Libraries tagged by nested read

realness/aliascompiler

0 Favers
10 Downloads

Compile array of keys to nested objects

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ghaliano/easyadmin-grouping-bundle

0 Favers
2 Downloads

Grouped list view for EasyAdmin: extends the native index template with nested header rows between groups, or renders a collapsible tree. Multi-level grouping via property paths, callables, or custom strategies.

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smartlogix/smart-table-block

1 Favers
11 Downloads

A Gutenberg smart table block with nested row and cell blocks, rich styling controls, and semantic table rendering.

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shammaa/laravel-optimized-queries

1 Favers
33 Downloads

Advanced Laravel query optimizer - Reduce multiple Eloquent queries to a single optimized SQL statement with JSON aggregation. Supports nested relations, callbacks, belongsToMany, polymorphic relations, and caching.

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rstmgsnvimax/irisnet-ai-php-api-client

0 Favers
2 Downloads

Artificial Intelligence (AI) for image- and video-processing in real-time. This is an interactive documentation where you can quickly look up the endpoints and their schemas, while having the opportunity to try things out for yourself. In the list below, you can see the available endpoints of the API, which can be expanded by clicking on them. Each expanded endpoint lists the request parameters (if available) and the request body (if available). The request body can list some example bodies and the schema, explaining each model in detail. Additionally you'll find a 'Try it out' button that allows you to enter your custom parameters and custom body and execute that against the API. Be sure to enter your license key to authorize the requests before using this documentation interactively. The responses section in the expanded endpoint lists the possible responses with their corresponding status codes. If you've executed an API call it will also show you the response from the server. Underneath the endpoints you'll find the model schemas. These are the models used for the requests and responses. If you click on the right arrow, you can expand the model and get a description of the model and the model parameters. For nested models, you can keep clicking the right arrow for further details. Clicking the link below the title at the top of this page opens the [OpenAPI specification](https://swagger.io/specification/) (OAS3) in JSON format. The OAS3 Spec allows the generation of clients in many programming languages. There are several free client generators available that can be used to get started easily.

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numeno/api-art-rec

0 Favers
2 Downloads

## Introduction Use the Numeno Article Recommender API to receive a curated selection of articles from across the web. See below for the steps to creating a Feed, as well as an introduction to the top-level concepts making up the Article Recommender API. ## Steps to creating a Feed 1. Create a Feed - [`/feeds`](create-feed) 2. Create a number of Stream queries associated with the Feed - [`/feeds/:feedId/streams`](create-stream) 3. Pull from the Feed as the Feed refreshes - [`/feeds/:feedId/articles`](get-articles-in-feed) 4. Use those Article IDs to look up metadata for the Articles -[`/articles/:id`](get-article-by-id) 5. Visit the Article links and render to your server DB or client app. ## Sources, Articles and Topics A **Source** is a place where Articles come from, typically a website, a blog, or a knowledgebase endpoint. Sources can be queried for activity via the [`/sources`](get-sources) endpoint. Beyond the Sources Numeno regaularly indexes, additional Sources can be associated with Stream queries, and Sources can be `allowlist`/`denylist`'d. **Articles** are the documents produced by Sources, typically pages from a blogpost or website, articles from a news source, or posts from a social platform or company intranet. See the [`/articles`](search-articles) endpoint. **Topics** - Numeno has millions of Topics that it associates with Articles when they are sourced. Topics are used in Stream queries, which themselves are composed to create Feeds. Get topics via the [`/topics`](get-topics) endpoint. ## Feeds **A Feed is a collection of Streams.** Feeds are configured to refresh on a regular schedule. No new Articles are published to a Feed except when it's refreshed. Feeds can be refreshed manually if the API Key Scopes allow. You can ask for Articles chronologically or by decreasing score. You can also limit Articles to a date-range, meaning that you can produce Feeds from historical content. Interact with Feeds via the [`/feeds`](create-feed) endpoint. ## Streams Think of a **Stream** as a search query with a "volume control knob". It's a collection of Topics that you're interested and a collection of Sources you'd explicitly like to include or exclude. Streams are associated with a Feed, and a collection of Streams produce the sequence of Articles that appear when a Feed is refreshed. The "volume control knob" on a Stream is a way to decide how many of the search results from the Stream query are included in the Feed. Our searches are "soft", and with a such a rich `Article x Topic` space to draw on, the "volume control" allows you to put a cuttoff on what you'd like included. Streams are a nested resource of `/feeds` - get started by explorting [`/feeds/:feedId/streams`](create-stream).

