Project
Reverse Dependencies for awesome_print
The projects listed here declare awesome_print as a runtime or development dependency
0.08
Universal ID opens the flood gates with a deluge of profoundly powerful
yet easily implemented new use-cases for your apps and scripts.
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0.07
Copy active record models from remote databases
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0.07
Provides recurrence to icalendar gem.
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Activity
0.06
Enhance rails console by using awesome_print, pry and several pry plugins. And useful prompt tweaks. Makes rails console awesome by default.
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0.06
CMS built on rails with love.
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0.06
The simplest way to configure and deploy an Elastic Beanstalk application via rake.
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0.06
A gem with tools for machine learning.
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Activity
0.06
Ruby wrapper to Riot Games API. Maps results to full blown ruby objects.
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0.06
The bridge between Calabash iOS and Xcode command-line tools like instruments and simctl.
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Activity
0.06
Table Cloth helps you create tables easily.
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0.06
Provides a simple and intuitive interface for the Movie Database API making use of OpenStruct.
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Activity
0.06
Toggl v8 API wrapper (See https://github.com/toggl/toggl_api_docs)
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Activity
0.06
Toggl v8 API wrapper (See https://github.com/toggl/toggl_api_docs)
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Activity
0.05
Shared code for Pact gems
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Activity
0.05
Indirizzo is simply an extraction of the US Street Address parsing code from Geocoder::US
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0.05
A Ruby Language Server implementation
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0.05
Control your nest thermostat
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Activity
0.05
Retrofits and generates valid puppet rspec test code to existing modules
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Activity
0.05
Debuggers are great! They help us troubleshoot complicated programming problems by inspecting values produced by code, line by line. They are invaluable when trying to understand what is going on in a large application composed of thousands or millions of lines of code.
In day-to-day test-driven development and simple debugging though, a puts statement can be a lot quicker in revealing what is going on than halting execution completely just to inspect a single value or a few. This is certainly true when writing the simplest possible code that could possibly work, and running a test every few seconds or minutes. Problem is you need to locate puts statements in large output logs, know which file names, line numbers, classes, and methods contained the puts statements, find out what variable names are being printed, and see nicely formatted output. Enter puts_debuggerer. A guilt-free puts debugging Ruby gem FTW that prints file names, line numbers, class names, method names, and code statements; and formats output nicely courtesy of awesome_print.
Partially inspired by this blog post: https://tenderlovemaking.com/2016/02/05/i-am-a-puts-debuggerer.html (Credit to Tenderlove.)
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Activity
0.05
Enable using native sql enums
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