CoffeeScript Libraries for ChromeOS

Browse free open source CoffeeScript Libraries for ChromeOS and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source CoffeeScript Libraries for ChromeOS by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

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  • 1
    jQuery.payment

    jQuery.payment

    Library for building credit card forms and validating inputs

    Created by Stripe and archived on GitHub, jquery.payment is a small jQuery plugin that formats credit card inputs—numeric grouping, expiry dates, CVC—as you type and validates card numbers, expiry, and CVC with client-side checks. While deprecated in favor of Stripe Elements, it remains useful for legacy implementations.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    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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  • 3
    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 versions and see content changes in place. This is especially helpful when diagnosing when bugs were introduced, exploring regression contexts, or reviewing code evolution visually. For projects with many commits, it accelerates historical exploration, and it is commonly integrated into editors so developers can use it in their working environment.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 4
    Gulp-Cheatsheet

    Gulp-Cheatsheet

    A cheatsheet for gulp.js

    The gulp-cheatsheet repository is a compact, printable reference guide for Gulp.js, summarizing common commands, patterns, and usage examples in both JavaScript and CoffeeScript. It’s designed to be easily printed or posted beside a workstation, acting as a quick lookup for task definitions, streams, watching, and build workflows. The cheatsheet covers essential topics like Gulp installation, defining tasks, piping streams, watchers, and handling asynchronous tasks. It includes multilingual PDF versions (English, Japanese, Chinese) so users around the world can use it in their preferred language. The repository is lightweight (mostly documentation and examples), licensed under MIT, and maintained as a community reference rather than a full tool or plugin.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 5
    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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  • 6
    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: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 7
    PleaseWait.js

    PleaseWait.js

    JavaScript library to display customizable splash/loading screens

    PleaseWait.js is a minimalist JavaScript library for showing splash-loading screens during the initialization of single-page applications (SPAs). It allows developers to define background colors, logos, and HTML content (like spinners) while delaying the main UI presentation. Once content is ready, it removes the loader and reveals the app. Installable via npm, Bower, or CDN.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 8
    Pretty-Error

    Pretty-Error

    See node.js errors with less clutter

    pretty-error is a Node.js library that renders JavaScript error messages in a cleaner, more readable, and visually styled format to make debugging easier. PrettyError turns error objects into something similar to an html document, and then uses RenderKid to render the document using simple html/css-like commands. This allows PrettyError to be themed using simple css-like declarations. There are a few methods to help you customize the contents of your error logs. You can customize which trace lines get logged and which won't.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 9
    QuoJS

    QuoJS

    Micro #JavaScript Library for Mobile Devices

    QuoJS is a lightweight JavaScript library aimed at building mobile-first web interfaces with a focus on touch interactions and simple DOM utilities. It provides a compact, jQuery-like API for element selection, traversal, and manipulation, but trims the surface area to keep payloads small for mobile browsers. A core feature set centers on high-level touch gestures—such as tap, double-tap, swipe, pinch, and long-tap—abstracting away platform quirks so developers can attach handlers consistently across devices. The library embraces modern browser features and CSS3 where available, offering helpers that make common mobile UI patterns feel responsive and fluid. Because it is intentionally minimal, QuoJS plays well as a drop-in alongside other client libraries when you only need fast gestures and a few utilities rather than a full framework. Its API is designed to be readable and chainable.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 10
    Shadowsocks-Nodejs

    Shadowsocks-Nodejs

    Node.js port of Shadowsocks

    Shadowsocks-Nodejs is a Node.js implementation of the Shadowsocks proxy protocol, providing server and client components that let users create an encrypted proxy tunnel to bypass network filtering and protect traffic in transit. The project reimplements the lightweight, stream-oriented Shadowsocks protocol in JavaScript so operators can run servers and clients using Node.js environments rather than native binaries or Python ports. It exposes typical Shadowsocks features such as configurable ciphers, listening ports, and worker process models that let operators tune performance for their deployment. Historically, the Node.js port has been used when convenience or platform compatibility mattered, though some maintainers and users note that performance and memory characteristics differ from other implementations. The codebase includes CLI helpers and configuration parsing so it can be run as a service or embedded in other Node.js tooling.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 11
    Stitch

