is akin to setting the `nullglob` option in bash, except that it does not resolve escaped pattern characters. If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before any other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern like `+(a|{b),c)}`, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is expanded **first** into the set of `+(a|b)` and `+(a|c)`, and those patterns are checked for validity. Since those two are valid, matching proceeds. binaryen.js =========== **binaryen.js** is a port of [Binaryen](https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen) to the Web, allowing you to generate [WebAssembly](https://webassembly.org) using a JavaScript API. <a href="https://github.com/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/actions?query=workflow%3ABuild"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/Build/master?label=build&logo=github" alt="Build status" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/binaryen"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/binaryen.svg?label=latest&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm version" /></a> <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/binaryen"><img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/binaryen/nightly.svg?label=nightly&color=007acc&logo=npm" alt="npm nightly version" /></a> Usage ----- ``` $> npm install binaryen ``` ```js var binaryen = require("binaryen"); // Create a module with a single function var myModule = new binaryen.Module(); myModule.addFunction("add", binaryen.createType([ binaryen.i32, binaryen.i32 ]), binaryen.i32, [ binaryen.i32 ], myModule.block(null, [ myModule.local.set(2, myModule.i32.add( myModule.local.get(0, binaryen.i32), myModule.local.get(1, binaryen.i32) ) ), myModule.return( myModule.local.get(2, binaryen.i32) ) ]) ); myModule.addFunctionExport("add", "add"); // Optimize the module using default passes and levels myModule.optimize(); // Validate the module if (!myModule.validate()) throw new Error("validation error"); // Generate text format and binary var textData = myModule.emitText(); var wasmData = myModule.emitBinary(); // Example usage with the WebAssembly API var compiled = new WebAssembly.Module(wasmData); var instance = new WebAssembly.Instance(compiled, {}); console.log(instance.exports.add(41, 1)); ``` The buildbot also publishes nightly versions once a day if there have been changes. The latest nightly can be installed through ``` $> npm install binaryen@nightly ``` or you can use one of the [previous versions](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/tags) instead if necessary. ### Usage with a CDN * From GitHub via [jsDelivr](https://www.jsdelivr.com):<br /> `https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js@VERSION/index.js` * From npm via [jsDelivr](https://www.jsdelivr.com):<br /> `https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/binaryen@VERSION/index.js` * From npm via [unpkg](https://unpkg.com):<br /> `https://unpkg.com/binaryen@VERSION/index.js` Replace `VERSION` with a [specific version](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/binaryen.js/releases) or omit it (not recommended in production) to use master/latest. API --- **Please note** that the Binaryen API is evolving fast and that definitions and documentation provided by the package tend to get out of sync despite our best efforts. It's a bot after all. If you rely on binaryen.js and spot an issue, please consider sending a PR our way by updating [index.d.ts](./index.d.ts) and [README.md](./README.md) to reflect the [current API](https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen/blob/master/src/js/binaryen.js-post.js). <!-- START doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update --> <!-- DON'T EDIT THIS SECTION, INSTEAD RE-RUN doctoc TO UPDATE --> ### Contents - [Types](#types) - [Module construction](#module-construction) - [Module manipulation](#module-manipulation) - [Module validation](#module-validation) - [Module optimization](#module-optimization) - [Module creation](#module-creation) - [Expression construction](#expression-construction) - [Control flow](#control-flow) - [Variable accesses](#variable-accesses) - [Integer operations](#integer-operations) - [Floating point operations](#floating-point-operations) - [Datatype conversions](#datatype-conversions) - [Function calls](#function-calls) - [Linear memory accesses](#linear-memory-accesses) - [Host operations](#host-operations) - [Vector operations 🦄](#vector-operations-) - [Atomic memory accesses 🦄](#atomic-memory-accesses-) - [Atomic read-modify-write operations 🦄](#atomic-read-modify-write-operations-) - [Atomic wait and notify operations 🦄](#atomic-wait-and-notify-operations-) - [Sign extension operations 🦄](#sign-extension-operations-) - [Multi-value operations 🦄](#multi-value-operations-) - [Exception handling operations 🦄](#exception-handling-operations-) - [Reference types operations 🦄](#reference-types-operations-) - [Expression manipulation](#expression-manipulation) - [Relooper](#relooper) - [Source maps](#source-maps) - [Debugging](#debugging) <!-- END doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update --> [Future features](http://webassembly.org/docs/future-features/) 🦄 might not be supported by all runtimes. ### Types * **none**: `Type`<br /> The none type, e.g., `void`. * **i32**: `Type`<br /> 32-bit integer type. * **i64**: `Type`<br /> 64-bit integer type. * **f32**: `Type`<br /> 32-bit float type. * **f64**: `Type`<br /> 64-bit float (double) type. * **v128**: `Type`<br /> 128-bit vector type. 🦄 * **funcref**: `Type`<br /> A function reference. 🦄 * **anyref**: `Type`<br /> Any host reference. 🦄 * **nullref**: `Type`<br /> A null reference. 🦄 * **exnref**: `Type`<br /> An exception reference. 🦄 * **unreachable**: `Type`<br /> Special type indicating unreachable code when obtaining information about an expression. * **auto**: `Type`<br /> Special type used in **Module#block** exclusively. Lets the API figure out a block's result type automatically. * **createType**(types: `Type[]`): `Type`<br /> Creates a multi-value type from an array of types. * **expandType**(type: `Type`): `Type[]`<br /> Expands a multi-value type to an array of types. ### Module construction * new **Module**()<br /> Constructs a new module. * **parseText**(text: `string`): `Module`<br /> Creates a module from Binaryen's s-expression text format (not official stack-style text format). * **readBinary**(data: `Uint8Array`): `Module`<br /> Creates a module from binary data. ### Module manipulation * Module#**addFunction**(name: `string`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`, vars: `Type[]`, body: `ExpressionRef`): `FunctionRef`<br /> Adds a function. `vars` indicate additional locals, in the given order. * Module#**getFunction**(name: `string`): `FunctionRef`<br /> Gets a function, by name, * Module#**removeFunction**(name: `string`): `void`<br /> Removes a function, by name. * Module#**getNumFunctions**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of functions within the module. * Module#**getFunctionByIndex**(index: `number`): `FunctionRef`<br /> Gets the function at the specified index. * Module#**addFunctionImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `void`<br /> Adds a function import. * Module#**addTableImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`): `void`<br /> Adds a table import. There's just one table for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addMemoryImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`): `void`<br /> Adds a memory import. There's just one memory for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addGlobalImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`, globalType: `Type`): `void`<br /> Adds a global variable import. Imported globals must be immutable. * Module#**addFunctionExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a function export. * Module#**addTableExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a table export. There's just one table for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addMemoryExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a memory export. There's just one memory for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**addGlobalExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef`<br /> Adds a global variable export. Exported globals must be immutable. * Module#**getNumExports**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of exports witin the module. * Module#**getExportByIndex**(index: `number`): `ExportRef`<br /> Gets the export at the specified index. * Module#**removeExport**(externalName: `string`): `void`<br /> Removes an export, by external name. * Module#**addGlobal**(name: `string`, type: `Type`, mutable: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `GlobalRef`<br /> Adds a global instance variable. * Module#**getGlobal**(name: `string`): `GlobalRef`<br /> Gets a global, by name, * Module#**removeGlobal**(name: `string`): `void`<br /> Removes a global, by name. * Module#**setFunctionTable**(initial: `number`, maximum: `number`, funcs: `string[]`, offset?: `ExpressionRef`): `void`<br /> Sets the contents of the function table. There's just one table for now, using name `"0"`. * Module#**getFunctionTable**(): `{ imported: boolean, segments: TableElement[] }`<br /> Gets the contents of the function table. * TableElement#**offset**: `ExpressionRef` * TableElement#**names**: `string[]` * Module#**setMemory**(initial: `number`, maximum: `number`, exportName: `string | null`, segments: `MemorySegment[]`, flags?: `number[]`, shared?: `boolean`): `void`<br /> Sets the memory. There's just one memory for now, using name `"0"`. Providing `exportName` also creates a memory export. * MemorySegment#**offset**: `ExpressionRef` * MemorySegment#**data**: `Uint8Array` * MemorySegment#**passive**: `boolean` * Module#**getNumMemorySegments**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of memory segments within the module. * Module#**getMemorySegmentInfoByIndex**(index: `number`): `MemorySegmentInfo`<br /> Gets information about the memory segment at the specified index. * MemorySegmentInfo#**offset**: `number` * MemorySegmentInfo#**data**: `Uint8Array` * MemorySegmentInfo#**passive**: `boolean` * Module#**setStart**(start: `FunctionRef`): `void`<br /> Sets the start function. * Module#**getFeatures**(): `Features`<br /> Gets the WebAssembly features enabled for this module. Note that the return value may be a bitmask indicating multiple features. Possible feature flags are: * Features.**MVP**: `Features` * Features.**Atomics**: `Features` * Features.**BulkMemory**: `Features` * Features.**MutableGlobals**: `Features` * Features.**NontrappingFPToInt**: `Features` * Features.**SignExt**: `Features` * Features.**SIMD128**: `Features` * Features.**ExceptionHandling**: `Features` * Features.**TailCall**: `Features` * Features.**ReferenceTypes**: `Features` * Features.**Multivalue**: `Features` * Features.**All**: `Features` * Module#**setFeatures**(features: `Features`): `void`<br /> Sets the WebAssembly features enabled for this module. * Module#**addCustomSection**(name: `string`, contents: `Uint8Array`): `void`<br /> Adds a custom section to the binary. * Module#**autoDrop**(): `void`<br /> Enables automatic insertion of `drop` operations where needed. Lets you not worry about dropping when creating your code. * **getFunctionInfo**(ftype: `FunctionRef`: `FunctionInfo`<br /> Obtains information about a function. * FunctionInfo#**name**: `string` * FunctionInfo#**module**: `string | null` (if imported) * FunctionInfo#**base**: `string | null` (if imported) * FunctionInfo#**params**: `Type` * FunctionInfo#**results**: `Type` * FunctionInfo#**vars**: `Type` * FunctionInfo#**body**: `ExpressionRef` * **getGlobalInfo**(global: `GlobalRef`): `GlobalInfo`<br /> Obtains information about a global. * GlobalInfo#**name**: `string` * GlobalInfo#**module**: `string | null` (if imported) * GlobalInfo#**base**: `string | null` (if imported) * GlobalInfo#**type**: `Type` * GlobalInfo#**mutable**: `boolean` * GlobalInfo#**init**: `ExpressionRef` * **getExportInfo**(export_: `ExportRef`): `ExportInfo`<br /> Obtains information about an export. * ExportInfo#**kind**: `ExternalKind` * ExportInfo#**name**: `string` * ExportInfo#**value**: `string` Possible `ExternalKind` values are: * **ExternalFunction**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalTable**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalMemory**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalGlobal**: `ExternalKind` * **ExternalEvent**: `ExternalKind` * **getEventInfo**(event: `EventRef`): `EventInfo`<br /> Obtains information about an event. * EventInfo#**name**: `string` * EventInfo#**module**: `string | null` (if imported) * EventInfo#**base**: `string | null` (if imported) * EventInfo#**attribute**: `number` * EventInfo#**params**: `Type` * EventInfo#**results**: `Type` * **getSideEffects**(expr: `ExpressionRef`, features: `FeatureFlags`): `SideEffects`<br /> Gets the side effects of the specified expression. * SideEffects.**None**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Branches**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Calls**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ReadsLocal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**WritesLocal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ReadsGlobal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**WritesGlobal**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ReadsMemory**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**WritesMemory**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**ImplicitTrap**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**IsAtomic**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Throws**: `SideEffects` * SideEffects.**Any**: `SideEffects` ### Module validation * Module#**validate**(): `boolean`<br /> Validates the module. Returns `true` if valid, otherwise prints validation errors and returns `false`. ### Module optimization * Module#**optimize**(): `void`<br /> Optimizes the module using the default optimization passes. * Module#**optimizeFunction**(func: `FunctionRef | string`): `void`<br /> Optimizes a single function using the default optimization passes. * Module#**runPasses**(passes: `string[]`): `void`<br /> Runs the specified passes on the module. * Module#**runPassesOnFunction**(func: `FunctionRef | string`, passes: `string[]`): `void`<br /> Runs the specified passes on a single function. * **getOptimizeLevel**(): `number`<br /> Gets the currently set optimize level. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-O1`, `-O2` (default), etc. * **setOptimizeLevel**(level: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the optimization level to use. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-O1`, `-O2` (default), etc. * **getShrinkLevel**(): `number`<br /> Gets the currently set shrink level. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-Os` (default), `-Oz`. * **setShrinkLevel**(level: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the shrink level to use. `0`, `1`, `2` correspond to `-O0`, `-Os` (default), `-Oz`. * **getDebugInfo**(): `boolean`<br /> Gets whether generating debug information is currently enabled or not. * **setDebugInfo**(on: `boolean`): `void`<br /> Enables or disables debug information in emitted binaries. * **getLowMemoryUnused**(): `boolean`<br /> Gets whether the low 1K of memory can be considered unused when optimizing. * **setLowMemoryUnused**(on: `boolean`): `void`<br /> Enables or disables whether the low 1K of memory can be considered unused when optimizing. * **getPassArgument**(key: `string`): `string | null`<br /> Gets the value of the specified arbitrary pass argument. * **setPassArgument**(key: `string`, value: `string | null`): `void`<br /> Sets the value of the specified arbitrary pass argument. Removes the respective argument if `value` is `null`. * **clearPassArguments**(): `void`<br /> Clears all arbitrary pass arguments. * **getAlwaysInlineMaxSize**(): `number`<br /> Gets the function size at which we always inline. * **setAlwaysInlineMaxSize**(size: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the function size at which we always inline. * **getFlexibleInlineMaxSize**(): `number`<br /> Gets the function size which we inline when functions are lightweight. * **setFlexibleInlineMaxSize**(size: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the function size which we inline when functions are lightweight. * **getOneCallerInlineMaxSize**(): `number`<br /> Gets the function size which we inline when there is only one caller. * **setOneCallerInlineMaxSize**(size: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the function size which we inline when there is only one caller. ### Module creation * Module#**emitBinary**(): `Uint8Array`<br /> Returns the module in binary format. * Module#**emitBinary**(sourceMapUrl: `string | null`): `BinaryWithSourceMap`<br /> Returns the module in binary format with its source map. If `sourceMapUrl` is `null`, source map generation is skipped. * BinaryWithSourceMap#**binary**: `Uint8Array` * BinaryWithSourceMap#**sourceMap**: `string | null` * Module#**emitText**(): `string`<br /> Returns the module in Binaryen's s-expression text format (not official stack-style text format). * Module#**emitAsmjs**(): `string`<br /> Returns the [asm.js](http://asmjs.org/) representation of the module. * Module#**dispose**(): `void`<br /> Releases the resources held by the module once it isn't needed anymore. ### Expression construction #### [Control flow](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#control-constructs-and-instructions) * Module#**block**(label: `string | null`, children: `ExpressionRef[]`, resultType?: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a block. `resultType` defaults to `none`. * Module#**if**(condition: `ExpressionRef`, ifTrue: `ExpressionRef`, ifFalse?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates an if or if/else combination. * Module#**loop**(label: `string | null`, body: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a loop. * Module#**br**(label: `string`, condition?: `ExpressionRef`, value?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a branch (br) to a label. * Module#**switch**(labels: `string[]`, defaultLabel: `string`, condition: `ExpressionRef`, value?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a switch (br_table). * Module#**nop**(): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a no-operation (nop) instruction. * Module#**return**(value?: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` Creates a return. * Module#**unreachable**(): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates an [unreachable](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#unreachable) instruction that will always trap. * Module#**drop**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a [drop](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#type-parametric-operators) of a value. * Module#**select**(condition: `ExpressionRef`, ifTrue: `ExpressionRef`, ifFalse: `ExpressionRef`, type?: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a [select](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#type-parametric-operators) of one of two values. #### [Variable accesses](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#local-variables) * Module#**local.get**(index: `number`, type: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a local.get for the local at the specified index. Note that we must specify the type here as we may not have created the local being accessed yet. * Module#**local.set**(index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a local.set for the local at the specified index. * Module#**local.tee**(index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`, type: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a local.tee for the local at the specified index. A tee differs from a set in that the value remains on the stack. Note that we must specify the type here as we may not have created the local being accessed yet. * Module#**global.get**(name: `string`, type: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a global.get for the global with the specified name. Note that we must specify the type here as we may not have created the global being accessed yet. * Module#**global.set**(name: `string`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a global.set for the global with the specified name. #### [Integer operations](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#32-bit-integer-operators) * Module#i32.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**clz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ctz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**popcnt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**eqz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**div_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**div_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rem_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rem_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**and**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**or**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**xor**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**shl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**shr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**shr_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rotl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**rotr**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**le_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**clz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ctz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**popcnt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**eqz**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**div_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**div_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rem_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rem_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**and**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**or**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**xor**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**shl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**shr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**shr_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rotl**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**rotr**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**le_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Floating point operations](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#floating-point-operators) * Module#f32.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**const_bits**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**ceil**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**floor**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**trunc**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**nearest**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**copysign**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64.**const**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**const_bits**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**ceil**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**floor**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**trunc**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**nearest**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**copysign**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Datatype conversions](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#datatype-conversions-truncations-reinterpretations-promotions-and-demotions) * Module#i32.**trunc_s.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**trunc_s.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**trunc_u.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**trunc_u.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**wrap**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**trunc_s.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**trunc_s.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**trunc_u.f32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**trunc_u.f64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f32.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_s.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_s.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_u.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**convert_u.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**demote**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64.**reinterpret**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_s.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_s.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_u.i32**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**convert_u.i64**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**promote**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Function calls](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#calls) * Module#**call**(name: `string`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, returnType: `Type`): `ExpressionRef` Creates a call to a function. Note that we must specify the return type here as we may not have created the function being called yet. * Module#**return_call**(name: `string`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, returnType: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Like **call**, but creates a tail-call. 🦄 * Module#**call_indirect**(target: `ExpressionRef`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Similar to **call**, but calls indirectly, i.e., via a function pointer, so an expression replaces the name as the called value. * Module#**return_call_indirect**(target: `ExpressionRef`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Like **call_indirect**, but creates a tail-call. 🦄 #### [Linear memory accesses](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#linear-memory-accesses) * Module#i32.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load8_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load8_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load16_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**load16_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**store8**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> * Module#i32.**store16**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> > * Module#i64.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load8_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load8_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load16_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load16_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load32_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**load32_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store8**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store16**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**store32**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f32.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Host operations](http://webassembly.org/docs/semantics/#resizing) * Module#**memory.size**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**memory.grow**(value: `number`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Vector operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/simd/blob/master/proposals/simd/SIMD.md) 🦄 * Module#v128.**const**(bytes: `Uint8Array`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**load**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**store**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**not**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**and**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**or**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**xor**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**andnot**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**bitselect**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`, cond: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i8x16.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**add_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**add_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**sub_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**sub_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**min_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**min_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**max_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**max_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**avgr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**narrow_i16x8_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i8x16.