Showing 2 open source projects for "syntax tool"

View related business solutions
  • $300 Free Credits to Build on Google Cloud Icon
    $300 Free Credits to Build on Google Cloud

    New to Google Cloud? Get $300 in credits to explore Compute Engine, BigQuery, Cloud Run, Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, and more.

    Start your next project with $300 in free Google Cloud credit. Spin up VMs, run containers, query petabytes in BigQuery, or build agents with Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform. Once your credits are used, keep building with 20+ always-free tier products including Compute Engine, Cloud Storage, GKE, and Cloud Run functions. No commitment required—just sign up and start building.
    Claim $300 Free
  • Enterprise-grade ITSM, for every business Icon
    Enterprise-grade ITSM, for every business

    Give your IT, operations, and business teams the ability to deliver exceptional services—without the complexity.

    Freshservice is an intuitive, AI-powered platform that helps IT, operations, and business teams deliver exceptional service without the usual complexity. Automate repetitive tasks, resolve issues faster, and provide seamless support across the organization. From managing incidents and assets to driving smarter decisions, Freshservice makes it easy to stay efficient and scale with confidence.
    Try it Free
  • 1
    PostCSS

    PostCSS

    A tool for transforming CSS with JavaScript

    PostCSS is a tool for transforming styles with JS plugins. These plugins can do a great number of things: transpile future CSS syntax, lint your CSS, support variables and mixins, and so much more. PostCSS works by taking a CSS file and providing an API to analyze and modify its rules (through its transformation into an Abstract Syntax Tree). The API can then be used by plugins to do a lot of useful things.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    IntelliJ plugin for Haskell

    IntelliJ plugin for Haskell

    IntelliJ plugin for Haskell

    When I was learning Haskell, I missed the nice features of IntelliJ IDEA. My first approach was to use the default way of creating an IntelliJ plugin by defining a grammar and a lexer according to Haskell report. That didn't work out because I could not define all the recursion. Then I decided to use grammar and lexer definitions only for tokenizing and parsing Haskell code, and not for syntax checking the code. This is needed for syntax highlighting, all kinds of navigation, and so on....
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next
Auth0 Logo