Marvel is an Elasticsearch management tool. This tool is free for
development use but requires a license to be used in production.
Eqe is a simple clone of the excellent LaTeX equation editor you can find on
MacOS X. There's a zone to type LaTeX input, and it generates an image to
represent it (color, font, and size are customisable). You can drag the
image to other applications (like OpenOffice.org Impress, Mozilla, the
Gimp). It also exports to almost any image format, including PNG, JPEG,
PDF...). It is free software, released under the GPL.
It is composed of two parts: eqedit, which is a command line tool that
generates images from LaTeX input, and eqe which wraps eqedit into a
graphical user interface.
Expat is an XML 1.0 parser written in C. It aims to be fully
conforming. It is currently not a validating XML processor.
Gladtex reads a 'htex' file (html with LaTeX maths embedded in <EQ></EQ>)
and produces html with equations substituted by images.
CTPL is a template engine library. It allows fast and easy parsing
of templates and fine control over template parsing environment.
The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package which reads plain
text mixed with formatting commands and produces formatted output.
html2text is a command line utility, written in C++, that converts
HTML documents (HTML 3.2) into plain text (ISO 8859-1).
Each HTML document is loaded from a location indicated by an URI or
read from standard input, and formatted into a stream of plain text
characters that is written to standard output or into an output-file.
The input-URI may specify a remote site, from that the documents are
loaded with the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). The program is
even able to preserve the original positions of table fields and
accepts also syntactically incorrect input, attempting to interpret it
"reasonably". The rendering is largely customisable through an RC
file.
Lasem aims to be a C/GObject based SVG/MathML renderer and editor. It uses
cairo and pango as it's rendering abstraction layer.
This package includes HTML function and methods to write in an HTML file. Thus,
making HTML reports is easy. Includes a function that allows redirection on the
fly, which appears to be very usefull for teaching purpose, as the student can
keep a copy of the produced output to keep all that he did during the course.
Package comes with a vignette describing how to write HTML reports for
statistical analysis. Finally, a driver for Sweave allows to parse HTML flat
files containing R code and to automatically write the corresponding outputs
(tables and graphs).
String operations the Python way - a package for those of us who miss Python's
string methods while we're working in R.