Parses almost all ISO 8601:2000(E) date and time formats. ISO 8601:2000(E)
time-intervals will be supported in a later release.
XFIG - Facility for Interactive Generation of figures under X11
Xfig is a menu-driven tool that allows the user to draw and manipulate objects
interactively in an X window. The resulting pictures can be saved, printed
on postscript printers or converted to a variety of other formats (e.g. to
allow inclusion in LaTeX documents).
To enjoy the beautiful colors, specify "*customization: -color" in your
.Xdefaults or .Xresources file.
Xfig is internationlized from version 3.2. To use i18n feature, type
$ xfig -international [-inputStyle OverTheSpot]
Xfig acts as non-i18n version without -international option. If you put
"Fig.international: true" into your resource file, -international option may
omitted.
ja_JP.EUC and ko_KR.EUC is tested for input, display, and printing.
For zh_CN.EUC, only display is confirmed.
Read /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xfig/xfig.html for more information.
(excerpt from HylaFAX FAQ, http://www.hylafax.org/content/About_HylaFAX)
HylaFAX is a facsimile system for UNIX systems. It supports:
o sending facsimile
o receiving facsimile
o polled retrieval of facsimile
o transparent shared data use of the modem
o sending messages to pagers
Facsimile can be any size (e.g. A4, B4), either 98 or 196 lpi, and
transmitted/received as either 1D-encoded or 2D-encoded facsimile data
(2D-encoded data is frequently more compact and hence takes a shorter
time to communicate). Any modem that supports one of the standard
interfaces for facsimile operation can be used; i.e. any Class 1, Class
2, or Class 2.0 modem.
A collection of command line filters, including B1FF and the Swedish Chef.
No personal, racial, societal slurs are intended. For amusement only.
All the filters read input from stdin, change it, and write the filtered
text to stdout.
Florist was produced by students and faculty of the Florida State University
Department of Computer Science, under contract to the US Department of
Defense, Defense Information Systems Agency, as a product of the POSIX Ada
Real-Time (PART) Project. When the contract was completed, in 1999, FSU turned
maintenance of Florist over to Ada Core Technologies, Inc.). The latest and
most complete free version is available from Adacore.
FLORIST is an implementation of the IEEE Standards 1003.5: 1992,
IEEE STD 1003.5b: 1996, and parts of IEEE STD 1003.5c: 1998, also known as
the POSIX Ada Bindings.
Hex-a-hop is a puzzle game based on hexagonal tiles. There is no time
limit and no real-time elements.
The objective is simply to destroy all the green hexagonal tiles on each
of the 100 levels. As you progress through the game, more types of tiles
are introduced which make things more difficult and interesting
(hopefully).
Usage: cdif [-Bvns] [-A #] [-C #] [-D #] [-I #] [-e #] [-[bwcu]] file1 file2
cdif [-rcs] [-q] [-rrev1 [-rrev2]] [$myname options] file
cdif [$myname options] [diff-output-file]
Options:
-B byte compare
-v use video standout (default for tty)
-n use nroff style overstrike (default for non-tty)
-b ignore trailing blank
-w ignore whitespace
-c[#] context diff
-u[#] unified diff (if diff has -u option)
-e # expression of `word' (default is '\w+')
-s show statistical information at the end
-A, -C, -D (Append, Change, Delete) takes one of
vso: video standout
vul: video underline
vbd: video bold
bd: nroff style overstrike
ul: nroff style underline
or any sequence or sequences separated by comma
-I specify string to be shown on insertion point
Following strings have special meanings.
vbar: print vertical bar at the point
caret: print caret under the point
-diff=command
specify any diff command
What Unidecode provides is a function, 'unidecode(...)' that
takes Unicode data and tries to represent it in ASCII characters
(i.e., the universally displayable characters between 0x00 and 0x7F).
The representation is almost always an attempt at *transliteration*
-- i.e., conveying, in Roman letters, the pronunciation expressed by
the text in some other writing system. (See the example above)
GB2PS converts Chinese GB (simple) encoded text to PostScript.
It automatically supports the HZ encoding. It even allows you to mix
GB and HZ code together.
Examples:
input: gb2ps -h
output: the usage of GB2PS
input: gb2ps cm9203d.gb cm
output: PS programs cm
input: gb2ps -b 3 -e 5 cm9208a.hz cm
output: PS program cm from page 3 to page 5.
then you can print out the Chinese document by sending the PS output
to your PS printer.