Project

Reverse Dependencies for asciidoctor

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

1.07
A long-lived project that still receives updates
An add-on converter for Asciidoctor that converts AsciiDoc documents to PDF using the Prawn PDF generation library.
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0.51
Low commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over a year
This is a reimplementation of the Asciidoctor's built-in (pre)processor for the include::[] directive in extensible and more clean way. It provides the same features, but you can easily adjust it or extend for your needs. For example, you can change how it loads included files or add another ways how to select portions of the document to include.
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0.34
A long-lived project that still receives updates
Converts AsciiDoc documents into HTML5 presentations designed to be executed by the reveal.js presentation framework.
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A long-lived project that still receives updates
Awestruct is a static site baking and publishing tool. It supports an extensive list of both templating and markup languages via Tilt (Haml, Slim, AsciiDoc, Markdown, Sass via Compass, etc), provides mobile-first layout and styling via Bootstrap or Foundation, offers a variety of deployment options (rsync, git, S3), handles site optimizations (minification, compression, cache busting), includes built-in extensions such as blog post management and is highly extensible.
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0.21
A long-lived project that still receives updates
A Jekyll plugin that converts the AsciiDoc source files in your site to HTML pages using Asciidoctor.
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0.08
Low commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over a year
AsciiBinder is an AsciiDoc-based system for authoring and publishing closely related documentation sets from a single source.
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0.08
No release in over 3 years
Low commit activity in last 3 years
There's a lot of open issues
An Asciidoctor extension to converts latexmath equations to SVG or PNGs
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0.07
No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
There's a lot of open issues
An extension for Asciidoctor that converts AsciiDoc documents to LaTeX and provides LaTeX extensions to Asciidoc.
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0.06
Low commit activity in last 3 years
A long-lived project that still receives updates
asciidoctor-bibtex is an Asciidocotor extension that adds bibtex support for AsciiDoc documents. It does so by introducing two new macros: `cite:[KEY]` and `bibliography::[]`. Citations are parsed and replaced with formatted inline text, and reference lists are automatically generated and inserted where the `bibliography::[]` macro is placed. The references are formatted using styles provided by CSL.
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0.06
Low commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over a year
Sym is a ruby library (gem) that offers both the command line interface (CLI) and a set of rich Ruby APIs, which make it rather trivial to add encryption and decryption of sensitive data to your development or deployment workflow. For additional security the private key itself can be encrypted with a user-generated password. For decryption using the key the password can be input into STDIN, or be defined by an ENV variable, or an OS-X Keychain Entry. Unlike many other existing encryption tools, Sym focuses on getting out of your way by offering a streamlined interface with password caching (if MemCached is installed and running locally) in hopes to make encryption of application secrets nearly completely transparent to the developers. Sym uses symmetric 256-bit key encryption with the AES-256-CBC cipher, same cipher as used by the US Government. For password-protecting the key Sym uses AES-128-CBC cipher. The resulting data is zlib-compressed and base64-encoded. The keys are also base64 encoded for easy copying/pasting/etc. Sym accomplishes encryption transparency by combining several convenient features: 1. Sym can read the private key from multiple source types, such as pathname, an environment variable name, a keychain entry, or CLI argument. You simply pass either of these to the -k flag — one flag that works for all source types. 2. By utilizing OS-X Keychain on a Mac, Sym offers truly secure way of storing the key on a local machine, much more secure then storing it on a file system, 3. By using a local password cache (activated with -c) via an in-memory provider such as memcached, sym invocations take advantage of password cache, and only ask for a password once per a configurable time period, 4. By using SYM_ARGS environment variable, where common flags can be saved. This is activated with sym -A, 5. By reading the key from the default key source file ~/.sym.key which requires no flags at all, 6. By utilizing the --negate option to quickly encrypt a regular file, or decrypt an encrypted file with extension .enc 7. By implementing the -t (edit) mode, that opens an encrypted file in your $EDITOR, and replaces the encrypted version upon save & exit, optionally creating a backup. 8. By offering the Sym::MagicFile ruby API to easily read encrypted files into memory. Please refer the module documentation available here: https://www.rubydoc.info/gems/sym
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0.04
Low commit activity in last 3 years
There's a lot of open issues
A long-lived project that still receives updates
An Asciidoctor converter that generates the HTML component of a Bespoke.js presentation from AsciiDoc.
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0.04
Low commit activity in last 3 years
There's a lot of open issues
No release in over a year
Semantic HTML5 backend (converter) for Asciidoctor This converter focuses on correct semantics, accessibility and compatibility with common typographic CSS styles.
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0.04
There's a lot of open issues
In version 5.0 the authors of the popular Ruby web server Puma chose to remove the daemonization support from Puma, because the code wasn't wall maintained, and because other and better options exist for production deployments. For example systemd, Docker/Kubernetes, Heroku, etc. Having said that, it was neat and often useful to daemonize Puma in development. This gem adds this support to Puma 5 & 6 (hopefully) without breaking anything in Puma itself. So, if you want to use the latest and greatest Puma 5+, but prefer to keep using built-in daemonization, this gem if for you.
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0.03
There's a lot of open issues
No release in over a year
A set of Asciidoctor extensions that add a chart block and block macro to AsciiDoc for including charts in your AsciiDoc document.
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