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The rationale is this: the spec string describes the expected behavior unconditionally. The code examples, on the other hand, set up an expectation that is tested with the call to the expect method. The code examples can violate the expectation, but the spec string does not. The value of the spec string is as clearly as possible describing the behavior. Including “should” in that description adds no value. (From http://rubyspec.org/style_guide/) |
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build | ||
debug | ||
dist | ||
spec | ||
src | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
Jakefile.js | ||
LICENSE | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
Leaflet is a modern open-source JavaScript library for mobile-friendly interactive maps. It is developed by Vladimir Agafonkin with a team of dedicated contributors. Weighing just about 27 KB of gzipped JS code, it has all the features most developers ever need for online maps.
Leaflet is designed with simplicity, performance and usability in mind. It works efficiently across all major desktop and mobile platforms out of the box, taking advantage of HTML5 and CSS3 on modern browsers while being accessible on older ones too. It can also be extended with many plugins, has a beautiful, easy to use and well-documented API and a simple, readable source code that is a joy to contribute to.
For more information, check out the official website.
We're happy to meet new contributors. If you want to get involved with Leaflet development, check out the contribution guide. Let's make the best open-source library for maps that can possibly exist!