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Port of 'textbling' markup syntax from Surebert http://wiki.surebert.com/index.php/Main_Page
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WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
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Qwicky is a REALLY small wiki implementation using Sinatra, DataMapper and SQLite3.
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Remote feature management for Cucumber. Bumps extends {Cucumber}[http://cukes.info] by allowing you to pull feature content and push run results to and from a remote server. This means that your feature files no longer need to live with your steps and other code. This also means that you can publish the results of a Cucumber run to another system. Bumps has been designed to work with {Bumpybot}[http://github.com/brentsnook/bumpybot] (a Google Wave robot) but it can be used with any server that meets the {push/pull contract}[http://wiki.github.com/brentsnook/bumps/push-pull-contract]. See the {wiki}[http://wiki.github.com/brentsnook/bumps] for more details.
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An implementation of the mediawiki markup in ruby
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Cosell is a minimal implementation of the 'Announcements' observer framework, originally introduced in VisualWorks Smalltalk as a replacement for 'triggerEvent' style of event notification. Instead of triggering events identified by symbols, the events are first class objects. For rationale, please see the original blog posting by Vassili Bykov (refs below). *Lineage* This implementation is loosely based on Lukas Renggli's tweak of Colin Putney's Squeak implementation of Vassili Bykov's Announcements framework for VisualWorks Smalltalk. (Specifically Announcements-lr.13.mcz was used as a reference.) Liberties where taken during the port. In particular, the Announcer class in the Smalltalk version is implemented here as a ruby module which can be mixed into any object. Also, in this implementation any object (or class) can serve as an announcement, so no Announcement class is implemented. The ability to queue announcements in the background is built into cosell. <b>The Name 'Cosell'</b> I chose the name 'Cosell' because a. Howard Cosell is an iconic event announcer b. Googling for 'Ruby Announcements', 'Ruby Event Announcements', etc., produced scads of results about ruby meetups, conferences, and the like. So I went with something a bit cryptic but hopefully a little more searchable. *See* * {Original blog posting describing Announcments by Vassili Bykov}[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/userblogs/vbykov/blogView?entry=3310034894] * {More info on the Announcements Framework}[http://wiki.squeak.org/squeak/5734]
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There's a lot of open issues
Gitki is a wiki using git to store data.
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There's a lot of open issues
Gitki is a wiki using git to store data.
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Ruby-FFI is a ruby extension for programmatically loading dynamic libraries, binding functions within them, and calling those functions from Ruby code. Moreover, a Ruby-FFI extension works without changes on Ruby and JRuby. Discover why should you write your next extension using Ruby-FFI here[http://wiki.github.com/ffi/ffi/why-use-ffi].
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get local copies of github project wikis
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Unofficial Chef Server scripts and related stuff. http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef
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You can create your slide as a text file. It means that you can version controlyour slide like your Ruby scripts. You can custom your slide style by Ruby.So Rabbit is for Rubyist. You can use RD, Markdown and Wiki format as slide source. Rabbit provides programmer friendly keyboard interface. It uses Emacs and Vistyle keybindings by default. You can use PDF and image as slide source. Rabbit can show PDF and imagedirectly. You can create your slide by other presentation tool and show yourslide by Rabbit. If you show your slide by Rabbit, you can use programmerfriendly keyboard interface provided by Rabbit to control your slide. You can upload your slide as a gem. If you publish your slide as a gem, youcan see your slide at https://slide.rabbit-shocker.org/ .
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Cosell is a minimal implementation of the 'Announcements' observer framework, originally introduced in VisualWorks Smalltalk as a replacement for 'triggerEvent' style of event notification. Instead of triggering events identified by symbols, the events are first class objects. For rationale, please see the original blog posting by Vassili Bykov (refs below). *Lineage* This implementation is loosely based on Lukas Renggli's tweak of Colin Putney's Squeak implementation of Vassili Bykov's Announcements framework for VisualWorks Smalltalk. (Specifically Announcements-lr.13.mcz was used as a reference.) Liberties where taken during the port. In particular, the Announcer class in the Smalltalk version is implemented here as a ruby module which can be mixed into any object. Also, in this implementation any object (or class) can serve as an announcement, so no Announcement class is implemented. The ability to queue announcements in the background is built into cosell. <b>The Name 'Cosell'</b> I chose the name 'Cosell' because a. Howard Cosell is an iconic event announcer b. Googling for 'Ruby Announcements', 'Ruby Event Announcements', etc., produced scads of results about ruby meetups, conferences, and the like. So I went with something a bit cryptic but hopefully a little more searchable. *See* * {Original blog posting describing Announcments by Vassili Bykov}[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/userblogs/vbykov/blogView?entry=3310034894] * {More info on the Announcements Framework}[http://wiki.squeak.org/squeak/5734]
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Ruby gem wrapper for the Plaid API. Read more at the homepage, the wiki, or in the Plaid documentation.
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GitHub's wiki doesn't currently have an API to call it's own, so this gem was created as a stopgap. For now, it lets you pull down the content of a project's GitHub wiki
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Irwi is Ruby on Rails plugin which adds wiki functionality to your application.
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The Juggernaut Gem for Ruby on Rails aims to revolutionize your Rails app by letting the server initiate a connection and push data to the client. In other words your app can have a real time connection to the server with the advantage of instant updates. Although the obvious use of this is for chat, the most exciting prospect for me is collaborative cms and wikis. This Gem bundles Alex MacCaw's Juggernaut Gem and Rails plugin into one, and extends its Rails intergration for a simpler install and setup.
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A Ruby Gem for interacting with RDF/OWL stored in the AllegroGraph Triple Store via Seasame 2 HTTP protocol. Go to http://wiki.github.com/mwarnock/activesesame
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ProtoBuffer::Converter can be inherited by a class and then multiple `structure` blocks define each structure, and trees can be made. For a sample usage, look at http://wiki.github.com/danopia/protobuffer
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