WMWork helps you to keep track of time you've spent working on several
projects, and is dockable in WindowMaker or AfterStep for your
convenience.
Tired of debugging your regular expressions? Do you want to quickly build
efficient regexps?
Visual REGEXP is for you!
This software will let you design your regexps by letting you type the
expression and visualize its effect on a sample of your choice.
The TOIlet project attempts to create a free replacement for the FIGlet
utility. TOIlet stands for "The Other Implementation's letters", coined
after FIGlet's "Frank, Ian and Glen's letters".
TOIlet is in its very early development phase. It uses the powerful
libcaca library to achieve various text-based effects. TOIlet
implements or plans to implement the following features:
* The ability to load FIGlet fonts
* Support for Unicode input and output
* Support for colour fonts
* Support for colour output
* Support for various output formats: HTML, IRC, ANSI...
TOIlet also aims for full FIGlet compatibility. It is currently able to
load FIGlet fonts and perform horizontal smushing.
ttyrec is a tty recorder. Recorded data can be played back with the included
ttyplay command. ttyrec is just a derivative of script command for recording
timing information with microsecond accuracy as well. It can record emacs -nw,
vi, lynx, or any programs running on tty.
PNS is a public domain Petri net simulation tool for Unix systems. It requires
the X Window System.
Examples:
---------
- simple.net
3-2 Reduction
- add.net
x = x + y
- sub1.net
x >= y : x = x - y
x < y : y = y - x
- sub2.net
x = x - y
NEGATIVE = 1 <=> x-y < 0
- mult.net
z = x * y
- phil.net
Dining Philosophers Problem
This package contains implementations of UTF-aware wc, fmt,
expand, and unexpand.
Approximate matching searching utilities to search for manpages and files.
This package holds THREE little search utilities:
* whichman -- search utility for man pages and it works
much like the well known Unix command "where".
* ftff -- a fault tolerant file finder
ftff works like the whichman above but searches the directory
tree. This is a case in-sensitive and fault tolerant way of
'find . -name xxxx -print'
* ftwhich -- a fault tolerant "which" command
ftwhich finds files (programs) which are in one of the directories in
your PATH and uses a fault tolerant search algorithm.
Find paths between two keys in the OpenPGP Web of Trust, and get statistics
about a key or the whole web.
Observe:
* We only search the largest strongly connected set.
* No attempt is made to verify the signatures. For you to be able to trust
a path, you must verify all signatures yourself.
* Even if there exists a path between you and another key, you have to
trust the other people in at least one path in the graph to trust the key.
Keys can be specified as normal key IDs (0x12345678 or 12345678), or a number
of space-separated case-insensitive search terms (i.e. "rms@gnu.org" or
"@gnu Stallman").
This extension is a drop-in replacement for the builtin timezone database that
comes with PHP. You should only install this extension in case you need to get a
later version of the timezone database then the one that ships with PHP.
"xtail" watches the growth of files. It's like running a "tail -f"
on a bunch of files at once.
You can specify both filenames and directories on the command line.
If you specify a directory, it watches all the files in that
directory. It will notice when new files are created (and start
watching them) or when old files are deleted (and stop watching
them).
This program is an oldie but goodie. It was posted to comp.sources.misc
in July 1989 (see ftp.uu.net:/usenet/comp.sources.misc/volume7/xtail.Z).
I remember posting an even earlier version to alt.sources. It has
been published in the O'Reilly & Associates "Unix Power Tools"
collection (book and CD-ROM). Over the years, some fly-by-night
organizations (such as the MIT X Consortium and SGI) have tried to
steal the "xtail" name. Don't be fooled! Insist on the original.