CSS Waxer refactors CSS files bringing the focus on properties, rather than on selectors. Typically, CSS files are written by groups of selectors, you first specify all the properties of <body>, then those of <h1>, #header, and so on. This makes it hard to catch a glimpse of the overall style of a site, such as the entire list of colors used, the fonts, or the dimensions. CSS Waxer reorders the lines of a CSS files so that properties are grouped together by family. In this way, you can rapidly check together all the fonts used, the colors, backgrounds, layouts and so on for the whole site.
A fuzzy text selector for files and anything else you need to select.
AlchemyFileSelector.
a (very) small library that counts selectors in a CSS file
Parse a CSS file and access/operate on rulesets, selectors, declarations etc. Includes specificity calculated according to W3C spec.
Country list based on a csv file with long an short names for Dropdowns and selections
Germinate is a tool for writing about code. With Germinate, the source code IS the article. For example, given the following source code: # #!/usr/bin/env ruby # :BRACKET_CODE: <pre>, </pre> # :PROCESS: ruby, "ruby %f" # :SAMPLE: hello def hello(who) puts "Hello, #{who}" end hello("World") # :TEXT: # Check out my amazing program! Here's the hello method: # :INSERT: @hello:/def/../end/ # And here's the output: # :INSERT: @hello|ruby When we run the <tt>germ format</tt> command the following output is generated: Check out my amazing program! Here's the hello method: <pre> def hello(who) puts "Hello, #{who}" end </pre> And here's the output: <pre> Hello, World </pre> To get a better idea of how this works, please take a look at link:examples/basic.rb, or run: germ generate > basic.rb To generate an example article to play with. Germinate is particularly useful for writing articles, such as blog posts, which contain code excerpts. Instead of forcing you to keep a source code file and an article document in sync throughout the editing process, the Germinate motto is "The source code IS the article". Specially marked comment sections in your code file become the article text. Wherever you need to reference the source code in the article, use insertion directives to tell Germinate what parts of the code to excerpt. An advanced selector syntax enables you to be very specific about which lines of code you want to insert. If you also want to show the output of your code, Germinate has you covered. Special "process" directives enable you to define arbitrary commands which can be run on your code. The output of the command then becomes the excerpt text. You can define an arbitrary number of processes and have different excerpts showing the same code as processed by different commands. You can even string processes together into pipelines. Development of Germinate is graciously sponsored by Devver, purveyor of fine cloud-based services to busy Ruby developers. If you like this tool please check them out at http://devver.net.
This project enables site crawling and data extraction with xpath and css selectors. You can also send forms such as text data, files, and checkboxes.
Germinate is a tool for writing about code. With Germinate, the source code IS the article. For example, given the following source code: # #!/usr/bin/env ruby # :BRACKET_CODE: <pre>, </pre> # :PROCESS: ruby, "ruby %f" # :SAMPLE: hello def hello(who) puts "Hello, #{who}" end hello("World") # :TEXT: # Check out my amazing program! Here's the hello method: # :INSERT: @hello:/def/../end/ # And here's the output: # :INSERT: @hello|ruby When we run the <tt>germ format</tt> command the following output is generated: Check out my amazing program! Here's the hello method: <pre> def hello(who) puts "Hello, #{who}" end </pre> And here's the output: <pre> Hello, World </pre> To get a better idea of how this works, please take a look at link:examples/basic.rb, or run: germ generate > basic.rb To generate an example article to play with. Germinate is particularly useful for writing articles, such as blog posts, which contain code excerpts. Instead of forcing you to keep a source code file and an article document in sync throughout the editing process, the Germinate motto is "The source code IS the article". Specially marked comment sections in your code file become the article text. Wherever you need to reference the source code in the article, use insertion directives to tell Germinate what parts of the code to excerpt. An advanced selector syntax enables you to be very specific about which lines of code you want to insert. If you also want to show the output of your code, Germinate has you covered. Special "process" directives enable you to define arbitrary commands which can be run on your code. The output of the command then becomes the excerpt text. You can define an arbitrary number of processes and have different excerpts showing the same code as processed by different commands. You can even string processes together into pipelines. Development of Germinate is graciously sponsored by Devver, purveyor of fine cloud-based services to busy Ruby developers. If you like this tool please check them out at http://devver.net.
Gem that, given a collection of HTML documents and CSS files, will remove any class attributes in the HTML set to CSS selectors that do not exist in the CSS files.
RSpec matcher ensures that CSS files do not break in Old IE
Automated Web-Scraping Client for Ruby using SLD2-like configuration files. Supports XPath and CSS selectors via Nokogiri.
Takes the screenshots from devices which match the specified names and puts them in a new directory for frameit to process. The screenshot files can then be cleaned up after the device images are created.
Reduce CSS file size by removing unused selectors with PurgeCSS in Rails asset pipeline.
RSpec matcher ensures that CSS files do not break in Old IE
A simple gem for selecting files.