license-checker
turf
Our great sponsors
license-checker | turf | |
---|---|---|
10 | 28 | |
1,572 | 8,770 | |
- | 1.2% | |
0.0 | 7.6 | |
3 months ago | 24 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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.
license-checker
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Consultant Asking About NPM Software Licenses
I thought that was a fairly weird question. A couple of our APIs run on Ubuntu, which contains GNU software. He has access to our source code, and I had also previously sent him the output of license checker so he really should have been able to answer this himself.
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A developer-friendly introduction to open source licenses
NPM License Checker
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Big Changes Ahead for Deno
I don't care whether it's all in one file or in a dozen files, but I want all of that information to be available programmatically in a text file (unlike in a readme or on Github) in a standardized location in a project.
In that respect, package.json is a strict win. Your lack of willingness to use `git blame` to see why you added a line, or lack of reasonable git comments, is not to be blamed on the file.
Complexity is unavoidable. How could you write a tool like license-checker [1] for a Go-based project without having license information in a standardized location? Without the scripts section, how can you create a tool like husky [2] that automatically installs git hooks for a project? Every single part of package.json is there for a good reason; at best you could argue that putting some of it in other files would be aesthetically superior, but that's just bikeshedding.
Complexity isn't de facto bad. Some complexity is required if you want a certain level of functionality to become available. Deno (and Go) are slowly accumulating that "cruft" as people realize that those functions are actually useful or even critical to a mature ecosystem.
[1] https://www.npmjs.com/package/license-checker
[2] https://www.npmjs.com/package/husky
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Richard Stallman calls for software package systems that help maintain your freedoms
Yes, all npm packages are supposed to have a valid SPDX license identifier, and there is an easy way to recursively check these values
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Introducing sbomx.com - Software Bill of Materials X
For JavaScript I always used davglass/license-checker as a starting point but it's not being maintained anymore. Then I did similar things for the backend code, put everything together and sent it to the legal and security teams. At some point I thought "There must be a better way!". So, I started building sbomx about one and a half years ago. It's working fine enough to show it to the world and gather some feedback.
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automatically pull licenses from package.json and put them into a spreadsheet??
Check this package https://www.npmjs.com/package/license-checker
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Italian Courts Find Open Source Software Terms Enforceable
Good doctors and drivers make mistakes, too, and they still face liability for those mistakes.
I think that if your company is large enough, you should have employees, or pay someone, to mirror your dependencies and automate license checks. There are projects that do the latter already[1][2]. You can loop your lawyers in if licenses change to ensure you don't violate them. If (A)GPL code still ships in proprietary products, that's a process problem that the company needs to solve.
[1] https://github.com/dhatim/python-license-check
[2] https://github.com/davglass/license-checker
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Node.js Packages and Resources
license-checker - Check licenses of your app's dependencies.
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Home Screen Shortcuts in React Native (with Expo)
If you don't know what licenses you're currently using, I suggest the license-checker NPM tool.
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How do I explain the concept of open source software to my boss?
Also, your IT dept is not entirely without concern here, you should be ensuring that you're not violating any open source licenses in your project, and be using something like https://www.npmjs.com/package/license-checker or an equivalent license checking service in your project language to ensure that everything is kosher
turf
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Flying with F#
to measure distances and convert between our parameters I'm using TurfJS, for which binding is even more trivial:
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Trying Out Various Turf.js
Turf.js is an open-source geospatial analysis library that can process various location data, such as the center of gravity and distance calculations.
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NYC Subwaysheds (Travel Time Maps)
Isochrones are manually calculated using turf.js assuming 1.2m/s walking speed after the subway trip. These are simple buffers around each station/prior isochrone and do not take the street network into account.
- Apache Baremaps: online maps toolkit
- Podem testar sff, se distrito, município, freguesia, rua, n. porta e altitude, estão corretos?
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Getting the distance from point A to point B.
Not to take away from you learning, which I think is awesome, I was wondering if you know about http://turfjs.org/ which provides a lot of simple modules … and is surprisingly hard to find. Their `distance` modules may be relevant in this case.
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Buffer analysis in free web map software
you can use client side libraries like Turfjs to do buffers https://github.com/Turfjs/turf/tree/master/packages/turf-buffer
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[OC] Sculpture of progression of most destructive California wildfire
Tools: custom Javascript (with heavy use of turf.js) for data processing and creating the 3D model, Blender, 3D printing, lost wax casting
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Introducing bummer - a place to list your unpleasant experiences
I've integrated https://turfjs.org/ with mapbox before and it was pretty fun
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Vite Support for Various Map Library Starters
References Amazon Location Service Turf.js MapLibre GL JS Leaflet OpenLayers Cesium Mapbox GL JS
What are some alternatives?
python-license-check - Check python packages from requirement.txt and report issues
Cytoscape.js - Graph theory (network) library for visualisation and analysis
npm-name - Check whether a package or organization name is available on npm
proj4js - JavaScript library to transform coordinates from one coordinate system to another, including datum transformations
npm-home - Open the npm page, Yarn page, or GitHub repo of a package
ipfs - IPFS implementation in JavaScript
alex - Catch insensitive, inconsiderate writing
Angular - Deliver web apps with confidence 🚀
Babel (Formerly 6to5) - 🐠 Babel is a compiler for writing next generation JavaScript.
Leaflet - 🍃 JavaScript library for mobile-friendly interactive maps 🇺🇦
np - A better `npm publish`
js-git - A JavaScript implementation of Git.