soundgrab is designed to help you slice up a big long raw audio file
(by default 44.1 kHz 2 channel signed sixteen bit little endian) and
save your favorite sections to other files. It does this by providing
you with a cassette player like command line interface. Commands like
ff <secs>, rw <secs>, jump <offset_from_start> can be used while the
volume is being played or while it is stopped to move the player head
around. The commands mark and name allow you to give names to sections
between the mark and the current position of the player head (like
emacs mark and point concept), and the export command exports the
named sections to other files in wav, cdr (CD mastering), or raw
format (or ogg or flac format if the appropriate encoder binaries are
found on your system).
Logisim is an educational tool for designing and simulating digital logic
circuits. With its simple toolbar interface and simulation of circuits as
you build them, it is simple enough to facilitate learning the most basic
concepts related to logic circuits. With the capacity to build larger circuits
from smaller subcircuits, and to draw bundles of wires with a single mouse
drag, Logisim can be used (and is used) to design and simulate entire CPUs for
educational purposes.
Logisim is used by students at colleges and universities around the world in
many types of classes, ranging from a brief unit on logic in general-education
computer science surveys, to computer organization courses, to full-semester
courses on computer architecture.
A Free Implementation of the Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm.
The library implements all of the algorithm as described in the "Unicode
Standard Annex #9, The Bidirectional Algorithm,
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr9/". FriBidi is exhautively tested
against Bidi Reference Code, and due to our best knowledge, does not contain
any conformance bugs.
In the API, we were inspired by the document "Bi-Di languages support - BiDi
API proposal" by Franck Portaneri which he wrote as a proposal for adding BiDi
support to Mozilla.
Internally the library uses Unicode entirely. The character property function
was automatically created from the Unicode property list data file,
PropList.txt, available from the Unicode Online Data site. This means that
every Unicode character will be treated in strict accordance with the Unicode
specification. The same is true for the mirroring of characters, which also
works for all the characters listed as mirrorable in the Unicode specification.
JRobin is a 100% pure java implementation of RRDTool's functionality. It
follows the same logic and uses the same data sources, archive types and
definitions as RRDTool does. JRobin supports all standard operations on
Round Robin Database (RRD) files: CREATE, UPDATE, FETCH, LAST, DUMP, XPORT
and GRAPH. JRobin's API is made for those who are familiar with RRDTool's
concepts and logic, but prefer to work with pure java. If you provide the
same data to RRDTool and JRobin, you will get exactly the same results and
graphs. JRobin is made from the scratch and it uses very limited portions
of RRDTool's original source code. JRobin does not use native functions and
libraries, has no Runtime.exec() calls and does not require RRDTool to be
present. JRobin is distributed as a software library (jar files) and comes
with full java source code (LGPL licence).
A graphical front-end to `cscope' and its clone `cs' with a number of
nice features, including:
- Graphical window interface for general ease of use.
- Function call hierarchy and function viewer.
- Recall of previous queries and query results for easy browsing.
- Ability to switch between databases and query back-ends.
- Source code highlighting ala Emacs.
- Querying and building may be performed simultaneously.
- Build database dialog allows interactively configuring source
and include directories.
- Saves queries and/or query results for later sessions.
- Query results and file browser separated by adjustable pane.
- Full text search in viewer windows.
- Convenient key and button bindings.
- Ability to invoke any editor directly from browser.
- Crude but existing help menu.
ftnchek (short for Fortran checker) is designed to detect certain errors
in a Fortran 77 program that a compiler usually does not. ftnchek is not
primarily intended to detect syntax errors. Its purpose is to assist the
user in finding semantic errors. Semantic errors are legal in the Fortran
77 language but are wasteful or may cause incorrect operation. For example,
variables which are never used may indicate some omission in the program;
uninitialized variables contain garbage which may cause incorrect results
to be calculated; and variables which are not declared may not have the
intended type. ftnchek is intended to assist users in the debugging of
their Fortran 77 program. It is not intended to catch all syntax errors.
This is the function of the compiler. Prior to using ftnchek, the user
should verify that the program compiles correctly.
Data::Printer is meant to do one thing and one thing only: display Perl
variables and objects on screen, properly formatted (to be inspected by a
human).
Here's what Data::Printer has to offer to Perl developers, out of the box:
- Very sane defaults (I hope!)
- Highly customizable (in case you disagree with me :)
- Colored output by default
- Human-friendly output, with array index and custom separators
- Full object dumps including methods, inheritance and internals
- Exposes extra information such as tainted data and weak references
- Ability to easily create filters for objects and regular structures
- Ability to load settings from a .dataprinter file so you don't have to write
anything other than "use DDP;" in your code!
File::ConfigDir is a helper for installing, reading and finding configuration
file locations. It's intended to work in every supported Perl5 environment and
will always try to Do The Right Thing(TM).
File::ConfigDir is a module to help out when perl modules (especially
applications) need to read and store configuration files from more than one
location. Writing user configuration is easy thanks to File::HomeDir, but what
when the system administrator needs to place some global configuration or there
will be system related configuration (in /etc on UNIX(TM) or $ENV{windir} on
Windows(TM)) and some network configuration in nfs mapped /etc/p5-app or
$ENV{ALLUSERSPROFILE} . "\\Application Data\\p5-app", respectively.
File::ConfigDir has no "do what I mean" mode - it's entirely up to the user to
pick the right directory for each particular application.
While ANSI color escape codes are fairly simple, it can be hard to
remember the codes for all of the attributes and the code resulting
from hard-coding them into your script is definitely difficult to
read. This module is designed to fix those problems, as well as
provide a convenient interface to do a few things for you
automatically (like resetting attributes after the text you print out
so that you don't accidentally leave attributes set).
Despite its name, this module can also handle non-color ANSI text
attributes (bold, underline, reverse video, and blink). It uses either
of two interfaces, one of which uses "constants" for each different
attribute and the other of which uses two subs which take strings of
attributes as arguments.
This is a port of the bulk of the Plan 9 software build environment to Unix.
It tries to reproduce the Plan 9 build environment as faithfully as possible,
providing u.h and libc.h, and blithely redefining tokens such as open, dup,
and accept in order to provide implementations that better mimic the Plan 9
semantics. The result is a somewhat more complicated and less Unix-friendly
environment, but Plan 9 programs can typically be compiled with little or no
changes.
The port includes the following:
- Sources for Linux, FreeBSD, and SunOS
- lib9 (nee libc), libString, libbin, libbio, libcomplete, libdraw,
liblibflate, frame, libfs, libhtml, libhttpd, libip, libmux, libplumb,
liblibregexp, libsec, thread, and libventi
- 9term, acme, hoc, plumber, rio (nee 9wm), sam, and samterm, along with
many small utilities and manual pages
- Plan 9 bitmap fonts