**narrow_i16x8_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i16x8.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**add_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**add_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**sub_saturate_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**sub_saturate_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**min_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**min_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**max_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**max_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**avgr_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**narrow_i32x4_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**narrow_i32x4_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_low_i8x16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_high_i8x16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_low_i8x16_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**widen_high_i8x16_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**load8x8_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i16x8.**load8x8_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i32x4.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**lt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**gt_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**gt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**le_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**lt_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**ge_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**ge_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**min_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**min_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**max_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**max_u**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**dot_i16x8_s**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**trunc_sat_f32x4_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**trunc_sat_f32x4_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_low_i16x8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_high_i16x8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_low_i16x8_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**widen_high_i16x8_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**load16x4_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32x4.**load16x4_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64x2.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**extract_lane_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**extract_lane_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**any_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**all_true**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**shl**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**shr_s**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**shr_u**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, shift: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**trunc_sat_f64x2_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**trunc_sat_f64x2_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**load32x2_s**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64x2.**load32x2_u**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f32x4.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**extract_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**qfma**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**qfms**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**convert_i32x4_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32x4.**convert_i32x4_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#f64x2.**splat**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**extract_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**replace_lane**(vec: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**eq**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**ne**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**lt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**gt**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**le**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**ge**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**abs**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**neg**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**sqrt**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**qfma**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**qfms**(a: `ExpressionRef`, b: `ExpressionRef`, c: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**add**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**sub**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**mul**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**div**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**min**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**max**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**convert_i64x2_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64x2.**convert_i64x2_u**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v8x16.**shuffle**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`, mask: `Uint8Array`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v8x16.**swizzle**(left: `ExpressionRef`, right: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v8x16.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v16x8.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v32x4.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#v64x2.**load_splat**(offset: `number`, align: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Atomic memory accesses](https://github.com/WebAssembly/threads/blob/master/proposals/threads/Overview.md#atomic-memory-accesses) 🦄 * Module#i32.**atomic.load**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.load8_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.load16_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.store**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.store8**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.store16**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**atomic.load**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.load8_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.load16_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.load32_u**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store8**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store16**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.store32**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Atomic read-modify-write operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/threads/blob/master/proposals/threads/Overview.md#read-modify-write) 🦄 * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw8_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**atomic.rmw16_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw8_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw16_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.add**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.sub**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.and**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.or**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.xor**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.xchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.rmw32_u.cmpxchg**(offset: `number`, ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, replacement: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Atomic wait and notify operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/threads/blob/master/proposals/threads/Overview.md#wait-and-notify-operators) 🦄 * Module#i32.**atomic.wait**(ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, timeout: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**atomic.wait**(ptr: `ExpressionRef`, expected: `ExpressionRef`, timeout: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**atomic.notify**(ptr: `ExpressionRef`, notifyCount: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**atomic.fence**(): `ExpressionRef` #### [Sign extension operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/sign-extension-ops/blob/master/proposals/sign-extension-ops/Overview.md) 🦄 * Module#i32.**extend8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**extend16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#i64.**extend8_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend16_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**extend32_s**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Multi-value operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/multi-value/blob/master/proposals/multi-value/Overview.md) 🦄 Note that these are pseudo instructions enabling Binaryen to reason about multiple values on the stack. * Module#**push**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i32.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#i64.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f32.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#f64.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#v128.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#funcref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#anyref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#nullref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#exnref.**pop**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#tuple.**make**(elements: `ExpressionRef[]`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#tuple.**extract**(tuple: `ExpressionRef`, index: `number`): `ExpressionRef` #### [Exception handling operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/blob/master/proposals/Exceptions.md) 🦄 * Module#**try**(body: `ExpressionRef`, catchBody: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**throw**(event: `string`, operands: `ExpressionRef[]`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**rethrow**(exnref: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#**br_on_exn**(label: `string`, event: `string`, exnref: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` > * Module#**addEvent**(name: `string`, attribute: `number`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `Event` * Module#**getEvent**(name: `string`): `Event` * Module#**removeEvent**(name: `stirng`): `void` * Module#**addEventImport**(internalName: `string`, externalModuleName: `string`, externalBaseName: `string`, attribute: `number`, params: `Type`, results: `Type`): `void` * Module#**addEventExport**(internalName: `string`, externalName: `string`): `ExportRef` #### [Reference types operations](https://github.com/WebAssembly/reference-types/blob/master/proposals/reference-types/Overview.md) 🦄 * Module#ref.**null**(): `ExpressionRef` * Module#ref.**is_null**(value: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef` * Module#ref.**func**(name: `string`): `ExpressionRef` ### Expression manipulation * **getExpressionId**(expr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionId`<br /> Gets the id (kind) of the specified expression. Possible values are: * **InvalidId**: `ExpressionId` * **BlockId**: `ExpressionId` * **IfId**: `ExpressionId` * **LoopId**: `ExpressionId` * **BreakId**: `ExpressionId` * **SwitchId**: `ExpressionId` * **CallId**: `ExpressionId` * **CallIndirectId**: `ExpressionId` * **LocalGetId**: `ExpressionId` * **LocalSetId**: `ExpressionId` * **GlobalGetId**: `ExpressionId` * **GlobalSetId**: `ExpressionId` * **LoadId**: `ExpressionId` * **StoreId**: `ExpressionId` * **ConstId**: `ExpressionId` * **UnaryId**: `ExpressionId` * **BinaryId**: `ExpressionId` * **SelectId**: `ExpressionId` * **DropId**: `ExpressionId` * **ReturnId**: `ExpressionId` * **HostId**: `ExpressionId` * **NopId**: `ExpressionId` * **UnreachableId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicCmpxchgId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicRMWId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicWaitId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicNotifyId**: `ExpressionId` * **AtomicFenceId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDExtractId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDReplaceId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDShuffleId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDTernaryId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDShiftId**: `ExpressionId` * **SIMDLoadId**: `ExpressionId` * **MemoryInitId**: `ExpressionId` * **DataDropId**: `ExpressionId` * **MemoryCopyId**: `ExpressionId` * **MemoryFillId**: `ExpressionId` * **RefNullId**: `ExpressionId` * **RefIsNullId**: `ExpressionId` * **RefFuncId**: `ExpressionId` * **TryId**: `ExpressionId` * **ThrowId**: `ExpressionId` * **RethrowId**: `ExpressionId` * **BrOnExnId**: `ExpressionId` * **PushId**: `ExpressionId` * **PopId**: `ExpressionId` * **getExpressionType**(expr: `ExpressionRef`): `Type`<br /> Gets the type of the specified expression. * **getExpressionInfo**(expr: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionInfo`<br /> Obtains information about an expression, always including: * Info#**id**: `ExpressionId` * Info#**type**: `Type` Additional properties depend on the expression's `id` and are usually equivalent to the respective parameters when creating such an expression: * BlockInfo#**name**: `string` * BlockInfo#**children**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * IfInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef` * IfInfo#**ifTrue**: `ExpressionRef` * IfInfo#**ifFalse**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * LoopInfo#**name**: `string` * LoopInfo#**body**: `ExpressionRef` > * BreakInfo#**name**: `string` * BreakInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef | null` * BreakInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * SwitchInfo#**names**: `string[]` * SwitchInfo#**defaultName**: `string | null` * SwitchInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef` * SwitchInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * CallInfo#**target**: `string` * CallInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * CallImportInfo#**target**: `string` * CallImportInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * CallIndirectInfo#**target**: `ExpressionRef` * CallIndirectInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * LocalGetInfo#**index**: `number` > * LocalSetInfo#**isTee**: `boolean` * LocalSetInfo#**index**: `number` * LocalSetInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * GlobalGetInfo#**name**: `string` > * GlobalSetInfo#**name**: `string` * GlobalSetInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * LoadInfo#**isAtomic**: `boolean` * LoadInfo#**isSigned**: `boolean` * LoadInfo#**offset**: `number` * LoadInfo#**bytes**: `number` * LoadInfo#**align**: `number` * LoadInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` > * StoreInfo#**isAtomic**: `boolean` * StoreInfo#**offset**: `number` * StoreInfo#**bytes**: `number` * StoreInfo#**align**: `number` * StoreInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * StoreInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * ConstInfo#**value**: `number | { low: number, high: number }` > * UnaryInfo#**op**: `number` * UnaryInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * BinaryInfo#**op**: `number` * BinaryInfo#**left**: `ExpressionRef` * BinaryInfo#**right**: `ExpressionRef` > * SelectInfo#**ifTrue**: `ExpressionRef` * SelectInfo#**ifFalse**: `ExpressionRef` * SelectInfo#**condition**: `ExpressionRef` > * DropInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * ReturnInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef | null` > * NopInfo > * UnreachableInfo > * HostInfo#**op**: `number` * HostInfo#**nameOperand**: `string | null` * HostInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * AtomicRMWInfo#**op**: `number` * AtomicRMWInfo#**bytes**: `number` * AtomicRMWInfo#**offset**: `number` * AtomicRMWInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicRMWInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**bytes**: `number` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**offset**: `number` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**expected**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicCmpxchgInfo#**replacement**: `ExpressionRef` > * AtomicWaitInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicWaitInfo#**expected**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicWaitInfo#**timeout**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicWaitInfo#**expectedType**: `Type` > * AtomicNotifyInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` * AtomicNotifyInfo#**notifyCount**: `ExpressionRef` > * AtomicFenceInfo > * SIMDExtractInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDExtractInfo#**vec**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDExtractInfo#**index**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDReplaceInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDReplaceInfo#**vec**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDReplaceInfo#**index**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDReplaceInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDShuffleInfo#**left**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDShuffleInfo#**right**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDShuffleInfo#**mask**: `Uint8Array` > * SIMDTernaryInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDTernaryInfo#**a**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDTernaryInfo#**b**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDTernaryInfo#**c**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDShiftInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDShiftInfo#**vec**: `ExpressionRef` * SIMDShiftInfo#**shift**: `ExpressionRef` > * SIMDLoadInfo#**op**: `Op` * SIMDLoadInfo#**offset**: `number` * SIMDLoadInfo#**align**: `number` * SIMDLoadInfo#**ptr**: `ExpressionRef` > * MemoryInitInfo#**segment**: `number` * MemoryInitInfo#**dest**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryInitInfo#**offset**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryInitInfo#**size**: `ExpressionRef` > * MemoryDropInfo#**segment**: `number` > * MemoryCopyInfo#**dest**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryCopyInfo#**source**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryCopyInfo#**size**: `ExpressionRef` > * MemoryFillInfo#**dest**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryFillInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` * MemoryFillInfo#**size**: `ExpressionRef` > * TryInfo#**body**: `ExpressionRef` * TryInfo#**catchBody**: `ExpressionRef` > * RefNullInfo > * RefIsNullInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` > * RefFuncInfo#**func**: `string` > * ThrowInfo#**event**: `string` * ThrowInfo#**operands**: `ExpressionRef[]` > * RethrowInfo#**exnref**: `ExpressionRef` > * BrOnExnInfo#**name**: `string` * BrOnExnInfo#**event**: `string` * BrOnExnInfo#**exnref**: `ExpressionRef` > * PopInfo > * PushInfo#**value**: `ExpressionRef` * **emitText**(expression: `ExpressionRef`): `string`<br /> Emits the expression in Binaryen's s-expression text format (not official stack-style text format). * **copyExpression**(expression: `ExpressionRef`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Creates a deep copy of an expression. ### Relooper * new **Relooper**()<br /> Constructs a relooper instance. This lets you provide an arbitrary CFG, and the relooper will structure it for WebAssembly. * Relooper#**addBlock**(code: `ExpressionRef`): `RelooperBlockRef`<br /> Adds a new block to the CFG, containing the provided code as its body. * Relooper#**addBranch**(from: `RelooperBlockRef`, to: `RelooperBlockRef`, condition: `ExpressionRef`, code: `ExpressionRef`): `void`<br /> Adds a branch from a block to another block, with a condition (or nothing, if this is the default branch to take from the origin - each block must have one such branch), and optional code to execute on the branch (useful for phis). * Relooper#**addBlockWithSwitch**(code: `ExpressionRef`, condition: `ExpressionRef`): `RelooperBlockRef`<br /> Adds a new block, which ends with a switch/br_table, with provided code and condition (that determines where we go in the switch). * Relooper#**addBranchForSwitch**(from: `RelooperBlockRef`, to: `RelooperBlockRef`, indexes: `number[]`, code: `ExpressionRef`): `void`<br /> Adds a branch from a block ending in a switch, to another block, using an array of indexes that determine where to go, and optional code to execute on the branch. * Relooper#**renderAndDispose**(entry: `RelooperBlockRef`, labelHelper: `number`, module: `Module`): `ExpressionRef`<br /> Renders and cleans up the Relooper instance. Call this after you have created all the blocks and branches, giving it the entry block (where control flow begins), a label helper variable (an index of a local we can use, necessary for irreducible control flow), and the module. This returns an expression - normal WebAssembly code - that you can use normally anywhere. ### Source maps * Module#**addDebugInfoFileName**(filename: `string`): `number`<br /> Adds a debug info file name to the module and returns its index. * Module#**getDebugInfoFileName**(index: `number`): `string | null` <br /> Gets the name of the debug info file at the specified index. * Module#**setDebugLocation**(func: `FunctionRef`, expr: `ExpressionRef`, fileIndex: `number`, lineNumber: `number`, columnNumber: `number`): `void`<br /> Sets the debug location of the specified `ExpressionRef` within the specified `FunctionRef`. ### Debugging * Module#**interpret**(): `void`<br /> Runs the module in the interpreter, calling the start function. # yargs-parser ![ci](https://github.com/yargs/yargs-parser/workflows/ci/badge.svg) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/yargs-parser.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/yargs-parser) [![Conventional Commits](https://img.shields.io/badge/Conventional%20Commits-1.0.0-yellow.svg)](https://conventionalcommits.org) ![nycrc config on GitHub](https://img.shields.io/nycrc/yargs/yargs-parser) The mighty option parser used by [yargs](https://github.com/yargs/yargs). visit the [yargs website](http://yargs.js.org/) for more examples, and thorough usage instructions. <img width="250" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yargs/yargs-parser/master/yargs-logo.png"> ## Example ```sh npm i yargs-parser --save ``` ```js const argv = require('yargs-parser')(process.argv.slice(2)) console.log(argv) ``` ```console $ node example.js --foo=33 --bar hello { _: [], foo: 33, bar: 'hello' } ``` _or parse a string!_ ```js const argv = require('yargs-parser')('--foo=99 --bar=33') console.log(argv) ``` ```console { _: [], foo: 99, bar: 33 } ``` Convert an array of mixed types before passing to `yargs-parser`: ```js const parse = require('yargs-parser') parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].join(' ')) // <-- array to string parse(['-f', 11, '--zoom', 55].map(String)) // <-- array of strings ``` ## Deno Example As of `v19` `yargs-parser` supports [Deno](https://github.com/denoland/deno): ```typescript import parser from "https://deno.land/x/yargs_parser/deno.ts"; const argv = parser('--foo=99 --bar=9987930', { string: ['bar'] }) console.log(argv) ``` ## ESM Example As of `v19` `yargs-parser` supports ESM (_both in Node.js and in the browser_): **Node.js:** ```js import parser from 'yargs-parser' const argv = parser('--foo=99 --bar=9987930', { string: ['bar'] }) console.log(argv) ``` **Browsers:** ```html <!doctype html> <body> <script type="module"> import parser from "https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/browser.js"; const argv = parser('--foo=99 --bar=9987930', { string: ['bar'] }) console.log(argv) </script> </body> ``` ## API ### parser(args, opts={}) Parses command line arguments returning a simple mapping of keys and values. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing the options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args` should be parsed: * `opts.alias`: an object representing the set of aliases for a key: `{alias: {foo: ['f']}}`. * `opts.array`: indicate that keys should be parsed as an array: `{array: ['foo', 'bar']}`.<br> Indicate that keys should be parsed as an array and coerced to booleans / numbers:<br> `{array: [{ key: 'foo', boolean: true }, {key: 'bar', number: true}]}`. * `opts.boolean`: arguments should be parsed as booleans: `{boolean: ['x', 'y']}`. * `opts.coerce`: provide a custom synchronous function that returns a coerced value from the argument provided (or throws an error). For arrays the function is called only once for the entire array:<br> `{coerce: {foo: function (arg) {return modifiedArg}}}`. * `opts.config`: indicate a key that represents a path to a configuration file (this file will be loaded and parsed). * `opts.configObjects`: configuration objects to parse, their properties will be set as arguments:<br> `{configObjects: [{'x': 5, 'y': 33}, {'z': 44}]}`. * `opts.configuration`: provide configuration options to the yargs-parser (see: [configuration](#configuration)). * `opts.count`: indicate a key that should be used as a counter, e.g., `-vvv` = `{v: 3}`. * `opts.default`: provide default values for keys: `{default: {x: 33, y: 'hello world!'}}`. * `opts.envPrefix`: environment variables (`process.env`) with the prefix provided should be parsed. * `opts.narg`: specify that a key requires `n` arguments: `{narg: {x: 2}}`. * `opts.normalize`: `path.normalize()` will be applied to values set to this key. * `opts.number`: keys should be treated as numbers. * `opts.string`: keys should be treated as strings (even if they resemble a number `-x 33`). **returns:** * `obj`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. ### require('yargs-parser').detailed(args, opts={}) Parses a command line string, returning detailed information required by the yargs engine. **expects:** * `args`: a string or array of strings representing options to parse. * `opts`: provide a set of hints indicating how `args`, inputs are identical to `require('yargs-parser')(args, opts={})`. **returns:** * `argv`: an object representing the parsed value of `args` * `key/value`: key value pairs for each argument and their aliases. * `_`: an array representing the positional arguments. * [optional] `--`: an array with arguments after the end-of-options flag `--`. * `error`: populated with an error object if an exception occurred during parsing. * `aliases`: the inferred list of aliases built by combining lists in `opts.alias`. * `newAliases`: any new aliases added via camel-case expansion: * `boolean`: `{ fooBar: true }` * `defaulted`: any new argument created by `opts.default`, no aliases included. * `boolean`: `{ foo: true }` * `configuration`: given by default settings and `opts.configuration`. <a name="configuration"></a> ### Configuration The yargs-parser applies several automated transformations on the keys provided in `args`. These features can be turned on and off using the `configuration` field of `opts`. ```js var parsed = parser(['--no-dice'], { configuration: { 'boolean-negation': false } }) ``` ### short option groups * default: `true`. * key: `short-option-groups`. Should a group of short-options be treated as boolean flags? ```console $ node example.js -abc { _: [], a: true, b: true, c: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -abc { _: [], abc: true } ``` ### camel-case expansion * default: `true`. * key: `camel-case-expansion`. Should hyphenated arguments be expanded into camel-case aliases? ```console $ node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true, fooBar: true } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --foo-bar { _: [], 'foo-bar': true } ``` ### dot-notation * default: `true` * key: `dot-notation` Should keys that contain `.` be treated as objects? ```console $ node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], foo: { bar: true } } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --foo.bar { _: [], "foo.bar": true } ``` ### parse numbers * default: `true` * key: `parse-numbers` Should keys that look like numbers be treated as such? ```console $ node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: 99.3 } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --foo=99.3 { _: [], foo: "99.3" } ``` ### parse positional numbers * default: `true` * key: `parse-positional-numbers` Should positional keys that look like numbers be treated as such. ```console $ node example.js 99.3 { _: [99.3] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js 99.3 { _: ['99.3'] } ``` ### boolean negation * default: `true` * key: `boolean-negation` Should variables prefixed with `--no` be treated as negations? ```console $ node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --no-foo { _: [], "no-foo": true } ``` ### combine arrays * default: `false` * key: `combine-arrays` Should arrays be combined when provided by both command line arguments and a configuration file. ### duplicate arguments array * default: `true` * key: `duplicate-arguments-array` Should arguments be coerced into an array when duplicated: ```console $ node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -x 1 -x 2 { _: [], x: 2 } ``` ### flatten duplicate arrays * default: `true` * key: `flatten-duplicate-arrays` Should array arguments be coerced into a single array when duplicated: ```console $ node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [1, 2, 3, 4] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -x 1 2 -x 3 4 { _: [], x: [[1, 2], [3, 4]] } ``` ### greedy arrays * default: `true` * key: `greedy-arrays` Should arrays consume more than one positional argument following their flag. ```console $ node example --arr 1 2 { _[], arr: [1, 2] } ``` _if disabled:_ ```console $ node example --arr 1 2 { _[2], arr: [1] } ``` **Note: in `v18.0.0` we are considering defaulting greedy arrays to `false`.