Open Source CoffeeScript Software Development Software

CoffeeScript Software Development Software

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  • 1
    Atom Beautify

    Atom Beautify

    Universal code formatting plugin

    atom‑beautify is a universal code formatting plugin for the Atom text editor, offering support for numerous languages and formatter engines to clean or prettify source code. Many users are experiencing issues when installing third-party beautifiers (e.g., Uncrustify, PHP-CS-Fixer, and many more). A possible solution is a "cloud" service that provides remote access to these beautifiers. Atom-Beautify would then communicate with these services, allowing for zero-installation beautification. Some of the supported beautifiers are developed for Node.js and are automatically installed when Atom-Beautify is installed. However, other beautifiers are command-line interface (CLI) applications and require you to manually install them.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 2
    Atom Simplified Chinese Menu

    Atom Simplified Chinese Menu

    Simplified Chinese localization for Atom's menu, context, settings

    This Atom plugin localizes the interface into Simplified Chinese, translating main menus, context menus, and setting dialogs into colloquial style. It provides settings to toggle specific UI parts and supports Windows, macOS, and Linux Atom installs. Though no longer actively updated, it remains useful for Chinese-speaking Atom users.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 3
    PSD.js

    PSD.js

    A Photoshop PSD file parser for NodeJS and browsers

    psd.js is an open-source JavaScript library (CoffeeScript/JS) for reading and parsing Adobe Photoshop PSD files in both Node.js and web browsers. It reconstructs the document into a DOM-like tree with layers, masks, text metadata, vector information, and pixel data. It enables developers to traverse layer structures, extract flattened or individual image buffers, and integrate PSD assets programmatically in web or backend applications.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 4
    PlatformIO Atom IDE Terminal

    PlatformIO Atom IDE Terminal

    A terminal package for Atom, complete with themes, API and more

    The PlatformIO Atom IDE Terminal is a lightweight terminal package for the Atom editor that embeds a native shell right inside the editor UI. It provides a familiar terminal experience—shell history, colors, and interactive programs—without switching windows, which streamlines workflows when building, flashing, or debugging embedded firmware from PlatformIO or other toolchains. The integration supports multiple terminal tabs, configurable shells, and user-defined startup commands so each project pane can pre-load environment variables or virtualenvs. Because embedded development often requires frequent command-line interactions (builds, serial monitors, log watchers), having the terminal adjacent to code and the project tree significantly reduces context switching. The package is intentionally minimal and focuses on stability and responsiveness rather than trying to replace full-featured terminal emulators.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 5
    Repl.it

    Repl.it

    Online REPL for 15+ languages

    This repository preserves an early open-source snapshot of the service that became Replit, a platform for writing and running code directly in the browser. The project’s core idea is instant, zero-setup programming: open a page, pick a language, type, and run—no local installs or environment wrangling. It combines an in-browser editor with a runnable backend or sandbox so code can execute safely and return output in seconds. Sharing and collaboration are first-class: code can be saved, forked, and embedded, which makes it useful for tutorials, classrooms, and quick demos. The architecture leans on simple web technologies so the learning curve stays low for educators and new programmers. Even as the commercial product evolved, this archive shows the foundational approach to making coding accessible anywhere with just a link.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 6
    SLOC

    SLOC

    simple tool to count SLOC (source lines of code)

    sloc is a simple, fast tool for counting lines of code that’s designed to be used from both the command line and Node.js scripts. It tallies physical lines, source lines, comment lines, and blank lines, giving you a quick snapshot of code size across files or entire directories. The utility is language-aware through lightweight detectors and patterns, so it can ignore comments correctly and avoid counting generated or minified files if you configure it to. Output can be human-readable for quick checks or machine-readable (like JSON) for CI pipelines that track repository growth over time. It supports typical developer conveniences such as glob patterns, file/directory ignores, and sensible defaults so you can drop it into existing workflows without fuss. Teams often wire sloc into build steps to watch trends, compare modules, or enforce thresholds before merging changes, making it a handy maintenance metric rather than a vanity number.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 7
    WebGL Heatmap

