Showing 3 open source projects for "command-line"

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  • 1
    Omelette

    Omelette

    Omelette is a simple, template based autocompletion tool for Node

    Omelette is a minimalist tool for adding shell autocompletion to Node.js and Deno command-line apps. Using a tagged-template DSL, it supports Bash, Zsh, and Fish. Developers define CLI structures, bind events to completion nodes, and call .init() to register completion scripts. It’s used by projects like Office 365 CLI and App Center, and is MIT‑licensed.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    Git Time Machine

    Git Time Machine

    Atom package that allows you to travel back in commit history

    git-time-machine is a user interface (often as an editor plugin or UI extension) that allows users to browse a file’s history visually, stepping back and forth through revisions in Git like a “time machine.” It shows changes to a file over time, lets users compare older states, and often provides diff and blame views to understand how the file evolved. Instead of just opening a commit log or diff, git-time-machine gives an interactive, incremental experience where you can slide through...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 3
    Morris.js

    Morris.js

    Pretty time-series line graphs

    Morris.js is a JavaScript charting library designed to render “pretty time‑series” graphs. It offers a very simple API for building line, bar, area, and donut charts, making it easy to add visually appealing charts to web pages. It is built on top of jQuery and Raphael.js. You'll need Node.js. I recommend using nvm for installing Node in development environments. Additionally, Bower is required for retrieving additional test dependencies. With node installed, install grunt using npm install -g grunt-cli, and then the rest of the test/build dependencies with npm install in the morris.js project folder.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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