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fwrepae/fwrepae

0 Favers
0 Downloads

The Inter TT REST API is described using OpenAPI 3.0. The descriptor for the api can be downloaded in both [YAML](http://localhost:8080/cyclos/api/openapi.yaml) or [JSON](http://localhost:8080/cyclos/api/openapi.json) formats. These files can be used in tools that support the OpenAPI specification, such as the [OpenAPI Generator](https://openapi-generator.tech). In the API, whenever some data is referenced, for example, a group, or payment type, either id or internal name can be used. When an user is to be referenced, the special word 'self' (sans quotes) always refers to the currently authenticated user, and any identification method (login name, e-mail, mobile phone, account number or custom field) that can be used on keywords search (as configured in the products) can also be used to identify users. Some specific data types have other identification fields, like accounts can have a number and payments can have a transaction number. This all depends on the current configuration. ----------- Most of the operations that return data allow selecting which fields to include in the response. This is useful to avoid calculating data that finally won't be needed and also for reducing the transfer over the network. If nothing is set, all object fields are returned. Fields are handled in 3 modes. Given an example object `{"a": {"x": 1, "y": 2, "z": 3}, "b": 0}`, the modes are: - **Include**: the field is unprefixed or prefixed with `+`. All fields which are not explicitly included are excluded from the result. Examples: - `["a"]` results in `{"a": {"x": 1, "y": 2, "z": 3}}` - `["+b"]` results in `{"b": 0}` - `["a.x"]` results in `{"a": {"x": 1}}`. This is a nested include. At root level, includes only `a` then, on `a`'s level, includes only `x`. - **Exclude**: the field is prefixed by `-` (or, for compatibility purposes, `!`). Only explicitly excluded fields are excluded from the result. Examples: - `["-a"]` results in `{"b": 0}` - `["-b"]` results in `{"a": {"x": 1, "y": 2, "z": 3}}` - `["a.-x"]` results in `{"a": {"y": 2, "z": 3}}`. In this example, `a` is actually an include at the root level, hence, excludes `b`. - **Nested only**: when a field is prefixed by `*` and has a nested path, it only affects includes / excludes for the nested fields, without affecting the current level. Only nested fields are configured. Examples: - `["*a.x"]` results in `{"a": {"x": 1}, "b": 0}`. In this example, `a` is configured to include only `x`. `b` is also included because, there is no explicit includes at root level. - `["*a.-x"]` results in `{"a": {"y": 2, "z": 3}, "b": 0}`. In this example, `a` is configured to exclude only `x`. `b` is also included because there is no explicit includes at the root level. For backwards compatibility, this can also be expressed in a special syntax `-a.x`. Also, keep in mind that `-x.y.z` is equivalent to `*x.*y.-z`. You cannot have the same field included and excluded at the same time - a HTTP `422` status will be returned. Also, when mixing nested excludes with explicit includes or excludes, the nested exclude will be ignored. For example, using `["*a.x", "a.y"]` will ignore the `*a.x` definition, resulting in `{"a": {"y": 2}}`. ----------- For details of the deprecated elements (operations and model) please visit the [deprecation notes page](https://documentation.cyclos.org/4.16.3/api-deprecation.html) for this version.

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remotemerge/totp-php

21 Favers
19053 Downloads

Lightweight, fast, and secure TOTP (2FA) authentication library for PHP — battle tested, dependency free, and ready for enterprise integration.

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tryhackx/flarum-advanced-pages

2 Favers
379 Downloads

Create advanced custom pages with HTML, BBCode, Markdown, PHP, or plain text, featuring nested hierarchies, breadcrumbs, and granular console-managed permissions for Flarum 2.x.

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forked/mailreader

6 Favers
4737 Downloads

A fully tested simple email reader parser for PHP 5.6+.

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marektichy/totp-php

0 Favers
92 Downloads

Lightweight, fast, and secure TOTP (2FA) authentication library for PHP — battle tested, dependency free, and ready for enterprise integration.

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luttje/php-example-tester

0 Favers
835 Downloads

Use comments in markdown to automatically compile tested examples into your README

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addgod/nova-nested-breadcrumbs

2 Favers
213 Downloads

Fully nested bradbcrumbs for laravel nova.

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devig/json-mini-bread

0 Favers
5 Downloads

Creates a mini BREAD nested inside another model.

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cristianhr/json-mini-bread

0 Favers
10 Downloads

Creates a mini BREAD nested inside another model.

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