** ### nargs eats options * default: `false` * key: `nargs-eats-options` Should nargs consume dash options as well as positional arguments. ### negation prefix * default: `no-` * key: `negation-prefix` The prefix to use for negated boolean variables. ```console $ node example.js --no-foo { _: [], foo: false } ``` _if set to `quux`:_ ```console $ node example.js --quuxfoo { _: [], foo: false } ``` ### populate -- * default: `false`. * key: `populate--` Should unparsed flags be stored in `--` or `_`. _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a', 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js a -b -- x y { _: [ 'a' ], '--': [ 'x', 'y' ], b: true } ``` ### set placeholder key * default: `false`. * key: `set-placeholder-key`. Should a placeholder be added for keys not set via the corresponding CLI argument? _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, c: 2 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a 1 -c 2 { _: [], a: 1, b: undefined, c: 2 } ``` ### halt at non-option * default: `false`. * key: `halt-at-non-option`. Should parsing stop at the first positional argument? This is similar to how e.g. `ssh` parses its command line. _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b' ], a: 'run', x: 'y' } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js -a run b -x y { _: [ 'b', '-x', 'y' ], a: 'run' } ``` ### strip aliased * default: `false` * key: `strip-aliased` Should aliases be removed before returning results? _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1, 'test-alias': 1, testAlias: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` ### strip dashed * default: `false` * key: `strip-dashed` Should dashed keys be removed before returning results? This option has no effect if `camel-case-expansion` is disabled. _If disabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], 'test-field': 1, testField: 1 } ``` _If enabled:_ ```console $ node example.js --test-field 1 { _: [], testField: 1 } ``` ### unknown options as args * default: `false` * key: `unknown-options-as-args` Should unknown options be treated like regular arguments? An unknown option is one that is not configured in `opts`. _If disabled_ ```console $ node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: [], unknownOption: true, knownOption: 2, stringOption: '', unknownOption2: true } ``` _If enabled_ ```console $ node example.js --unknown-option --known-option 2 --string-option --unknown-option2 { _: ['--unknown-option'], knownOption: 2, stringOption: '--unknown-option2' } ``` ## Supported Node.js Versions Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track [Node.js' release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/). Here's [a post on why we think this is important](https://medium.com/the-node-js-collection/maintainers-should-consider-following-node-js-release-schedule-ab08ed4de71a). ## Special Thanks The yargs project evolves from optimist and minimist. It owes its existence to a lot of James Halliday's hard work. Thanks [substack](https://github.com/substack) **beep** **boop** \o/ ## License ISC long.js ======= A Long class for representing a 64 bit two's-complement integer value derived from the [Closure Library](https://github.com/google/closure-library) for stand-alone use and extended with unsigned support. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/dcodeIO/long.js.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/dcodeIO/long.js) Background ---------- As of [ECMA-262 5th Edition](http://ecma262-5.com/ELS5_HTML.htm#Section_8.5), "all the positive and negative integers whose magnitude is no greater than 2<sup>53</sup> are representable in the Number type", which is "representing the doubleprecision 64-bit format IEEE 754 values as specified in the IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic". The [maximum safe integer](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Number/MAX_SAFE_INTEGER) in JavaScript is 2<sup>53</sup>-1. Example: 2<sup>64</sup>-1 is 1844674407370955**1615** but in JavaScript it evaluates to 1844674407370955**2000**. Furthermore, bitwise operators in JavaScript "deal only with integers in the range −2<sup>31</sup> through 2<sup>31</sup>−1, inclusive, or in the range 0 through 2<sup>32</sup>−1, inclusive. These operators accept any value of the Number type but first convert each such value to one of 2<sup>32</sup> integer values." In some use cases, however, it is required to be able to reliably work with and perform bitwise operations on the full 64 bits. This is where long.js comes into play. Usage ----- The class is compatible with CommonJS and AMD loaders and is exposed globally as `Long` if neither is available. ```javascript var Long = require("long"); var longVal = new Long(0xFFFFFFFF, 0x7FFFFFFF); console.log(longVal.toString()); ... ``` API --- ### Constructor * new **Long**(low: `number`, high: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`)<br /> Constructs a 64 bit two's-complement integer, given its low and high 32 bit values as *signed* integers. See the from* functions below for more convenient ways of constructing Longs. ### Fields * Long#**low**: `number`<br /> The low 32 bits as a signed value. * Long#**high**: `number`<br /> The high 32 bits as a signed value. * Long#**unsigned**: `boolean`<br /> Whether unsigned or not. ### Constants * Long.**ZERO**: `Long`<br /> Signed zero. * Long.**ONE**: `Long`<br /> Signed one. * Long.**NEG_ONE**: `Long`<br /> Signed negative one. * Long.**UZERO**: `Long`<br /> Unsigned zero. * Long.**UONE**: `Long`<br /> Unsigned one. * Long.**MAX_VALUE**: `Long`<br /> Maximum signed value. * Long.**MIN_VALUE**: `Long`<br /> Minimum signed value. * Long.**MAX_UNSIGNED_VALUE**: `Long`<br /> Maximum unsigned value. ### Utility * Long.**isLong**(obj: `*`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if the specified object is a Long. * Long.**fromBits**(lowBits: `number`, highBits: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Returns a Long representing the 64 bit integer that comes by concatenating the given low and high bits. Each is assumed to use 32 bits. * Long.**fromBytes**(bytes: `number[]`, unsigned?: `boolean`, le?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Creates a Long from its byte representation. * Long.**fromBytesLE**(bytes: `number[]`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Creates a Long from its little endian byte representation. * Long.**fromBytesBE**(bytes: `number[]`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Creates a Long from its big endian byte representation. * Long.**fromInt**(value: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Returns a Long representing the given 32 bit integer value. * Long.**fromNumber**(value: `number`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Returns a Long representing the given value, provided that it is a finite number. Otherwise, zero is returned. * Long.**fromString**(str: `string`, unsigned?: `boolean`, radix?: `number`)<br /> Long.**fromString**(str: `string`, radix: `number`)<br /> Returns a Long representation of the given string, written using the specified radix. * Long.**fromValue**(val: `*`, unsigned?: `boolean`): `Long`<br /> Converts the specified value to a Long using the appropriate from* function for its type. ### Methods * Long#**add**(addend: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the sum of this and the specified Long. * Long#**and**(other: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise AND of this Long and the specified. * Long#**compare**/**comp**(other: `Long | number | string`): `number`<br /> Compares this Long's value with the specified's. Returns `0` if they are the same, `1` if the this is greater and `-1` if the given one is greater. * Long#**divide**/**div**(divisor: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long divided by the specified. * Long#**equals**/**eq**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value equals the specified's. * Long#**getHighBits**(): `number`<br /> Gets the high 32 bits as a signed integer. * Long#**getHighBitsUnsigned**(): `number`<br /> Gets the high 32 bits as an unsigned integer. * Long#**getLowBits**(): `number`<br /> Gets the low 32 bits as a signed integer. * Long#**getLowBitsUnsigned**(): `number`<br /> Gets the low 32 bits as an unsigned integer. * Long#**getNumBitsAbs**(): `number`<br /> Gets the number of bits needed to represent the absolute value of this Long. * Long#**greaterThan**/**gt**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is greater than the specified's. * Long#**greaterThanOrEqual**/**gte**/**ge**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is greater than or equal the specified's. * Long#**isEven**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is even. * Long#**isNegative**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is negative. * Long#**isOdd**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is odd. * Long#**isPositive**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is positive. * Long#**isZero**/**eqz**(): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value equals zero. * Long#**lessThan**/**lt**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is less than the specified's. * Long#**lessThanOrEqual**/**lte**/**le**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value is less than or equal the specified's. * Long#**modulo**/**mod**/**rem**(divisor: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long modulo the specified. * Long#**multiply**/**mul**(multiplier: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the product of this and the specified Long. * Long#**negate**/**neg**(): `Long`<br /> Negates this Long's value. * Long#**not**(): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise NOT of this Long. * Long#**notEquals**/**neq**/**ne**(other: `Long | number | string`): `boolean`<br /> Tests if this Long's value differs from the specified's. * Long#**or**(other: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise OR of this Long and the specified. * Long#**shiftLeft**/**shl**(numBits: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long with bits shifted to the left by the given amount. * Long#**shiftRight**/**shr**(numBits: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long with bits arithmetically shifted to the right by the given amount. * Long#**shiftRightUnsigned**/**shru**/**shr_u**(numBits: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns this Long with bits logically shifted to the right by the given amount. * Long#**subtract**/**sub**(subtrahend: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the difference of this and the specified Long. * Long#**toBytes**(le?: `boolean`): `number[]`<br /> Converts this Long to its byte representation. * Long#**toBytesLE**(): `number[]`<br /> Converts this Long to its little endian byte representation. * Long#**toBytesBE**(): `number[]`<br /> Converts this Long to its big endian byte representation. * Long#**toInt**(): `number`<br /> Converts the Long to a 32 bit integer, assuming it is a 32 bit integer. * Long#**toNumber**(): `number`<br /> Converts the Long to a the nearest floating-point representation of this value (double, 53 bit mantissa). * Long#**toSigned**(): `Long`<br /> Converts this Long to signed. * Long#**toString**(radix?: `number`): `string`<br /> Converts the Long to a string written in the specified radix. * Long#**toUnsigned**(): `Long`<br /> Converts this Long to unsigned. * Long#**xor**(other: `Long | number | string`): `Long`<br /> Returns the bitwise XOR of this Long and the given one. Building -------- To build an UMD bundle to `dist/long.js`, run: ``` $> npm install $> npm run build ``` Running the [tests](./tests): ``` $> npm test ``` Railroad-diagram Generator ========================== This is a small js library for generating railroad diagrams (like what [JSON.org](http://json.org) uses) using SVG. Railroad diagrams are a way of visually representing a grammar in a form that is more readable than using regular expressions or BNF. I think (though I haven't given it a lot of thought yet) that if it's easy to write a context-free grammar for the language, the corresponding railroad diagram will be easy as well. There are several railroad-diagram generators out there, but none of them had the visual appeal I wanted. [Here's an example of how they look!](http://www.xanthir.com/etc/railroad-diagrams/example.html) And [here's an online generator for you to play with and get SVG code from!](http://www.xanthir.com/etc/railroad-diagrams/generator.html) The library now exists in a Python port as well! See the information further down. Details ------- To use the library, just include the js and css files, and then call the Diagram() function. Its arguments are the components of the diagram (Diagram is a special form of Sequence). An alternative to Diagram() is ComplexDiagram() which is used to describe a complex type diagram. Components are either leaves or containers. The leaves: * Terminal(text) or a bare string - represents literal text * NonTerminal(text) - represents an instruction or another production * Comment(text) - a comment * Skip() - an empty line The containers: * Sequence(children) - like simple concatenation in a regex * Choice(index, children) - like | in a regex. The index argument specifies which child is the "normal" choice and should go in the middle * Optional(child, skip) - like ? in a regex. A shorthand for `Choice(1, [Skip(), child])`. If the optional `skip` parameter has the value `"skip"`, it instead puts the Skip() in the straight-line path, for when the "normal" behavior is to omit the item. * OneOrMore(child, repeat) - like + in a regex. The 'repeat' argument is optional, and specifies something that must go between the repetitions. * ZeroOrMore(child, repeat, skip) - like * in a regex. A shorthand for `Optional(OneOrMore(child, repeat))`. The optional `skip` parameter is identical to Optional(). For convenience, each component can be called with or without `new`. If called without `new`, the container components become n-ary; that is, you can say either `new Sequence([A, B])` or just `Sequence(A,B)`. After constructing a Diagram, call `.format(...padding)` on it, specifying 0-4 padding values (just like CSS) for some additional "breathing space" around the diagram (the paddings default to 20px). The result can either be `.toString()`'d for the markup, or `.toSVG()`'d for an `<svg>` element, which can then be immediately inserted to the document. As a convenience, Diagram also has an `.addTo(element)` method, which immediately converts it to SVG and appends it to the referenced element with default paddings. `element` defaults to `document.body`. Options ------- There are a few options you can tweak, at the bottom of the file. Just tweak either until the diagram looks like what you want. You can also change the CSS file - feel free to tweak to your heart's content. Note, though, that if you change the text sizes in the CSS, you'll have to go adjust the metrics for the leaf nodes as well. * VERTICAL_SEPARATION - sets the minimum amount of vertical separation between two items. Note that the stroke width isn't counted when computing the separation; this shouldn't be relevant unless you have a very small separation or very large stroke width. * ARC_RADIUS - the radius of the arcs used in the branching containers like Choice. This has a relatively large effect on the size of non-trivial diagrams. Both tight and loose values look good, depending on what you're going for. * DIAGRAM_CLASS - the class set on the root `<svg>` element of each diagram, for use in the CSS stylesheet. * STROKE_ODD_PIXEL_LENGTH - the default stylesheet uses odd pixel lengths for 'stroke'. Due to rasterization artifacts, they look best when the item has been translated half a pixel in both directions. If you change the styling to use a stroke with even pixel lengths, you'll want to set this variable to `false`. * INTERNAL_ALIGNMENT - when some branches of a container are narrower than others, this determines how they're aligned in the extra space. Defaults to "center", but can be set to "left" or "right". Caveats ------- At this early stage, the generator is feature-complete and works as intended, but still has several TODOs: * The font-sizes are hard-coded right now, and the font handling in general is very dumb - I'm just guessing at some metrics that are probably "good enough" rather than measuring things properly. Python Port ----------- In addition to the canonical JS version, the library now exists as a Python library as well. Using it is basically identical. The config variables are globals in the file, and so may be adjusted either manually or via tweaking from inside your program. The main difference from the JS port is how you extract the string from the Diagram. You'll find a `writeSvg(writerFunc)` method on `Diagram`, which takes a callback of one argument and passes it the string form of the diagram. For example, it can be used like `Diagram(...).writeSvg(sys.stdout.write)` to write to stdout. **Note**: the callback will be called multiple times as it builds up the string, not just once with the whole thing. If you need it all at once, consider something like a `StringIO` as an easy way to collect it into a single string. License ------- This document and all associated files in the github project are licensed under [CC0](http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) ![](http://i.creativecommons.org/p/zero/1.0/80x15.png). This means you can reuse, remix, or otherwise appropriate this project for your own use **without restriction**. (The actual legal meaning can be found at the above link.) Don't ask me for permission to use any part of this project, **just use it**. I would appreciate attribution, but that is not required by the license. # Regular Expression Tokenizer Tokenizes strings that represent a regular expressions. [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/fent/ret.js.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/fent/ret.js) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/fent/ret.js.svg)](https://david-dm.org/fent/ret.js) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/ret.js/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/fent/ret.js) # Usage ```js var ret = require('ret'); var tokens = ret(/foo|bar/.source); ``` `tokens` will contain the following object ```js { "type": ret.types.ROOT "options": [ [ { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 102 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 111 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 111 } ], [ { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 98 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 97 }, { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 114 } ] ] } ``` # Token Types `ret.types` is a collection of the various token types exported by ret. ### ROOT Only used in the root of the regexp. This is needed due to the posibility of the root containing a pipe `|` character. In that case, the token will have an `options` key that will be an array of arrays of tokens. If not, it will contain a `stack` key that is an array of tokens. ```js { "type": ret.types.ROOT, "stack": [token1, token2...], } ``` ```js { "type": ret.types.ROOT, "options" [ [token1, token2...], [othertoken1, othertoken2...] ... ], } ``` ### GROUP Groups contain tokens that are inside of a parenthesis. If the group begins with `?` followed by another character, it's a special type of group. A ':' tells the group not to be remembered when `exec` is used. '=' means the previous token matches only if followed by this group, and '!' means the previous token matches only if NOT followed. Like root, it can contain an `options` key instead of `stack` if there is a pipe. ```js { "type": ret.types.GROUP, "remember" true, "followedBy": false, "notFollowedBy": false, "stack": [token1, token2...], } ``` ```js { "type": ret.types.GROUP, "remember" true, "followedBy": false, "notFollowedBy": false, "options" [ [token1, token2...], [othertoken1, othertoken2...] ... ], } ``` ### POSITION `\b`, `\B`, `^`, and `$` specify positions in the regexp. ```js { "type": ret.types.POSITION, "value": "^", } ``` ### SET Contains a key `set` specifying what tokens are allowed and a key `not` specifying if the set should be negated. A set can contain other sets, ranges, and characters. ```js { "type": ret.types.SET, "set": [token1, token2...], "not": false, } ``` ### RANGE Used in set tokens to specify a character range. `from` and `to` are character codes. ```js { "type": ret.types.RANGE, "from": 97, "to": 122, } ``` ### REPETITION ```js { "type": ret.types.REPETITION, "min": 0, "max": Infinity, "value": token, } ``` ### REFERENCE References a group token. `value` is 1-9. ```js { "type": ret.types.REFERENCE, "value": 1, } ``` ### CHAR Represents a single character token. `value` is the character code. This might seem a bit cluttering instead of concatenating characters together. But since repetition tokens only repeat the last token and not the last clause like the pipe, it's simpler to do it this way. ```js { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value": 123, } ``` ## Errors ret.js will throw errors if given a string with an invalid regular expression. All possible errors are * Invalid group. When a group with an immediate `?` character is followed by an invalid character. It can only be followed by `!`, `=`, or `:`. Example: `/(?_abc)/` * Nothing to repeat. Thrown when a repetitional token is used as the first token in the current clause, as in right in the beginning of the regexp or group, or right after a pipe. Example: `/foo|?bar/`, `/{1,3}foo|bar/`, `/foo(+bar)/` * Unmatched ). A group was not opened, but was closed. Example: `/hello)2u/` * Unterminated group. A group was not closed. Example: `/(1(23)4/` * Unterminated character class. A custom character set was not closed. Example: `/[abc/` # Install npm install ret # Tests Tests are written with [vows](http://vowsjs.org/) ```bash npm test ``` # License MIT # [nearley](http://nearley.js.org) ↗️ [![JS.ORG](https://img.shields.io/badge/js.org-nearley-ffb400.svg?style=flat-square)](http://js.org) [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/nearley.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/js/nearley) nearley is a simple, fast and powerful parsing toolkit. It consists of: 1. [A powerful, modular DSL for describing languages](https://nearley.js.org/docs/grammar) 2. [An efficient, lightweight Earley parser](https://nearley.js.org/docs/parser) 3. [Loads of tools, editor plug-ins, and other goodies!](https://nearley.js.org/docs/tooling) nearley is a **streaming** parser with support for catching **errors** gracefully and providing _all_ parsings for **ambiguous** grammars. It is compatible with a variety of **lexers** (we recommend [moo](http://github.com/tjvr/moo)). It comes with tools for creating **tests**, **railroad diagrams** and **fuzzers** from your grammars, and has support for a variety of editors and platforms. It works in both node and the browser. Unlike most other parser generators, nearley can handle *any* grammar you can define in BNF (and more!). In particular, while most existing JS parsers such as PEGjs and Jison choke on certain grammars (e.g. [left recursive ones](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left_recursion)), nearley handles them easily and efficiently by using the [Earley parsing algorithm](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earley_parser). nearley is used by a wide variety of projects: - [artificial intelligence](https://github.com/ChalmersGU-AI-course/shrdlite-course-project) and - [computational linguistics](https://wiki.eecs.yorku.ca/course_archive/2014-15/W/6339/useful_handouts) classes at universities; - [file format parsers](https://github.com/raymond-h/node-dmi); - [data-driven markup languages](https://github.com/idyll-lang/idyll-compiler); - [compilers for real-world programming languages](https://github.com/sizigi/lp5562); - and nearley itself! The nearley compiler is bootstrapped. nearley is an npm [staff pick](https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm-collection-staff-picks). ## Documentation Please visit our website https://nearley.js.org to get started! You will find a tutorial, detailed reference documents, and links to several real-world examples to get inspired. ## Contributing Please read [this document](.github/CONTRIBUTING.md) *before* working on nearley. If you are interested in contributing but unsure where to start, take a look at the issues labeled "up for grabs" on the issue tracker, or message a maintainer (@kach or @tjvr on Github). nearley is MIT licensed. A big thanks to Nathan Dinsmore for teaching me how to Earley, Aria Stewart for helping structure nearley into a mature module, and Robin Windels for bootstrapping the grammar. Additionally, Jacob Edelman wrote an experimental JavaScript parser with nearley and contributed ideas for EBNF support. Joshua T. Corbin refactored the compiler to be much, much prettier. Bojidar Marinov implemented postprocessors-in-other-languages. Shachar Itzhaky fixed a subtle bug with nullables. ## Citing nearley If you are citing nearley in academic work, please use the following BibTeX entry. ```bibtex @misc{nearley, author = "Kartik Chandra and Tim Radvan", title = "{nearley}: a parsing toolkit for {JavaScript}", year = {2014}, doi = {10.5281/zenodo.3897993}, url = {https://github.com/kach/nearley} } ``` # tr46.js > An implementation of the [Unicode TR46 specification](http://unicode.org/reports/tr46/). ## Installation [Node.js](http://nodejs.org) `>= 6` is required. To install, type this at the command line: ```shell npm install tr46 ``` ## API ### `toASCII(domainName[, options])` Converts a string of Unicode symbols to a case-folded Punycode string of ASCII symbols. Available options: * [`checkBidi`](#checkBidi) * [`checkHyphens`](#checkHyphens) * [`checkJoiners`](#checkJoiners) * [`processingOption`](#processingOption) * [`useSTD3ASCIIRules`](#useSTD3ASCIIRules) * [`verifyDNSLength`](#verifyDNSLength) ### `toUnicode(domainName[, options])` Converts a case-folded Punycode string of ASCII symbols to a string of Unicode symbols. Available options: * [`checkBidi`](#checkBidi) * [`checkHyphens`](#checkHyphens) * [`checkJoiners`](#checkJoiners) * [`useSTD3ASCIIRules`](#useSTD3ASCIIRules) ## Options ### `checkBidi` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, any bi-directional text within the input will be checked for validation. ### `checkHyphens` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, the positions of any hyphen characters within the input will be checked for validation. ### `checkJoiners` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, any word joiner characters within the input will be checked for validation. ### `processingOption` Type: `String` Default value: `"nontransitional"` When set to `"transitional"`, symbols within the input will be validated according to the older IDNA2003 protocol. When set to `"nontransitional"`, the current IDNA2008 protocol will be used. ### `useSTD3ASCIIRules` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, input will be validated according to [STD3 Rules](http://unicode.org/reports/tr46/#STD3_Rules). ### `verifyDNSLength` Type: `Boolean` Default value: `false` When set to `true`, the length of each DNS label within the input will be checked for validation. ## Follow Redirects Drop-in replacement for Nodes `http` and `https` that automatically follows redirects. [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/follow-redirects.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/follow-redirects) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/follow-redirects/follow-redirects/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/follow-redirects/follow-redirects?branch=master) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects.svg)](https://david-dm.org/follow-redirects/follow-redirects) [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/follow-redirects.