The bbcode extension is a quick and efficient BBCode Parsing Library.
It provides various tag types, high speed one pass parsing, callback
system and tag position restriction.
nose provides an alternate test discovery and running process for
unittest, one that is intended to mimic the behavior of py.test as
much as is reasonably possible without resorting to magic. By default,
nose will run tests in files or directories under the current working
directory whose names include "test". nose also supports doctest tests
and may optionally provide a test coverage report.
This is a PHP binding for lib library.
This is a simple wrapper around "make" to make its output more readable.
Normally version control systems don't allow fine grained commits.
commit-patch allows the user to control exactly what gets committed by
letting the user supply a patch to be committed rather than using the
files in the current working directory.
commit-patch supports Darcs, Git, Mercurial, Bazaar, Subversion,
Monotone or CVS repositories.
Also included is an Emacs interface to commit-patch. It allows you to
just hit C-c C-c in any patch buffer to apply and commit only the
changes indicated by the patch, regardless of the changes in your
working directory.
Courier library which implements several algorithms related to the
Unicode Standard:
- Look up uppercase, lowercase, and titlecase equivalents of a
unicode character.
- Implementation of grapheme and work breaking rules.
- Implementation of line breaking rules.
- Several ancillary functions, like looking up the unicode character
that corresponds to some HTML 4.0 entity (such as "&", for
example), and determining the normal width or a double-width status
of a unicode character. Also, an adaptation of the iconv(3) API
for this unicode library.
This library also implements C++ bindings for these algorithms.
Open source library for SPI/I2C control via FTDI chips
Libmpsse is a library for interfacing with SPI/I2C devices via FTDI's
FT-2232 family of USB chips. Based around the libftdi library.
The C Runtime In Tcl, CriTcl for short, is a system to build C extension
packages for Tcl on the fly, from C code embedded within Tcl scripts,
for all who wish to make their code go faster.
CSSC is the GNU Project's replacement for SCCS. SCCS is a proprietary suite
of tools which is provided with most commercial versions of Unix. The purpose
behind CSSC is to provide a work-alike for SCCS which can be used on the
various Free versions of Unix.
SCCS was the only major form of source code control on Unix platforms for many
years, until RCS came along. SCCS was an effective method for small projects,
but these days it is less popular, particularly for projects involving large
numbers of files. A certain amount of old software is still in SCCS form, and
CSSC is designed to retrieve that software. Once retrieved, it is recommended
to bring the source under the control of a more modern source code control
system, such as git or Apache Subversion.
However, SCCS (and CSSC) is still perfectly adequate for small projects. For
example, if you are familiar with SCCS, it is not unreasonable to control the
files in /etc and /usr/local/etc on your private FreeBSD machine with CSSC.
Syncmail is a CVS notification tool which can provide a diff for every
change to a CVS repository, mailed to specified email addresses.
This tool is useful for large communities to monitor activity,
and is used for Python and many other active projects.