DTDParse is a tool for manipulating XML and SGML Document Type
Definitions (DTDs). DTDParse is designed primarily to aid in the
understanding and documentation of DTDs.
Duncan is an English-Thai dictionary. It was developed on Mac OS X, using the
Cocoa libraries. The GNUstep port that can be found here, was done by me. It
was very easy to do; primarily requiring only new interface files, and build
files.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later
Intelligent Input Bus for Linux / Unix OS, iBus, is the next generation
input framework, developed by the developer of scim-python, includes all
its function, and much more.
This is the ibus-qt port, the input method module for Qt4 of ibus.
You may select ibus as the input method in qtconfig after installation.
EasyDiff is a GNUstep application that lets you easily see the
differences between two text files.
This package implements the libyaml YAML 1.1 parser and emitter for
R.
ebook-tools provides tools for accessing and converting
various ebook file formats.
An integrated solution for XML-based publishing in print and web.
It is specifically targeted at producing technical documentation
in the field of computer science.
Documents are written in an XML-based markup language and translated
to different formats with XSL-transformations. At this time, eCromedos
supports the target formats XHTML and LATEX. Where LATEX output can be
further processed into high-quality printable formats by use of the
TEX typesetting system (http://www.ctan.org).
Add one or more CSS <link> elements to an XHTML document.
Aspell Afrikaans dictionary.
AFT (Almost Free Text) is a document preparation system. It is mostly
free form meaning that there is little intrusive markup. AFT source
documents look a lot like plain old ASCII text.
AFT has a few rules for structuring your document and these rules have
more to do with formatting your text rather than embedding commands.
Right now, AFT produces pretty good (weblint-able) HTML, XHTML, LaTeX,
lout and RTF. It can, in fact, be coerced into producing all types of
output (e.g. roll-your-own XML). All that needs to be done is to edit
a rule file. You can even customize your own HTML rule files for
specialized output.