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/follow-redirects) `follow-redirects` provides [request](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback) and [get](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_get_options_callback) methods that behave identically to those found on the native [http](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback) and [https](https://nodejs.org/api/https.html#https_https_request_options_callback) modules, with the exception that they will seamlessly follow redirects. ```javascript var http = require('follow-redirects').http; var https = require('follow-redirects').https; http.get('http://bit.ly/900913', function (response) { response.on('data', function (chunk) { console.log(chunk); }); }).on('error', function (err) { console.error(err); }); ``` You can inspect the final redirected URL through the `responseUrl` property on the `response`. If no redirection happened, `responseUrl` is the original request URL. ```javascript https.request({ host: 'bitly.com', path: '/UHfDGO', }, function (response) { console.log(response.responseUrl); // 'http://duckduckgo.com/robots.txt' }); ``` ## Options ### Global options Global options are set directly on the `follow-redirects` module: ```javascript var followRedirects = require('follow-redirects'); followRedirects.maxRedirects = 10; followRedirects.maxBodyLength = 20 * 1024 * 1024; // 20 MB ``` The following global options are supported: - `maxRedirects` (default: `21`) – sets the maximum number of allowed redirects; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. - `maxBodyLength` (default: 10MB) – sets the maximum size of the request body; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. ### Per-request options Per-request options are set by passing an `options` object: ```javascript var url = require('url'); var followRedirects = require('follow-redirects'); var options = url.parse('http://bit.ly/900913'); options.maxRedirects = 10; http.request(options); ``` In addition to the [standard HTTP](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback) and [HTTPS options](https://nodejs.org/api/https.html#https_https_request_options_callback), the following per-request options are supported: - `followRedirects` (default: `true`) – whether redirects should be followed. - `maxRedirects` (default: `21`) – sets the maximum number of allowed redirects; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. - `maxBodyLength` (default: 10MB) – sets the maximum size of the request body; if exceeded, an error will be emitted. - `agents` (default: `undefined`) – sets the `agent` option per protocol, since HTTP and HTTPS use different agents. Example value: `{ http: new http.Agent(), https: new https.Agent() }` - `trackRedirects` (default: `false`) – whether to store the redirected response details into the `redirects` array on the response object. ### Advanced usage By default, `follow-redirects` will use the Node.js default implementations of [`http`](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html) and [`https`](https://nodejs.org/api/https.html). To enable features such as caching and/or intermediate request tracking, you might instead want to wrap `follow-redirects` around custom protocol implementations: ```javascript var followRedirects = require('follow-redirects').wrap({ http: require('your-custom-http'), https: require('your-custom-https'), }); ``` Such custom protocols only need an implementation of the `request` method. ## Browserify Usage Due to the way `XMLHttpRequest` works, the `browserify` versions of `http` and `https` already follow redirects. If you are *only* targeting the browser, then this library has little value for you. If you want to write cross platform code for node and the browser, `follow-redirects` provides a great solution for making the native node modules behave the same as they do in browserified builds in the browser. To avoid bundling unnecessary code you should tell browserify to swap out `follow-redirects` with the standard modules when bundling. To make this easier, you need to change how you require the modules: ```javascript var http = require('follow-redirects/http'); var https = require('follow-redirects/https'); ``` You can then replace `follow-redirects` in your browserify configuration like so: ```javascript "browser": { "follow-redirects/http" : "http", "follow-redirects/https" : "https" } ``` The `browserify-http` module has not kept pace with node development, and no long behaves identically to the native module when running in the browser. If you are experiencing problems, you may want to check out [browserify-http-2](https://www.npmjs.com/package/http-browserify-2). It is more actively maintained and attempts to address a few of the shortcomings of `browserify-http`. In that case, your browserify config should look something like this: ```javascript "browser": { "follow-redirects/http" : "browserify-http-2/http", "follow-redirects/https" : "browserify-http-2/https" } ``` ## Contributing Pull Requests are always welcome. Please [file an issue](https://github.com/follow-redirects/follow-redirects/issues) detailing your proposal before you invest your valuable time. Additional features and bug fixes should be accompanied by tests. You can run the test suite locally with a simple `npm test` command. ## Debug Logging `follow-redirects` uses the excellent [debug](https://www.npmjs.com/package/debug) for logging. To turn on logging set the environment variable `DEBUG=follow-redirects` for debug output from just this module. When running the test suite it is sometimes advantageous to set `DEBUG=*` to see output from the express server as well. ## Authors - Olivier Lalonde ([email protected]) - James Talmage ([email protected]) - [Ruben Verborgh](https://ruben.verborgh.org/) ## License [https://github.com/follow-redirects/follow-redirects/blob/master/LICENSE](MIT License) assemblyscript-json # assemblyscript-json ## Table of contents ### Namespaces - [JSON](modules/json.md) ### Classes - [DecoderState](classes/decoderstate.md) - [JSONDecoder](classes/jsondecoder.md) - [JSONEncoder](classes/jsonencoder.md) - [JSONHandler](classes/jsonhandler.md) - [ThrowingJSONHandler](classes/throwingjsonhandler.md) # AssemblyScript Rtrace A tiny utility to sanitize the AssemblyScript runtime. Records allocations and frees performed by the runtime and emits an error if something is off. Also checks for leaks. Instructions ------------ Compile your module that uses the full or half runtime with `-use ASC_RTRACE=1 --explicitStart` and include an instance of this module as the import named `rtrace`. ```js const rtrace = new Rtrace({ onerror(err, info) { // handle error }, oninfo(msg) { // print message, optional }, getMemory() { // obtain the module's memory, // e.g. with --explicitStart: return instance.exports.memory; } }); const { module, instance } = await WebAssembly.instantiate(..., rtrace.install({ ...imports... }) ); instance.exports._start(); ... if (rtrace.active) { let leakCount = rtr.check(); if (leakCount) { // handle error } } ``` Note that references in globals which are not cleared before collection is performed appear as leaks, including their inner members. A TypedArray would leak itself and its backing ArrayBuffer in this case for example. This is perfectly normal and clearing all globals avoids this. # <img src="./logo.png" alt="bn.js" width="160" height="160" /> > BigNum in pure javascript [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/indutny/bn.js.png)](http://travis-ci.org/indutny/bn.js) ## Install `npm install --save bn.js` ## Usage ```js const BN = require('bn.js'); var a = new BN('dead', 16); var b = new BN('101010', 2); var res = a.add(b); console.log(res.toString(10)); // 57047 ``` **Note**: decimals are not supported in this library. ## Notation ### Prefixes There are several prefixes to instructions that affect the way the work. Here is the list of them in the order of appearance in the function name: * `i` - perform operation in-place, storing the result in the host object (on which the method was invoked). Might be used to avoid number allocation costs * `u` - unsigned, ignore the sign of operands when performing operation, or always return positive value. Second case applies to reduction operations like `mod()`. In such cases if the result will be negative - modulo will be added to the result to make it positive ### Postfixes * `n` - the argument of the function must be a plain JavaScript Number. Decimals are not supported. * `rn` - both argument and return value of the function are plain JavaScript Numbers. Decimals are not supported. ### Examples * `a.iadd(b)` - perform addition on `a` and `b`, storing the result in `a` * `a.umod(b)` - reduce `a` modulo `b`, returning positive value * `a.iushln(13)` - shift bits of `a` left by 13 ## Instructions Prefixes/postfixes are put in parens at the of the line. `endian` - could be either `le` (little-endian) or `be` (big-endian). ### Utilities * `a.clone()` - clone number * `a.toString(base, length)` - convert to base-string and pad with zeroes * `a.toNumber()` - convert to Javascript Number (limited to 53 bits) * `a.toJSON()` - convert to JSON compatible hex string (alias of `toString(16)`) * `a.toArray(endian, length)` - convert to byte `Array`, and optionally zero pad to length, throwing if already exceeding * `a.toArrayLike(type, endian, length)` - convert to an instance of `type`, which must behave like an `Array` * `a.toBuffer(endian, length)` - convert to Node.js Buffer (if available). For compatibility with browserify and similar tools, use this instead: `a.toArrayLike(Buffer, endian, length)` * `a.bitLength()` - get number of bits occupied * `a.zeroBits()` - return number of less-significant consequent zero bits (example: `1010000` has 4 zero bits) * `a.byteLength()` - return number of bytes occupied * `a.isNeg()` - true if the number is negative * `a.isEven()` - no comments * `a.isOdd()` - no comments * `a.isZero()` - no comments * `a.cmp(b)` - compare numbers and return `-1` (a `<` b), `0` (a `==` b), or `1` (a `>` b) depending on the comparison result (`ucmp`, `cmpn`) * `a.lt(b)` - `a` less than `b` (`n`) * `a.lte(b)` - `a` less than or equals `b` (`n`) * `a.gt(b)` - `a` greater than `b` (`n`) * `a.gte(b)` - `a` greater than or equals `b` (`n`) * `a.eq(b)` - `a` equals `b` (`n`) * `a.toTwos(width)` - convert to two's complement representation, where `width` is bit width * `a.fromTwos(width)` - convert from two's complement representation, where `width` is the bit width * `BN.isBN(object)` - returns true if the supplied `object` is a BN.js instance * `BN.max(a, b)` - return `a` if `a` bigger than `b` * `BN.min(a, b)` - return `a` if `a` less than `b` ### Arithmetics * `a.neg()` - negate sign (`i`) * `a.abs()` - absolute value (`i`) * `a.add(b)` - addition (`i`, `n`, `in`) * `a.sub(b)` - subtraction (`i`, `n`, `in`) * `a.mul(b)` - multiply (`i`, `n`, `in`) * `a.sqr()` - square (`i`) * `a.pow(b)` - raise `a` to the power of `b` * `a.div(b)` - divide (`divn`, `idivn`) * `a.mod(b)` - reduct (`u`, `n`) (but no `umodn`) * `a.divmod(b)` - quotient and modulus obtained by dividing * `a.divRound(b)` - rounded division ### Bit operations * `a.or(b)` - or (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.and(b)` - and (`i`, `u`, `iu`, `andln`) (NOTE: `andln` is going to be replaced with `andn` in future) * `a.xor(b)` - xor (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.setn(b, value)` - set specified bit to `value` * `a.shln(b)` - shift left (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.shrn(b)` - shift right (`i`, `u`, `iu`) * `a.testn(b)` - test if specified bit is set * `a.maskn(b)` - clear bits with indexes higher or equal to `b` (`i`) * `a.bincn(b)` - add `1 << b` to the number * `a.notn(w)` - not (for the width specified by `w`) (`i`) ### Reduction * `a.gcd(b)` - GCD * `a.egcd(b)` - Extended GCD results (`{ a: ..., b: ..., gcd: ... }`) * `a.invm(b)` - inverse `a` modulo `b` ## Fast reduction When doing lots of reductions using the same modulo, it might be beneficial to use some tricks: like [Montgomery multiplication][0], or using special algorithm for [Mersenne Prime][1]. ### Reduction context To enable this tricks one should create a reduction context: ```js var red = BN.red(num); ``` where `num` is just a BN instance. Or: ```js var red = BN.red(primeName); ``` Where `primeName` is either of these [Mersenne Primes][1]: * `'k256'` * `'p224'` * `'p192'` * `'p25519'` Or: ```js var red = BN.mont(num); ``` To reduce numbers with [Montgomery trick][0]. `.mont()` is generally faster than `.red(num)`, but slower than `BN.red(primeName)`. ### Converting numbers Before performing anything in reduction context - numbers should be converted to it. Usually, this means that one should: * Convert inputs to reducted ones * Operate on them in reduction context * Convert outputs back from the reduction context Here is how one may convert numbers to `red`: ```js var redA = a.toRed(red); ``` Where `red` is a reduction context created using instructions above Here is how to convert them back: ```js var a = redA.fromRed(); ``` ### Red instructions Most of the instructions from the very start of this readme have their counterparts in red context: * `a.redAdd(b)`, `a.redIAdd(b)` * `a.redSub(b)`, `a.redISub(b)` * `a.redShl(num)` * `a.redMul(b)`, `a.redIMul(b)` * `a.redSqr()`, `a.redISqr()` * `a.redSqrt()` - square root modulo reduction context's prime * `a.redInvm()` - modular inverse of the number * `a.redNeg()` * `a.redPow(b)` - modular exponentiation ### Number Size Optimized for elliptic curves that work with 256-bit numbers. There is no limitation on the size of the numbers. ## LICENSE This software is licensed under the MIT License. [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montgomery_modular_multiplication [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mersenne_prime # axios // helpers The modules found in `helpers/` should be generic modules that are _not_ specific to the domain logic of axios. These modules could theoretically be published to npm on their own and consumed by other modules or apps. Some examples of generic modules are things like: - Browser polyfills - Managing cookies - Parsing HTTP headers # Web IDL Type Conversions on JavaScript Values This package implements, in JavaScript, the algorithms to convert a given JavaScript value according to a given [Web IDL](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/) [type](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#idl-types). The goal is that you should be able to write code like ```js "use strict"; const conversions = require("webidl-conversions"); function doStuff(x, y) { x = conversions["boolean"](x); y = conversions["unsigned long"](y); // actual algorithm code here } ``` and your function `doStuff` will behave the same as a Web IDL operation declared as ```webidl void doStuff(boolean x, unsigned long y); ``` ## API This package's main module's default export is an object with a variety of methods, each corresponding to a different Web IDL type. Each method, when invoked on a JavaScript value, will give back the new JavaScript value that results after passing through the Web IDL conversion rules. (See below for more details on what that means.) Alternately, the method could throw an error, if the Web IDL algorithm is specified to do so: for example `conversions["float"](NaN)` [will throw a `TypeError`](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-float). Each method also accepts a second, optional, parameter for miscellaneous options. For conversion methods that throw errors, a string option `{ context }` may be provided to provide more information in the error message. (For example, `conversions["float"](NaN, { context: "Argument 1 of Interface's operation" })` will throw an error with message `"Argument 1 of Interface's operation is not a finite floating-point value."`) Specific conversions may also accept other options, the details of which can be found below. ## Conversions implemented Conversions for all of the basic types from the Web IDL specification are implemented: - [`any`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-any) - [`void`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-void) - [`boolean`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-boolean) - [Integer types](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-integer-types), which can additionally be provided the boolean options `{ clamp, enforceRange }` as a second parameter - [`float`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-float), [`unrestricted float`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-unrestricted-float) - [`double`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-double), [`unrestricted double`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-unrestricted-double) - [`DOMString`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-DOMString), which can additionally be provided the boolean option `{ treatNullAsEmptyString }` as a second parameter - [`ByteString`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-ByteString), [`USVString`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-USVString) - [`object`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-object) - [`Error`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-Error) - [Buffer source types](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#es-buffer-source-types) Additionally, for convenience, the following derived type definitions are implemented: - [`ArrayBufferView`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#ArrayBufferView) - [`BufferSource`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#BufferSource) - [`DOMTimeStamp`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#DOMTimeStamp) - [`Function`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#Function) - [`VoidFunction`](https://heycam.github.io/webidl/#VoidFunction) (although it will not censor the return type) Derived types, such as nullable types, promise types, sequences, records, etc. are not handled by this library. You may wish to investigate the [webidl2js](https://github.com/jsdom/webidl2js) project. ### A note on the `long long` types The `long long` and `unsigned long long` Web IDL types can hold values that cannot be stored in JavaScript numbers, so the conversion is imperfect. For example, converting the JavaScript number `18446744073709552000` to a Web IDL `long long` is supposed to produce the Web IDL value `-18446744073709551232`. Since we are representing our Web IDL values in JavaScript, we can't represent `-18446744073709551232`, so we instead the best we could do is `-18446744073709552000` as the output. This library actually doesn't even get that far. Producing those results would require doing accurate modular arithmetic on 64-bit intermediate values, but JavaScript does not make this easy. We could pull in a big-integer library as a dependency, but in lieu of that, we for now have decided to just produce inaccurate results if you pass in numbers that are not strictly between `Number.MIN_SAFE_INTEGER` and `Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER`. ## Background What's actually going on here, conceptually, is pretty weird. Let's try to explain. Web IDL, as part of its madness-inducing design, has its own type system. When people write algorithms in web platform specs, they usually operate on Web IDL values, i.e. instances of Web IDL types. For example, if they were specifying the algorithm for our `doStuff` operation above, they would treat `x` as a Web IDL value of [Web IDL type `boolean`](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#idl-boolean). Crucially, they would _not_ treat `x` as a JavaScript variable whose value is either the JavaScript `true` or `false`. They're instead working in a different type system altogether, with its own rules. Separately from its type system, Web IDL defines a ["binding"](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#ecmascript-binding) of the type system into JavaScript. This contains rules like: when you pass a JavaScript value to the JavaScript method that manifests a given Web IDL operation, how does that get converted into a Web IDL value? For example, a JavaScript `true` passed in the position of a Web IDL `boolean` argument becomes a Web IDL `true`. But, a JavaScript `true` passed in the position of a [Web IDL `unsigned long`](http://heycam.github.io/webidl/#idl-unsigned-long) becomes a Web IDL `1`. And so on. Finally, we have the actual implementation code. This is usually C++, although these days [some smart people are using Rust](https://github.com/servo/servo). The implementation, of course, has its own type system. So when they implement the Web IDL algorithms, they don't actually use Web IDL values, since those aren't "real" outside of specs. Instead, implementations apply the Web IDL binding rules in such a way as to convert incoming JavaScript values into C++ values. For example, if code in the browser called `doStuff(true, true)`, then the implementation code would eventually receive a C++ `bool` containing `true` and a C++ `uint32_t` containing `1`. The upside of all this is that implementations can abstract all the conversion logic away, letting Web IDL handle it, and focus on implementing the relevant methods in C++ with values of the correct type already provided. That is payoff of Web IDL, in a nutshell. And getting to that payoff is the goal of _this_ project—but for JavaScript implementations, instead of C++ ones. That is, this library is designed to make it easier for JavaScript developers to write functions that behave like a given Web IDL operation. So conceptually, the conversion pipeline, which in its general form is JavaScript values ↦ Web IDL values ↦ implementation-language values, in this case becomes JavaScript values ↦ Web IDL values ↦ JavaScript values. And that intermediate step is where all the logic is performed: a JavaScript `true` becomes a Web IDL `1` in an unsigned long context, which then becomes a JavaScript `1`. ## Don't use this Seriously, why would you ever use this? You really shouldn't. Web IDL is … strange, and you shouldn't be emulating its semantics. If you're looking for a generic argument-processing library, you should find one with better rules than those from Web IDL. In general, your JavaScript should not be trying to become more like Web IDL; if anything, we should fix Web IDL to make it more like JavaScript. The _only_ people who should use this are those trying to create faithful implementations (or polyfills) of web platform interfaces defined in Web IDL. Its main consumer is the [jsdom](https://github.com/tmpvar/jsdom) project. # safe-buffer [![travis][travis-image]][travis-url] [![npm][npm-image]][npm-url] [![downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url] [![javascript style guide][standard-image]][standard-url] [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/feross/safe-buffer/master.svg [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/feross/safe-buffer [npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/safe-buffer.svg [npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/safe-buffer [downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/safe-buffer.svg [downloads-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/safe-buffer [standard-image]: https://img.shields.io/badge/code_style-standard-brightgreen.svg [standard-url]: https://standardjs.com #### Safer Node.js Buffer API **Use the new Node.js Buffer APIs (`Buffer.from`, `Buffer.alloc`, `Buffer.allocUnsafe`, `Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow`) in all versions of Node.js.** **Uses the built-in implementation when available.** ## install ``` npm install safe-buffer ``` ## usage The goal of this package is to provide a safe replacement for the node.js `Buffer`. It's a drop-in replacement for `Buffer`. You can use it by adding one `require` line to the top of your node.js modules: ```js var Buffer = require('safe-buffer').Buffer // Existing buffer code will continue to work without issues: new Buffer('hey', 'utf8') new Buffer([1, 2, 3], 'utf8') new Buffer(obj) new Buffer(16) // create an uninitialized buffer (potentially unsafe) // But you can use these new explicit APIs to make clear what you want: Buffer.from('hey', 'utf8') // convert from many types to a Buffer Buffer.alloc(16) // create a zero-filled buffer (safe) Buffer.allocUnsafe(16) // create an uninitialized buffer (potentially unsafe) ``` ## api ### Class Method: Buffer.from(array) <!-- YAML added: v3.0.0 --> * `array` {Array} Allocates a new `Buffer` using an `array` of octets. ```js const buf = Buffer.from([0x62,0x75,0x66,0x66,0x65,0x72]); // creates a new Buffer containing ASCII bytes // ['b','u','f','f','e','r'] ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `array` is not an `Array`. ### Class Method: Buffer.from(arrayBuffer[, byteOffset[, length]]) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `arrayBuffer` {ArrayBuffer} The `.buffer` property of a `TypedArray` or a `new ArrayBuffer()` * `byteOffset` {Number} Default: `0` * `length` {Number} Default: `arrayBuffer.length - byteOffset` When passed a reference to the `.buffer` property of a `TypedArray` instance, the newly created `Buffer` will share the same allocated memory as the TypedArray. ```js const arr = new Uint16Array(2); arr[0] = 5000; arr[1] = 4000; const buf = Buffer.from(arr.buffer); // shares the memory with arr; console.log(buf); // Prints: <Buffer 88 13 a0 0f> // changing the TypedArray changes the Buffer also arr[1] = 6000; console.log(buf); // Prints: <Buffer 88 13 70 17> ``` The optional `byteOffset` and `length` arguments specify a memory range within the `arrayBuffer` that will be shared by the `Buffer`. ```js const ab = new ArrayBuffer(10); const buf = Buffer.from(ab, 0, 2); console.log(buf.length); // Prints: 2 ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `arrayBuffer` is not an `ArrayBuffer`. ### Class Method: Buffer.from(buffer) <!-- YAML added: v3.0.0 --> * `buffer` {Buffer} Copies the passed `buffer` data onto a new `Buffer` instance. ```js const buf1 = Buffer.from('buffer'); const buf2 = Buffer.from(buf1); buf1[0] = 0x61; console.log(buf1.toString()); // 'auffer' console.log(buf2.toString()); // 'buffer' (copy is not changed) ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `buffer` is not a `Buffer`. ### Class Method: Buffer.from(str[, encoding]) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `str` {String} String to encode. * `encoding` {String} Encoding to use, Default: `'utf8'` Creates a new `Buffer` containing the given JavaScript string `str`. If provided, the `encoding` parameter identifies the character encoding. If not provided, `encoding` defaults to `'utf8'`. ```js const buf1 = Buffer.from('this is a tést'); console.log(buf1.toString()); // prints: this is a tést console.log(buf1.toString('ascii')); // prints: this is a tC)st const buf2 = Buffer.from('7468697320697320612074c3a97374', 'hex'); console.log(buf2.toString()); // prints: this is a tést ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `str` is not a string. ### Class Method: Buffer.alloc(size[, fill[, encoding]]) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `size` {Number} * `fill` {Value} Default: `undefined` * `encoding` {String} Default: `utf8` Allocates a new `Buffer` of `size` bytes. If `fill` is `undefined`, the `Buffer` will be *zero-filled*. ```js const buf = Buffer.alloc(5); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 00 00 00 00 00> ``` The `size` must be less than or equal to the value of `require('buffer').kMaxLength` (on 64-bit architectures, `kMaxLength` is `(2^31)-1`). Otherwise, a [`RangeError`][] is thrown. A zero-length Buffer will be created if a `size` less than or equal to 0 is specified. If `fill` is specified, the allocated `Buffer` will be initialized by calling `buf.fill(fill)`. See [`buf.fill()`][] for more information. ```js const buf = Buffer.alloc(5, 'a'); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 61 61 61 61 61> ``` If both `fill` and `encoding` are specified, the allocated `Buffer` will be initialized by calling `buf.fill(fill, encoding)`. For example: ```js const buf = Buffer.alloc(11, 'aGVsbG8gd29ybGQ=', 'base64'); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 68 65 6c 6c 6f 20 77 6f 72 6c 64> ``` Calling `Buffer.alloc(size)` can be significantly slower than the alternative `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` but ensures that the newly created `Buffer` instance contents will *never contain sensitive data*. A `TypeError` will be thrown if `size` is not a number. ### Class Method: Buffer.allocUnsafe(size) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `size` {Number} Allocates a new *non-zero-filled* `Buffer` of `size` bytes. The `size` must be less than or equal to the value of `require('buffer').kMaxLength` (on 64-bit architectures, `kMaxLength` is `(2^31)-1`). Otherwise, a [`RangeError`][] is thrown. A zero-length Buffer will be created if a `size` less than or equal to 0 is specified. The underlying memory for `Buffer` instances created in this way is *not initialized*. The contents of the newly created `Buffer` are unknown and *may contain sensitive data*. Use [`buf.fill(0)`][] to initialize such `Buffer` instances to zeroes. ```js const buf = Buffer.allocUnsafe(5); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 78 e0 82 02 01> // (octets will be different, every time) buf.fill(0); console.log(buf); // <Buffer 00 00 00 00 00> ``` A `TypeError` will be thrown if `size` is not a number. Note that the `Buffer` module pre-allocates an internal `Buffer` instance of size `Buffer.poolSize` that is used as a pool for the fast allocation of new `Buffer` instances created using `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` (and the deprecated `new Buffer(size)` constructor) only when `size` is less than or equal to `Buffer.poolSize >> 1` (floor of `Buffer.poolSize` divided by two). The default value of `Buffer.poolSize` is `8192` but can be modified. Use of this pre-allocated internal memory pool is a key difference between calling `Buffer.alloc(size, fill)` vs. `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size).fill(fill)`. Specifically, `Buffer.alloc(size, fill)` will *never* use the internal Buffer pool, while `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size).fill(fill)` *will* use the internal Buffer pool if `size` is less than or equal to half `Buffer.poolSize`. The difference is subtle but can be important when an application requires the additional performance that `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` provides. ### Class Method: Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow(size) <!