LT XML is an integrated set of XML tools and a developers' tool-kit,
including a C-based API.
The LT XML tool-kit includes stand-alone tools for a wide range of
processing of well-formed XML documents, including searching and
extracting, down-translation (e.g. report generation, formatting),
tokenising and sorting.
Sequences of tool applications can be pipelined together to achieve
complex results.
For special purposes beyond what the pre-constructed tools can
achieve, extending their functionality and/or creating new tools
is easy using the LT XML API. Minimal applications require less
than one-half page of C code to express.
LT XML provides two views of an XML file; one as a flat stream of
markup elements and text; a second as a sequence of tree-structured
XML elements. The two views can be mixed, allowing great flexibility
in the manipulation of XML documents. It also includes a powerful,
yet simple, querying language, which allows the user to quickly and
easily select those parts of an XML document which are of interest.
RXP is a validating XML parser written in C. It is licensed under the
GNU Public Licence.
Command line manipulation of BibTeX files:
* Pretty-printing data bases
* Syntactic checks with error recovery
* Semantic checks
* Sorting and merging of data bases
* Generation of uniform reference keys according to predefined rules or
according to user specification
* Selecting references used in one publication which are found by
analyzing an aux file
* Controlled rewriting of fields utilising regular expressions to specify
the rewriting rules
* Macro (String) expansion to eliminate the need of extra string
definitions
* Collecting statistics about one or more data bases
This is the BSD-licensed version of the well-known diff utility, obtained from
OpenBSD. It lacks some features of GNU diff. It is a proposed project idea
to replace the GNU diff with this one, but it needs to be completed first.
Patches are highly appreciated.
This is the BSD-licensed version of the well-known grep utility, obtained from
OpenBSD. It lacks some features of GNU grep. It is a proposed project idea
to replace the GNU grep with this one, but it needs to be completed first.
Patches are highly appreciated.
Emacs Muse is an authoring and publishing environment for Emacs. It
simplifies the process of writings documents and publishing them to
various output formats.
Muse consists of two main parts: an enhanced text-mode for authoring
documents and navigating within Muse projects, and a set of publishing
styles for generating different kinds of output.
The Free Software Foundation's "diff" utilities, including "diff",
"diff3", "sdiff", and "cmp".
These utilities exist in the FreeBSD base collection, but the GNU
versions have added functionality that is sometimes useful.
Note that this port will install these utilities with a `g' prefix,
for example gdiff, gdiff3, ggcmp, but the texinfo documentation
will refer to these utilities without the `g' prefix.
The OpenGrm NGram library is used for making and modifying n-gram language
models encoded as weighted finite-state transducers (FSTs). It makes use of
functionality in the OpenFst library to create, access and manipulate n-gram
models. Operations for counting, smoothing, pruning, applying, and
evaluating models as well as support for distributed computation are among
those provided. It was developed by contributors from OHSU and Google Research.
A batch converter that transforms UNIX-style manpages from the
DocBook SGML DTD into nroff/troff -man macros.
`chpp' is a preprocessor. Therefore, its main purpose is to modify
input text by including other input files and by macro expansion.
What distinguishes `chpp' from other textprocessors are mainly two
features:
* `chpp' is non-intrusive. This means that you can take your
favorite text and it is very unlikely that it will be changed when
piped through `chpp'. Due to this feature it is pretty easy to
start using `chpp' since you can just start writing your text and
need not concern yourself with `chpp' sitting in the background
changing it for no obvious reason.
* `chpp' is not just a package for performing simple macro expansion,
but can indeed be considered a full-fledged programming language.
Most importantly, it provides support for complex data structures,
namely lists and hashes (associative arrays), which can be nested
arbitrarily.