    WebGL Heatmap

    A high performance WebGL/JS heatmap display library

    webgl-heatmap is a browser-side rendering library that uses the GPU via WebGL to draw smooth, continuous heatmaps from large numbers of data points. Instead of relying on CPU-bound canvas operations, it leverages fragment shaders and additive blending to accumulate intensity and colorize results in real time. The API lets you push points or weighted samples into a buffer and then renders a gradient map where hot areas emerge organically from density rather than discrete markers. Because most work happens on the GPU, it scales well as the number of points grows and remains interactive for animations, live telemetry, or dynamic overlays. The library focuses on visual quality, producing anti-aliased, blur-free gradients that look good at various zoom levels and resolutions. It fits well into data-viz stacks where you need a responsive heat layer on top of maps, charts, or custom canvases, and it is compact enough to embed in dashboards and demos without heavy dependencies.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 8
    APM (Atom Package Manager)

    APM (Atom Package Manager)

    Atom Package Manager

    APM is the command-line package manager built specifically for the Atom editor; it functions as a thin, Atom-aware wrapper around npm that handles installing, publishing, and managing Atom packages. Unlike a typical npm install, APM installs packages into Atom’s package directory and applies Atom-specific defaults and lifecycle hooks so community packages behave consistently inside the editor. It also exposes commands to publish packages to the Atom ecosystem and to fetch package metadata, making it the standard developer tool for creating and distributing Atom extensions. The tool is designed to be simple and scriptable so package authors can automate builds, test installs, and CI workflows. Because it integrates closely with Atom’s expectations (package locations, service activation, etc.), using APM simplifies the developer experience compared with manually managing package folders.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 9
    Activate Power Mode

    Activate Power Mode

    Atom package - Activate POWER MODE to write your code in style

    Activate Power Mode is an Atom plugin that adds playful visual and audio effects—particle trails, screen shaking, combo counters—when coding at speed. Inspired by Code in the Dark’s “power mode”, it enhances typing flow, with customizable thresholds and combo modes to moderate effect frequency.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 10
    Aglio

    Aglio

    An API Blueprint renderer with theme support that outputs static HTML

    Aglio is a renderer for API Blueprint documents (Markdown‑based API description format), producing static HTML documentation with theme support. It functions as both a command‑line executable and a Node.js library, allowing integration into pipelines or live-preview workflows. An API Blueprint renderer that supports multiple themes and outputs static HTML that can be served by any web host. API Blueprint is a Markdown-based document format that lets you write API descriptions and documentation in a simple and straightforward way. Currently supported is API Blueprint format 1A. Fast parsing thanks to Protagonist. Support for custom colors, templates, and theme engines. Include other documents in your blueprint.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 11
    Angular Google Maps

    Angular Google Maps

    AngularJS directives for the Google Maps Javascript API

    Angular Google Maps is a set of AngularJS directives written in CoffeeScript and JavaScript for integrating Google Maps into AngularJS applications. This will generate source maps for development (angular-google-maps_dev_mapped.js) (non minified) and source maps to minified (angular-google-maps_dev_mapped.min.js) files. They each have their own corresponding map files. To get the coinciding source files you will need to copy the generated /tmp directory (currently not under scc). If you plan to hack on the directives or want to run the example, first thing to do is to install NPM dependencies.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 12
    Angular Masonry

    Angular Masonry

    An AngularJS directive for Masonry

    Angular‑Masonry is an AngularJS directive that seamlessly wraps Desandro’s Masonry layout library. It enables dynamic, Pinterest-style grid layouts in your AngularJS apps. Bricks automatically reposition as items load, with optional image‑loaded detection to prevent overlaps. It’s easily installed via npm or Bower and supports custom selectors and Masonry options.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 13
    At.js

