The notes plugin provides a quick way to paste text, to write down a
list of things, to leave a note to a friend, or whatever is common to do
with Post-It's.
A slider for the Xfce panel that can be used to adjust and/or monitor any
numeric variable. You set whatever "variable" this is by setting an adjust
command which will run when the slider is clicked or scrolled. An option is
provided to pass the value of the slider (the fraction times an adjustable
normalization factor) to the command. You get the value of the "variable" by
setting a sychronize command. The command should return a numeric value and this
value will be regarded as a fraction of a second adjustable normalization
factor.
Port of notification daemon for Xfce Desktop Environment.
This plugin displays the current keyboard layout, and refreshes when
layout changes. Also the layout can be switched by simply clicking on
the plugin. The new version can display the layout as text label and
also as an image of the corresponding country's flag. If the flag
image is unavailable then the plugin falls back to displaying text
label for that layout.
This plugin is used along with the XKB extension. For now the keyboard
layouts cannot be configured from the plugin itself, they should be
set in the Xorg file or some other way (e.g. setxkbmap).
A simple, visually-appealing notification daemon for Xfce that implements the
Freedesktop.org Desktop Notifications Specification.
Features:
* Themable using the GTK+ theming mechanism
* Visually appealing: rounded corners, shaped windows
* Supports transparency and fade effects
Functions for Bitwise operations on integer vectors
Various R programming tools
Doxygen HTML documentation for The ADAPTIVE Communication Environment (ACE)
and The ACE ORB (TAO).
About 171 Megabytes in 21500+ files.
This script performs basic checks for the presence of bashisms in
/bin/sh scripts and the lack of bashisms in /bin/bash ones.
CMUNGE is a simple tool for encrypting and compacting C source code, while
leaving it syntactically and semantically unchanged. It does this by:
* Recursively in-lining `user-defined' #include files.
* Renaming C identifiers, except those in the C Standard Library, with names
like l1 (i.e. letter-l one), l2, l3, etc.
* Removing comments and blank lines, converting multiple consecutive whitespace
characters (including `\n') into single blanks, removing all unnecessary
whitespace between tokens.
* Outputting the transformed code in lines of least N characters long, where N
is a user-specified minimum line length.
It accepts ANSI and K & R C as its input language.