Gathering detailed insights and metrics for console-faker
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for console-faker
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for console-faker
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for console-faker
Get some file content to be printed out on console while you type anything on your keyboard.
npm install console-faker
Typescript
Module System
NPM Version
66.7
Supply Chain
82.1
Quality
74.7
Maintenance
25
Vulnerability
99.1
License
JavaScript (100%)
Total Downloads
1,273
Last Day
1
Last Week
4
Last Month
18
Last Year
83
25 Stars
25 Commits
1 Forks
4 Watchers
1 Branches
1 Contributors
Updated on Aug 12, 2024
Minified
Minified + Gzipped
Latest Version
0.1.0
Package Id
console-faker@0.1.0
Size
3.83 kB
NPM Version
1.3.11
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last Day
0%
1
Compared to previous day
Last Week
-20%
4
Compared to previous week
Last Month
350%
18
Compared to previous month
Last Year
0%
83
Compared to previous year
2
Get some file content to be printed out on console while you type anything on your keyboard.
It is basic a hackertyper-like implementation but using the Node.js console. Use any file you want as an input.
Now, there is one serious use for this tool. It is great for live presentations. Do you love the coolness of live-coding but find it too risky and error-prone to do it under all the stress of presenting to a real crowd?
Here is your solution, any javascript file used as an input will have each line executed by the node console as if it were a real input. So you can have your shaking hand slamming on the keyboard as you speak and your previously-tested code will be outputed (and executed if it's javascript) neatly.
Just use a simple npm install command:
1npm install -g console-faker
It is as simple as running:
1console-faker ./path/to/my-file.js
You can also use multiple files as an input:
1console-faker ./test.js ./src/index.js
If you are going to use it for presenting to an audience, it might be a good idea to have a shell script file to run it from, instead of invoking the consoke-faker
command directly.
Having a ./run
file with, let's say:
1console-faker ./my-demo-code.js
Will do the job. Just do not forget to give it the proper execution rights: chmod a+x ./run
And execute your script with: ./run
.
Ideally, you will need a javascript file formatted just like if you were inputting it into the console. Actually creating it while inputting each line on the node console should be the better way to go.
A small examples is available under the example/presentation.js
file in the Github repository.
Released under the MIT license
No vulnerabilities found.
Reason
no binaries found in the repo
Reason
0 existing vulnerabilities detected
Reason
Found 0/25 approved changesets -- score normalized to 0
Reason
0 commit(s) and 0 issue activity found in the last 90 days -- score normalized to 0
Reason
no SAST tool detected
Details
Reason
no effort to earn an OpenSSF best practices badge detected
Reason
security policy file not detected
Details
Reason
project is not fuzzed
Details
Reason
license file not detected
Details
Reason
branch protection not enabled on development/release branches
Details
Score
Last Scanned on 2025-06-30
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