    At.js

    Add Github like mentions autocomplete to your application

    At.js is a lightweight jQuery plugin that enables @mention-style autocomplete functionality within text inputs or contenteditable areas. It allows developers to bind actions to character triggers (like @ or #) and display suggestion dropdowns with customizable behavior. The plugin is especially useful for building social platforms, chat apps, or collaborative editors.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 14
    Aurora.js

    Aurora.js

    JavaScript audio decoding framework

    Aurora.js is a JavaScript framework that simplifies audio decode pipeline implementation—covering source, demux, decode, and playback stages. It provides high-level APIs for inspecting and playing audio, supports plugins for decoders (MP3, AAC, FLAC), works in browser and Node.js (via Browserify), and abstracts browser audio APIs.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 15
    Badges

    Badges

    Readme Badges – Gotta catch 'em all

    Badges is a utility / site that generates small status badge images for open-source projects (for example, build status, coverage, downloads, version). It allows projects to easily embed dynamic badges in their README or documentation that reflect project metadata or external service metrics. The badges system supports different styles, icons, and dynamic links, making them visually consistent and informative. It abstracts the generation of badge SVGs so the end user doesn’t need to manually create or update image files. The project also supports caching, HTTP APIs, and format options (e.g. to serve badges dynamically or with query parameters). It is used by many open source repos to display real-time project metrics in documentation pages.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 16
    Bone.io

    Bone.io

    Realtime HTML5 Framework

    Bone.io is a real-time web framework that streamlines building event-driven apps over WebSockets, pairing a Node.js server with a lightweight client library. It organizes communication into channels and events, so the server can push data to the browser and the browser can send commands back without boilerplate. The framework focuses on mapping server-side logic to UI updates directly, which makes patterns like live dashboards, chat, and collaborative editing easier to implement. Abstracting transport details, it lets developers concentrate on domain messages and state transitions rather than wiring up socket handlers repeatedly. The client side integrates cleanly with common frontend architectures, enabling incremental adoption in existing projects. Overall, bone.io targets teams who want a minimal, understandable real-time layer that keeps codebases small while still supporting rich, low-latency interactions.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 17
    Browser diet

    Browser diet

    The definitive front-end performance guide

    Browser diet is a community-driven front-end performance guide presented as a fun, colorful website that explains how to make web pages faster and “lighter.” It collects advice from experienced front-end developers and organizes it into practical sections covering HTML, CSS, JavaScript, images, server configuration, and general best practices. The project was built as a static site powered by DocPad, with content written in Markdown and translated into multiple languages, making it accessible to a global audience. Its tone is intentionally playful (with a “diet” metaphor for trimming page weight) to make performance optimization less intimidating and more approachable. The repository provides the full source of the site, including styles, content, and build pipeline so others can run it locally or fork it to create customized guides. Even though it is not a tool or library, browser-diet has been influential as an educational resource that demystifies front-end performance.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 18
    BuckyClient

    BuckyClient

    Collect performance data from the client

    BuckyClient is a HubSpot-provided JavaScript client that runs in the browser and collects performance data from clients, sending it to the Bucky server, which forwards metrics to endpoints like StatsD, Graphite, or OpenTSDB. It can automatically measure how long your pages take to load, how long AJAX requests take and how long various functions take to run. Most importantly, it's taking the measurements on actual page loads, so the data has the potential to be much more valuable than in vitro measurements. Modern browsers log a bunch of page performance data, Bucky includes a method for writing all of this in one go. It won't do anything on browsers that don't support the performance.timing API. Call it whenever; it will bind an event if the data isn't ready yet.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 19
    CSON

    CSON

    CoffeeScript-Object-Notation. Same as JSON but for CoffeeScript

    cson (CoffeeScript‑Object‑Notation) is a human-friendly data serialization format similar to JSON but using CoffeeScript syntax, with a library (and CLI) to parse and serialize between CSON, JSON, and JavaScript objects. Executing the method with a callback still executes the method synchronously. Requires or parses a file path of the desired format into an Object If the format option is not specified, we use the filename to detect what it should be; otherwise, we default to parsing CSON.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 20
    Card

