Categories
21.31
Rake is a Make-like program implemented in Ruby. Tasks and dependencies are
specified in standard Ruby syntax.
Rake has the following features:
* Rakefiles (rake's version of Makefiles) are completely defined in standard Ruby syntax.
No XML files to edit. No quirky Makefile syntax to worry about (is that a tab or a space?)
* Users can specify tasks with prerequisites.
* Rake supports rule patterns to synthesize implicit tasks.
* Flexible FileLists that act like arrays but know about manipulating file names and paths.
* Supports parallel execution of tasks.
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21.09
Nokogiri (鋸) makes it easy and painless to work with XML and HTML from Ruby. It provides a
sensible, easy-to-understand API for reading, writing, modifying, and querying documents. It is
fast and standards-compliant by relying on native parsers like libxml2, libgumbo, or xerces.
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14.35
Builder provides a number of builder objects that make creating structured data
simple to do. Currently the following builder objects are supported:
* XML Markup
* XML Events
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14.78
A package (also known as a library) contains a set of functionality
that can be invoked by a Ruby program, such as reading and parsing an XML file. We call
these packages 'gems' and RubyGems is a tool to install, create, manage and load these
packages in your Ruby environment. RubyGems is also a client for RubyGems.org, a public
repository of Gems that allows you to publish a Gem that can be shared and used by other
developers. See our guide on publishing a Gem at guides.rubygems.org
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8.58
Provides swappable XML backends utilizing LibXML, Nokogiri, Ox, or REXML.
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9.67
An XML toolkit for Ruby
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6.17
Really simple JSON and XML parsing, ripped from Merb and Rails.
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3.13
A simple API for XML processing.
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4.1
This is a module to read, write and manipulate both binary and XML property lists as defined by apple.
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2.94
Extraction of the XML parsing tools shared between a
number of providers in the 'fog' gem
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2.79
Nokogiri (鋸) makes it easy and painless to work with XML and HTML from Ruby. It provides a
sensible, easy-to-understand API for reading, writing, modifying, and querying documents. It is
fast and standards-compliant by relying on native parsers like libxml2, libgumbo, or xerces.
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Activity
2.79
Nokogiri (鋸) makes it easy and painless to work with XML and HTML from Ruby. It provides a
sensible, easy-to-understand API for reading, writing, modifying, and querying documents. It is
fast and standards-compliant by relying on native parsers like libxml2 (C) and xerces (Java).
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2.6
The will_paginate library provides a simple, yet powerful and extensible API for ActiveRecord pagination and rendering of pagination links in ActionView templates. [Experimental: addition of prev/next rel navigation for XML rendering]
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0.0
# Fresh::Auth
This gem makes it really, REALLY easy to use the Freshbooks API. It couldn't be easier.
With only 3 functions you'll ever need to use, and only 2 required configuration values, it can't get any easier.
## Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'fresh-auth'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install fresh-auth
## Usage
### Configuration:
You must define your Freshbooks subdomain and your OAuth Secret in your application code before using Fresh::Auth. For Ruby on Rails apps, a new file at config/initializers/fresh-auth.rb would be appropriate.
Your configuration file should look like this (you fill in the three empty strings):
Fresh::Auth.configure do |config|
# The part of your login url between 'http://' and '.freshbooks.com'
config.url.subdomain = ""
# Under 'My Account' (on the top right when you're logged into Freshbooks)
# -> 'Freshbooks API' -> 'OAuth Developer Access' -> 'OAuth Secret'
# You'll need to request this from Freshbooks initially.
config.oauth_secret = ""
# Optional. Any string of your choice. Be creative or check out http://www.thebitmill.com/tools/password.html
config.nonce_salt = ""
end
Fear not: If you try to use Fresh::Auth without configuring it first, an exception will be thrown that clearly describes the problem.
### Public API:
There are two modules in this API: Fresh::Auth::Authentication and Fresh::Auth::Api
#### Fresh::Auth::Authentication
This module authenticates you with Freshbooks, storing the authentication in an array called `session`. This integrates seamlessly with Ruby on Rails' controller environment. If you're using some framework other than Ruby on Rails, make sure to define session in your class before including the Authentication module. This isn't recommended because your class will also need to define other objects called `params` and `request` and implement a `redirect_to` method. It gets complicated. Better leave it to Rails to handle this for you.
The only public function of this module is AuthenticateWithFreshbooks.
To use it, just add the following line of code to your controller:
`
include Fresh::Auth::Authentication
`
Then, the following line of code authenticates with Freshbooks from any method in your controller:
`
AuthenticateWithFreshbooks()
`
Note that, after authenticating with Freshbooks, the user will be redirected back to the same path using HTTP GET, so make sure the resource supports HTTP GET and that in the business logic executed on GET, AuthenticateWihFreshbooks() is called.
#### Fresh::Auth::Api
Once you've authenticated, you want to send XML requests to Freshbooks. The first step is preparing the XML with Fresh::Auth::Api.GenerateXml, which you'll supply with a block that defines all the nested XML that you want in your request. GenerateXml also takes two arguments before the block: the class and method that you want to call.
First, in your controller:
`include Fresh::Auth::Api`
Then, in some method in that controller:
my_xml = GenerateXml :invoice, :update do |xml|
xml.client_id 20
xml.status 'sent'
xml.notes 'Pick up the car by 5'
xml.terms 'Cash only'
xml.lines {
xml.line {
xml.name 'catalytic converter'
xml.quantity 1
xml.unit_cost 450
xml.type 'Item'
}
xml.line {
xml.name 'labor'
xml.quantity 1
xml.unit_cost 60
xml.type 'Time'
}
}
end
Ok, you created the XML. Now you want to send it. Sounds pretty complicated, right? Not at all! Ready? Let's go!
`_response = PostToFreshbooksApi my_xml`
Now, are you wondering what's in `_response`? I'll tell you shortly, but before we discuss that, we have to know about the exception that PostToFreshbooksApi might raise. It raises a detailed error message if the response status is not 'ok'. Makes sense, right?
Now, you still want to know what's in `_response`? Oh, nothing fancy. Just a Nokogiri XML object, representing the root element of the xml response. Could this get any easier?
## Contributing
1. Fork it
2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`)
3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Added some feature'`)
4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`)
5. Create new Pull Request
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Activity
2.26
XML to Hash translator
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2.2
Gyoku translates Ruby Hashes to XML
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xlsx spreadsheet generation with charts, images, automated column width, customizable styles and full schema validation. Axlsx helps you create beautiful Office Open XML Spreadsheet documents ( Excel, Google Spreadsheets, Numbers, LibreOffice) without having to understand the entire ECMA specification. Check out the README for some examples of how easy it is. Best of all, you can validate your xlsx file before serialization so you know for sure that anything generated is going to load on your client's machine.
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1.83
General ruby templating with json, bson, xml and msgpack support
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1.82
You probably meant `gem install multi_xml`.
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1.72
SitemapGenerator is a framework-agnostic XML Sitemap generator written in Ruby with automatic Rails integration. It supports Video, News, Image, Mobile, PageMap and Alternate Links sitemap extensions and includes Rake tasks for managing your sitemaps, as well as many other great features.
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