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Results 8,3918,400 of 17,773 for comment.zh_CN%3A%E6%8E%A7%E5%88%B6%E5%8F%B0.(0.012 seconds)
textproc/Pod-Abstract-0.20 (Score: 1.9078088E-4)
Abstract document tree for Perl POD documents
POD::Abstract provides a means to load a POD (or POD compatible) document without direct reference to it's syntax, and perform manipulations on the abstract syntax tree. This can be used to support additional features for POD, to format output, to compile into alternative formats, etc. While Pod looks like a simple format, the specification calls for a number of special cases to be handled, and that makes any software that works on Pod as text more complex than it needs to be. In addition to this, Pod does not lend itself to a natural structured model. This makes it difficult to manipulate without damaging the validity of the document. Pod::Abstract solves these problems by loading the document into a structured tree, and providing consistent traversal, searching, manpulation and re-serialisation. Pod related utilities are easy to write using Pod::Abstract.
textproc/extract_url-1.5.8 (Score: 1.9078088E-4)
Perl script that extracts URLs from email in MIME or plain text format
This is a Perl script that extracts URLs from correctly-encoded MIME email messages or plain text. This can be used either as a pre-parser for urlview, or to replace urlview entirely. This is designed primarily for use with the mutt emailer. The idea is that if you want to access a URL in an email, you pipe the email to a URL extractor (like this one) which then lets you select a URL to view in some third program (such as Firefox). An alternative design is to access URLs from within mutt's pager by defining macros and tagging the URLs in the display to indicate which macro to use. A script you can use to do that is tagurl.pl. Main features: - Configurable - Handles URLs that have been broken over several lines in format=flowed delsp=yes email messages - Handles quoted-printable email messages - Sanitizes URLs so that they can't break out of the command shell
textproc/Text-Tmpl-0.33 (Score: 1.9078088E-4)
Templating system perl library
Text::Tmpl is a module for very fast templating. There are dozens of templating modules on CPAN, each only a tiny bit different from the others. This one is no different - what sets it aside is speed. The entire module is implemented as a C library, with only a thin XS/Perl layer to make the calls available from Perl. The same templates, then, can be used from either Perl or C/C++ programs. This was originally designed to completely isolate HTML programmers from module/CGI programmers, or at least completely separate logic from content in dynamic web applications. It is syntactically based on a similar system written by a friend of mine, Neil Mix, which was proprietary and exclusively written in Perl. It shares no code in common with this system, or any other. -Anton <tobez@FreeBSD.org>
textproc/unroff-1.0.2 (Score: 1.9078088E-4)
Programmable troff translator with backend for HTML
Unroff is a Scheme-based, programmable, extensible troff translator with a back-end for the Hypertext Markup Language. Unroff reads and parses UNIX troff documents and translates the embedded markup into a different format. Neither the actual output format nor any knowledge about particular troff macro sets (-man, -ms, etc.) are hard-wired into unroff. Instead, the translation process is controlled by a set of user-supplied procedures written in the Scheme programming language. Translation rules for new output formats and troff macro packages can be added easily by providing a corresponding set of Scheme procedures (a `back-end'). Version 1.0 of unroff includes back-ends for translating documents using the `man' and `ms' macros into the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) version 2.0. Additional requests facilitate use of arbitrary hypertext links in troff documents.
www/mod_authn_otp-1.1.6 (Score: 1.9078088E-4)
Apache module for one-time password authentication
mod_authn_otp - Apache module for one-time password authentication mod_authn_otp is an Apache web server module for two-factor authentication using one-time passwords (OTP) generated via the HOTP/OATH algorithm defined in RFC 4226. This creates a simple way to protect a web site with one-time passwords, using any RFC 4226-compliant hardware or software token device. mod_authn_otp also supports the Mobile-OTP algorithm. mod_authn_otp supports both event and time based one-time passwords. It also supports "lingering" which allows the repeated re-use of a previously used one-time password up to a configurable maximum linger time. This allows one-time passwords to be used directly in HTTP authentication without forcing the user to enter a new one-time password for every page load. mod_authn_otp supports both basic and digest authentication, and will auto-synchronize with the user's token within a configurable maximum offset (auto-synchronization is not supported with digest authentication).
