Locale::Maketext is a base class providing a framework for software
localization and inheritance-based lexicons, as described in my
article in The Perl Journal #13 (which is on the way to your mailbox
and/or newsstand).
Copyright 1999, Sean M. Burke <sburke@netadventure.net>, all rights
reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it
and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Apache Spark is a fast and general-purpose cluster computing system. It
provides high-level APIs in Java, Scala and Python, and an optimized engine
that supports general execution graphs. It also supports a rich set of
higher-level tools including Spark SQL for SQL and structured data processing,
MLlib for machine learning, GraphX for graph processing, and Spark Streaming.
Spice protocol defines a set of protocol messages for accessing,
controlling, and receiving inputs from remote computing devices
(e.g., keyboard, video, mouse) across networks, and sending output
to them. A controlled device can reside on either side, client
and/or server.
Spin is an efficient on-the-fly verification system
(a `model checker') for asynchronous concurrent systems,
such as data communication protocols, distributed operating
systems, database systems, etc.
It can be used to prove both safety and liveness properties,
including all correctness requirements expressible in linear
time temporal logic.
Spin uses a high level language to specify systems descriptions,
called PROMELA (PROcess MEta LAnguage).
The SRecord package is a collection of powerful tools for manipulating
EPROM load files.
Perl bindings for KDE libraries.
The Software Testing Automation Framework (STAF) is an open source,
multi-platform, multi-language framework designed around the idea of reusable
components, called services (such as process invocation, resource management,
logging, and monitoring).
STAF removes the tedium of building an automation infrastructure, thus enabling
you to focus on building your automation solution.
The STAF framework provides the foundation upon which to build higher level
solutions, and provides a pluggable approach supported across a large variety of
platforms and languages.
StatCVS retrieves information from a CVS repository and generates
various tables and charts describing the project development, e.g.
timeline for the lines of code, contribution of each developer etc.
The current version of StatCVS generates a static suite of HTML or
XDOC documents containing tables and chart images.
statik allows you to embed a directory of static files into your
Go binary to be later served from an http.FileSystem. Is this a
crazy idea? No, not necessarily. If you're building a tool that
has a Web component, you typically want to serve some images, CSS
and JavaScript. You like the comfort of distributing a single binary,
so you don't want to mess with deploying them elsewhere. If your
static files are not large in size and will be browsed by a few
people, statik is a solution you are looking for.
StatSVN retrieves information from a Subversion repository and
generates various tables and charts describing the project development,
e.g. timeline for the lines of code, contribution of each developer
etc. The current version of StatSVN generates a static suite of
HTML or XDOC documents containing tables and chart images.