Dlume is nice, gtk2-based addressbook. You can easily add, edit
and delete records to/from database (but Dlume doesn't rely on an outside
database - It stores your contacts in XML format). The Quick-search
feature allows you find required entry in comfortable way. Export to
CSV and HTML formats is also available. Interface design was borrowed
and improved from Paddress (http://paddress.sourceforge.net).
Oniguruma is a BSDL Regular Expression library written for ruby-m17n,
which implements all of Perl extensions, many of .NET extensions plus
more.
It provides multiple APIs for ease of use; GNU regex compatible API,
POSIX regex compatible API and its own.
This library is multilingualized by design and can have one encoding
for each regex object. Currently supported character encodings are
ASCII, UTF-8, EUC-JP and Shift_JIS.
4.x supports Ruby1.9.
Oniguruma is a BSDL Regular Expression library written for ruby-m17n,
which implements all of Perl extensions, many of .NET extensions plus
more.
It provides multiple APIs for ease of use; GNU regex compatible API,
POSIX regex compatible API and its own.
This library is multilingualized by design and can have one encoding
for each regex object. Currently supported character encodings are
ASCII, UTF-8, EUC-JP and Shift_JIS.
4.x supports Ruby1.9.
The ezpyinline is a pure python module which requires almost no setup to
allows you put C source code directly "inline" in a Python script or module,
then the C code is automatically compiled and then loaded for immediate access
from Python.
ezpyinline is forked from PyInline (http://pyinline.sourceforge.net/)
but aim to be as easy as possible and do all the magics for you.
Simian (Similarity Analyser) identifies duplication in Java, C#,
C, C++, COBOL, Ruby, JSP, ASP, HTML, XML, Visual Basic Groovy source
code and even plain text files. In fact, simian can be used on any
human readable files such as ini files, deployment descriptors, you
name it.
Note: The port uses the java version by default. You can select the .NET
version via WITH_MONO=yes, and disable installation of the
java parts with WITHOUT_JAVA=yes.
Locale::Maketext is a base class providing a framework for software
localization and inheritance-based lexicons, as described in my
article in The Perl Journal #13 (which is on the way to your mailbox
and/or newsstand).
Copyright 1999, Sean M. Burke <sburke@netadventure.net>, all rights
reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it
and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Totd is a small DNS proxy nameserver that supports IPv6 only hosts/networks
that communicate with the IPv4 world using some translation mechanism.
Examples of such translation mechanisms currently in use are:
* IPv6/IPv4 Network Address and Packet Translation (NAT-PT)
implemented e.g. by Cisco.
* Application level translators as the faithd implemented by
the KAME project (http://www.kame.net). See faithd(8) on
*BSD/Kame.
fairy-Max is a version of micro-Max that reads the piece description
from a file fmax.ini, so that arbitrary fairy pieces can be implemen-
ted. This version supports up to 15 piece types, and board sizes upto
12x8 board. A Linux port exists in the format of a debian package.
You can use it e.g. with games/xboard/:
e.g.: xboard -boardSize Middling -variant courier -fcp fairymax
GIT: http://hgm.nubati.net/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi/fairymax.git
The GLE Tubing and Extrusion Library is a graphics application
programming interface (API). The library consists of a number of "C"
language subroutines for drawing tubing and extrusions. The library is
distributed in source code form, in a package that includes
documentation, a VRML proposal, Makefiles, and full source code and
header files. It uses the OpenGL (TM) programming API to perform the
actual drawing of the tubing and extrusions.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/gle/
This is a Perl implementation of the reCAPTCHA API.
From the recaptcha.net web site:
reCAPTCHA improves the process of digitizing books by sending words that
cannot be read by computers to the Web in the form of CAPTCHAs for
humans to decipher. More specifically, each word that cannot be read
correctly by OCR is placed on an image and used as a CAPTCHA. This is
possible because most OCR programs alert you when a word cannot be read
correctly.