-- YAML added: v5.10.0 --> * `size` {Number} Allocates a new *non-zero-filled* and non-pooled `Buffer` of `size` bytes. The `size` must be less than or equal to the value of `require('buffer').kMaxLength` (on 64-bit architectures, `kMaxLength` is `(2^31)-1`). Otherwise, a [`RangeError`][] is thrown. A zero-length Buffer will be created if a `size` less than or equal to 0 is specified. The underlying memory for `Buffer` instances created in this way is *not initialized*. The contents of the newly created `Buffer` are unknown and *may contain sensitive data*. Use [`buf.fill(0)`][] to initialize such `Buffer` instances to zeroes. When using `Buffer.allocUnsafe()` to allocate new `Buffer` instances, allocations under 4KB are, by default, sliced from a single pre-allocated `Buffer`. This allows applications to avoid the garbage collection overhead of creating many individually allocated Buffers. This approach improves both performance and memory usage by eliminating the need to track and cleanup as many `Persistent` objects. However, in the case where a developer may need to retain a small chunk of memory from a pool for an indeterminate amount of time, it may be appropriate to create an un-pooled Buffer instance using `Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow()` then copy out the relevant bits. ```js // need to keep around a few small chunks of memory const store = []; socket.on('readable', () => { const data = socket.read(); // allocate for retained data const sb = Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow(10); // copy the data into the new allocation data.copy(sb, 0, 0, 10); store.push(sb); }); ``` Use of `Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow()` should be used only as a last resort *after* a developer has observed undue memory retention in their applications. A `TypeError` will be thrown if `size` is not a number. ### All the Rest The rest of the `Buffer` API is exactly the same as in node.js. [See the docs](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html). ## Related links - [Node.js issue: Buffer(number) is unsafe](https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/4660) - [Node.js Enhancement Proposal: Buffer.from/Buffer.alloc/Buffer.zalloc/Buffer() soft-deprecate](https://github.com/nodejs/node-eps/pull/4) ## Why is `Buffer` unsafe? Today, the node.js `Buffer` constructor is overloaded to handle many different argument types like `String`, `Array`, `Object`, `TypedArrayView` (`Uint8Array`, etc.), `ArrayBuffer`, and also `Number`. The API is optimized for convenience: you can throw any type at it, and it will try to do what you want. Because the Buffer constructor is so powerful, you often see code like this: ```js // Convert UTF-8 strings to hex function toHex (str) { return new Buffer(str).toString('hex') } ``` ***But what happens if `toHex` is called with a `Number` argument?*** ### Remote Memory Disclosure If an attacker can make your program call the `Buffer` constructor with a `Number` argument, then they can make it allocate uninitialized memory from the node.js process. This could potentially disclose TLS private keys, user data, or database passwords. When the `Buffer` constructor is passed a `Number` argument, it returns an **UNINITIALIZED** block of memory of the specified `size`. When you create a `Buffer` like this, you **MUST** overwrite the contents before returning it to the user. From the [node.js docs](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html#buffer_new_buffer_size): > `new Buffer(size)` > > - `size` Number > > The underlying memory for `Buffer` instances created in this way is not initialized. > **The contents of a newly created `Buffer` are unknown and could contain sensitive > data.** Use `buf.fill(0)` to initialize a Buffer to zeroes. (Emphasis our own.) Whenever the programmer intended to create an uninitialized `Buffer` you often see code like this: ```js var buf = new Buffer(16) // Immediately overwrite the uninitialized buffer with data from another buffer for (var i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) { buf[i] = otherBuf[i] } ``` ### Would this ever be a problem in real code? Yes. It's surprisingly common to forget to check the type of your variables in a dynamically-typed language like JavaScript. Usually the consequences of assuming the wrong type is that your program crashes with an uncaught exception. But the failure mode for forgetting to check the type of arguments to the `Buffer` constructor is more catastrophic. Here's an example of a vulnerable service that takes a JSON payload and converts it to hex: ```js // Take a JSON payload {str: "some string"} and convert it to hex var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) { var data = '' req.setEncoding('utf8') req.on('data', function (chunk) { data += chunk }) req.on('end', function () { var body = JSON.parse(data) res.end(new Buffer(body.str).toString('hex')) }) }) server.listen(8080) ``` In this example, an http client just has to send: ```json { "str": 1000 } ``` and it will get back 1,000 bytes of uninitialized memory from the server. This is a very serious bug. It's similar in severity to the [the Heartbleed bug](http://heartbleed.com/) that allowed disclosure of OpenSSL process memory by remote attackers. ### Which real-world packages were vulnerable? #### [`bittorrent-dht`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bittorrent-dht) [Mathias Buus](https://github.com/mafintosh) and I ([Feross Aboukhadijeh](http://feross.org/)) found this issue in one of our own packages, [`bittorrent-dht`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/bittorrent-dht). The bug would allow anyone on the internet to send a series of messages to a user of `bittorrent-dht` and get them to reveal 20 bytes at a time of uninitialized memory from the node.js process. Here's [the commit](https://github.com/feross/bittorrent-dht/commit/6c7da04025d5633699800a99ec3fbadf70ad35b8) that fixed it. We released a new fixed version, created a [Node Security Project disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/68), and deprecated all vulnerable versions on npm so users will get a warning to upgrade to a newer version. #### [`ws`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ws) That got us wondering if there were other vulnerable packages. Sure enough, within a short period of time, we found the same issue in [`ws`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ws), the most popular WebSocket implementation in node.js. If certain APIs were called with `Number` parameters instead of `String` or `Buffer` as expected, then uninitialized server memory would be disclosed to the remote peer. These were the vulnerable methods: ```js socket.send(number) socket.ping(number) socket.pong(number) ``` Here's a vulnerable socket server with some echo functionality: ```js server.on('connection', function (socket) { socket.on('message', function (message) { message = JSON.parse(message) if (message.type === 'echo') { socket.send(message.data) // send back the user's message } }) }) ``` `socket.send(number)` called on the server, will disclose server memory. Here's [the release](https://github.com/websockets/ws/releases/tag/1.0.1) where the issue was fixed, with a more detailed explanation. Props to [Arnout Kazemier](https://github.com/3rd-Eden) for the quick fix. Here's the [Node Security Project disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/67). ### What's the solution? It's important that node.js offers a fast way to get memory otherwise performance-critical applications would needlessly get a lot slower. But we need a better way to *signal our intent* as programmers. **When we want uninitialized memory, we should request it explicitly.** Sensitive functionality should not be packed into a developer-friendly API that loosely accepts many different types. This type of API encourages the lazy practice of passing variables in without checking the type very carefully. #### A new API: `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)` The functionality of creating buffers with uninitialized memory should be part of another API. We propose `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)`. This way, it's not part of an API that frequently gets user input of all sorts of different types passed into it. ```js var buf = Buffer.allocUnsafe(16) // careful, uninitialized memory! // Immediately overwrite the uninitialized buffer with data from another buffer for (var i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) { buf[i] = otherBuf[i] } ``` ### How do we fix node.js core? We sent [a PR to node.js core](https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/4514) (merged as `semver-major`) which defends against one case: ```js var str = 16 new Buffer(str, 'utf8') ``` In this situation, it's implied that the programmer intended the first argument to be a string, since they passed an encoding as a second argument. Today, node.js will allocate uninitialized memory in the case of `new Buffer(number, encoding)`, which is probably not what the programmer intended. But this is only a partial solution, since if the programmer does `new Buffer(variable)` (without an `encoding` parameter) there's no way to know what they intended. If `variable` is sometimes a number, then uninitialized memory will sometimes be returned. ### What's the real long-term fix? We could deprecate and remove `new Buffer(number)` and use `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)` when we need uninitialized memory. But that would break 1000s of packages. ~~We believe the best solution is to:~~ ~~1. Change `new Buffer(number)` to return safe, zeroed-out memory~~ ~~2. Create a new API for creating uninitialized Buffers. We propose: `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)`~~ #### Update We now support adding three new APIs: - `Buffer.from(value)` - convert from any type to a buffer - `Buffer.alloc(size)` - create a zero-filled buffer - `Buffer.allocUnsafe(size)` - create an uninitialized buffer with given size This solves the core problem that affected `ws` and `bittorrent-dht` which is `Buffer(variable)` getting tricked into taking a number argument. This way, existing code continues working and the impact on the npm ecosystem will be minimal. Over time, npm maintainers can migrate performance-critical code to use `Buffer.allocUnsafe(number)` instead of `new Buffer(number)`. ### Conclusion We think there's a serious design issue with the `Buffer` API as it exists today. It promotes insecure software by putting high-risk functionality into a convenient API with friendly "developer ergonomics". This wasn't merely a theoretical exercise because we found the issue in some of the most popular npm packages. Fortunately, there's an easy fix that can be applied today. Use `safe-buffer` in place of `buffer`. ```js var Buffer = require('safe-buffer').Buffer ``` Eventually, we hope that node.js core can switch to this new, safer behavior. We believe the impact on the ecosystem would be minimal since it's not a breaking change. Well-maintained, popular packages would be updated to use `Buffer.alloc` quickly, while older, insecure packages would magically become safe from this attack vector. ## links - [Node.js PR: buffer: throw if both length and enc are passed](https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/4514) - [Node Security Project disclosure for `ws`](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/67) - [Node Security Project disclosure for`bittorrent-dht`](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/68) ## credit The original issues in `bittorrent-dht` ([disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/68)) and `ws` ([disclosure](https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/67)) were discovered by [Mathias Buus](https://github.com/mafintosh) and [Feross Aboukhadijeh](http://feross.org/). Thanks to [Adam Baldwin](https://github.com/evilpacket) for helping disclose these issues and for his work running the [Node Security Project](https://nodesecurity.io/). Thanks to [John Hiesey](https://github.com/jhiesey) for proofreading this README and auditing the code. ## license MIT. Copyright (C) [Feross Aboukhadijeh](http://feross.org) # debug [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/visionmedia/debug.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/visionmedia/debug) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/visionmedia/debug/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/visionmedia/debug?branch=master) [![Slack](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/badge.svg)](https://visionmedia-community-slackin.now.sh/) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/backers/badge.svg)](#backers) [![OpenCollective](https://opencollective.com/debug/sponsors/badge.svg)](#sponsors) <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> A tiny JavaScript debugging utility modelled after Node.js core's debugging technique. Works in Node.js and web browsers. ## Installation ```bash $ npm install debug ``` ## Usage `debug` exposes a function; simply pass this function the name of your module, and it will return a decorated version of `console.error` for you to pass debug statements to. This will allow you to toggle the debug output for different parts of your module as well as the module as a whole. Example [_app.js_](./examples/node/app.js): ```js var debug = require('debug')('http') , http = require('http') , name = 'My App'; // fake app debug('booting %o', name); http.createServer(function(req, res){ debug(req.method + ' ' + req.url); res.end('hello\n'); }).listen(3000, function(){ debug('listening'); }); // fake worker of some kind require('./worker'); ``` Example [_worker.js_](./examples/node/worker.js): ```js var a = require('debug')('worker:a') , b = require('debug')('worker:b'); function work() { a('doing lots of uninteresting work'); setTimeout(work, Math.random() * 1000); } work(); function workb() { b('doing some work'); setTimeout(workb, Math.random() * 2000); } workb(); ``` The `DEBUG` environment variable is then used to enable these based on space or comma-delimited names. Here are some examples: <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 04 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091703-a6302cdc-7c38-11e7-8304-7c0b3bc600cd.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 38 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091700-a62a6888-7c38-11e7-800b-db911291ca2b.png"> <img width="647" alt="screen shot 2017-08-08 at 12 53 25 pm" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091701-a62ea114-7c38-11e7-826a-2692bedca740.png"> #### Windows note On Windows the environment variable is set using the `set` command. ```cmd set DEBUG=*,-not_this ``` Note that PowerShell uses different syntax to set environment variables. ```cmd $env:DEBUG = "*,-not_this" ``` Then, run the program to be debugged as usual. ## Namespace Colors Every debug instance has a color generated for it based on its namespace name. This helps when visually parsing the debug output to identify which debug instance a debug line belongs to. #### Node.js In Node.js, colors are enabled when stderr is a TTY. You also _should_ install the [`supports-color`](https://npmjs.org/supports-color) module alongside debug, otherwise debug will only use a small handful of basic colors. <img width="521" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092181-47f6a9e6-7c3a-11e7-9a14-1928d8a711cd.png"> #### Web Browser Colors are also enabled on "Web Inspectors" that understand the `%c` formatting option. These are WebKit web inspectors, Firefox ([since version 31](https://hacks.mozilla.org/2014/05/editable-box-model-multiple-selection-sublime-text-keys-much-more-firefox-developer-tools-episode-31/)) and the Firebug plugin for Firefox (any version). <img width="524" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29092033-b65f9f2e-7c39-11e7-8e32-f6f0d8e865c1.png"> ## Millisecond diff When actively developing an application it can be useful to see when the time spent between one `debug()` call and the next. Suppose for example you invoke `debug()` before requesting a resource, and after as well, the "+NNNms" will show you how much time was spent between calls. <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091486-fa38524c-7c37-11e7-895f-e7ec8e1039b6.png"> When stdout is not a TTY, `Date#toISOString()` is used, making it more useful for logging the debug information as shown below: <img width="647" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/71256/29091956-6bd78372-7c39-11e7-8c55-c948396d6edd.png"> ## Conventions If you're using this in one or more of your libraries, you _should_ use the name of your library so that developers may toggle debugging as desired without guessing names. If you have more than one debuggers you _should_ prefix them with your library name and use ":" to separate features. For example "bodyParser" from Connect would then be "connect:bodyParser". If you append a "*" to the end of your name, it will always be enabled regardless of the setting of the DEBUG environment variable. You can then use it for normal output as well as debug output. ## Wildcards The `*` character may be used as a wildcard. Suppose for example your library has debuggers named "connect:bodyParser", "connect:compress", "connect:session", instead of listing all three with `DEBUG=connect:bodyParser,connect:compress,connect:session`, you may simply do `DEBUG=connect:*`, or to run everything using this module simply use `DEBUG=*`. You can also exclude specific debuggers by prefixing them with a "-" character. For example, `DEBUG=*,-connect:*` would include all debuggers except those starting with "connect:". ## Environment Variables When running through Node.js, you can set a few environment variables that will change the behavior of the debug logging: | Name | Purpose | |-----------|-------------------------------------------------| | `DEBUG` | Enables/disables specific debugging namespaces. | | `DEBUG_HIDE_DATE` | Hide date from debug output (non-TTY). | | `DEBUG_COLORS`| Whether or not to use colors in the debug output. | | `DEBUG_DEPTH` | Object inspection depth. | | `DEBUG_SHOW_HIDDEN` | Shows hidden properties on inspected objects. | __Note:__ The environment variables beginning with `DEBUG_` end up being converted into an Options object that gets used with `%o`/`%O` formatters. See the Node.js documentation for [`util.inspect()`](https://nodejs.org/api/util.html#util_util_inspect_object_options) for the complete list. ## Formatters Debug uses [printf-style](https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Printf_format_string) formatting. Below are the officially supported formatters: | Formatter | Representation | |-----------|----------------| | `%O` | Pretty-print an Object on multiple lines. | | `%o` | Pretty-print an Object all on a single line. | | `%s` | String. | | `%d` | Number (both integer and float). | | `%j` | JSON. Replaced with the string '[Circular]' if the argument contains circular references. | | `%%` | Single percent sign ('%'). This does not consume an argument. | ### Custom formatters You can add custom formatters by extending the `debug.formatters` object. For example, if you wanted to add support for rendering a Buffer as hex with `%h`, you could do something like: ```js const createDebug = require('debug') createDebug.formatters.h = (v) => { return v.toString('hex') } // …elsewhere const debug = createDebug('foo') debug('this is hex: %h', new Buffer('hello world')) // foo this is hex: 68656c6c6f20776f726c6421 +0ms ``` ## Browser Support You can build a browser-ready script using [browserify](https://github.com/substack/node-browserify), or just use the [browserify-as-a-service](https://wzrd.in/) [build](https://wzrd.in/standalone/debug@latest), if you don't want to build it yourself. Debug's enable state is currently persisted by `localStorage`. Consider the situation shown below where you have `worker:a` and `worker:b`, and wish to debug both. You can enable this using `localStorage.debug`: ```js localStorage.debug = 'worker:*' ``` And then refresh the page. ```js a = debug('worker:a'); b = debug('worker:b'); setInterval(function(){ a('doing some work'); }, 1000); setInterval(function(){ b('doing some work'); }, 1200); ``` ## Output streams By default `debug` will log to stderr, however this can be configured per-namespace by overriding the `log` method: Example [_stdout.js_](./examples/node/stdout.js): ```js var debug = require('debug'); var error = debug('app:error'); // by default stderr is used error('goes to stderr!'); var log = debug('app:log'); // set this namespace to log via console.log log.log = console.log.bind(console); // don't forget to bind to console! log('goes to stdout'); error('still goes to stderr!'); // set all output to go via console.info // overrides all per-namespace log settings debug.log = console.info.bind(console); error('now goes to stdout via console.info'); log('still goes to stdout, but via console.info now'); ``` ## Checking whether a debug target is enabled After you've created a debug instance, you can determine whether or not it is enabled by checking the `enabled` property: ```javascript const debug = require('debug')('http'); if (debug.enabled) { // do stuff... } ``` You can also manually toggle this property to force the debug instance to be enabled or disabled. ## Authors - TJ Holowaychuk - Nathan Rajlich - Andrew Rhyne ## Backers Support us with a monthly donation and help us continue our activities. 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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # set-blocking [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/set-blocking.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/set-blocking) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/set-blocking.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/set-blocking) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/yargs/set-blocking/badge.svg?branch=)](https://coveralls.io/r/yargs/set-blocking?branch=master) [![Standard Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/release-standard%20version-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version) set blocking `stdio` and `stderr` ensuring that terminal output does not truncate. ```js const setBlocking = require('set-blocking') setBlocking(true) console.log(someLargeStringToOutput) ``` ## Historical Context/Word of Warning This was created as a shim to address the bug discussed in [node #6456](https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/6456). This bug crops up on newer versions of Node.js (`0.12+`), truncating terminal output. You should be mindful of the side-effects caused by using `set-blocking`: * if your module sets blocking to `true`, it will effect other modules consuming your library. In [yargs](https://github.com/yargs/yargs/blob/master/yargs.js#L653) we only call `setBlocking(true)` once we already know we are about to call `process.exit(code)`. * this patch will not apply to subprocesses spawned with `isTTY = true`, this is the [default `spawn()` behavior](https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_process_child_process_spawn_command_args_options). ## License ISC # balanced-match Match balanced string pairs, like `{` and `}` or `<b>` and `</b>`. Supports regular expressions as well! [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/juliangruber/balanced-match.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/juliangruber/balanced-match) [![downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/balanced-match.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/balanced-match) [![testling badge](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/balanced-match.png)](https://ci.testling.com/juliangruber/balanced-match) ## Example Get the first matching pair of braces: ```js var balanced = require('balanced-match'); console.log(balanced('{', '}', 'pre{in{nested}}post')); console.log(balanced('{', '}', 'pre{first}between{second}post')); console.log(balanced(/\s+\{\s+/, /\s+\}\s+/, 'pre { in{nest} } post')); ``` The matches are: ```bash $ node example.js { start: 3, end: 14, pre: 'pre', body: 'in{nested}', post: 'post' } { start: 3, end: 9, pre: 'pre', body: 'first', post: 'between{second}post' } { start: 3, end: 17, pre: 'pre', body: 'in{nest}', post: 'post' } ``` ## API ### var m = balanced(a, b, str) For the first non-nested matching pair of `a` and `b` in `str`, return an object with those keys: * **start** the index of the first match of `a` * **end** the index of the matching `b` * **pre** the preamble, `a` and `b` not included * **body** the match, `a` and `b` not included * **post** the postscript, `a` and `b` not included If there's no match, `undefined` will be returned. If the `str` contains more `a` than `b` / there are unmatched pairs, the first match that was closed will be used. For example, `{{a}` will match `['{', 'a', '']` and `{a}}` will match `['', 'a', '}']`. ### var r = balanced.range(a, b, str) For the first non-nested matching pair of `a` and `b` in `str`, return an array with indexes: `[ <a index>, <b index> ]`. If there's no match, `undefined` will be returned. If the `str` contains more `a` than `b` / there are unmatched pairs, the first match that was closed will be used. For example, `{{a}` will match `[ 1, 3 ]` and `{a}}` will match `[0, 2]`. ## Installation With [npm](https://npmjs.org) do: ```bash npm install balanced-match ``` ## License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2013 Julian Gruber &lt;[email protected]&gt; Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # get-caller-file [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/stefanpenner/get-caller-file.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/stefanpenner/get-caller-file) [![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/ol2q94g1932cy14a/branch/master?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/embercli/get-caller-file/branch/master) This is a utility, which allows a function to figure out from which file it was invoked. It does so by inspecting v8's stack trace at the time it is invoked. Inspired by http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13227489 *note: this relies on Node/V8 specific APIs, as such other runtimes may not work* ## Installation ```bash yarn add get-caller-file ``` ## Usage Given: ```js // ./foo.js const getCallerFile = require('get-caller-file'); module.exports = function() { return getCallerFile(); // figures out who called it }; ``` ```js // index.js const foo = require('./foo'); foo() // => /full/path/to/this/file/index.js ``` ## Options: * `getCallerFile(position = 2)`: where position is stack frame whos fileName we want. [![NPM registry](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/as-bignum.svg?style=for-the-badge)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/as-bignum)[![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/master?style=for-the-badge)](https://travis-ci.