phpMyFAQ is a multilingual, completely database-driven FAQ-system. It
supports various databases to store all data, PHP 4.1.0 (or higher) is
needed in order to access this data. phpMyFAQ also offers a Content
Management-System with a WYSIWYG editor and an Image Manager, flexible
multi-user support with LDAP support, a news-system, user-tracking, language
modules, enhanced automatic content negotiation, templates, extensive
XML-support, PDF-support, a backup-system and an easy to use installation
script.
This is an extension to ease the use of the del.icio.us website: a
social bookmarking, social software web service for storing and sharing
web bookmarks.
A non-hierarchical keyword categorization system is used on del.icio.us
where users can tag each of their bookmarks with a number of freely
chosen keywords. A combined view of everyone's bookmarks with a given
tag is available.
WadcomBlog is a simple open-source static blog engine written in Python
by Vlad Skvortsov and distributed under BSD license.
It doesn't use any backend database but instead reads a set of plain i
text files (in RFC2822 format) and creates a tree of interlinked HTML pages
that may be then published. To update a blog one just needs to add a file
to the source tree and run the command-line WadcomBlog script
to regenerate the output.
Perl bindings for the C library "libunique" that provides a mechanism for
writing single instance applications. If you launch a single instance
application twice, the second instance will either just quit or will send a
message to the running instance.
Unique makes it easy to write this kind of applications, by providing a base
class, taking care of all the IPC machinery needed to send messages to a running
instance, and also handling the startup notification side.
Qt is a C++ toolkit for application development. It lets application
developers target all major operating systems with a single application
source code.
Qt provides a platform-independent API to all central platform functionality:
GUI, database access, networking, file handling, etc. The Qt library
encapsulates the different APIs of different operating systems, providing
the application programmer with a single, common API for all operating systems.
The native C APIs are encapsulated in a set of well-designed, fully
object-oriented C++ classes.
from the source:
This is a major rewrite of the xmag program distributed by MIT with
X11R5. It features three modes of magnification. The magnifier
can be made to follow the mouse pointer around, displaying a
magnified image either in a window that is "sticky" to the pointer,
or in a stationary window. The magnifier can also be `anchored'
to continually magnify a fixed area of the screen.
The sticky window does not work.
Trevor Johnson
xstroke is a full-screen gesture recognition program written for the X
Window System. It captures gestures that are performed with a pointer
device, (such as a mouse, a stylus, or a pen/tablet), recognizes the
gestures and performs actions based on the gestures.
xstroke is most commonly configured to "type" characters in response to
gestures, but it can also emulate mouse button "clicks", launch programs,
and other fun things.
Tags groups of audio files using CDDB.
TagLookup is a utility for tagging MP3s and other taggable audio file formats.
It inspects a set of audio files and uses their lengths to look up an
appropriate disc from a CDDB-compatible service. TagLookup can be used in two
modes:
* ID -- Given a CDDB ID and a number of files, look up the details of the CDDB
disc from a CDDB service. Tag files using the CDDB disc. Match each file with
each CDDB track using the closest track length.
* Sequence -- Given a number of files, generate a CDDB ID and query a CDDB
service. CDDB IDs are generated based on the sequence of tracks. Choose the
closest matching CDDB disc to tag the files.
As well as this, taglookup can:
* Rename -- Rename files based on their tags.
DBIx::Admin::CreateTable is a pure Perl module.
Database vendors supported: MySQL, Oracle, Postgres, SQLite.
Assumptions:
- Every table has a primary key
- The primary key is a unique, non-null, integer
- The primary key is a single column
- The primary key column is called 'id'
- If a primary key has a corresponding auto-created index, the index is called
't_pkey': This is true for Postgres, where declaring a column as a primary
key automatically results in the creation of an associated index for that
column. The index is named after the table, not after the column.
- If a table 't' (with primary key 'id') has an associated sequence, the
sequence is called 't_id_seq': This is true for both Oracle and Postgres,
which use sequences to populate primary key columns. The sequences are named
after both the table and the column.
Kyua is a testing framework for infrastructure software, originally
designed to equip BSD-based operating systems with a test suite. This
means that Kyua is lightweight and simple, and that Kyua integrates well
with various build systems and continuous integration frameworks.
Kyua features an expressive test suite definition language, a safe
runtime engine for test suites and a powerful report generation engine.
Kyua is for both developers and users, from the developer applying a
simple fix to a library to the system administrator deploying a new
release on a production machine.
Kyua is able to execute test programs written with a plethora of testing
libraries and languages. The library of choice is ATF, for which Kyua
was originally designed, but simple, framework-less test programs and
TAP-compliant test programs can also be executed through Kyua.