Porte provides a simple, fast and efficient interface to searching
FreeBSD ports index fields. It also has a simple statistics mode which
allows collecting frequency statistics for these fields.
PackageKit is a DBUS abstraction layer that allows the session user to manage
packages in a secure way using a cross-distro, cross-architecture API.
Get a 'graphical' tree-overview of installed packages
Generates a ascii-art-graphical tree of packages and their dependancies.
For example for setxkbmap and xkbcomp
[~] edwin@k7>pkg_tree 'xkb[cm]'
setxkbmap-1.0.4
|\__ kbproto-1.0.3
|\__ pkg-config-0.23_1
|\__ xproto-7.0.10_1
|\__ libXau-1.0.3_2
|\__ libXdmcp-1.0.2_1
|\__ libX11-1.1.3_1,1
\__ libxkbfile-1.0.4
xkbcomp-1.0.3
|\__ kbproto-1.0.3
|\__ pkg-config-0.23_1
|\__ xproto-7.0.10_1
|\__ libXau-1.0.3_2
|\__ libXdmcp-1.0.2_1
|\__ libX11-1.1.3_1,1
\__ libxkbfile-1.0.4
Use portfind to search in the ports tree.
Localized messages and documentation for libreoffice
Localized messages and documentation for libreoffice
Localized messages and documentation for libreoffice
Russian version of Tabbrowsing Extensions for Firefox.
This is an extension for extending operations of tabbed browsing, e.g., tabs
become re-ordable by drag and drop, show tabs like a tree, and so on.
ITK is an open-source software toolkit for performing registration and
segmentation. Segmentation is the process of identifying and classifying
data found in a digitally sampled representation. Typically the sampled
representation is an image acquired from such medical instrumentation as
CT or MRI scanners. Registration is the task of aligning or developing
correspondences between data. For example, in the medical environment,
a CT scan may be aligned with a MRI scan in order to combine the
information contained in both.
Brian is a simulator for spiking neural networks available on almost all
platforms. The motivation for this project is that a simulator should
not only save the time of processors, but also the time of scientists.
Brian is easy to learn and use, highly flexible and easily extensible.
The Brian package itself and simulations using it are all written in
the Python programming language, which is an easy, concise and highly
developed language with many advanced features and development tools,
excellent documentation and a large community of users providing support
and extension packages.