Reddit::Client provides methods and simple object wrappers for objects exposed
by the Reddit API. This module handles HTTP communication, basic session
management (e.g. storing an active login session), and communication with
Reddit's external API.
Driver for Intel integrated graphics chipsets. It supports the i810,
i810-DC100, i810e, i815, i830M, 845G, 852GM, 855GM, 865G, 915G, 915GM,
945G, 945GM, 965G, 965Q, 946GZ and 965GM chipsets.
mkcomposecache is used for creating global (system-wide) Compose cache files.
Compose cache files help with application startup times and memory usage,
especially in locales with large Compose tables (e.g. all UTF-8 locales).
The sbxkb program is modernized replacement for classic xxkb. It is not
as configurable, but avoids few very annoying bugs of xxkb (i.e. it just
works). Comes with 224 national flag icons.
posix_ipc is a Python module (written in C) that permits creation and
manipulation of POSIX inter-process semaphores, shared memory and message queues
on platforms supporting the POSIX Realtime Extensions a.k.a. POSIX 1003.1b-1993.
QuickPage sends messages to a paging terminal using the SNPP and IXO
(also known as TAP) protocols. It is normally used with no options
other than a recipient and the message text, in which case the message
is sent to the SNPP server where it is submitted to a page queue to be
sent by a separate daemon process.
Page groups and duty schedules are supported. Status notification
messages indicating the success or failure of a page are sent via
e-mail to submitters of high-priority (level 0) pages.
Libodbc++ aims to be a complete C++ development environment for data source
(typically SQL database) access. It exists in the form of a class library
and a set of tools. Libodbc++ currently provides a subset of the JDBC 2.0
specification functionality.
Libodbc++ runs on top of ODBC, i.e. it needs to be compiled with support for
an ODBC driver manager. It currently supports either iODBC or unixODBC.
This port allows the user to select which driver manager to use via a
build-time variable definition - see the comments in the Makefile for further
details.
Tapi is a tool to automate the testing of your Application Programmer Interfaces
(APIs). Features:
- Test you API without writing any code (only edit a json file)
- Test you APIs in a much more 'natural' way by specifying urls/verbs and what
the output should be
- Verify anything from response status codes, headers, body content etc
- Also allows verification by issuing another API call to a different endpoint
to ensure a prior API call worked
- Execute arbitrary python scripts to populate request paramaters e.g. custom
headers
- Execute arbitrary python scripts to verify response from endpoint is valid
- Tests your APIs using your own APIs
PIDDLE - Plug-In Drawing, Does Little Else
------------------------------------------
PIDDLE is a Python module for creating two-dimensional graphics in a
manner that is both cross-platform and cross-media; that is, it can
support screen graphics (e.g. QuickDraw, Windows, Tk) as well as file
output (PostScript, PDF, GIF, etc.). It makes use of the native 2D
drawing calls of each backend, for maximum efficiency and quality. It
works by defining a base class (piddle.Canvas) with methods for all
supported drawing primitives. A particular drawing context is provided
in the form of a derived class. PIDDLE applications will be able to
automatically select an appropriate backend for the user's environment.
Grace is a WYSIWYG 2D plotting tool for the X Window System and M*tif,
successor of ACE/gr (Xmgr). A few of its features are:
* User defined scaling, tick marks, labels, symbols, line styles,
colors.
* Batch mode for unattended plotting.
* Read and write parameters used during a session.
* Polynomial regression, splines, running averages, DFT/FFT,
cross/auto-correlation.
* Exports high-resolution graphics to (E)PS, PDF, MIF, and SVG
formats
* Supports cross-platform PNM, JPEG and PNG formats
While grace has a convenient point-and-click interface, most parameter
settings and operations are available through a command line interface
(found in Data/Commands).