Accept Language
libvips
Accept Language | libvips | |
---|---|---|
2 | 24 | |
54 | 9,029 | |
- | 1.1% | |
4.0 | 9.2 | |
2 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Ruby | C | |
MIT License | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Accept Language
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My project: railstart app
accept_language
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Language negotiation with Ruby
In Ruby, there is a small library that can facilitate language negotiations between client and server: accept_language.
libvips
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Ask HN: How to handle user file uploads?
Read through the comments and was surprised no one mentioned libvips - https://github.com/libvips/libvips. At my current small company we were trying to allow image uploads and started with imagemagick but certain images took too long to process and we were looking for faster alternatives. It's a great tool with minimum overhead. For video thumbnails, we use ffmpeg which is really heavy. We off-load video thumbnail generation to a queue. We've had great luck with these tools.
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Building an online image compressor
After some research, I found libvips, a demand-driven, horizontally threaded image processing library. It is designed to run quickly while using as little as memory as possible.
- Libvips: A fast image processing library with low memory needs
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Things you might not know about Next Image
Sharp is a fast and efficient image optimization Node.js module that makes use of the native libvips library.
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Go Image Converting
h2non/bimg can handle both if the underlying libvips is compiled with support for both formats.
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.Webp is the bane of my existence
if you're using linux (which it doesn't seem so) there's also vispdisp https://github.com/jcupitt/vipsdisp which is based on https://github.com/libvips/libvips which will likely take over how images are decoded in the future for everything, at least methodology wise.
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How are responsive image sets are generated, stored, and managed server-side?
The magic happens by way of a library called Libvips, which contains an ultra-high-speed low-memory image resizer.
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imagor v1 - a fast, Docker-ready image processing server in Go, libvips and more
imagor uses one of the most efficient image processing library libvips. It is typically 4-8x faster than using the quickest ImageMagick and GraphicsMagick settings.
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[OSError] Cannot find pyvips library (DLLs)
Try the solutions here: https://github.com/libvips/libvips/issues/2479
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Image library for fast read of huge Tif files?
in that case maybe take a look at https://github.com/libvips/libvips
What are some alternatives?
HTTP - HTTP (The Gem! a.k.a. http.rb) - a fast Ruby HTTP client with a chainable API, streaming support, and timeouts
OpenCV - Open Source Computer Vision Library
Typhoeus - Typhoeus wraps libcurl in order to make fast and reliable requests.
imagick - Go binding to ImageMagick's MagickWand C API
XSR - XSR - eXtremely Simple REST client
sharp - High performance Node.js image processing, the fastest module to resize JPEG, PNG, WebP, AVIF and TIFF images. Uses the libvips library.
RESTClient - Simple HTTP and REST client for Ruby, inspired by microframework syntax for specifying actions.
GD - GD Graphics Library
Sawyer - Secret User Agent of HTTP
tesseract-ocr - Tesseract Open Source OCR Engine (main repository)
Patron - Ruby HTTP client based on libcurl
FreeImage - A custom distribution of FreeImage, with a CMake-based build system. Used by the Athena Game Framework.