This is an empty Plugin you can use as a template to build your own
TWikiPlugins. This Plugin does nothing, but is ready to be used.
This plugin will help you to write readable markup (TWikiMarkup, HMTL,
...) within TWiki by allowing tags and arguments to be formatted on
multiple lines. This is done by removing whitespaces surrounding tilde
characters at the beginning of a line and recombine consecutive lines
again.
The InterwikiPlugin links ExternalSite:Page text to external sites
based on aliases defined in the InterWikis topic. This plugin is
inspired by UseMod Wiki's inter-wiki links.
Mishoo JSCalendar, packaged for use by plugins, skins and add-ons.
WebMagick is a package which supports making image collections
available on the Web. It recurses through directory trees, building
HTML pages and imagemap files to allow the user to navigate through
collections of thumbnail images (somewhat similar to xv's Visual
Schnauzer) and select the image to view with a mouse click (see sample
output). Every effort is made to minimize the bandwidth required
between the server and the browser.
Alef has been designed to meet very high standards whilst at a very small
size. It was created under the consideration of its primary use for digital
media, and overcomes great challenges in the rendition of small characters
and cross-platform adjustment.
The font supports Hebrew and various European Languages.
LdapNgPlugin provides an interface to query an LDAP directory and
display the results in a TWiki topic.
anyremote2html package is a WEB interface for anyRemote.
It acts as HTTP server and translates anyRemote commands to HTML.
The overall goal of this project is to provide remote control service on Linux
through Bluetooth, InfraRed, Wi-Fi or just TCP/IP connection.
anyRemote supports wide range of modern cell phones like Nokia, SonyEricsson,
Motorola and others.
It was developed as thin communication layer between Bluetooth (or IR, Wi-Fi)
capabled phone and UNIX, and in principle could be configured to manage almost
any software.
Anyterm provides a terminal emulator on a Web page using Javascript and a
server daemon. The daemon typically runs behind an HTTP proxy; it forks a shell
and communicates with the script using XMLHTTP on port 80 or securely using
SSL. This provides you with shell access to your machine from almost any Web
browser, even when firewalls are in the way.
This plugin is of use in those cases where TWiki users are registered
and authenticated externally, for example using LDAP. So users are not
registered to TWiki using its own registration workflow and therefore
don't have a user topic in the Main web. This plugin fills that gap and
creates a user's topic if it does not yet exist.