    Card

    Make your credit card form better in one line of code

    Card will take any credit card form and make it the best part of the checkout process (without you changing anything). Everything is created with pure CSS, HTML, and Javascript, no images required. To use, you'll need to include the Card JavaScript files into your HTML, no CSS link is necessary as the JavaScript file does this for you. You can find the necessary file at /dist/card.js and include it in your HTML like so. Once you've included those files, you can initialize Card. Card can be used in forms where you have multiple inputs that render to a single field (i.e. you have a first and last name input). To use Card with this functionality, just pass in a selector that selects the fields in the correct order. Card renders with default placeholders for card name, number, expiry, and cvc. To override these placeholders, you can pass in a placeholders object.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 21
    Chaplin

    Chaplin

    HTML5 application architecture using Backbone.js

    Chaplin is a lightweight, structured JavaScript application architecture built on Backbone.js for developing scalable, maintainable single‑page applications. It provides MVC organization, clean routing, memory management, controllers for screen logic, and modular design to address shortcomings in raw Backbone. Chaplin was derived from a real application (moviepilot.com) and is written in CoffeeScript with builds in JavaScript.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 22
    CoffeeKup

    CoffeeKup

    Markup as CoffeeScript

    CoffeeKup is a concise templating engine written in CoffeeScript that aims to provide an expressive, readable way to generate HTML from templates inside Node.js applications. It emphasizes minimal, CoffeeScript-style syntax so template authors can write small, elegant templates that integrate naturally with CoffeeScript codebases. The engine supports common templating needs—embedding variables, simple control flow, partials/includes, and basic layout patterns—while focusing on clean, compact syntax rather than a huge feature surface. Because it targets CoffeeScript users, CoffeeKup often appeals to projects that prefer that language’s terse style and want templates that look like the rest of their code. The project includes examples and installation instructions for integrating templates into server-side rendering pipelines and simple static site workflows.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 23
    CoffeeLint

    CoffeeLint

    Lint your CoffeeScript

    coffeelint is a linter for CoffeeScript code, analyzing style, syntax, potential errors, and code consistency issues. It scans CoffeeScript files for patterns such as missing semicolons, inconsistent indentation, unused variables, suspicious constructs, and bad practices, and reports warnings or errors. The tool is configurable via a ruleset file so projects can tailor which rules to enforce and which to allow or warn only. Because CoffeeScript’s syntax can mask subtle errors or ambiguity, a linter helps catch mistakes early (before runtime) and encourages consistent code style across teams. The project supports various output formats (plain text, JSON) so results can be consumed in editors, CI systems, or integrated developer tools. It targets CoffeeScript codebases, especially those in Node.js or frontend toolchains, to improve code quality and reduce debugging overhead.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 24
    CoffeeScript

    CoffeeScript

    Unfancy JavaScript

    CoffeeScript is a lightweight programming language that compiles into JavaScript. It adds syntactic sugar inspired by Ruby, Python, and Haskell to improve brevity and readability, while producing predictable and efficient JavaScript output. Its design emphasizes that “It’s just JavaScript,” meaning any JS library works seamlessly, and compiled output is clean and performant. Adds syntactic sugar like list comprehensions and destructuring assignment. Supports literate programming via .litcoffee or Markdown-embedded files.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 25
    CoffeeScriptRedux

    CoffeeScriptRedux

    Rewrite of the CoffeeScript compiler with proper compiler design

    CoffeeScriptRedux is a rewritten version of the CoffeeScript compiler with emphasis on compiler design principles, robustness, and extensibility—designed to be "complete enough to use for nearly every project." Before transitioning from Jeremy's compiler, see the intentional deviations from jashkenas/coffee-script wiki page. Complete enough to use for nearly every project. Proper compiler design principles and a focus on robustness and extensibility.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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