XDU is a program for displaying a graphical tree of disk space
utilization as reported by the UNIX utility "du". You can
navigate up and down in the tree, sort things, and print out
information.
SweetXml is a thin wrapper around :xmerl. It allows you to converts
a string or xmlElement record as defined in :xmerl to an elixir
value such as map, list, char_list, or any combination of these.
LaCheck is a general purpose consistency checker for LaTeX documents.
It reads a LaTeX document and displays warning messages, if it finds
bad sequences. LaCheck is designed to help find common mistakes in
LaTeX documents, especially those made by beginners.
Tag-stream is a library for parsing HTML//XML to a token stream. It can
parse unstructured and malformed HTML from the web. It also provides an
Enumeratee which can parse streamline html, which means it consumes constant
memory.
Enchant is a binder for libenchant. Libenchant
provides a common API for many spell libraries,
such as aspell/pspell(intended to replace
ispell),hspell(hebrew),ispell,myspell/hunspell
(OpenOffice project, mozilla),uspell (primarily
Yiddish, Hebrew, and Eastern European languages)
MyThes is a simple thesaurus that uses a structured text data file and an index
file with binary search to lookup words and phrases and return information on
part of speech, meanings, and synonyms
Traces SAX events in a program. Works by applying Devel::TraceCalls
to a tracer on the desired classes for all known SAX event types
(according to XML::SAX::EventMethodMaker and XML::SAX::Machines).
Augeas is a configuration editing tool. It parses configuration files in their
native formats and transforms them into a tree. Configuration changes are made
by manipulating this tree and saving it back into native config files.
The Lingua::EN::Sentence module contains the function get_sentences,
which splits text into its constituent sentences, based on a regular
expression and a list of abbreviations (built in and given).
Seamus Venasse <svenasse@polaris.ca>
This is a collection of add-on policies for Perl::Critic. They're under a
"pulp" theme plus other themes according to their purpose (see "POLICY THEMES"
in Perl::Critic).