Hangul X11 fonts(baekmuk)
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(c) Copyright 1986-1999, Wooderart Inc.
You are hereby granted permission under all Wooderart propriety rights
to use, copy, modify, sublicense, sell, and redistribute the 4 Baekmuk
Hangul bitmap fonts for any purpose and without restriction;
provided, that this notice is left intact on all copies of such fonts
and that Wooderart's trademark is acknowledged as shown below on all
copies of the 4 Baekmuk bitmap fonts.
BAEKMUK BATANG is a registered trademark of Wooderart Inc.
BAEKMUK GULIM is a registered trademark of Wooderart Inc.
BAEKMUK DOTUM is a registered trademark of Wooderart Inc.
BAEKMUK HEADLINE is a registered trademark of Wooderart Inc.
The development of Algol played an important role in establishing
computer science as an academic discipline. The Algol 68 Genie project
preserves Algol 68 out of educational as well as scientific-historical
interest, by making available Algol 68 Genie; a recent, well-featured
implementation written from scratch.
This is a port of Bigloo, a Scheme system which includes a compiler
generating C code and Java classes and an interpreter. Bigloo is the
tool of choice for the construction of small autonomous applications
in Scheme. Bigloo is mostly conformant to the Revised5 Report on the
Algorithmic Language Scheme with many extensions:
Rgc, a lex facility.
Match, a pattern-matching compiler.
Foreign languages interface (connection to C and to Java).
Module language.
Extension package system.
An Lalr facility.
An Object system.
A thread library.
DSSSL support.
Unicode characters and strings.
Process, Pipe and Socket support.
Basho's patched version of Erlang to install Riak 2.0
Gforth is a fast and portable implementation of the ANS Forth
language. It works nicely with the Emacs editor, offers some nice
features such as input completion and history and a powerful locals
facility, and it even has a manual. Gforth employs traditional
implementation techniques: its inner innerpreter is indirect or
direct threaded.
Jelly is an XML based scripting engine. The basic idea is that XML elements can
be bound to a Java Tag which is a Java bean that performs some function.
Jelly is totally extendable via custom actions (in a similar way to JSP custom
tags) as well as cleanly integrating with scripting languages such as Jexl,
Velocity, pnuts, beanshell and via BSF (Bean Scripting Framework) languages
like JavaScript & JPython.
Jelly uses an XMLOutput class which extends SAX ContentHandler to output XML
events. This makes Jelly ideal for XML content generation, SOAP scripting or
dynamic web site generation. A single Jelly tag can produce, consume, filter or
transform XML events. This leads to a powerful XML pipeline engine similar in
some ways to Cocoon.
A GNUstep-aware scheme interpreter. You need libflex installed on your system.
Includes many examples, e.g. the sieve of Erathostenes to compute primes,
a Koch curve plotter, mandelbrot set, graphs of various functions etc.
GScheme is fully tail recursive. The garbage collector bypasses GNUstep's
retain/release mechanism in order to deal with circular data structures.
GScheme is document-based and you can edit more than one file at the same time.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later
lafontaine - graphical logo interpreter
HOPE is simple applicative (functional) language.
It was been used in "Functional Programming" book by Anthony J. Field and
Peter G. Harrison.
This port installs simple lazy interpreter of hope.
Author of this interpreter is Ross Paterson <ross@soi.city.ac.uk>.
This is the source / API documentation for the GNU C++ Library.
It includes documentation of the implementation of the C++ Standard
Template Library as shipped with GNU C++.