www/pyblosxom-1.5.3 (Score: 1.9078088E-4)
Lightweight weblog system
PyBlosxom is a lightweight weblog system. It originally started out as a Python clone of Blosxom but has since evolved into a beast of its own. PyBlosxom focuses on three things: simplicity, extensibility, and community. simplicity - PyBlosxom uses the file system for all its data storage. Because of this you can use whatever editor you want to use to create, update, and manipulate entries. extensibility - PyBlosxom has plugin framework allowing you to build plugins in Python to augment and change PyBlosxom's default behavior. community - There are hundreds of PyBlosxom users out there all of whom have different needs. PyBlosxom is used on a variety of operating systems in a variety of environments. PyBlosxom is a pretty straight-forward system that allows you to do the things you need to do without building everything from scratch.
www/quickie-1.1 (Score: 1.9078088E-4)
Small footprint, fast Wiki engine written in C++
Quickie is a small footprint, fast C++ Wiki engine; hence the name. The fundamental insight for this engine is that wiki pages are read far more often than they are modified. Thus, the generated HTML can be cached. It follows that the main code path will check that the .html file exists and simply copy it to stdout in the vast majority of cases. The .html file generated from each .wiki file is about the same size as the .wiki file itself, so there will be no particular I/O advantage, but there is a huge CPU advantage, and a significant memory footprint advantage, and since I want to run a wiki on a geriatric 20MB 33MHz 386 machine, this is a good thing. Online demo: http://quickie.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/quickie
www/TracGantt-0.3.2a (Score: 1.9078088E-4)
Plugin to creates Gantt charts for trac
A plugin for the Trac project/source code management system that creates Gantt charts based on ticket reports. It is a work-in-progress. A Gantt chart is a graphical representation of the duration of tasks against the progression of time. Gantt charts are very useful for planning a scheduling a project based on different tasks that will need to be completed and their durations and dependencies on other tasks. The TracGantt plugin uses Trac's ticketing system to generate Gantt charts based on existing Trac Ticket Reports (found under the "View Tickets" tab in Trac). The Gantt charts are pure XHTML and are generated on-the-fly from the ticket reports, using only the tickets provided by the report.
x11-wm/peksystray-0.4.0 (Score: 1.9078088E-4)
System tray dockapp similar to the GNOME notification area applet
Peksystray is a small system tray (also called notification tray) designed for all lightweight window managers that support docking. As more and more applications use a small icon in the system tray to provide some additional functionality and information, it becomes useful for everyone to have common access to them. While "heavy" window managers (Gnome, KDE...) come with a system tray embedded in the rest of the desktop, lighter window managers (Window Maker, Fluxbox ...) do not have this feature. Peksystray is a very simple and light implementation of a system tray for any window manager supporting docking, conforming to the System Tray freedesktop.org standard. Peksystray provides a window where icons will automatically add up depending on the requests from the applications. Both the size of the window and the size of the icons can be selected by the user. If the window is full, it can automatically display another window in order to display more icons. Peksystray has been named after PekWM.
archivers/lzip-1.18 (Score: 1.888634E-4)
Lossless data compressor based on the LZMA algorithm
Lzip is a lossless data compressor with a user interface similar to the one of gzip or bzip2. Lzip decompresses almost as fast as gzip and compresses more than bzip2, which makes it well suited for software distribution and data archiving. Lzip is a clean implementation of the LZMA algorithm. The lzip file format is designed for long-term data archiving. It is clean, provides very safe four factor integrity checking, and is backed by the recovery capabilities of lziprecover.