usrinfo is simple program that gathers information about a specified user
and displays the information using either "<br>" or "\n" line breaks. Useful
if you want to display a users information from the web.
El-Kabong is a high-speed, forgiving, sax-style HTML parser.
Its aim is to provide consumers with a very fast, clean,
lightweight library which parses HTML quickly, while forgiving
syntactically incorrect tags.
This package is a collection of SGML/XML tools called OpenSP.
It is a fork from James Clark's SP suite. These tools are used
to parse, validate, and normalize SGML and XML files.
This module allows you to validate XML documents against a W3C XML
Schema. This module does not implement the full W3C XML Schema
recommendation, but a useful subset. See the SCHEMA SUPPORT section
in the module documention.
CRP is a package that automates the process of being the program chair of a
conference. It's designed to be easy to install, easy to modify and easy
to use by program chairs, PC members, authors and reviewers.
Parses a mobile user agent string into it's basic constituent parts, the most
important being vendor and model. One reason for doing this would be to use
this information to lookup vendor-model specific device characteristics in a
database.
Displays a country flag depicting the location of the current
website's server and provides a multitude of tools such as site
safety checks, whois, translation, similar sites, validation,
URL shortening, and more...
This program will beep, using a
duration and pitch specified on the command line or the program's defaults.
This is a Ruby module for accessing MySQL databases, which has the
same functions as C API.
This is the part of X11R3's xcalc(1) utility that features a historic
Slide Rule. This is not taken to be too serious, it's merely a little
fun project for those people who have learned their basics of mathemat-
ics and logarithms by using such a nice ``pocket calculator''.
The original xcalc is from John Bradley, and Mark Rosenstein. A number
of bugs and inaccuracies fixed by Joerg Wunsch.