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum)[![NPM license](https://img.shields.io/badge/license-Apache%202.0-ba68c8.svg?style=for-the-badge)](LICENSE.md) ## Work in progress --- ### WebAssembly fixed length big numbers written on [AssemblyScript](https://github.com/AssemblyScript/assemblyscript) Provide wide numeric types such as `u128`, `u256`, `i128`, `i256` and fixed points and also its arithmetic operations. Namespace `safe` contain equivalents with overflow/underflow traps. All kind of types pretty useful for economical and cryptographic usages and provide deterministic behavior. ### Install > yarn add as-bignum or > npm i as-bignum ### Usage via AssemblyScript ```ts import { u128 } from "as-bignum"; declare function logF64(value: f64): void; declare function logU128(hi: u64, lo: u64): void; var a = u128.One; var b = u128.from(-32); // same as u128.from<i32>(-32) var c = new u128(0x1, -0xF); var d = u128.from(0x0123456789ABCDEF); // same as u128.from<i64>(0x0123456789ABCDEF) var e = u128.from('0x0123456789ABCDEF01234567'); var f = u128.fromString('11100010101100101', 2); // same as u128.from('0b11100010101100101') var r = d / c + (b << 5) + e; logF64(r.as<f64>()); logU128(r.hi, r.lo); ``` ### Usage via JavaScript/Typescript ```ts TODO ``` ### List of types - [x] [`u128`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/integer/u128.ts) unsigned type (tested) - [ ] [`u256`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/integer/u256.ts) unsigned type (very basic) - [ ] `i128` signed type - [ ] `i256` signed type --- - [x] [`safe.u128`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/integer/safe/u128.ts) unsigned type (tested) - [ ] `safe.u256` unsigned type - [ ] `safe.i128` signed type - [ ] `safe.i256` signed type --- - [ ] [`fp128<Q>`](https://github.com/MaxGraey/as-bignum/blob/master/assembly/fixed/fp128.ts) generic fixed point signed type٭ (very basic for now) - [ ] `fp256<Q>` generic fixed point signed type٭ --- - [ ] `safe.fp128<Q>` generic fixed point signed type٭ - [ ] `safe.fp256<Q>` generic fixed point signed type٭ ٭ _typename_ `Q` _is a type representing count of fractional bits_ # inflight Add callbacks to requests in flight to avoid async duplication ## USAGE ```javascript var inflight = require('inflight') // some request that does some stuff function req(key, callback) { // key is any random string. like a url or filename or whatever. // // will return either a falsey value, indicating that the // request for this key is already in flight, or a new callback // which when called will call all callbacks passed to inflightk // with the same key callback = inflight(key, callback) // If we got a falsey value back, then there's already a req going if (!callback) return // this is where you'd fetch the url or whatever // callback is also once()-ified, so it can safely be assigned // to multiple events etc. First call wins. setTimeout(function() { callback(null, key) }, 100) } // only assigns a single setTimeout // when it dings, all cbs get called req('foo', cb1) req('foo', cb2) req('foo', cb3) req('foo', cb4) ``` # lodash.clonedeep v4.5.0 The [lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.cloneDeep` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.clonedeep ``` In Node.js: ```js var cloneDeep = require('lodash.clonedeep'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#cloneDeep) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.5.0-npm-packages/lodash.clonedeep) for more details. # axios // adapters The modules under `adapters/` are modules that handle dispatching a request and settling a returned `Promise` once a response is received. ## Example ```js var settle = require('./../core/settle'); module.exports = function myAdapter(config) { // At this point: // - config has been merged with defaults // - request transformers have already run // - request interceptors have already run // Make the request using config provided // Upon response settle the Promise return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) { var response = { data: responseData, status: request.status, statusText: request.statusText, headers: responseHeaders, config: config, request: request }; settle(resolve, reject, response); // From here: // - response transformers will run // - response interceptors will run }); } ``` # Punycode.js [![Build status](https://travis-ci.org/bestiejs/punycode.js.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/bestiejs/punycode.js) [![Code coverage status](http://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/bestiejs/punycode.js.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/bestiejs/punycode.js) [![Dependency status](https://gemnasium.com/bestiejs/punycode.js.svg)](https://gemnasium.com/bestiejs/punycode.js) Punycode.js is a robust Punycode converter that fully complies to [RFC 3492](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3492) and [RFC 5891](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5891). This JavaScript library is the result of comparing, optimizing and documenting different open-source implementations of the Punycode algorithm: * [The C example code from RFC 3492](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3492#appendix-C) * [`punycode.c` by _Markus W. Scherer_ (IBM)](http://opensource.apple.com/source/ICU/ICU-400.42/icuSources/common/punycode.c) * [`punycode.c` by _Ben Noordhuis_](https://github.com/bnoordhuis/punycode/blob/master/punycode.c) * [JavaScript implementation by _some_](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/183485/can-anyone-recommend-a-good-free-javascript-for-punycode-to-unicode-conversion/301287#301287) * [`punycode.js` by _Ben Noordhuis_](https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/426298c8c1c0d5b5224ac3658c41e7c2a3fe9377/lib/punycode.js) (note: [not fully compliant](https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/2072)) This project was [bundled](https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/master/lib/punycode.js) with Node.js from [v0.6.2+](https://github.com/joyent/node/compare/975f1930b1...61e796decc) until [v7](https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/7941) (soft-deprecated). The current version supports recent versions of Node.js only. It provides a CommonJS module and an ES6 module. For the old version that offers the same functionality with broader support, including Rhino, Ringo, Narwhal, and web browsers, see [v1.4.1](https://github.com/bestiejs/punycode.js/releases/tag/v1.4.1). ## Installation Via [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```bash npm install punycode --save ``` In [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/): ```js const punycode = require('punycode'); ``` ## API ### `punycode.decode(string)` Converts a Punycode string of ASCII symbols to a string of Unicode symbols. ```js // decode domain name parts punycode.decode('maana-pta'); // 'mañana' punycode.decode('--dqo34k'); // '☃-⌘' ``` ### `punycode.encode(string)` Converts a string of Unicode symbols to a Punycode string of ASCII symbols. ```js // encode domain name parts punycode.encode('mañana'); // 'maana-pta' punycode.encode('☃-⌘'); // '--dqo34k' ``` ### `punycode.toUnicode(input)` Converts a Punycode string representing a domain name or an email address to Unicode. Only the Punycoded parts of the input will be converted, i.e. it doesn’t matter if you call it on a string that has already been converted to Unicode. ```js // decode domain names punycode.toUnicode('xn--maana-pta.com'); // → 'mañana.com' punycode.toUnicode('xn----dqo34k.com'); // → '☃-⌘.com' // decode email addresses punycode.toUnicode('джумла@xn--p-8sbkgc5ag7bhce.xn--ba-lmcq'); // → 'джумла@джpумлатест.bрфa' ``` ### `punycode.toASCII(input)` Converts a lowercased Unicode string representing a domain name or an email address to Punycode. Only the non-ASCII parts of the input will be converted, i.e. it doesn’t matter if you call it with a domain that’s already in ASCII. ```js // encode domain names punycode.toASCII('mañana.com'); // → 'xn--maana-pta.com' punycode.toASCII('☃-⌘.com'); // → 'xn----dqo34k.com' // encode email addresses punycode.toASCII('джумла@джpумлатест.bрфa'); // → 'джумла@xn--p-8sbkgc5ag7bhce.xn--ba-lmcq' ``` ### `punycode.ucs2` #### `punycode.ucs2.decode(string)` Creates an array containing the numeric code point values of each Unicode symbol in the string. While [JavaScript uses UCS-2 internally](https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/javascript-encoding), this function will convert a pair of surrogate halves (each of which UCS-2 exposes as separate characters) into a single code point, matching UTF-16. ```js punycode.ucs2.decode('abc'); // → [0x61, 0x62, 0x63] // surrogate pair for U+1D306 TETRAGRAM FOR CENTRE: punycode.ucs2.decode('\uD834\uDF06'); // → [0x1D306] ``` #### `punycode.ucs2.encode(codePoints)` Creates a string based on an array of numeric code point values. ```js punycode.ucs2.encode([0x61, 0x62, 0x63]); // → 'abc' punycode.ucs2.encode([0x1D306]); // → '\uD834\uDF06' ``` ### `punycode.version` A string representing the current Punycode.js version number. ## Author | [![twitter/mathias](https://gravatar.com/avatar/24e08a9ea84deb17ae121074d0f17125?s=70)](https://twitter.com/mathias "Follow @mathias on Twitter") | |---| | [Mathias Bynens](https://mathiasbynens.be/) | ## License Punycode.js is available under the [MIT](https://mths.be/mit) license. # node-tar [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/npm/node-tar.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/npm/node-tar) [Fast](./benchmarks) and full-featured Tar for Node.js The API is designed to mimic the behavior of `tar(1)` on unix systems. If you are familiar with how tar works, most of this will hopefully be straightforward for you. If not, then hopefully this module can teach you useful unix skills that may come in handy someday :) ## Background A "tar file" or "tarball" is an archive of file system entries (directories, files, links, etc.) The name comes from "tape archive". If you run `man tar` on almost any Unix command line, you'll learn quite a bit about what it can do, and its history. Tar has 5 main top-level commands: * `c` Create an archive * `r` Replace entries within an archive * `u` Update entries within an archive (ie, replace if they're newer) * `t` List out the contents of an archive * `x` Extract an archive to disk The other flags and options modify how this top level function works. ## High-Level API These 5 functions are the high-level API. All of them have a single-character name (for unix nerds familiar with `tar(1)`) as well as a long name (for everyone else). All the high-level functions take the following arguments, all three of which are optional and may be omitted. 1. `options` - An optional object specifying various options 2. `paths` - An array of paths to add or extract 3. `callback` - Called when the command is completed, if async. (If sync or no file specified, providing a callback throws a `TypeError`.) If the command is sync (ie, if `options.sync=true`), then the callback is not allowed, since the action will be completed immediately. If a `file` argument is specified, and the command is async, then a `Promise` is returned. In this case, if async, a callback may be provided which is called when the command is completed. If a `file` option is not specified, then a stream is returned. For `create`, this is a readable stream of the generated archive. For `list` and `extract` this is a writable stream that an archive should be written into. If a file is not specified, then a callback is not allowed, because you're already getting a stream to work with. `replace` and `update` only work on existing archives, and so require a `file` argument. Sync commands without a file argument return a stream that acts on its input immediately in the same tick. For readable streams, this means that all of the data is immediately available by calling `stream.read()`. For writable streams, it will be acted upon as soon as it is provided, but this can be at any time. ### Warnings and Errors Tar emits warnings and errors for recoverable and unrecoverable situations, respectively. In many cases, a warning only affects a single entry in an archive, or is simply informing you that it's modifying an entry to comply with the settings provided. Unrecoverable warnings will always raise an error (ie, emit `'error'` on streaming actions, throw for non-streaming sync actions, reject the returned Promise for non-streaming async operations, or call a provided callback with an `Error` as the first argument). Recoverable errors will raise an error only if `strict: true` is set in the options. Respond to (recoverable) warnings by listening to the `warn` event. Handlers receive 3 arguments: - `code` String. One of the error codes below. This may not match `data.code`, which preserves the original error code from fs and zlib. - `message` String. More details about the error. - `data` Metadata about the error. An `Error` object for errors raised by fs and zlib. All fields are attached to errors raisd by tar. Typically contains the following fields, as relevant: - `tarCode` The tar error code. - `code` Either the tar error code, or the error code set by the underlying system. - `file` The archive file being read or written. - `cwd` Working directory for creation and extraction operations. - `entry` The entry object (if it could be created) for `TAR_ENTRY_INFO`, `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID`, and `TAR_ENTRY_ERROR` warnings. - `header` The header object (if it could be created, and the entry could not be created) for `TAR_ENTRY_INFO` and `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID` warnings. - `recoverable` Boolean. If `false`, then the warning will emit an `error`, even in non-strict mode. #### Error Codes * `TAR_ENTRY_INFO` An informative error indicating that an entry is being modified, but otherwise processed normally. For example, removing `/` or `C:\` from absolute paths if `preservePaths` is not set. * `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID` An indication that a given entry is not a valid tar archive entry, and will be skipped. This occurs when: - a checksum fails, - a `linkpath` is missing for a link type, or - a `linkpath` is provided for a non-link type. If every entry in a parsed archive raises an `TAR_ENTRY_INVALID` error, then the archive is presumed to be unrecoverably broken, and `TAR_BAD_ARCHIVE` will be raised. * `TAR_ENTRY_ERROR` The entry appears to be a valid tar archive entry, but encountered an error which prevented it from being unpacked. This occurs when: - an unrecoverable fs error happens during unpacking, - an entry has `..` in the path and `preservePaths` is not set, or - an entry is extracting through a symbolic link, when `preservePaths` is not set. * `TAR_ENTRY_UNSUPPORTED` An indication that a given entry is a valid archive entry, but of a type that is unsupported, and so will be skipped in archive creation or extracting. * `TAR_ABORT` When parsing gzipped-encoded archives, the parser will abort the parse process raise a warning for any zlib errors encountered. Aborts are considered unrecoverable for both parsing and unpacking. * `TAR_BAD_ARCHIVE` The archive file is totally hosed. This can happen for a number of reasons, and always occurs at the end of a parse or extract: - An entry body was truncated before seeing the full number of bytes. - The archive contained only invalid entries, indicating that it is likely not an archive, or at least, not an archive this library can parse. `TAR_BAD_ARCHIVE` is considered informative for parse operations, but unrecoverable for extraction. Note that, if encountered at the end of an extraction, tar WILL still have extracted as much it could from the archive, so there may be some garbage files to clean up. Errors that occur deeper in the system (ie, either the filesystem or zlib) will have their error codes left intact, and a `tarCode` matching one of the above will be added to the warning metadata or the raised error object. Errors generated by tar will have one of the above codes set as the `error.code` field as well, but since errors originating in zlib or fs will have their original codes, it's better to read `error.tarCode` if you wish to see how tar is handling the issue. ### Examples The API mimics the `tar(1)` command line functionality, with aliases for more human-readable option and function names. The goal is that if you know how to use `tar(1)` in Unix, then you know how to use `require('tar')` in JavaScript. To replicate `tar czf my-tarball.tgz files and folders`, you'd do: ```js tar.c( { gzip: <true|gzip options>, file: 'my-tarball.tgz' }, ['some', 'files', 'and', 'folders'] ).then(_ => { .. tarball has been created .. }) ``` To replicate `tar cz files and folders > my-tarball.tgz`, you'd do: ```js tar.c( // or tar.create { gzip: <true|gzip options> }, ['some', 'files', 'and', 'folders'] ).pipe(fs.createWriteStream('my-tarball.tgz')) ``` To replicate `tar xf my-tarball.tgz` you'd do: ```js tar.x( // or tar.extract( { file: 'my-tarball.tgz' } ).then(_=> { .. tarball has been dumped in cwd .. }) ``` To replicate `cat my-tarball.tgz | tar x -C some-dir --strip=1`: ```js fs.createReadStream('my-tarball.tgz').pipe( tar.x({ strip: 1, C: 'some-dir' // alias for cwd:'some-dir', also ok }) ) ``` To replicate `tar tf my-tarball.tgz`, do this: ```js tar.t({ file: 'my-tarball.tgz', onentry: entry => { .. do whatever with it .. } }) ``` To replicate `cat my-tarball.tgz | tar t` do: ```js fs.createReadStream('my-tarball.tgz') .pipe(tar.t()) .on('entry', entry => { .. do whatever with it .. }) ``` To do anything synchronous, add `sync: true` to the options. Note that sync functions don't take a callback and don't return a promise. When the function returns, it's already done. Sync methods without a file argument return a sync stream, which flushes immediately. But, of course, it still won't be done until you `.end()` it. To filter entries, add `filter: <function>` to the options. Tar-creating methods call the filter with `filter(path, stat)`. Tar-reading methods (including extraction) call the filter with `filter(path, entry)`. The filter is called in the `this`-context of the `Pack` or `Unpack` stream object. The arguments list to `tar t` and `tar x` specify a list of filenames to extract or list, so they're equivalent to a filter that tests if the file is in the list. For those who _aren't_ fans of tar's single-character command names: ``` tar.c === tar.create tar.r === tar.replace (appends to archive, file is required) tar.u === tar.update (appends if newer, file is required) tar.x === tar.extract tar.t === tar.list ``` Keep reading for all the command descriptions and options, as well as the low-level API that they are built on. ### tar.c(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.create] Create a tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to add to the tarball. Adding a directory also adds its children recursively. An entry in `fileList` that starts with an `@` symbol is a tar archive whose entries will be added. To add a file that starts with `@`, prepend it with `./`. The following options are supported: - `file` Write the tarball archive to the specified filename. If this is specified, then the callback will be fired when the file has been written, and a promise will be returned that resolves when the file is written. If a filename is not specified, then a Readable Stream will be returned which will emit the file data. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Act synchronously. If this is set, then any provided file will be fully written after the call to `tar.c`. If this is set, and a file is not provided, then the resulting stream will already have the data ready to `read` or `emit('data')` as soon as you request it. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` [Alias: `z`] - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. [Alias: `P`] - `mode` The mode to set on the created file archive - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. [Alias: `n`] - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. [Alias: `L`, `h`] - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. The following options are mostly internal, but can be modified in some advanced use cases, such as re-using caches between runs. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `readdirCache` A Map object that caches calls to `readdir`. - `jobs` A number specifying how many concurrent jobs to run. Defaults to 4. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. ### tar.x(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.extract] Extract a tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to extract from the tarball. If no paths are provided, then all the entries are extracted. If the archive is gzipped, then tar will detect this and unzip it. Note that all directories that are created will be forced to be writable, readable, and listable by their owner, to avoid cases where a directory prevents extraction of child entries by virtue of its mode. Most extraction errors will cause a `warn` event to be emitted. If the `cwd` is missing, or not a directory, then the extraction will fail completely. The following options are supported: - `cwd` Extract files relative to the specified directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. If provided, this must exist and must be a directory. [Alias: `C`] - `file` The archive file to extract. If not specified, then a Writable stream is returned where the archive data should be written. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Create files and directories synchronously. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being unpacked. Return `true` to unpack the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `newer` Set to true to keep the existing file on disk if it's newer than the file in the archive. [Alias: `keep-newer`, `keep-newer-files`] - `keep` Do not overwrite existing files. In particular, if a file appears more than once in an archive, later copies will not overwrite earlier copies. [Alias: `k`, `keep-existing`] - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths, paths containing `..`, and extracting through symbolic links. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths, `..` paths are not extracted, and any file whose location would be modified by a symbolic link is not extracted. [Alias: `P`] - `unlink` Unlink files before creating them. Without this option, tar overwrites existing files, which preserves existing hardlinks. With this option, existing hardlinks will be broken, as will any symlink that would affect the location of an extracted file. [Alias: `U`] - `strip` Remove the specified number of leading path elements. Pathnames with fewer elements will be silently skipped. Note that the pathname is edited after applying the filter, but before security checks. [Alias: `strip-components`, `stripComponents`] - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `preserveOwner` If true, tar will set the `uid` and `gid` of extracted entries to the `uid` and `gid` fields in the archive. This defaults to true when run as root, and false otherwise. If false, then files and directories will be set with the owner and group of the user running the process. This is similar to `-p` in `tar(1)`, but ACLs and other system-specific data is never unpacked in this implementation, and modes are set by default already. [Alias: `p`] - `uid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified user id, regardless of the `uid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `gid` option. - `gid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified group id, regardless of the `gid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `uid` option. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` value for extracted entries. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `transform` Provide a function that takes an `entry` object, and returns a stream, or any falsey value. If a stream is provided, then that stream's data will be written instead of the contents of the archive entry. If a falsey value is provided, then the entry is written to disk as normal. (To exclude items from extraction, use the `filter` option described above.) - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. The following options are mostly internal, but can be modified in some advanced use cases, such as re-using caches between runs. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `umask` Filter the modes of entries like `process.umask()`. - `dmode` Default mode for directories - `fmode` Default mode for files - `dirCache` A Map object of which directories exist. - `maxMetaEntrySize` The maximum size of meta entries that is supported. Defaults to 1 MB. Note that using an asynchronous stream type with the `transform` option will cause undefined behavior in sync extractions. [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass)-based streams are designed for this use case. ### tar.t(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.list] List the contents of a tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to list from the tarball. If no paths are provided, then all the entries are listed. If the archive is gzipped, then tar will detect this and unzip it. Returns an event emitter that emits `entry` events with `tar.ReadEntry` objects. However, they don't emit `'data'` or `'end'` events. (If you want to get actual readable entries, use the `tar.Parse` class instead.) The following options are supported: - `cwd` Extract files relative to the specified directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `file` The archive file to list. If not specified, then a Writable stream is returned where the archive data should be written. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Read the specified file synchronously. (This has no effect when a file option isn't specified, because entries are emitted as fast as they are parsed from the stream anyway.) - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being listed. Return `true` to emit the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. This is important for when both `file` and `sync` are set, because it will be called synchronously. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noResume` By default, `entry` streams are resumed immediately after the call to `onentry`. Set `noResume: true` to suppress this behavior. Note that by opting into this, the stream will never complete until the entry data is consumed. ### tar.u(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.update] Add files to an archive if they are newer than the entry already in the tarball archive. The `fileList` is an array of paths to add to the tarball. Adding a directory also adds its children recursively. An entry in `fileList` that starts with an `@` symbol is a tar archive whose entries will be added. To add a file that starts with `@`, prepend it with `./`. The following options are supported: - `file` Required. Write the tarball archive to the specified filename. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Act synchronously. If this is set, then any provided file will be fully written after the call to `tar.c`. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for adding entries to the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` [Alias: `z`] - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. [Alias: `P`] - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. [Alias: `n`] - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. [Alias: `L`, `h`] - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. ### tar.r(options, fileList, callback) [alias: tar.replace] Add files to an existing archive. Because later entries override earlier entries, this effectively replaces any existing entries. The `fileList` is an array of paths to add to the tarball. Adding a directory also adds its children recursively. An entry in `fileList` that starts with an `@` symbol is a tar archive whose entries will be added. To add a file that starts with `@`, prepend it with `./`. The following options are supported: - `file` Required. Write the tarball archive to the specified filename. [Alias: `f`] - `sync` Act synchronously. If this is set, then any provided file will be fully written after the call to `tar.c`. