GNU gettext is a framework of libraries and tools for internationalisation
and localisation of software.
This package contains the runtime libraries and programs.
This port contains the programming reference for devel/gconf2.
GNU gettext is a framework of libraries and tools for internationalisation
and localisation of software.
This package contains development and translation tools.
GNU gettext is a framework of libraries and tools for internationalisation
and localisation of software.
GNU GLOBAL is a source code tagging system that works the same way across
diverse environments, such as Emacs editor, Vi editor, Less viewer, Bash shell,
various web browsers, etc.
You can locate various objects, such as functions, macros, structs, classes, in
your source files and move there easily. It is useful for hacking a large
projects which contain many sub-directories, many #ifdef and many main()
functions. It is similar to ctags or etags, but is different from them in the
following two points:
- Independence of any editor
- Capability to treat definition and reference
GLUI is a GLUT-based C++ user interface library which provides
controls such as buttons, check boxes, radio buttons, and spinners
to OpenGL applications. It is window-system independent, relying
on GLUT to handle all system-dependent issues, such as window and
mouse management.
GNU make is a tool that controls the generation of executables and other
non-source files from source files. Its purpose is the same as that
of the utility make(1).
Gnulib, the GNU portability library, offers a macro system and C
declarations and definitions for commonly-used API elements and
abstracted system behaviors. It can be used to improve portability and
other functionality in your programs.
Gnulib takes a different approach than libiberty. Gnulib components are
intended to be shared at the source level, rather than being a library that
gets built, installed, and linked against. Thus, there is no distribution
tarball; the idea is to copy files from Gnulib into your own source tree.
However, there are bimonthly stable snapshots of the Gnulib codebase
published at http://erislabs.net/ianb/projects/gnulib/
Gorm allows developers to quickly create graphical applications and to design
every little aspect of the application's user interface.
Using drag and drop all types of objects like menus, buttons, tables, lists
and browsers are easily added to the interface. With just the mouse you can
resize, move or convert the objects or connect them to functions as well as
edit nearly every aspect of them using Gorm's powerful inspectors.
With its intuitive interface Gorm makes creating, editing and testing complex
user interfaces a piece of cake.
While teaching a data structures course at University of California,
Irvine, I developed a program called GPERF that generates perfect hash
functions for sets of key words. A perfect hash function is simply:
A hash function and a data structure that allows
recognition of a key word in a set of words using
exactly 1 probe into the data structure.
The gperf.texinfo file explains how the program works, the form of the
input, what options are available, and hints on choosing the best
options for particular key word sets. The texinfo file is readable
both via the GNU emacs `info' command, and is also suitable for
typesetting with TeX.
The enclosed Makefile creates the executable program ``gperf'' and
also runs some tests.
Output from the GPERF program is used to recognize reserved words in
the GNU C, GNU C++, and GNU Pascal compilers, as well as with the GNU
indent program.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later