Library for developers to extract data from Microsoft Excel (tm)
spreadsheet files
Extract data from Excel spreadsheets (.xls and .xlsx, versions 2.0
onwards) on any platform. Pure Python (2.6, 2.7, 3.2+). Strong support
for Excel dates. Unicode-aware.
Collection of utilities for working with Excel files. Since these utilities may
require either or both of the xlrd and xlwt packages, they are collected
together here, separate from either package.
The re_graph.pl program graphs regular expressions. The guts of the regular
expression engine is a simple state machine. The various states and
operations in the regular expression parser can be displayed using a
surprisingly simple diagram.
A few notes on what you are looking at:
* The nodes Start and Stop denote the beginning and end of the regular
expression.
* The solid squares denote atoms. Lines indicate the next state. When a
line splits, the state machine will take the top line first. If it's
path is blocked it will backup and take the next lower line. This is
repeated until it finds a path to the end or all paths are exhausted.
* Brown boxes indicate a grouping operation, i.e. ().
* Green boxes indicate a zero with test. The state machine will perform
the test inside the box before moving ahead.
Extend the XML Resume library.
DB2LaTeX are a set of XSLT stylesheets which generate high level LaTeX2e from
your docbook document. They do not perform any FO transformation, the only
thing they do is to map DocBook tags into more or less standard LaTeX (a recent
installation of LaTeX 2e is required, with most common packages. However, in
more stable releases, package dependencies will be completely managed with xsl
parameters, making it virtually compatible with basic LaTeX 2e installations).
All the "styling" has to be done by modifying available xsl:params, overriding
and customizing templates, and in the last, by adding your "sty" files.
Ruby implementation of a Creole-to-HTML converter for
Creole, a lightweight markup language.
fast_xs provides C extensions for escaping text.
The original String#fast_xs method is based on the xchar code by Sam Ruby:
o intertwingly.net/stories/2005/09/28/xchar.rb
o intertwingly.net/blog/2005/09/28/XML-Cleansing
_why also packages an older version with Hpricot (patches submitted). The
version here should be compatible with the latest version of Hpricot code.
Ruby on Rails will automatically use String#fast_xs from either Hpricot or this
gem version with the bundled Builder package.
String#fast_xs is an almost exact translation of Sam Ruby's original
implementation (String#to_xs), but it does escape """ (which is an
optional, but all parsers are able ot handle it. XML::Builder as packaged in
Rails 2.0 will be automatically use String#fast_xs instead of String#to_xs
available.
fast_xs provides C extensions for escaping text.
The original String#fast_xs method is based on the xchar code by Sam Ruby:
o intertwingly.net/stories/2005/09/28/xchar.rb
o intertwingly.net/blog/2005/09/28/XML-Cleansing
_why also packages an older version with Hpricot (patches submitted). The
version here should be compatible with the latest version of Hpricot code.
Ruby on Rails will automatically use String#fast_xs from either Hpricot or this
gem version with the bundled Builder package.
String#fast_xs is an almost exact translation of Sam Ruby's original
implementation (String#to_xs), but it does escape """ (which is an
optional, but all parsers are able ot handle it. XML::Builder as packaged in
Rails 2.0 will be automatically use String#fast_xs instead of String#to_xs
available.
Ferret is a high-performance, full-featured text search engine
library written for Ruby. It is a full port of the
Apache Lucene Java project.
There is a pure Ruby version included.
HTMLEntities is a simple library to facilitate encoding and decoding of
named (ý and so on) or numerical ({ or Ī) entities
in HTML and XHTML documents.