The flat assembler is a fast and efficient self-assembling 80x86
assembler for DOS, Windows and Linux operating systems. Currently it
supports all 8086-80486/Pentium instructions with MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3
and 3DNow! extensions and x86-64 (both AMD64 and EM64T) instructions,
can produce output in binary, MZ, PE, COFF or ELF format. It includes
the powerful but easy to use macroinstruction support and does multiple
passes to optimize the instruction codes for size. The flat assembler
is self-compilable and the full source code is included.
f2c and its run-time library, libf2c.a, are a port of the
Fortran-to-C converter available from ftp.netlib.org. This
software was originally developed by AT&T, Lucent Technologies,
and Bellcore.
A scripting language designed to be embedded in other applications, that aims
to provide a powerful object oriented syntax with low memory and cpu overhead.
FICL is an extremely lightweight, fast, portable implementation of FORTH
which can be bound to C functions or even embedded within C/assembler
programs. This is a port for the current version of FICL. Older versions
can typically be found in /usr/src/sys/boot/ficl on FreeBSD with the
bindings needed by the OS loader.
FPC Base
This collection constitutes the base packages and utilities for Free
Pascal.
This is the documentation, in Adobe Acrobat(tm) format, for Free
Pascal, a 32 bit Turbo Pascal-compatible Pascal compiler for DOS,
Linux, Win32, OS/2, (based on an older version) the AmigaOS,
FreeBSD, and BeOS.
Originally named FPK-Pascal, the Free Pascal compiler is a 32 bit and 64 bit
Turbo Pascal compatible Pascal compiler for DOS, Linux, Win32, OS/2,
(based on an older version) the AmigaOS, FreeBSD/ELF, BeOS, Darwin(OSX)
and others.
Perl is a language that combines some of the features of C, sed, awk and
shell. See the manual page for more hype. There are also many books
published by O'Reilly & Assoc. See pod/perlbook.pod for more
information.
PhantomJS is a minimalistic, headless, WebKit-based, JavaScript-driven
tool.
It has native support for different web technologies: DOM handling,
CSS selector, JSON, Canvas, SVG, and of course JavaScript.
GCC, the GNU Compiler Collection, supports a number of languages. This
port installs the C, C++, Fortran and Java front ends as gcc46, g++46,
gfortran46, and gcj46, respectively.
Gerald Pfeifer <gerald@FreeBSD.org>