p4.el -- Perforce-Emacs Integration
Mono.Addins is a framework for creating extensible applications, and for
creating libraries which extend those applications.
Mono.Addins has been designed to be easy to use and useful for a wide
range of applications: from simple applications with small extensibility
needs, to complex applications which need support for large add-in
structures.
p4delta works with a project that is in the Perforce configuration
management system. It lists the local files that have been added,
changed, or deleted. Content differences are summarized, i.e., the
number of lines of code that have been added, changed, and deleted.
It can also add, edit, and remove the appropriate files to/from
Perforce.
Requires ruby.
Include package is a collection of the useful independent include files for
embedded C/Assembler developers.
Include package is released under BSD-style license.
Perforce is a commercial revision control system that can be used
gratis for developing free software. (see the WWW page for details).
p4d2p is a Perl script which performs in-place editing on the output of
a previous 'p4 describe' command, to generate output suitable for patch(1).
p4genpatch is a Perl script which wraps 'p4 describe' to generate such
patches directly from the depot, when provided with a Perforce changelist
number.
Both utilities were written for development on Perl itself by Andreas Konig
and Gurusamy Sarathy, and were modified for use with multiple Perforce
depots by Simon Cozens.
Perforce is a commercial revision control system that can be used
gratis for developing free software. (see the WWW page for details).
Perforce is a commercial revision control system that can be used
gratis for developing free software. (see the WWW page for details).
Perl compiler's C backend
This compiler backend takes Perl source and generates C source
code corresponding to the internal structures that perl uses to
run your program. When the generated C source is compiled and
run, it cuts out the time which perl would have taken to load
and parse your program into its internal semi-compiled form.
That means that compiling with this backend will not help improve
the runtime execution speed of your program but may improve
the start-up time. Depending on the environment in which your
program runs this may be either a help or a hindrance.