PHP, which stands for "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor" is a widely-used Open
Source general-purpose scripting language that is especially suited for
Web development and can be embedded into HTML. Its syntax draws upon C,
Java, and Perl, and is easy to learn. The main goal of the language is to
allow web developers to write dynamically generated webpages quickly, but
you can do much more with PHP.
The GCL system contains C and Lisp source files to build a Common
Lisp sytem. The original KCL system was written by Taiichi Yuasa
and Masami Hagiya in 1984. The AKCL system work was begun in 1987
by William Schelter and continued through 1994. In 1994 AKCL was
released as GCL (GNU Common Lisp) under the GNU public library
license.
NOTE: GCL supports Tk bindings with Tcl 8 and Tk 8.
The VisualWorks suite is the premier Smalltalk toolset for building instantly
portable server, web-based, and client/server applications. With connectivity
to all major relational databases, object databases, and internet standard
protocols, VisualWorks offers a complete solution for Windows(R)
(95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP), PowerMac, Intel Linux, AIX, SGI Irix, Compaq UNIX,
HP-UX, and Solaris. With the most, well-respected, high-performance virtual
machine architecture, VisualWorks is the preferred choice for internet
development.
nwcc is a small C compiler for Unix systems under the BSDL
The primary goals of nwcc currently are portability and correctness.
Various C99 and GNU C features are also supported.
It works with FreeBSD/OpenBSD/Solaris/Linux on 80x86, FreeBSD/Linux on AMD64,
Solaris on SPARC, AIX on PowerPC, and IRIX on MIPS hardware.
Cross-compilation is also supported.
The x86 and AMD64 backends support two assemblers; nasm/yasm and gas.
This can be useful for side-by-side assembler syntax comparison
Beginners always want to write this:
print "The sum of three and four is: 3+4";
And they want the 3+4 part to be evaluated, so that it prints this:
The sum of three and four is: 7
Of course, it's a double-quoted string, so it's not evaluated. The only
things that are evaluated in double-quoted strings are variable
references.
There are solutions to this, but most of them are ugly. This module is
less ugly.
This module provides the capability to parse a string at runtime as
Perl source code, so that the resulting compiled code can be later
executed. This is part of the job of the string form of the eval
operator, but in this module it is separated out from the other jobs
of eval. Parsing of Perl code is generally influenced by its lexical
context, and this module provides some explicit control over this
process, by reifying lexical environments as Perl objects.
This module aims to provide a nicer syntax and method to catch errors in
Perl, similar to what is found in other languages (such as Java, Python
or C++). The standard method of using eval {}; if ($@) {} is often prone
to subtle bugs, primarily that its far too easy to stomp on the error in
error handlers. And also eval/if isn't the nicest idiom.
phc is a framework for static analysis of PHP scripts, PHP source to source
transformations, and ultimately compiling PHP scripts down to native machine
code.
The current release does not yet compile PHP and is therefore not yet useful
for end-users. It is however useful for writing tools that operate on PHP
scripts, such as refactoring tools, aspect weavers, or obfuscators. See the
website to get an idea of what is planned for coming releases of phc.
PHP, which stands for "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor" is a widely-used Open
Source general-purpose scripting language that is especially suited for
Web development and can be embedded into HTML. Its syntax draws upon C,
Java, and Perl, and is easy to learn. The main goal of the language is to
allow web developers to write dynamically generated webpages quickly, but
you can do much more with PHP.
Biabam Is A Bash Attachment Mailer
To use BIABAM use the following syntax:
echo [body] | biabam attachment1,[attachment2,attachmentN] [-s subject] \
recipient1[,recipient2,recipientN]
Example:
echo "Here are the tarballs you requested" | biabam \
foobar-0.7.8.tar.gz,coolapp-0.4.3.tar.gz,otherapp-4.3.0.tar.gz \
-s "Answer to your request" john@doe.org,irene@prima.org,cira@alpispa.es
If no text is piped into biabam, it will wait for text on standard input
(finish with CTRL-D)