Pypersrc is an open-source (GNU GPL) GUI program written in Python
and C++ for browsing source code. You can click a HTML-like hyperlink
to jump to a line in a source code file. Pypersrc can display
different representations of the same source code.
Ruby-calendar includes the following modules.
Calendrical Calculations module:
This module supports the following calendars:
Gregorian (current civil), Calendar week (ISO), Julian (old
civil), Islamic (Moslem), Hebrew (Jewish), Mayan, French
Revolutionary, Old Hindu, Achelis', Coptic, Ethiopian, Jalaali
(incomplete), Kyureki (Japanese traditional with CE) A "Getdate"
module
Getdate module:
This module provides a method which creates a Time object reflecting
the given representation of dates and times. An "Sdn" module
Sdn module:
This is an interface to the Scott E. Lee's SDN package.
This module supports the following calendars:
Gregorian, Julian, French Republican, Jewish
date2 is an alternative date class for Ruby.
This class handles calculations about dates. The day of reform can be
specified freely in this class. The procedures about holiday
(holiday.rb) and date format (parsedate2.rb, strftime.rb and
strptime.rb) are also available.
rbison generates a Ruby parser class from a Bison-like specification
file. rbison uses Bison to do all the hard work (generating state
transition tables, etc), then translates the Bison-generated C code
into Ruby code.
A Ruby version of the Rackspace Cloud Files API
SKK like library for input Japanese, based on SDL.
A filter program, used to generate text to be
included into C code as #define, provides the conversion
of newlines and quotes into standard C-code text
mkimage adds a header to a kernel image with information and checksums for
the u-boot bootloader used in embedded systems.
UpSlug is a tool to flash your NSLU2 from an external computer on
the same subnet (direct Ethernet access is needed; it won't work
if you have routers or NAT devices between you and the NSLU2, though
WiFi? via a wireless router is OK).
bmake is a portable version of NetBSD's make(1) utility,
conveniently packaged using a configure script, for other environments
which may lack NetBSD's libraries, regular expression code, etc.