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Results 1,5611,570 of 1,719 for /textproc/.(0.003 seconds)
textproc/ya2yaml-0.31 (Score: 0.068937615)
Yet another YAML converter, includes complete UTF8 support
Ya2YAML is "yet another to_yaml". It emits YAML document with complete UTF8 support (string/binary detection, "\u" escape sequences and Unicode specific line breaks).
textproc/yard-0.8.7.6 (Score: 0.068937615)
Documentation generation tool for Ruby
YARD - Yay! A Ruby Documentation Tool YARD is a documentation generation tool for the Ruby programming language. It enables the user to generate consistent, usable documentation that can be exported to a number of formats very easily, and also supports extending for custom Ruby constructs such as custom class level definitions.
textproc/yard-chef-1.0.0 (Score: 0.068937615)
YARD plugin for Chef
yard-chef is a YARD plugin for Chef that adds support for documenting Chef resources, providers, and definitions.
textproc/uz-aspell-0.6.0 (Score: 0.068937615)
Aspell Uzbek dictionary
Aspell Uzbek dictionary.
textproc/hunspell-0.6 (Score: 0.068937615)
Uzbek hunspell dictionaries
Uzbek hunspell dictionaries
textproc/zmq-2.1.4 (Score: 0.068937615)
Ruby ZeroMQ gem
The Ruby binding (C extension) to the ZeroMQ library.
textproc/hunspell-20110323 (Score: 0.068937615)
Venda hunspell dictionaries
Venda hunspell dictionaries
textproc/wa-aspell-0.50.0 (Score: 0.068937615)
Aspell Walloon dictionary
Aspell Walloon dictionary.
textproc/Sablot-1.0.3 (Score: 0.068937615)
XML toolkit implementing XSLT 1.0, XPath 1.0 and DOM Level2
Sablotron is an XML processor fully implemented in C++. It uses Expat by James Clark as an XML parser. Sablotron implements XSLT 1.0, XPath 1.0 and DOM Level2. Original creator of Sablotron is Ginger Alliance Ltd; Czech Republic.
textproc/wdiff-1.2.2 (Score: 0.068937615)
Display word differences between text files
<< wdiff >> From man page of wdiff: wdiff compares two files, finding which words have been deleted or added to old_file to get new_file. A word is anything between whitespace. The output is collected and used to produce an annotated copy of new_file on standard output. Suitable annotations produce a nice display of word differences between the original files. Example: text-a I like FreeBSD. text-b I love FreeBSD. % wdiff -n text-a text-b I [-like-] {+love+} FreeBSD.