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for adding entries to the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. [Alias: `C`] - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` [Alias: `z`] - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. [Alias: `P`] - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. [Alias: `n`] - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. [Alias: `L`, `h`] - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. [Alias: `m`, `no-mtime`] - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. ## Low-Level API ### class tar.Pack A readable tar stream. Has all the standard readable stream interface stuff. `'data'` and `'end'` events, `read()` method, `pause()` and `resume()`, etc. #### constructor(options) The following options are supported: - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. - `prefix` A path portion to prefix onto the entries in the archive. - `gzip` Set to any truthy value to create a gzipped archive, or an object with settings for `zlib.Gzip()` - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, stat)` for each entry being added. Return `true` to add the entry to the archive, or `false` to omit it. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `readdirCache` A Map object that caches calls to `readdir`. - `jobs` A number specifying how many concurrent jobs to run. Defaults to 4. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 16 MB. - `noDirRecurse` Do not recursively archive the contents of directories. - `follow` Set to true to pack the targets of symbolic links. Without this option, symbolic links are archived as such. - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. - `mtime` Set to a `Date` object to force a specific `mtime` for everything added to the archive. Overridden by `noMtime`. #### add(path) Adds an entry to the archive. Returns the Pack stream. #### write(path) Adds an entry to the archive. Returns true if flushed. #### end() Finishes the archive. ### class tar.Pack.Sync Synchronous version of `tar.Pack`. ### class tar.Unpack A writable stream that unpacks a tar archive onto the file system. All the normal writable stream stuff is supported. `write()` and `end()` methods, `'drain'` events, etc. Note that all directories that are created will be forced to be writable, readable, and listable by their owner, to avoid cases where a directory prevents extraction of child entries by virtue of its mode. `'close'` is emitted when it's done writing stuff to the file system. Most unpack errors will cause a `warn` event to be emitted. If the `cwd` is missing, or not a directory, then an error will be emitted. #### constructor(options) - `cwd` Extract files relative to the specified directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. If provided, this must exist and must be a directory. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being unpacked. Return `true` to unpack the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `newer` Set to true to keep the existing file on disk if it's newer than the file in the archive. - `keep` Do not overwrite existing files. In particular, if a file appears more than once in an archive, later copies will not overwrite earlier copies. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths, paths containing `..`, and extracting through symbolic links. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths, `..` paths are not extracted, and any file whose location would be modified by a symbolic link is not extracted. - `unlink` Unlink files before creating them. Without this option, tar overwrites existing files, which preserves existing hardlinks. With this option, existing hardlinks will be broken, as will any symlink that would affect the location of an extracted file. - `strip` Remove the specified number of leading path elements. Pathnames with fewer elements will be silently skipped. Note that the pathname is edited after applying the filter, but before security checks. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `umask` Filter the modes of entries like `process.umask()`. - `dmode` Default mode for directories - `fmode` Default mode for files - `dirCache` A Map object of which directories exist. - `maxMetaEntrySize` The maximum size of meta entries that is supported. Defaults to 1 MB. - `preserveOwner` If true, tar will set the `uid` and `gid` of extracted entries to the `uid` and `gid` fields in the archive. This defaults to true when run as root, and false otherwise. If false, then files and directories will be set with the owner and group of the user running the process. This is similar to `-p` in `tar(1)`, but ACLs and other system-specific data is never unpacked in this implementation, and modes are set by default already. - `win32` True if on a windows platform. Causes behavior where filenames containing `<|>?` chars are converted to windows-compatible values while being unpacked. - `uid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified user id, regardless of the `uid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `gid` option. - `gid` Set to a number to force ownership of all extracted files and folders, and all implicitly created directories, to be owned by the specified group id, regardless of the `gid` field in the archive. Cannot be used along with `preserveOwner`. Requires also setting a `uid` option. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` value for extracted entries. - `transform` Provide a function that takes an `entry` object, and returns a stream, or any falsey value. If a stream is provided, then that stream's data will be written instead of the contents of the archive entry. If a falsey value is provided, then the entry is written to disk as normal. (To exclude items from extraction, use the `filter` option described above.) - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") ### class tar.Unpack.Sync Synchronous version of `tar.Unpack`. Note that using an asynchronous stream type with the `transform` option will cause undefined behavior in sync unpack streams. [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass)-based streams are designed for this use case. ### class tar.Parse A writable stream that parses a tar archive stream. All the standard writable stream stuff is supported. If the archive is gzipped, then tar will detect this and unzip it. Emits `'entry'` events with `tar.ReadEntry` objects, which are themselves readable streams that you can pipe wherever. Each `entry` will not emit until the one before it is flushed through, so make sure to either consume the data (with `on('data', ...)` or `.pipe(...)`) or throw it away with `.resume()` to keep the stream flowing. #### constructor(options) Returns an event emitter that emits `entry` events with `tar.ReadEntry` objects. The following options are supported: - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `filter` A function that gets called with `(path, entry)` for each entry being listed. Return `true` to emit the entry from the archive, or `false` to skip it. - `onentry` A function that gets called with `(entry)` for each entry that passes the filter. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") #### abort(error) Stop all parsing activities. This is called when there are zlib errors. It also emits an unrecoverable warning with the error provided. ### class tar.ReadEntry extends [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass) A representation of an entry that is being read out of a tar archive. It has the following fields: - `extended` The extended metadata object provided to the constructor. - `globalExtended` The global extended metadata object provided to the constructor. - `remain` The number of bytes remaining to be written into the stream. - `blockRemain` The number of 512-byte blocks remaining to be written into the stream. - `ignore` Whether this entry should be ignored. - `meta` True if this represents metadata about the next entry, false if it represents a filesystem object. - All the fields from the header, extended header, and global extended header are added to the ReadEntry object. So it has `path`, `type`, `size, `mode`, and so on. #### constructor(header, extended, globalExtended) Create a new ReadEntry object with the specified header, extended header, and global extended header values. ### class tar.WriteEntry extends [MiniPass](http://npm.im/minipass) A representation of an entry that is being written from the file system into a tar archive. Emits data for the Header, and for the Pax Extended Header if one is required, as well as any body data. Creating a WriteEntry for a directory does not also create WriteEntry objects for all of the directory contents. It has the following fields: - `path` The path field that will be written to the archive. By default, this is also the path from the cwd to the file system object. - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `myuid` If supported, the uid of the user running the current process. - `myuser` The `env.USER` string if set, or `''`. Set as the entry `uname` field if the file's `uid` matches `this.myuid`. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 1 MB. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. - `absolute` The absolute path to the entry on the filesystem. By default, this is `path.resolve(this.cwd, this.path)`, but it can be overridden explicitly. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `win32` True if on a windows platform. Causes behavior where paths replace `\` with `/` and filenames containing the windows-compatible forms of `<|>?:` characters are converted to actual `<|>?:` characters in the archive. - `noPax` Suppress pax extended headers. Note that this means that long paths and linkpaths will be truncated, and large or negative numeric values may be interpreted incorrectly. - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. #### constructor(path, options) `path` is the path of the entry as it is written in the archive. The following options are supported: - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `maxReadSize` The maximum buffer size for `fs.read()` operations. Defaults to 1 MB. - `linkCache` A Map object containing the device and inode value for any file whose nlink is > 1, to identify hard links. - `statCache` A Map object that caches calls `lstat`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `cwd` The current working directory for creating the archive. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. - `absolute` The absolute path to the entry on the filesystem. By default, this is `path.resolve(this.cwd, this.path)`, but it can be overridden explicitly. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `win32` True if on a windows platform. Causes behavior where paths replace `\` with `/`. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. - `umask` Set to restrict the modes on the entries in the archive, somewhat like how umask works on file creation. Defaults to `process.umask()` on unix systems, or `0o22` on Windows. #### warn(message, data) If strict, emit an error with the provided message. Othewise, emit a `'warn'` event with the provided message and data. ### class tar.WriteEntry.Sync Synchronous version of tar.WriteEntry ### class tar.WriteEntry.Tar A version of tar.WriteEntry that gets its data from a tar.ReadEntry instead of from the filesystem. #### constructor(readEntry, options) `readEntry` is the entry being read out of another archive. The following options are supported: - `portable` Omit metadata that is system-specific: `ctime`, `atime`, `uid`, `gid`, `uname`, `gname`, `dev`, `ino`, and `nlink`. Note that `mtime` is still included, because this is necessary for other time-based operations. Additionally, `mode` is set to a "reasonable default" for most unix systems, based on a `umask` value of `0o22`. - `preservePaths` Allow absolute paths. By default, `/` is stripped from absolute paths. - `strict` Treat warnings as crash-worthy errors. Default false. - `onwarn` A function that will get called with `(code, message, data)` for any warnings encountered. (See "Warnings and Errors") - `noMtime` Set to true to omit writing `mtime` values for entries. Note that this prevents using other mtime-based features like `tar.update` or the `keepNewer` option with the resulting tar archive. ### class tar.Header A class for reading and writing header blocks. It has the following fields: - `nullBlock` True if decoding a block which is entirely composed of `0x00` null bytes. (Useful because tar files are terminated by at least 2 null blocks.) - `cksumValid` True if the checksum in the header is valid, false otherwise. - `needPax` True if the values, as encoded, will require a Pax extended header. - `path` The path of the entry. - `mode` The 4 lowest-order octal digits of the file mode. That is, read/write/execute permissions for world, group, and owner, and the setuid, setgid, and sticky bits. - `uid` Numeric user id of the file owner - `gid` Numeric group id of the file owner - `size` Size of the file in bytes - `mtime` Modified time of the file - `cksum` The checksum of the header. This is generated by adding all the bytes of the header block, treating the checksum field itself as all ascii space characters (that is, `0x20`). - `type` The human-readable name of the type of entry this represents, or the alphanumeric key if unknown. - `typeKey` The alphanumeric key for the type of entry this header represents. - `linkpath` The target of Link and SymbolicLink entries. - `uname` Human-readable user name of the file owner - `gname` Human-readable group name of the file owner - `devmaj` The major portion of the device number. Always `0` for files, directories, and links. - `devmin` The minor portion of the device number. Always `0` for files, directories, and links. - `atime` File access time. - `ctime` File change time. #### constructor(data, [offset=0]) `data` is optional. It is either a Buffer that should be interpreted as a tar Header starting at the specified offset and continuing for 512 bytes, or a data object of keys and values to set on the header object, and eventually encode as a tar Header. #### decode(block, offset) Decode the provided buffer starting at the specified offset. Buffer length must be greater than 512 bytes. #### set(data) Set the fields in the data object. #### encode(buffer, offset) Encode the header fields into the buffer at the specified offset. Returns `this.needPax` to indicate whether a Pax Extended Header is required to properly encode the specified data. ### class tar.Pax An object representing a set of key-value pairs in an Pax extended header entry. It has the following fields. Where the same name is used, they have the same semantics as the tar.Header field of the same name. - `global` True if this represents a global extended header, or false if it is for a single entry. - `atime` - `charset` - `comment` - `ctime` - `gid` - `gname` - `linkpath` - `mtime` - `path` - `size` - `uid` - `uname` - `dev` - `ino` - `nlink` #### constructor(object, global) Set the fields set in the object. `global` is a boolean that defaults to false. #### encode() Return a Buffer containing the header and body for the Pax extended header entry, or `null` if there is nothing to encode. #### encodeBody() Return a string representing the body of the pax extended header entry. #### encodeField(fieldName) Return a string representing the key/value encoding for the specified fieldName, or `''` if the field is unset. ### tar.Pax.parse(string, extended, global) Return a new Pax object created by parsing the contents of the string provided. If the `extended` object is set, then also add the fields from that object. (This is necessary because multiple metadata entries can occur in sequence.) ### tar.types A translation table for the `type` field in tar headers. #### tar.types.name.get(code) Get the human-readable name for a given alphanumeric code. #### tar.types.code.get(name) Get the alphanumeric code for a given human-readable name. # ts-mixer [version-badge]: https://badgen.net/npm/v/ts-mixer [version-link]: https://npmjs.com/package/ts-mixer [build-badge]: https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/tannerntannern/ts-mixer/ts-mixer%20CI [build-link]: https://github.com/tannerntannern/ts-mixer/actions [ts-versions]: https://badgen.net/badge/icon/3.8,3.9,4.0?icon=typescript&label&list=| [node-versions]: https://badgen.net/badge/node/10%2C12%2C14/blue/?list=| [![npm version][version-badge]][version-link] [![github actions][build-badge]][build-link] [![TS Versions][ts-versions]][build-link] [![Node.js Versions][node-versions]][build-link] [![Minified Size](https://badgen.net/bundlephobia/min/ts-mixer)](https://bundlephobia.com/result?p=ts-mixer) [![Conventional Commits](https://badgen.net/badge/conventional%20commits/1.0.0/yellow)](https://conventionalcommits.org) ## Overview `ts-mixer` brings mixins to TypeScript. "Mixins" to `ts-mixer` are just classes, so you already know how to write them, and you can probably mix classes from your favorite library without trouble. The mixin problem is more nuanced than it appears. I've seen countless code snippets that work for certain situations, but fail in others. `ts-mixer` tries to take the best from all these solutions while accounting for the situations you might not have considered. [Quick start guide](#quick-start) ### Features * mixes plain classes * mixes classes that extend other classes * mixes classes that were mixed with `ts-mixer` * supports static properties * supports protected/private properties (the popular function-that-returns-a-class solution does not) * mixes abstract classes (with caveats [[1](#caveats)]) * mixes generic classes (with caveats [[2](#caveats)]) * supports class, method, and property decorators (with caveats [[3, 6](#caveats)]) * mostly supports the complexity presented by constructor functions (with caveats [[4](#caveats)]) * comes with an `instanceof`-like replacement (with caveats [[5, 6](#caveats)]) * [multiple mixing strategies](#settings) (ES6 proxies vs hard copy) ### Caveats 1. Mixing abstract classes requires a bit of a hack that may break in future versions of TypeScript. See [mixing abstract classes](#mixing-abstract-classes) below. 2. Mixing generic classes requires a more cumbersome notation, but it's still possible. See [mixing generic classes](#mixing-generic-classes) below. 3. Using decorators in mixed classes also requires a more cumbersome notation. See [mixing with decorators](#mixing-with-decorators) below. 4. ES6 made it impossible to use `.apply(...)` on class constructors (or any means of calling them without `new`), which makes it impossible for `ts-mixer` to pass the proper `this` to your constructors. This may or may not be an issue for your code, but there are options to work around it. See [dealing with constructors](#dealing-with-constructors) below. 5. `ts-mixer` does not support `instanceof` for mixins, but it does offer a replacement. See the [hasMixin function](#hasmixin) for more details. 6. Certain features (specifically, `@decorator` and `hasMixin`) make use of ES6 `Map`s, which means you must either use ES6+ or polyfill `Map` to use them. If you don't need these features, you should be fine without. ## Quick Start ### Installation ``` $ npm install ts-mixer ``` or if you prefer [Yarn](https://yarnpkg.com): ``` $ yarn add ts-mixer ``` ### Basic Example ```typescript import { Mixin } from 'ts-mixer'; class Foo { protected makeFoo() { return 'foo'; } } class Bar { protected makeBar() { return 'bar'; } } class FooBar extends Mixin(Foo, Bar) { public makeFooBar() { return this.makeFoo() + this.makeBar(); } } const fooBar = new FooBar(); console.log(fooBar.makeFooBar()); // "foobar" ``` ## Special Cases ### Mixing Abstract Classes Abstract classes, by definition, cannot be constructed, which means they cannot take on the type, `new(...args) => any`, and by extension, are incompatible with `ts-mixer`. BUT, you can "trick" TypeScript into giving you all the benefits of an abstract class without making it technically abstract. The trick is just some strategic `// @ts-ignore`'s: ```typescript import { Mixin } from 'ts-mixer'; // note that Foo is not marked as an abstract class class Foo { // @ts-ignore: "Abstract methods can only appear within an abstract class" public abstract makeFoo(): string; } class Bar { public makeBar() { return 'bar'; } } class FooBar extends Mixin(Foo, Bar) { // we still get all the benefits of abstract classes here, because TypeScript // will still complain if this method isn't implemented public makeFoo() { return 'foo'; } } ``` Do note that while this does work quite well, it is a bit of a hack and I can't promise that it will continue to work in future TypeScript versions. ### Mixing Generic Classes Frustratingly, it is _impossible_ for generic parameters to be referenced in base class expressions. No matter what, you will eventually run into `Base class expressions cannot reference class type parameters.` The way to get around this is to leverage [declaration merging](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/declaration-merging.html), and a slightly different mixing function from ts-mixer: `mix`. It works exactly like `Mixin`, except it's a decorator, which means it doesn't affect the type information of the class being decorated. See it in action below: ```typescript import { mix } from 'ts-mixer'; class Foo<T> { public fooMethod(input: T): T { return input; } } class Bar<T> { public barMethod(input: T): T { return input; } } interface FooBar<T1, T2> extends Foo<T1>, Bar<T2> { } @mix(Foo, Bar) class FooBar<T1, T2> { public fooBarMethod(input1: T1, input2: T2) { return [this.fooMethod(input1), this.barMethod(input2)]; } } ``` Key takeaways from this example: * `interface FooBar<T1, T2> extends Foo<T1>, Bar<T2> { }` makes sure `FooBar` has the typing we want, thanks to declaration merging * `@mix(Foo, Bar)` wires things up "on the JavaScript side", since the interface declaration has nothing to do with runtime behavior. * The reason we have to use the `mix` decorator is that the typing produced by `Mixin(Foo, Bar)` would conflict with the typing of the interface. `mix` has no effect "on the TypeScript side," thus avoiding type conflicts. ### Mixing with Decorators Popular libraries such as [class-validator](https://github.com/typestack/class-validator) and [TypeORM](https://github.com/typeorm/typeorm) use decorators to add functionality. Unfortunately, `ts-mixer` has no way of knowing what these libraries do with the decorators behind the scenes. So if you want these decorators to be "inherited" with classes you plan to mix, you first have to wrap them with a special `decorate` function exported by `ts-mixer`. Here's an example using `class-validator`: ```typescript import { IsBoolean, IsIn, validate } from 'class-validator'; import { Mixin, decorate } from 'ts-mixer'; class Disposable { @decorate(IsBoolean()) // instead of @IsBoolean() isDisposed: boolean = false; } class Statusable { @decorate(IsIn(['red', 'green'])) // instead of @IsIn(['red', 'green']) status: string = 'green'; } class ExtendedObject extends Mixin(Disposable, Statusable) {} const extendedObject = new ExtendedObject(); extendedObject.status = 'blue'; validate(extendedObject).then(errors => { console.log(errors); }); ``` ### Dealing with Constructors As mentioned in the [caveats section](#caveats), ES6 disallowed calling constructor functions without `new`. This means that the only way for `ts-mixer` to mix instance properties is to instantiate each base class separately, then copy the instance properties into a common object. The consequence of this is that constructors mixed by `ts-mixer` will _not_ receive the proper `this`. **This very well may not be an issue for you!** It only means that your constructors need to be "mostly pure" in terms of how they handle `this`. Specifically, your constructors cannot produce [side effects](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Side_effect_%28computer_science%29) involving `this`, _other than adding properties to `this`_ (the most common side effect in JavaScript constructors). If you simply cannot eliminate `this` side effects from your constructor, there is a workaround available: `ts-mixer` will automatically forward constructor parameters to a predesignated init function (`settings.initFunction`) if it's present on the class. Unlike constructors, functions can be called with an arbitrary `this`, so this predesignated init function _will_ have the proper `this`. Here's a basic example: ```typescript import { Mixin, settings } from 'ts-mixer'; settings.initFunction = 'init'; class Person { public static allPeople: Set<Person> = new Set(); protected init() { Person.allPeople.add(this); } } type PartyAffiliation = 'democrat' | 'republican'; class PoliticalParticipant { public static democrats: Set<PoliticalParticipant> = new Set(); public static republicans: Set<PoliticalParticipant> = new Set(); public party: PartyAffiliation; // note that these same args will also be passed to init function public constructor(party: PartyAffiliation) { this.party = party; } protected init(party: PartyAffiliation) { if (party === 'democrat') PoliticalParticipant.democrats.add(this); else PoliticalParticipant.republicans.add(this); } } class Voter extends Mixin(Person, PoliticalParticipant) {} const v1 = new Voter('democrat'); const v2 = new Voter('democrat'); const v3 = new Voter('republican'); const v4 = new Voter('republican'); ``` Note the above `.add(this)` statements. These would not work as expected if they were placed in the constructor instead, since `this` is not the same between the constructor and `init`, as explained above. ## Other Features ### hasMixin As mentioned above, `ts-mixer` does not support `instanceof` for mixins. While it is possible to implement [custom `instanceof` behavior](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Symbol/hasInstance), this library does not do so because it would require modifying the source classes, which is deliberately avoided. You can fill this missing functionality with `hasMixin(instance, mixinClass)` instead. See the below example: ```typescript import { Mixin, hasMixin } from 'ts-mixer'; class Foo {} class Bar {} class FooBar extends Mixin(Foo, Bar) {} const instance = new FooBar(); // doesn't work with instanceof... console.log(instance instanceof FooBar) // true console.log(instance instanceof Foo) // false console.log(instance instanceof Bar) // false // but everything works nicely with hasMixin! console.log(hasMixin(instance, FooBar)) // true console.log(hasMixin(instance, Foo)) // true console.log(hasMixin(instance, Bar)) // true ``` `hasMixin(instance, mixinClass)` will work anywhere that `instance instanceof mixinClass` works. Additionally, like `instanceof`, you get the same [type narrowing benefits](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/advanced-types.html#instanceof-type-guards): ```typescript if (hasMixin(instance, Foo)) { // inferred type of instance is "Foo" } if (hasMixin(instance, Bar)) { // inferred type of instance of "Bar" } ``` ## Settings ts-mixer has multiple strategies for mixing classes which can be configured by modifying `settings` from ts-mixer. For example: ```typescript import { settings, Mixin } from 'ts-mixer'; settings.prototypeStrategy = 'proxy'; // then use `Mixin` as normal... ``` ### `settings.prototypeStrategy` * Determines how ts-mixer will mix class prototypes together * Possible values: - `'copy'` (default) - Copies all methods from the classes being mixed into a new prototype object. (This will include all methods up the prototype chains as well.) This is the default for ES5 compatibility, but it has the downside of stale references. For example, if you mix `Foo` and `Bar` to make `FooBar`, then redefine a method on `Foo`, `FooBar` will not have the latest methods from `Foo`. If this is not a concern for you, `'copy'` is the best value for this setting. - `'proxy'` - Uses an ES6 Proxy to "soft mix" prototypes. Unlike `'copy'`, updates to the base classes _will_ be reflected in the mixed class, which may be desirable. The downside is that method access is not as performant, nor is it ES5 compatible. ### `settings.staticsStrategy` * Determines how static properties are inherited * Possible values: - `'copy'` (default) - Simply copies all properties (minus `prototype`) from the base classes/constructor functions onto the mixed class. Like `settings.prototypeStrategy = 'copy'`, this strategy also suffers from stale references, but shouldn't be a concern if you don't redefine static methods after mixing. - `'proxy'` - Similar to `settings.prototypeStrategy`, proxy's static method access to base classes. Has the same benefits/downsides. ### `settings.initFunction` * If set, `ts-mixer` will automatically call the function with this name upon construction * Possible values: - `null` (default) - disables the behavior - a string - function name to call upon construction * Read more about why you would want this in [dealing with constructors](#dealing-with-constructors) ### `settings.decoratorInheritance` * Determines how decorators are inherited from classes passed to `Mixin(...)