This module provides functions to treat half-width and full-width
characters and display correct size of text in one line on terminals
and mobile phones. You can know the visual width of any text and
truncate text by the visual width. Now this module support EUC-JP and
UTF-8 and tested only with Japanese.
Text::WikiCreole implements the Wiki Creole markup language, version
1.0, as described at http://www.wikicreole.org. It reads Creole 1.0
markup and returns XHTML.
In addition to the official Creole 1.0 markup elements, it also supports
several extensions, such as plugins, superscript, subscript, underline,
definition lists, indented paragraphs, plugins, etc.
About the project
We plan to build a program that will accept ASCII text as input and generate
International Morse Code as output. The output formats can be:
- . -..- - (text) on the console
Raw audio on /dev/audio (8bit PCM data)
.wav files
.ogg or (proprietary format) compressed audio
International Morse Code
Supported character set includes [A-Za-z] (all downcased as Morse is not case
sensitive), [0-9], ",-.?/" plus a few procedural characters (SK, AR, BT etc).
Search::Elasticsearch is a thin API which makes it easy to communicate with
an ElasticSearch cluster.
dbacl is a digramic Bayesian text classifier. Given some text,
it calculates the posterior probabilities that the input resembles
one of any number of previously learned document collections.
It can be used to sort incoming email into arbitrary categories
such as spam, work, and play, or simply to distinguish an English text
from a French text. It fully supports international character sets,
and uses sophisticated statistical models based on the
Maximum Entropy Principle.
Dblatex started as a DB2LaTeX clone. So, why this project? The purpose
is a bit different on these points:
(1) The project is end-user oriented, that is, it tries to hide as much
as possible the latex compiling stuff by providing a single clean
script to produce directly DVI, PostScript and PDF output.
(2) The actual output rendering is done not only by the XSL stylesheets
transformation, but also by a dedicated LaTeX package. The purpose is
to allow a deep LaTeX customisation without changing the XSL
stylesheets.
(3) Post-processing is done by Python, to make publication faster,
convert the images if needed, and do the whole compilation.
denature is a perl program that attempts to convert an HTML page into XSL-FO
which it then passes off to the FOP (Formatted Objects Formatter) to produce a
PDF document.
denature trys to use any included CSS stylesheets to figure out the properties
used in the document. The CSS processing in denature is not very mature and
only handles a limited amount of the available CSS markup. The CSS support
does not handle the contextual entries in a CSS document, and the CSS::Tiny
module requires that all the :'s in a document have a space after them.
The Dictionary Server Protocol (DICT) is a TCP transaction based query/response
protocol that allows a client to access dictionary definitions from a set of
natural language dictionary databases.
RFC 2229 describes the DICT client/server protocol.
dict is a client which can access DICT servers from the command line.
DictEm is a dict client for GNU Emacs.
It uses a console dict client (http://sf.net/projects/dict) and
implements all functions of the client part of DICT protocol
(RFC-2229, www.dict.org), i.e. looking up words and definitions,
obtaining information about available strategies, provided databases,
information about DICT server etc.
The Dictionary Server Protocol (DICT) is a TCP transaction based query/response
protocol that allows a client to access dictionary definitions from a set of
natural language dictionary databases.
RFC 2229 describes the DICT client/server protocol.
dictfmt converts databases in various formats into working databases and indices
for the DICT server.