Project

Reverse Dependencies for rspec

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

0.19
No commit activity in last 3 years
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Switching database connection between readonly one and writable one.
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0.19
No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
A Vagrant plugin that ensures the desired version of Chef is installed via the platform-specific Omnibus packages.
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0.19
No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
There's a lot of open issues
Ruby library for running commands via WinRM as elevated through a scheduled task
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0.19
Low commit activity in last 3 years
A long-lived project that still receives updates
A modern ruby gem allowing to do time calculation with working hours.
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0.19
Low commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over a year
Cakefile — A Podfile for your main project. 🍰Describe Xcode projects in a human readable format and (re)generate one on demand.
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0.19
A long-lived project that still receives updates
A highly flexible hexdump implementation.
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Low commit activity in last 3 years
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A long-lived project that still receives updates
Automated post-deploy tasks for Ruby/Rails. Your deployment is the party. This is the after party
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0.18
No commit activity in last 3 years
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There's a lot of open issues
Agent is a diverse family of related approaches for modelling concurrent systems, in Ruby
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0.18
No commit activity in last 3 years
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amqp-daemon-kit is derived from the larger daemon-kit gem with updates to modernize and optimize integration with new AMQP protocols.
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0.18
No release in over 3 years
Low commit activity in last 3 years
Authorize.Net SDK includes standard payments, recurring billing, and customer profiles
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0.18
Low commit activity in last 3 years
There's a lot of open issues
No release in over a year
An expressive query DSL for Active Record 6+
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BlueCloth is a Ruby implementation of John Gruber's Markdown[http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/], a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. To quote from the project page: Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML). It borrows a naming convention and several helpings of interface from {Redcloth}[http://redcloth.org/], Why the Lucky Stiff's processor for a similar text-to-HTML conversion syntax called Textile[http://www.textism.com/tools/textile/]. BlueCloth 2 is a complete rewrite using David Parsons' Discount[http://www.pell.portland.or.us/~orc/Code/discount/] library, a C implementation of Markdown. I rewrote it using the extension for speed and accuracy; the original BlueCloth was a straight port from the Perl version that I wrote in a few days for my own use just to avoid having to shell out to Markdown.pl, and it was quite buggy and slow. I apologize to all the good people that sent me patches for it that were never released. Note that the new gem is called 'bluecloth' and the old one 'BlueCloth'. If you have both installed, you can ensure you're loading the new one with the 'gem' directive: # Load the 2.0 version gem 'bluecloth', '>= 2.0.0' # Load the 1.0 version gem 'BlueCloth' require 'bluecloth'
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0.18
No commit activity in last 3 years
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Caller/backtrace parser with some useful utilities for manipulating the load path, and doing other relative things.
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0.18
Repository is archived
No commit activity in last 3 years
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Ruby is an excellent programming language for creating and managing custom DSLs, but how can you securely evaluate a DSL while explicitly controlling the methods exposed to the user? Our good friends instance_eval and instance_exec are great, but they expose all methods - public, protected, and private - to the user. Even worse, they expose the ability to accidentally or intentionally alter the behavior of the system! The cleanroom pattern is a safer, more convenient, Ruby-like approach for limiting the information exposed by a DSL while giving users the ability to write awesome code!
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