` * Possible values: - `'deep'` (default) - Deeply inherits decorators from all given classes and their ancestors - `'direct'` - Only inherits decorators defined directly on the given classes - `'none'` - Skips decorator inheritance # Author Tanner Nielsen <[email protected]> * Website - [tannernielsen.com](http://tannernielsen.com) * Github - [tannerntannern](https://github.com/tannerntannern) Like `chown -R`. Takes the same arguments as `fs.chown()` ![](cow.png) Moo! ==== Moo is a highly-optimised tokenizer/lexer generator. Use it to tokenize your strings, before parsing 'em with a parser like [nearley](https://github.com/hardmath123/nearley) or whatever else you're into. * [Fast](#is-it-fast) * [Convenient](#usage) * uses [Regular Expressions](#on-regular-expressions) * tracks [Line Numbers](#line-numbers) * handles [Keywords](#keywords) * supports [States](#states) * custom [Errors](#errors) * is even [Iterable](#iteration) * has no dependencies * 4KB minified + gzipped * Moo! Is it fast? ----------- Yup! Flying-cows-and-singed-steak fast. Moo is the fastest JS tokenizer around. It's **~2–10x** faster than most other tokenizers; it's a **couple orders of magnitude** faster than some of the slower ones. Define your tokens **using regular expressions**. Moo will compile 'em down to a **single RegExp for performance**. It uses the new ES6 **sticky flag** where possible to make things faster; otherwise it falls back to an almost-as-efficient workaround. (For more than you ever wanted to know about this, read [adventures in the land of substrings and RegExps](http://mrale.ph/blog/2016/11/23/making-less-dart-faster.html).) You _might_ be able to go faster still by writing your lexer by hand rather than using RegExps, but that's icky. Oh, and it [avoids parsing RegExps by itself](https://hackernoon.com/the-madness-of-parsing-real-world-javascript-regexps-d9ee336df983#.2l8qu3l76). Because that would be horrible. Usage ----- First, you need to do the needful: `$ npm install moo`, or whatever will ship this code to your computer. Alternatively, grab the `moo.js` file by itself and slap it into your web page via a `<script>` tag; moo is completely standalone. Then you can start roasting your very own lexer/tokenizer: ```js const moo = require('moo') let lexer = moo.compile({ WS: /[ \t]+/, comment: /\/\/.*?$/, number: /0|[1-9][0-9]*/, string: /"(?:\\["\\]|[^\n"\\])*"/, lparen: '(', rparen: ')', keyword: ['while', 'if', 'else', 'moo', 'cows'], NL: { match: /\n/, lineBreaks: true }, }) ``` And now throw some text at it: ```js lexer.reset('while (10) cows\nmoo') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'keyword', value: 'while' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'WS', value: ' ' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'lparen', value: '(' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'number', value: '10' } // ... ``` When you reach the end of Moo's internal buffer, next() will return `undefined`. You can always `reset()` it and feed it more data when that happens. On Regular Expressions ---------------------- RegExps are nifty for making tokenizers, but they can be a bit of a pain. Here are some things to be aware of: * You often want to use **non-greedy quantifiers**: e.g. `*?` instead of `*`. Otherwise your tokens will be longer than you expect: ```js let lexer = moo.compile({ string: /".*"/, // greedy quantifier * // ... }) lexer.reset('"foo" "bar"') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'string', value: 'foo" "bar' } ``` Better: ```js let lexer = moo.compile({ string: /".*?"/, // non-greedy quantifier *? // ... }) lexer.reset('"foo" "bar"') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'string', value: 'foo' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'space', value: ' ' } lexer.next() // -> { type: 'string', value: 'bar' } ``` * The **order of your rules** matters. Earlier ones will take precedence. ```js moo.compile({ identifier: /[a-z0-9]+/, number: /[0-9]+/, }).reset('42').next() // -> { type: 'identifier', value: '42' } moo.compile({ number: /[0-9]+/, identifier: /[a-z0-9]+/, }).reset('42').next() // -> { type: 'number', value: '42' } ``` * Moo uses **multiline RegExps**. This has a few quirks: for example, the **dot `/./` doesn't include newlines**. Use `[^]` instead if you want to match newlines too. * Since an excluding character ranges like `/[^ ]/` (which matches anything but a space) _will_ include newlines, you have to be careful not to include them by accident! In particular, the whitespace metacharacter `\s` includes newlines. Line Numbers ------------ Moo tracks detailed information about the input for you. It will track line numbers, as long as you **apply the `lineBreaks: true` option to any rules which might contain newlines**. Moo will try to warn you if you forget to do this. Note that this is `false` by default, for performance reasons: counting the number of lines in a matched token has a small cost. For optimal performance, only match newlines inside a dedicated token: ```js newline: {match: '\n', lineBreaks: true}, ``` ### Token Info ### Token objects (returned from `next()`) have the following attributes: * **`type`**: the name of the group, as passed to compile. * **`text`**: the string that was matched. * **`value`**: the string that was matched, transformed by your `value` function (if any). * **`offset`**: the number of bytes from the start of the buffer where the match starts. * **`lineBreaks`**: the number of line breaks found in the match. (Always zero if this rule has `lineBreaks: false`.) * **`line`**: the line number of the beginning of the match, starting from 1. * **`col`**: the column where the match begins, starting from 1. ### Value vs. Text ### The `value` is the same as the `text`, unless you provide a [value transform](#transform). ```js const moo = require('moo') const lexer = moo.compile({ ws: /[ \t]+/, string: {match: /"(?:\\["\\]|[^\n"\\])*"/, value: s => s.slice(1, -1)}, }) lexer.reset('"test"') lexer.next() /* { value: 'test', text: '"test"', ... } */ ``` ### Reset ### Calling `reset()` on your lexer will empty its internal buffer, and set the line, column, and offset counts back to their initial value. If you don't want this, you can `save()` the state, and later pass it as the second argument to `reset()` to explicitly control the internal state of the lexer. ```js    lexer.reset('some line\n') let info = lexer.save() // -> { line: 10 } lexer.next() // -> { line: 10 } lexer.next() // -> { line: 11 } // ... lexer.reset('a different line\n', info) lexer.next() // -> { line: 10 } ``` Keywords -------- Moo makes it convenient to define literals. ```js moo.compile({ lparen: '(', rparen: ')', keyword: ['while', 'if', 'else', 'moo', 'cows'], }) ``` It'll automatically compile them into regular expressions, escaping them where necessary. **Keywords** should be written using the `keywords` transform. ```js moo.compile({ IDEN: {match: /[a-zA-Z]+/, type: moo.keywords({ KW: ['while', 'if', 'else', 'moo', 'cows'], })}, SPACE: {match: /\s+/, lineBreaks: true}, }) ``` ### Why? ### You need to do this to ensure the **longest match** principle applies, even in edge cases. Imagine trying to parse the input `className` with the following rules: ```js keyword: ['class'], identifier: /[a-zA-Z]+/, ``` You'll get _two_ tokens — `['class', 'Name']` -- which is _not_ what you want! If you swap the order of the rules, you'll fix this example; but now you'll lex `class` wrong (as an `identifier`). The keywords helper checks matches against the list of keywords; if any of them match, it uses the type `'keyword'` instead of `'identifier'` (for this example). ### Keyword Types ### Keywords can also have **individual types**. ```js let lexer = moo.compile({ name: {match: /[a-zA-Z]+/, type: moo.keywords({ 'kw-class': 'class', 'kw-def': 'def', 'kw-if': 'if', })}, // ... }) lexer.reset('def foo') lexer.next() // -> { type: 'kw-def', value: 'def' } lexer.next() // space lexer.next() // -> { type: 'name', value: 'foo' } ``` You can use [itt](https://github.com/nathan/itt)'s iterator adapters to make constructing keyword objects easier: ```js itt(['class', 'def', 'if']) .map(k => ['kw-' + k, k]) .toObject() ``` States ------ Moo allows you to define multiple lexer **states**. Each state defines its own separate set of token rules. Your lexer will start off in the first state given to `moo.states({})`. Rules can be annotated with `next`, `push`, and `pop`, to change the current state after that token is matched. A "stack" of past states is kept, which is used by `push` and `pop`. * **`next: 'bar'`** moves to the state named `bar`. (The stack is not changed.) * **`push: 'bar'`** moves to the state named `bar`, and pushes the old state onto the stack. * **`pop: 1`** removes one state from the top of the stack, and moves to that state. (Only `1` is supported.) Only rules from the current state can be matched. You need to copy your rule into all the states you want it to be matched in. For example, to tokenize JS-style string interpolation such as `a${{c: d}}e`, you might use: ```js let lexer = moo.states({ main: { strstart: {match: '`', push: 'lit'}, ident: /\w+/, lbrace: {match: '{', push: 'main'}, rbrace: {match: '}', pop: true}, colon: ':', space: {match: /\s+/, lineBreaks: true}, }, lit: { interp: {match: '${', push: 'main'}, escape: /\\./, strend: {match: '`', pop: true}, const: {match: /(?:[^$`]|\$(?!\{))+/, lineBreaks: true}, }, }) // <= `a${{c: d}}e` // => strstart const interp lbrace ident colon space ident rbrace rbrace const strend ``` The `rbrace` rule is annotated with `pop`, so it moves from the `main` state into either `lit` or `main`, depending on the stack. Errors ------ If none of your rules match, Moo will throw an Error; since it doesn't know what else to do. If you prefer, you can have moo return an error token instead of throwing an exception. The error token will contain the whole of the rest of the buffer. ```js moo.compile({ // ... myError: moo.error, }) moo.reset('invalid') moo.next() // -> { type: 'myError', value: 'invalid', text: 'invalid', offset: 0, lineBreaks: 0, line: 1, col: 1 } moo.next() // -> undefined ``` You can have a token type that both matches tokens _and_ contains error values. ```js moo.compile({ // ... myError: {match: /[\$?`]/, error: true}, }) ``` ### Formatting errors ### If you want to throw an error from your parser, you might find `formatError` helpful. Call it with the offending token: ```js throw new Error(lexer.formatError(token, "invalid syntax")) ``` It returns a string with a pretty error message. ``` Error: invalid syntax at line 2 col 15: totally valid `syntax` ^ ``` Iteration --------- Iterators: we got 'em. ```js for (let here of lexer) { // here = { type: 'number', value: '123', ... } } ``` Create an array of tokens. ```js let tokens = Array.from(lexer); ``` Use [itt](https://github.com/nathan/itt)'s iteration tools with Moo. ```js for (let [here, next] = itt(lexer).lookahead()) { // pass a number if you need more tokens // enjoy! } ``` Transform --------- Moo doesn't allow capturing groups, but you can supply a transform function, `value()`, which will be called on the value before storing it in the Token object. ```js moo.compile({ STRING: [ {match: /"""[^]*?"""/, lineBreaks: true, value: x => x.slice(3, -3)}, {match: /"(?:\\["\\rn]|[^"\\])*?"/, lineBreaks: true, value: x => x.slice(1, -1)}, {match: /'(?:\\['\\rn]|[^'\\])*?'/, lineBreaks: true, value: x => x.slice(1, -1)}, ], // ... }) ``` Contributing ------------ Do check the [FAQ](https://github.com/tjvr/moo/issues?q=label%3Aquestion). Before submitting an issue, [remember...](https://github.com/tjvr/moo/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md) bs58 ==== [![build status](https://travis-ci.org/cryptocoinjs/bs58.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/cryptocoinjs/bs58) JavaScript component to compute base 58 encoding. This encoding is typically used for crypto currencies such as Bitcoin. **Note:** If you're looking for **base 58 check** encoding, see: [https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bs58check](https://github.com/bitcoinjs/bs58check), which depends upon this library. Install ------- npm i --save bs58 API --- ### encode(input) `input` must be a [Buffer](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html) or an `Array`. It returns a `string`. **example**: ```js const bs58 = require('bs58') const bytes = Buffer.from('003c176e659bea0f29a3e9bf7880c112b1b31b4dc826268187', 'hex') const address = bs58.encode(bytes) console.log(address) // => 16UjcYNBG9GTK4uq2f7yYEbuifqCzoLMGS ``` ### decode(input) `input` must be a base 58 encoded string. Returns a [Buffer](https://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html). **example**: ```js const bs58 = require('bs58') const address = '16UjcYNBG9GTK4uq2f7yYEbuifqCzoLMGS' const bytes = bs58.decode(address) console.log(out.toString('hex')) // => 003c176e659bea0f29a3e9bf7880c112b1b31b4dc826268187 ``` Hack / Test ----------- Uses JavaScript standard style. Read more: [![js-standard-style](https://cdn.rawgit.com/feross/standard/master/badge.svg)](https://github.com/feross/standard) Credits ------- - [Mike Hearn](https://github.com/mikehearn) for original Java implementation - [Stefan Thomas](https://github.com/justmoon) for porting to JavaScript - [Stephan Pair](https://github.com/gasteve) for buffer improvements - [Daniel Cousens](https://github.com/dcousens) for cleanup and merging improvements from bitcoinjs-lib - [Jared Deckard](https://github.com/deckar01) for killing `bigi` as a dependency License ------- MIT ## Setting up your terminal The scripts in this folder are designed to help you demonstrate the behavior of the contract(s) in this project. It uses the following setup: ```sh # set your terminal up to have 2 windows, A and B like this: ┌─────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ A │ B │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘ ``` ### Terminal **A** *This window is used to compile, deploy and control the contract* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment export OWNER= # any account you control # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 # export OWNER=sherif.testnet ``` - Commands _helper scripts_ ```sh 1.dev-deploy.sh # helper: build and deploy contracts 2.use-contract.sh # helper: call methods on ContractPromise 3.cleanup.sh # helper: delete build and deploy artifacts ``` ### Terminal **B** *This window is used to render the contract account storage* - Environment ```sh export CONTRACT= # depends on deployment # for example # export CONTRACT=dev-1615190770786-2702449 ``` - Commands ```sh # monitor contract storage using near-account-utils # https://github.com/near-examples/near-account-utils watch -d -n 1 yarn storage $CONTRACT ``` --- ## OS Support ### Linux - The `watch` command is supported natively on Linux - To learn more about any of these shell commands take a look at [explainshell.com](https://explainshell.com) ### MacOS - Consider `brew info visionmedia-watch` (or `brew install watch`) ### Windows - Consider this article: [What is the Windows analog of the Linux watch command?](https://superuser.com/questions/191063/what-is-the-windows-analog-of-the-linuo-watch-command#191068) # lodash.sortby v4.7.0 The [lodash](https://lodash.com/) method `_.sortBy` exported as a [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) module. ## Installation Using npm: ```bash $ {sudo -H} npm i -g npm $ npm i --save lodash.sortby ``` In Node.js: ```js var sortBy = require('lodash.sortby'); ``` See the [documentation](https://lodash.com/docs#sortBy) or [package source](https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/4.7.0-npm-packages/lodash.sortby) for more details. # yallist Yet Another Linked List There are many doubly-linked list implementations like it, but this one is mine. For when an array would be too big, and a Map can't be iterated in reverse order. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/yallist.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/yallist) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/isaacs/yallist/badge.svg?service=github)](https://coveralls.io/github/isaacs/yallist) ## basic usage ```javascript var yallist = require('yallist') var myList = yallist.create([1, 2, 3]) myList.push('foo') myList.unshift('bar') // of course pop() and shift() are there, too console.log(myList.toArray()) // ['bar', 1, 2, 3, 'foo'] myList.forEach(function (k) { // walk the list head to tail }) myList.forEachReverse(function (k, index, list) { // walk the list tail to head }) var myDoubledList = myList.map(function (k) { return k + k }) // now myDoubledList contains ['barbar', 2, 4, 6, 'foofoo'] // mapReverse is also a thing var myDoubledListReverse = myList.mapReverse(function (k) { return k + k }) // ['foofoo', 6, 4, 2, 'barbar'] var reduced = myList.reduce(function (set, entry) { set += entry return set }, 'start') console.log(reduced) // 'startfoo123bar' ``` ## api The whole API is considered "public". Functions with the same name as an Array method work more or less the same way. There's reverse versions of most things because that's the point. ### Yallist Default export, the class that holds and manages a list. Call it with either a forEach-able (like an array) or a set of arguments, to initialize the list. The Array-ish methods all act like you'd expect. No magic length, though, so if you change that it won't automatically prune or add empty spots. ### Yallist.create(..) Alias for Yallist function. Some people like factories. #### yallist.head The first node in the list #### yallist.tail The last node in the list #### yallist.length The number of nodes in the list. (Change this at your peril. It is not magic like Array length.) #### yallist.toArray() Convert the list to an array. #### yallist.forEach(fn, [thisp]) Call a function on each item in the list. #### yallist.forEachReverse(fn, [thisp]) Call a function on each item in the list, in reverse order. #### yallist.get(n) Get the data at position `n` in the list. If you use this a lot, probably better off just using an Array. #### yallist.getReverse(n) Get the data at position `n`, counting from the tail. #### yallist.map(fn, thisp) Create a new Yallist with the result of calling the function on each item. #### yallist.mapReverse(fn, thisp) Same as `map`, but in reverse. #### yallist.pop() Get the data from the list tail, and remove the tail from the list. #### yallist.push(item, ...) Insert one or more items to the tail of the list. #### yallist.reduce(fn, initialValue) Like Array.reduce. #### yallist.reduceReverse Like Array.reduce, but in reverse. #### yallist.reverse Reverse the list in place. #### yallist.shift() Get the data from the list head, and remove the head from the list. #### yallist.slice([from], [to]) Just like Array.slice, but returns a new Yallist. #### yallist.sliceReverse([from], [to]) Just like yallist.slice, but the result is returned in reverse. #### yallist.toArray() Create an array representation of the list. #### yallist.toArrayReverse() Create a reversed array representation of the list. #### yallist.unshift(item, ...) Insert one or more items to the head of the list. #### yallist.unshiftNode(node) Move a Node object to the front of the list. (That is, pull it out of wherever it lives, and make it the new head.) If the node belongs to a different list, then that list will remove it first. #### yallist.pushNode(node) Move a Node object to the end of the list. (That is, pull it out of wherever it lives, and make it the new tail.) If the node belongs to a list already, then that list will remove it first. #### yallist.removeNode(node) Remove a node from the list, preserving referential integrity of head and tail and other nodes. Will throw an error if you try to have a list remove a node that doesn't belong to it. ### Yallist.Node The class that holds the data and is actually the list. Call with `var n = new Node(value, previousNode, nextNode)` Note that if you do direct operations on Nodes themselves, it's very easy to get into weird states where the list is broken. Be careful :) #### node.next The next node in the list. #### node.prev The previous node in the list. #### node.value The data the node contains. #### node.list The list to which this node belongs. (Null if it does not belong to any list.) # require-main-filename [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/require-main-filename.png)](https://travis-ci.org/yargs/require-main-filename) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/yargs/require-main-filename/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/yargs/require-main-filename?branch=master) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/require-main-filename.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/require-main-filename) `require.main.filename` is great for figuring out the entry point for the current application. This can be combined with a module like [pkg-conf](https://www.npmjs.com/package/pkg-conf) to, _as if by magic_, load top-level configuration. Unfortunately, `require.main.filename` sometimes fails when an application is executed with an alternative process manager, e.g., [iisnode](https://github.com/tjanczuk/iisnode). `require-main-filename` is a shim that addresses this problem. ## Usage ```js var main = require('require-main-filename')() // use main as an alternative to require.main.filename. ``` ## License ISC # emoji-regex [![Build status](https://travis-ci.org/mathiasbynens/emoji-regex.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/mathiasbynens/emoji-regex) _emoji-regex_ offers a regular expression to match all emoji symbols (including textual representations of emoji) as per the Unicode Standard. This repository contains a script that generates this regular expression based on [the data from Unicode v12](https://github.com/mathiasbynens/unicode-12.0.0). Because of this, the regular expression can easily be updated whenever new emoji are added to the Unicode standard. ## Installation Via [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/): ```bash npm install emoji-regex ``` In [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/): ```js const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex'); // Note: because the regular expression has the global flag set, this module // exports a function that returns the regex rather than exporting the regular // expression itself, to make it impossible to (accidentally) mutate the // original regular expression. const text = ` \u{231A}: ⌚ default emoji presentation character (Emoji_Presentation) \u{2194}\u{FE0F}: ↔️ default text presentation character rendered as emoji \u{1F469}: 👩 emoji modifier base (Emoji_Modifier_Base) \u{1F469}\u{1F3FF}: 👩🏿 emoji modifier base followed by a modifier `; const regex = emojiRegex(); let match; while (match = regex.exec(text)) { const emoji = match[0]; console.log(`Matched sequence ${ emoji } — code points: ${ [...emoji].length }`); } ``` Console output: ``` Matched sequence ⌚ — code points: 1 Matched sequence ⌚ — code points: 1 Matched sequence ↔️ — code points: 2 Matched sequence ↔️ — code points: 2 Matched sequence 👩 — code points: 1 Matched sequence 👩 — code points: 1 Matched sequence 👩🏿 — code points: 2 Matched sequence 👩🏿 — code points: 2 ``` To match emoji in their textual representation as well (i.e. emoji that are not `Emoji_Presentation` symbols and that aren’t forced to render as emoji by a variation selector), `require` the other regex: ```js const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex/text.js'); ``` Additionally, in environments which support ES2015 Unicode escapes, you may `require` ES2015-style versions of the regexes: ```js const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex/es2015/index.js'); const emojiRegexText = require('emoji-regex/es2015/text.js'); ``` ## Author | [![twitter/mathias](https://gravatar.com/avatar/24e08a9ea84deb17ae121074d0f17125?s=70)](https://twitter.com/mathias "Follow @mathias on Twitter") | |---| | [Mathias Bynens](https://mathiasbynens.be/) | ## License _emoji-regex_ is available under the [MIT](https://mths.be/mit) license. [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/dankogai/js-base64.png)](http://travis-ci.org/dankogai/js-base64) # base64.js Yet another [Base64] transcoder. [Base64]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base64 ## HEADS UP In version 3.0 `js-base64` switch to ES2015 module so it is no longer compatible with legacy browsers like IE (see below). And since version 3.3 it is written in TypeScript. Now `base64.mjs` is compiled from `base64.ts` then `base64.js` is generated from `base64.mjs`. ## Install ```shell $ npm install --save js-base64 ``` ## Usage ### In Browser Locally… ```html <script src="base64.js"></script> ``` … or Directly from CDN. In which case you don't even need to install. ```html <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/base64.min.js"></script> ``` This good old way loads `Base64` in the global context (`window`). Though `Base64.noConflict()` is made available, you should consider using ES6 Module to avoid tainting `window`. ### As an ES6 Module locally… ```javascript import { Base64 } from 'js-base64'; ``` ```javascript // or if you prefer no Base64 namespace import { encode, decode } from 'js-base64'; ``` or even remotely. ```html <script type="module"> // note jsdelivr.net does not automatically minify .mjs import { Base64 } from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/base64.mjs'; </script> ``` ```html <script type="module"> // or if you prefer no Base64 namespace import { encode, decode } from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/base64.mjs'; </script> ``` ### node.js (commonjs) ```javascript const {Base64} = require('js-base64'); ``` Unlike the case above, the global context is no longer modified. You can also use [esm] to `import` instead of `require`. [esm]: https://github.com/standard-things/esm ```javascript require=require('esm')(module); import {Base64} from 'js-base64'; ``` ## SYNOPSIS ```javascript let latin = 'dankogai'; let utf8 = '小飼弾' let u8s = new Uint8Array([100,97,110,107,111,103,97,105]); Base64.encode(latin); // ZGFua29nYWk= Base64.btoa(latin); // ZGFua29nYWk= Base64.btoa(utf8); // raises exception Base64.fromUint8Array(u8s); // ZGFua29nYWk= Base64.fromUint8Array(u8s, true); // ZGFua29nYW which is URI safe Base64.encode(utf8); // 5bCP6aO85by+ Base64.encode(utf8, true) // 5bCP6aO85by- Base64.encodeURI(utf8); // 5bCP6aO85by- ``` ```javascript Base64.decode( 'ZGFua29nYWk=');// dankogai Base64.atob( 'ZGFua29nYWk=');// dankogai Base64.atob( '5bCP6aO85by+');// '小飼弾' which is nonsense Base64.toUint8Array('ZGFua29nYWk=');// u8s above Base64.decode( '5bCP6aO85by+');// 小飼弾 // note .decodeURI() is unnecessary since it accepts both flavors Base64.decode( '5bCP6aO85by-');// 小飼弾 ``` ```javascript Base64.isValid(0); // false: 0 is not string Base64.isValid(''); // true: a valid Base64-encoded empty byte Base64.isValid('ZA=='); // true: a valid Base64-encoded 'd' Base64.isValid('Z A='); // true: whitespaces are okay Base64.isValid('ZA'); // true: padding ='s can be omitted Base64.isValid('++'); // true: can be non URL-safe Base64.isValid('--'); // true: or URL-safe Base64.isValid('+-'); // false: can't mix both ``` ### Built-in Extensions By default `Base64` leaves built-in prototypes untouched. But you can extend them as below. ```javascript // you have to explicitly extend String.prototype Base64.extendString(); // once extended, you can do the following 'dankogai'.toBase64(); // ZGFua29nYWk= '小飼弾'.toBase64(); // 5bCP6aO85by+ '小飼弾'.toBase64(true); // 5bCP6aO85by- '小飼弾'.toBase64URI(); // 5bCP6aO85by- ab alias of .toBase64(true) '小飼弾'.toBase64URL(); // 5bCP6aO85by- an alias of .toBase64URI() 'ZGFua29nYWk='.fromBase64(); // dankogai '5bCP6aO85by+'.fromBase64(); // 小飼弾 '5bCP6aO85by-'.fromBase64(); // 小飼弾 '5bCP6aO85by-'.toUint8Array();// u8s above ``` ```javascript // you have to explicitly extend String.prototype Base64.extendString(); // once extended, you can do the following u8s.toBase64(); // 'ZGFua29nYWk=' u8s.toBase64URI(); // 'ZGFua29nYWk' u8s.toBase64URL(); // 'ZGFua29nYWk' an alias of .toBase64URI() ``` ```javascript // extend all at once Base64.extendBuiltins() ``` ## `.decode()` vs `.atob` (and `.encode()` vs `btoa()`) Suppose you have: ``` var pngBase64 = "iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAEAAAABCAQAAAC1HAwCAAAAC0lEQVR42mNkYAAAAAYAAjCB0C8AAAAASUVORK5CYII="; ``` Which is a Base64-encoded 1x1 transparent PNG, **DO NOT USE** `Base64.decode(pngBase64)`.  Use `Base64.atob(pngBase64)` instead.  `Base64.decode()` decodes to UTF-8 string while `Base64.atob()` decodes to bytes, which is compatible to browser built-in `atob()` (Which is absent in node.js).  The same rule applies to the opposite direction. Or even better, `Base64.toUint8Array(pngBase64)`. ### If you really, really need an ES5 version You can transpiles to an ES5 that runs on IE11. Do the following in your shell. ```shell $ make base64.es5.js ```