###########################################################################
# This program is Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1988 by Jonathan Payne. JOVE #
# is provided to you without charge, and with no warranty. You may give #
# away copies of JOVE, including sources, provided that this notice is #
# included in all the files. #
###########################################################################
Jove is a simple text editor in the spirit of GNU emacs, but somewhat
smaller and faster to start up.
There are man pages for jove and teachjove. Teachjove is for people who
have never used EMACS style editors. It is an interactive tutorial, THE
tutorial written by Stallman for the original EMACS, only slightly
modified for JOVE in the appropriate places. The man pages are
completely up to date, thanks to me.
JOE is the professional freeware ASCII text screen editor for UNIX.
It makes full use of the power and versatility of UNIX, but lacks the steep
learning curve and basic nonsense you have to deal with in every other UNIX
editor. JOE has the feel of most IBM PC text editors: The key-sequences are
reminiscent of WordStar and Turbo-C. JOE is much more powerful than those
editors, however. JOE has all of the features a UNIX user should expect:
full use of termcap/terminfo, excellent screen update optimizations (JOE is
fully useable at 2400 baud), simple installation, and all of the
UNIX-integration features of VI.
Jupp is the portable version of Joe's Own Editor. This version has been
enhanced by several functions intended for programmers or other professional
users, and has a lot of bugs fixed. It is based upon an older version of
joe because these behave better overall.
Jupp also does come with the editor flavours known from joe, specifically,
jmacs, joe, jpico, jstar, and rjoe. Not all features of jupp are available
for these though (but all the bugfixes, and syntax highlighting is still
enabled by default for these, while it is not auto-enabled in jupp).
Pico and Pilot are simple, display-oriented tools. Commands are displayed
at the bottom of the screen, and context-sensitive help is provided.
In Pico as characters are typed they are immediately inserted into the text.
It has three basic features: paragraph justification, searching, and block
cut/paste.
In Pilot several basic file manipulation commands are provided:
Delete, Rename, Copy, View, Launch, and Edit. The "View" and "Edit"
commands operate on text files only. The "Edit" command invokes "pico."
The "Launch" command provides a convenient way to either execute the selected
file or to run an application on it.
The TeXworks project is an effort to build a simple TeX front-end program
(working environment) that will be available for all today's major desktop
operating systems. It is deliberately modeled after Dick Koch's award-
winning TeXShop for Mac OS X.
TeXworks includes an integrated PDF viewer, based on the Poppler library,
and supports source/preview synchronization. This capability is based on
the "SyncTeX" feature developed by Jerome Laurens, and supported by both
the pdfTeX and XeTeX programs in TeX Live, and other current distributions.
vile is a text editor which is extremely compatible with vi in terms of
"finger feel". in addition, it has extended capabilities in many areas,
notably:
multi-file editing and viewing
key rebinding (in addition to :map, :map!, and :abbr)
mouse support (in an xterm, or when built as xvile)
infinite undo
many additional operator commands
selection highlighting
rectangular operations
"next error" cursor positioning after compilation
full function- and arrow-key support
filename, command, internal mode and variable completion
auxiliary utilities for man page and C program syntax highlighting
built-in macro language
portability to all UNIX platforms, VMS, DOS, Win32, OS/2
y is a multi-windowed console text editor, primarily intended for
programmers and system administrators.
y main features is:
- Multi-windows interface with up and down menu lines
- Pulldown menus
- Operable window list
- Copy/paste between windows
- Inter-windows search and replace
- Help window with ability to browse manual pages and info files
- Internal terminal window
- Internal GDB interface with ability to set up breakpoints
inside text window
- Status saving - you can load 20 files from your program project
by one click
- C-style and HTML-style Syntax highlight
- Stream and columnar blocks with saving block features
- Ability to edit huge (hundred of Mb) files
Rashid N. Achilov (citycat4@ngs.ru)
FCE Ultra is an NTSC and PAL Famicom/NES emulator for various
platforms. It is based upon Bero's original FCE source code. Current
features include good PPU, CPU, pAPU, expansion chip, and joystick
emulation. Also a feature unique to this emulator (at the current time)
is authentic Game Genie emulation. Save states and snapshot features
also have been implemented. The VS Unisystem is emulated as well.
FCE Ultra supports iNES format ROM images, UNIF format ROM images,
headerless and FWNES style FDS disk images, and NSF files.
VMware Command Line Tools
On this page, you'll find command line programs which can replace and/or
supplement the VMware's official VMwareTools.
These programs use VMware's undocumented and therefore not officially
supported feature to communicate with VMware (see VMware Backdoor I/O Port).
Information on these functions have come entirely from my personal research
and quite a few contributions by fellow VMware users.
These programs are intended partly as illustrative examples of how to use the
VMware backdoor function and I have cut many corners writing them.
* vmw: generic backdoor access program
* vmshrink: virtual disk shrink program
* vmftp: host-guest file transfer program
LICENSE: no particular restriction on redistribution
HomeBank is the free software you have always wanted to manage your
personal accounts at home. The main concept is to be light, simple and
very easy to use. It brings you many features that allow you to analyze
your finances in a detailed way instantly and dynamically with powerful
report tools based on filtering and graphical charts.
Furthermore, HomeBank benefits from more than 10 years of users'
experiences and feedback as its development started in 1995 on Amiga
computers. It is now available on Amiga, GNU/Linux, and will probably be
available soon for Microsoft Windows and MacOS X systems as GTK+ exists
on them.