Project

Reverse Dependencies for hoe

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

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Simple OAuth implementation
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Net::LDAP for Ruby (also called net-ldap) implements client access for the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), an IETF standard protocol for accessing distributed directory services. Net::LDAP is written completely in Ruby with no external dependencies. It supports most LDAP client features and a subset of server features as well. Net::LDAP has been tested against modern popular LDAP servers including OpenLDAP and Active Directory. The current release is mostly compliant with earlier versions of the IETF LDAP RFCs (2251–2256, 2829–2830, 3377, and 3771). Our roadmap for Net::LDAP 1.0 is to gain full <em>client</em> compliance with the most recent LDAP RFCs (4510–4519, plutions of 4520–4532).
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God is an easy to configure, easy to extend monitoring framework written in Ruby.
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Provides an easy to use DSL resembling ActiveRecord for defining objects representing any XML document, including deeply nested ones. This project was extracted from my ruby-picasa gem. You can find ruby-picasa at http://github.com/pangloss/ruby_picasa or available as a gem. The project also has significant (if not complete) Atom support.
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objectiveflickr is a minimalistic Flickr API library that uses REST-style calls and receives JSON response blocks, resulting in very concise code. Named so in order to echo another Flickr library of mine, under the same name, developed for Objective-C.
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ObjectProxy provides a proxied interface to Ruby objects. It lets you add methods to objects that don't normally support them.
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&quot;Permanently stash your Ruby objects&quot; Serializes your ruby objects and writes them to disk (gziped). Easily load stashed object.
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It's metastable
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octobok - book publishing tool for jekyll
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* oddb2tdat converts oddb.csv to oddb.dat * http://dev.ywesee.com/wiki.php/ODDB/Oddb2tdat
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Open Drug Database for Switzerland. See the live version at http://ch.oddb.org
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officetxt (Office.TXT) - the free writer's command line tool suite
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== DESCRIPTION: My fork of aasmith's ofx-parser v1.0.2 and attempt at building the investment acct methods. OfxParser is a ruby library to parse a realistic subset of the lengthy OFX 1.x specification. == FEATURES/PROBLEMS: * Reads OFX responses - i.e. those downloaded from financial institutions and puts it into a usable object graph. * Supports the 3 main message sets: banking, credit card and investment accounts, as well as the required 'sign on' set. * Knows about SIC codes - if your institution provides them. See http://www.eeoc.gov/stats/jobpat/siccodes.html * Monetary amounts can be retrieved either as a raw string, or in pennies. * Supports OFX timestamps.
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== DESCRIPTION: ofx-parser is a ruby library to parse a realistic subset of the lengthy OFX 1.x specification. == FEATURES/PROBLEMS: * Reads OFX responses - i.e. those downloaded from financial institutions and puts it into a usable object graph. * Supports the 3 main message sets: banking, credit card and investment accounts, as well as the required 'sign on' set. * Knows about SIC codes - if your institution provides them. See http://www.eeoc.gov/stats/jobpat/siccodes.html * Monetary amounts can be retrieved either as a raw string, or in pennies. * Supports OFX timestamps.
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ObjectGraph will output Graphviz dot files of your objects in memory. It will ferret out your instance variables and enumerate over your enumerables to give you a graph of your object and its relationships. For sample output and more sample code see: * http://flickr.com/photos/aaronp/tags/graphviz/ * http://tenderlovemaking.com/2007/06/17/graphing-ruby-objects/ * http://tenderlovemaking.com/2007/01/13/graphing-objects-in-memory-with-ruby/
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An API for OptionsHouse (http://optionshouse.com). Currently provides a mechanism for pulling stock and option quotes.
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Fancy console output tools
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Add ANSI color codes to strings using a simple markup.
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I'm tired of the complications that tools like bundler and rvm inject into my system and my workflow. I don't want 4 billion gems installed globally. I don't want to have `rake` slow down for no good reason. I don't want rvm to regress on undefined variables over and over and over (and I don't want to report it anymore when it does). I want as much simplicity as I can afford and still be able to get my job done. I've found pretty good balance using rbenv (only when needed) and by using this 45 line shell function `ohmygems` (aliased to `omg`, of course). I still have my system-level gems as my previous GEM_HOME gets moved into GEM_PATH so things like minitest and autotest are always available. But now I have private gems that are incredibly easy to switch around and only rely on simple environment variables to manage. To go back to normal, simply run `omg reset`.
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OkExtensions by steved http://code.google.com/p/ok-extensions/ == DESCRIPTION: A set of extensions to the ruby stdlib
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