    Stitch

    Stitch your CommonJS modules together for the browser

    Stitch is a library that simplifies the packaging of CommonJS modules for use in the browser. It allows developers to write modular JavaScript code using the CommonJS format and then bundles it into a single file that can be served client-side. This helps bridge the gap between Node.js-style development and browser environments, particularly before modern bundlers like Browserify and Webpack became widespread. The library automatically resolves dependencies, inlines modules, and ensures they can be required in the browser as if they were running in Node.js. It was designed to encourage clean modular design in front-end applications and reduce reliance on global variables. Stitch is lightweight and intended for developers who want a simple way to bundle JavaScript modules without a lot of configuration overhead.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 12
    Tourist

    Tourist

    Simple, flexible tours for your app

    Tourist is a small library for building guided, step-by-step tours inside web applications, letting developers create interactive walk-throughs that highlight UI elements and explain workflows to end users. It provides a simple API for defining a sequence of steps, each tied to a DOM selector or screen area, with configurable titles, descriptions, next/previous controls, and optional callbacks for custom behavior. The library is designed to be flexible: steps can be triggered programmatically, attached to single-page app routing, or displayed conditionally based on user state, making it suitable for onboarding, feature discovery, or contextual help. Tourist aims to be framework-agnostic so it can be integrated into plain JavaScript projects as well as React, Vue, or other frontend stacks with minimal glue code. It also supports common niceties like mobile-friendly positioning, step-skipping, and hooks for analytics events so teams can measure adoption of guided flows.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 13
    Turbolinks Classic

    Turbolinks Classic

    Classic version of Turbolinks

    Turbolinks Classic is a now-deprecated JavaScript library (largely used in Rails projects) for speeding up navigation by intercepting link clicks and replacing only the <body> and page title instead of reloading the entire page. It avoids recompiling JS and CSS on each navigation, improving perceived performance. Turbolinks makes following links in your web application faster. Instead of letting the browser recompile the JavaScript and CSS between each page change, it keeps the current page instance alive and replaces only the body (or parts of) and the title in the head. Think CGI vs persistent process.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 14
    Vim-Mode

    Vim-Mode

    Next generation vim support for atom

    vim‑mode is an Atom editor package providing modal Vim-style editing—combining the power of traditional Vim keybindings with the extensibility of the Atom editor. It’s now deprecated in favor of vim-mode-plus. Provides Vim modal control for Atom, blending the best of Vim and Atom. Seamlessly integrates with Atom's UI and editing workflows. Easy to install via Atom’s package manager.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 15
    jQuery Shapeshift

    jQuery Shapeshift

    A dynamic grid system with drag and drop functionality

    jQuery.shapeshift is a jQuery plugin that creates dynamic, Pinterest-style column grid layouts with drag-and-drop functionality and predictable indexing for each item. Rearrange items within a container or even drag items between multiple Shapeshift-enabled containers. Dragging elements around will physically change their index position within their parent container. When a page reloads, as long as the child elements are placed in the correct order, then the grid will look exactly the same. Shapeshift uses jQuery UI Draggable/Droppable for help with the drag and drop system. Luckily, there is already a plugin called jQuery Touch Punch, which provides touch support for jQuery UI D/D. It can be found in the vendor folder.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 16
    jQuery.Turbolinks

    jQuery.Turbolinks

    Plugin for drop-in fix binded events problem caused by Turbolinks

    jQuery.Turbolinks bridges the gap between jQuery plugins and Turbolinks 1–4. It ensures jQuery event handlers rebind properly on page change, solving issues with uninitialized bindings after Turbolinks page swaps. Though deprecated (incompatible with Turbolinks 5+), its simplicity makes it valuable for older Rails apps.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 17
    mo · js

    mo · js

    The motion graphics toolbelt for the web

    mo · js is a javascript motion graphics library that is fast, retina-ready, modular, and open source. In comparison to other libraries, it has a different syntax and code animation structure approach. The declarative API provides you a complete control over the animation, making it customizable with ease. The library provides built-in components to start animating from scratch like HTML, shape, swirl, burst, and stagger, but also brings you tools to help craft your animation in the most natural way. Using mo · js on your site will enhance the user experience, enrich your content visually, and create delightful animations precisely.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 18
    oriDomi

    oriDomi

    Fold up DOM elements like paper

    oriDomi is a JavaScript library that visually "folds" DOM elements like paper, creating origami-style transitions using CSS transforms and JavaScript. Use your mouse or touch to manipulate the images on the website, or press the fold button to see a random effect. Create an OriDomi instance by passing your target element to the constructor. When creating a new OriDomi composition, you can pass a map of options as the second argument.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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