Enter the query into the form above.
API method:
GET /api/symbols?search=hello&page=1&limit=20
where search is your query, page is a page number and limit is a number of items on a single page. Pagination information (such as a number of pages and etc) is returned
in response headers.
If you'd like to join our channel webring send a patch to ~whereiseveryone/toys@lists.sr.ht adding your channel as an entry in channels.scm.
Write to PORT the representation of the DAG with the given SINKS, using the given BACKEND. Use NODE-TYPE to traverse the DAG. When REVERSE-EDGES? is true, draw reverse arrows. Do not represent nodes whose distance to one of the SINKS is greater than MAX-DEPTH.
Return the graph backend called NAME. Raise an error if it is not found.
Return true if FILE matches a version control system from the list VCSES-DIRECTORIES.
Compute the hash of FILE with ALGORITHM.
Symbolic links are only dereferenced if RECURSIVE? is false. Directories are only supported if RECURSIVE? is #true or 'auto'. The executable bit is only recorded if RECURSIVE? is #true. If FILE is a symbolic link, it is only followed if RECURSIVE? is false.
For regular files, there are two different hashes when the executable hash isn't recorded: the regular hash and the nar hash. In most situations, the regular hash is desired and setting RECURSIVE? to 'auto' does the right thing for both regular files and directories.
This procedure must only be used under controlled circumstances; the detection of symbolic links in FILE is racy.
When FILE is a directory, the procedure SELECT? called as (SELECT? FILE STAT) decides which files to include. By default, version control files are excluded. To include everything, SELECT? can be set to (const #true).
Return a two-argument procedure that returns true when version-control metadata directories such as '.git' is found in DIRECTORY.
This procedure evaluates to a predicate that reports back whether a given file - stat combination is part of the files tracked by Mercurial.
Return the file-name for packages using hg-download.
Return a fixed-output derivation that fetches REF, a <hg-reference> object. The output is expected to have recursive hash HASH of type HASH-ALGO (a symbol). Use NAME as the file name, or a generic name if #f.
Return the version string for packages using hg-download.
Return an input port containing the data at URI, and the expected number of bytes available or #f. If TEXT? is true, the data at URI is considered to be textual. Follow any HTTP redirection. When BUFFERED? is #f, return an unbuffered port, suitable for use in `filtered-port'. HEADERS is an alist of extra HTTP headers.
When KEEP-ALIVE? is true, the connection is marked as 'keep-alive' and PORT is not closed upon completion.
When VERIFY-CERTIFICATE? is true, verify HTTPS server certificates.
TIMEOUT specifies the timeout in seconds for connection establishment; when TIMEOUT is #f, connection establishment never times out.
Write information about redirects to LOG-PORT.
Raise an '&http-get-error' condition if downloading fails.
Send all of REQUESTS to the server at BASE-URI. Call PROC for each response, passing it the request object, the response, a port from which to read the response body, and the previous result, starting with SEED, à la 'fold'. Return the final result.
When PORT is specified, use it as the initial connection on which HTTP requests are sent; otherwise call OPEN-CONNECTION to open a new connection for a URI. When KEEP-ALIVE? is false, close the connection port before returning.
Like 'http-fetch', return an input port, but cache its contents in ~/.cache/guix. The cache remains valid for TTL seconds.
Call WRITE-CACHE with the HTTP input port and the cache output port to write the data to cache. Call CACHE-MISS with URI just before fetching data from URI.
HEADERS is an alist of extra HTTP headers, to which cache-related headers are added automatically as appropriate.
TIMEOUT specifies the timeout in seconds for connection establishment.
Write information about redirects to LOG-PORT.