rubyinstaller2
RE2
rubyinstaller2 | RE2 | |
---|---|---|
20 | 49 | |
632 | 8,628 | |
1.3% | 0.6% | |
7.6 | 8.9 | |
8 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Ruby | C++ | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
rubyinstaller2
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Running Ruby on Rails web apps with .NET Aspire
Ruby 3.x (for Windows, use RubyInstaller),
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🚀Ruby on Rails for beginners: build an online store with Rails
Ruby is the foundation upon which Ruby on Rails is built. Download and install the latest Ruby version from the official RubyInstaller website. This will provide you with the Ruby programming language and its associated tools.
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Jekyll Tutorial: How To Create a Static Website
To install Ruby and Jekyll on a Windows machine, you’d use the RubyInstaller. This can be done by downloading and installing a Ruby+Devkit version from RubyInstaller Downloads and using the default options for installation.
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How to set up a wayback_machine_downloader line for a wordpress blog??
Here's the command line I used when downloading it. The exclusion flag didn't seem to work for some reason, and I have a ton of folders called things like "%3flike_comment%3d66879%26_wpnonce%3d4295aac3b6". If it matters, I'm doing this on windows. I installed Ruby locally on windows, and ran this command through the command prompt from that.
- Ruby environment
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Cheap laptop & reccomended linux distro for ruby dev?
If you're just experimenting rather than trying to match a production environment, you could run Ruby / Rails on Windows directly: https://rubyinstaller.org/
- Cómo instalar ruby on rails?
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Ruby 3.2.0 Is from Another Dimension
I've been doing Ruby on Rails since the early 2.x days. (I dabbled with 1.x, but gave up to let it "age" a little.) For the first 5 years, I was on Linux full time, and it was great.
Then I moved to Mac, and it was almost as great. (The terminal situation and general integration of the command line is still more cohesive in Linux.)
For about the past 10 years, I've been at a standard Fortune 250 Windows-is-the-entire-world kind of place. I've been able to do my work on my personal Mac, but I've always made sure that I can do all of my Rails work on my corporate Windows laptop. There are times my code needs to access file locations and other applications inside the corporate firewall.
Obviously, people are correct that Ruby is not a "first-class" citizen on Windows, but RubyInstaller (https://rubyinstaller.org) has been a lifesaver. Not only does it "just work," and compile all the gems I've used, but it also includes a neat little script that addresses the common "corporate" practice of having to install custom SSL certificates so that IT can decode all traffic going through their firewall. (They install these certs directly into the Windows networking stack, but bundler doesn't use the stack.) The SSL bundle their script creates is also useful for use with Postgres database connections. You just need RubyInstaller, NodeJS, and a better terminal application (or maybe RubyMine), and you're GTG on Windows.
I've tried to use WSL, both version 1 and 2. If you need to support many Rails apps, and switch Ruby versions (with RVM or rbenv), that might be the way to go, but for just one (big) project, I prefer to stay inside the native environment. And even if I were tempted to use WSL, I'd rather just use an actual VM software like VMWare or OpenBox, and control the details of the virtualization myself. YMMV.
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[Ruby Intro] The Programming Language for Humanity from Japan
Feeling eager to run your very first program written in Ruby? Here's the link where you can download the installer for Ruby Runtime Tools: Downloads Ruby Installer for Windows.
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In-Depth Guide :: RMagick – Add Text To An Image (With Word Wrap)
Install latest Ruby+Devkit package which you can get from RubyInstaller for Windows.
RE2
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C Is the Greenest Programming Language
Looking at the benchmark where C++ is worst compared to other languages, it's depending on the library used. I would guess if they used Google's re2 Regex library instead of Boost's, the result would be different.
https://github.com/google/re2
https://github.com/greensoftwarelab/Energy-Languages/blob/ma...
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what does this + do in the regular expression "(^A-Za-z)+"
That page says it just includes "some of the most common special characters", and following the link to the Examples page in turn includes a link to the full list.
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On a Great Interview Question
Python uses backtracking, so this probably isn't O(n), especially with the ability to choose the dictionary.
But with there are non-backtracking matchers which would make this O(n). Here's re2 from https://github.com/google/re2 :
>>> import re2
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RE2 VS hyperscan - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 17 Mar 2023
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hyperscan VS RE2 - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 17 Mar 2023
RE2 is a Google regular expression library
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Projects ideas to learn C++/OOP
google's regex library: https://github.com/google/re2
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Regex: is there a difference between * and {0,}, as well as + and {1,}?
I am currently working with Regex, specifically Re2, and was wondering if there is a real difference between the above expressions for repeated sub-regex.
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First release of SPVM::File::Spec - complex regular expressions, file tests, SPVM::Cwd, inheritance
I ported Google RE2, a regular expression library, to SPVM as Resource::Re2, and created SPVM::Regex, a wrapper for it.
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SPVM::File::Basename is released. This is the first module of SPVM using regular expressions.
I searched for I found that there is a Perl compatible regular expression called Google RE2. It is written in C++, and with Google RE2, I can use Perl-compatible regular expressions as a library.
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Ruby 3.2.0 Is from Another Dimension
Yes, but there is an interesting clarification here. RE2 has used the "caching" approach documented in the Ruby bug ticket linked for quite some time (since its birth?): https://github.com/google/re2/blob/954656f47fe8fb505d4818da1...
It is mentioned only briefly in Cox's article on regex matching in the wild. Look for the word "bitstate": https://swtch.com/~rsc/regexp/regexp3.html
I didn't know Perl had implemented this trick too.
The paper[1] cited in the Ruby bug ticket was published very recently. When I first read the Ruby bug ticket, I immediately wondered how they sidestepped the memory use problem. The paper's abstract seems to suggest there is some technique for doing so, as it rebuffs the idea of doing "full" memoization. Alas, I do not have access the paper. (Which is fucking ridiculous.)
[1]: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/9519427
What are some alternatives?
MSYS2-packages - 🌰Package scripts for MSYS2.
compile-time-regular-expressions - Compile Time Regular Expression in C++
MSYS2-packages - Package scripts for MSYS2.
semver.c - Semantic version in ANSI C
hello-world-jekyll - An example of how to set your Jekyll application up to enable deployment on Kinsta App Hosting services.
Boost.Signals - Boost.org signals2 module
ProxSpace - Proxmark III develoment environment for Windows
libevil - The Evil License Manager
ruby - The Ruby Programming Language
constexpr-8cc - Compile-time C Compiler implemented as C++14 constant expressions
flatpak - Linux application sandboxing and distribution framework
Cppcheck - static analysis of C/C++ code