YUI Compressor is JavaScript and CSS minificator.
YUI Compressor is written in Java and relies on Rhino to tokenize the
source JavaScript file. It starts by analyzing the source JavaScript
file to understand how it is structured. It then prints out the token
stream, omitting as many white space characters as possible, and
replacing all local symbols by a 1 (or 2, or 3) letter symbol wherever
such a substitution is appropriate (in the face of evil features such as
eval or with, the YUI Compressor takes a defensive approach by not
obfuscating any of the scopes containing the evil statement).
The CSS compression algorithm uses a set of finely tuned regular
expressions to compress the source CSS file. The YUI Compressor is
open-source, so don't hesitate to look at the code to understand exactly
how it works.
WadcomBlog is a simple open-source static blog engine written in Python
by Vlad Skvortsov and distributed under BSD license.
It doesn't use any backend database but instead reads a set of plain i
text files (in RFC2822 format) and creates a tree of interlinked HTML pages
that may be then published. To update a blog one just needs to add a file
to the source tree and run the command-line WadcomBlog script
to regenerate the output.
Emacs-w3m is a simple interface program of w3m for Emacs.
Eventum is a user-friendly and flexible issue tracking system
that can be used by a support department to track incoming
technical support requests, or by a software development team
to quickly organize tasks and bugs.
Wiki: http://eventum.mysql.org/wiki
Webbrowser is a wrapper script for finding and running the "best" available
installed browser on the system. It is intended for use by other
applications that invoke a browser, so that they need not be reconfigured
when a user switches to a different browser.
This is a simple http server for purely static content. You can
use it to serve the content of a ftp server via http for example.
It is also nice to export some files quickly by starting an http
server in a few seconds without editing a config file first.
Features/Design:
================
* single process: select() + non-blocking I/O
* automatically generates directory listings when asked for a
directory (check for index.html available as option), caches
the listings.
* no config file, just a few switches. Try "webfsd -h" for a
list.
* Uses ${PREFIX}/etc/webfsd/mime.types to map file extentions
to mime/types (not included).
* supports keep-alive and pipelined requests.
* serves byte ranges.
* optional logging in common log file format.
web.go is the simplest way to write web applications in the Go programming
language. It's ideal for writing simple, performant backend web services.
web.go should be familiar to people who've developed websites with higher-level
web frameworks like sinatra, pylons, or web.py. It is designed to be a
lightweight web framework that doesn't impose any scaffolding on the user.
Some features include:
* Routing to url handlers based on regular expressions
* Secure cookies
* Support for fastcgi and scgi
* Web applications are compiled to native code. This means very fast
execution and page render speed
* Serving static files
Webgrind is a Xdebug profiling web frontend in PHP5. It implements
a subset of the features of kcachegrind and installs in seconds
and works on all platforms. For quick'n'dirty optimizations it
does the job.
web.py is a web framework for python that is as simple as
it is powerful. web.py is in the public domain; you can use
it for whatever purpose with absolutely no restrictions.
A next generation web framework for the Perl programming language; duct
tape for the HTML5 web.
An amazing real-time web framework, allowing you to easily grow single file
prototypes into well-structured web applications.
Powerful out of the box with RESTful routes, plugins, commands, Perl-ish
templates, content negotiation, session management, form validation, testing
framework, static file server, CGI/PSGI detection, first class Unicode support
and much more for you to discover.
Full stack HTTP and WebSocket client/server implementation with IPv6, TLS, SNI,
IDNA, HTTP/SOCKS5 proxy, Comet (long polling), keep-alive, connection pooling,
timeout, cookie, multipart and gzip compression support.
Built-in non-blocking I/O web server, supporting multiple event loops as well
as optional preforking and hot deployment, perfect for building highly scalable
web services.
JSON and HTML/XML parser with CSS selector support.