NETGEN is an automatic 3D tetrahedral mesh generator.
It accepts input from constructive solid geometry (CSG) or boundary
representation (BRep) from STL file format. The connection to a geometry
kernel allows the handling of IGES and STEP files. NETGEN contains modules
for mesh optimization and hierarchical mesh refinement.
The Verilog-Perl library is a building point for Verilog support in the Perl
language. It includes:
* Verilog::Getopt which parses command line options similar to C++ and VCS.
* Verilog::Language which knows the language keywords and parses numbers.
* Verilog::Netlist which builds netlists out of Verilog files. This allows
easy scripts to determine things such as the hierarchy of modules.
* Verilog::Parser invokes callbacks for language tokens.
* Verilog::Preproc preprocesses the language, and allows reading
post-processed files right from Perl without temporary files.
* vpassert inserts PLIish warnings and assertions for any simulator.
* vppreproc preprocesses the complete Verilog 2001 and SystemVerilog language.
* vrename renames and cross-references Verilog symbols. Vrename creates Verilog
cross references and makes it easy to rename signal and module names across
multiple files. Vrename uses a simple and efficient three step process.
First, you run vrename to create a list of signals in the design. You then
edit this list, changing as many symbols as you wish. Vrename is then run a
second time to apply the changes.
Verilog-mode.el is a Verilog mode for Emacs which provides context-sensitive
highlighting, auto indenting, and provides macro expansion capabilities to
greatly reduce Verilog coding time.
Recent versions allow you to insert AUTOS in non-AUTO designs, so IP
interconnect can be easily modified. You can also expand Verilog-2001 ".*"
instantiations, to see what ports will be connected by simulators.
CElvis is a clone of vi/ex, the standard UNIX editor. CElvis supports
nearly all of the vi/ex commands, in both visual mode and colon mode.
It also allows displaying and editing of documents using the
Chinese GB (simple) and Big-5 (complex) encodings.
Celvis is based on Elvis version 1.3 by Steve Kirkendall.
Have a TrueType font which is not recognized by X Window? Probably,
the font uses an encoding other than Unicode! Open Type Organizer (oTo)
can show you font info and add new 'name' and 'cmap' tables by
translating the original ones.
This port installs four Chinese Big5/GB TrueType fonts, includes
Kaiti/Mingti(Big5) and Kaiti/Sungti(GB). It then can be used along
with X Window System or typesetting software like CJK. Thanks to
Arphic Technology, you may freely distribute these high-quality
fonts under a GPL-based license. See ARPHIC_*.TXT for details.
kcfonts is a suit of chinese Ming Fanti fonts for X-window
kcfonts' fonts are contributed by Kau Chauo Information CO. to all
TANet users running on PC. Thanks Chin-Hao Tsai <c-tsai@uiuc.edu>, who
converted it to the style of ETen's fonts. Now you can use kcfonts &
crxvt to view Chinese by BIG5 encoding.
This module is a Perl interface to the TaBE (Taiwan and Big5 Encoding)
library, an unified interface and library dealing with Chinese words,
phrases, sentences, and phonetic symbols; it is intended to be used as
the foundation of Chinese text processing.
Noted that the Chinese new year does not coincide with the Gregorian
new year, so the determination of what year it is in the Chinese
calendar is only going to be correct for a portion of the Gregorian
year. This module is API for calculating dates for Chinese calendar.
This module tries to convert a number into Chinese cardinal number. It
supports decimals number, and five representation systems (charsets):
traditional, simplified, big5, gb and pinyin. The first two are returned
as unicode strings; hence they are only available for Perl 5.6 and later
versions.