pyExcelerator is a Python library that can generate Excel 97+ files and import
Excel 95+ files. It supports Unicode in Excel files, and can use a variety of
formatting features and printing options. It can dump Excel and OLE2 compound
files.
This is a Python implementation of John Gruber's Markdown. It is almost
completely compliant with the reference implementation, though there are a
few very minor differences.
Features:
* International Input
* Extensions
* Output Formats
* "Safe Modes"
* Command Line Interface
pyXLWriter is a Python library for generating Excel-compatible spreadsheets.
It's a port of John McNamara's Perl Spreadsheet::WriteExcel module (see
http://www.cpan.org) to Python.
This package provides a parser and renderers for the classic Zope
"structured text" markup dialect (STX). STX is a plain text markup
in which document structure is signalled primarily by identation.
This is htmlrepair.rb, a Ruby library to repair unclosed tags in an
HTML document.
It is used with htmlsplit.rb and adds a method "repair" to the
HTMLSplit class.
This is a small package containing a Sphinx theme named "Cloud",
along with some related Sphinx extensions. To see an example
of the theme in action, check out it's documentation.
Jing is a validator for RELAX NG implemented in Java. It uses a
vendor-independent Java interface for RELAX NG datatype libraries and
can use any datatype library that implements this interface.
This library provides a handful of chainable HTML filters to
transform user content into markup. A filter takes an HTML
string or Nokogiri::HTML::DocumentFragment, optionally
manipulates it, and then outputs the result.
This library provides a handful of chainable HTML filters to
transform user content into markup. A filter takes an HTML
string or Nokogiri::HTML::DocumentFragment, optionally
manipulates it, and then outputs the result.
scr2txt takes a syscons screenshot generated by "vidcontrol -p" and
converts it in to a text file, optionally rewriting the eight bit
line drawing characters to seven bit equivalents.