Vroom lets you create your slides in a single file using a Wiki-like
style, much like Spork and Sporx do. The difference is that your slides
don't compile to HTML or JavaScript or XUL. They get turned into a set
of files that begin with '0', like '03' or '07c' or '05b.pl'.
The slides are named in alphabetic order. That means you can bring them
all into a Vim session with the command: vim 0*. vroom --vroom does
exactly that.
Vroom takes advantage of Vim's syntax highlighting. It also lets you run
slides that contain code.
Since Vim is an editor, you can change your slides during the show.
This is a module that parses WDDX packets. Which are
well supported in Allaire Coldfusion, and pretty
useful.
This is from the WDDX.org web site: "The Web Distributed
Data Exchange, or WDDX, is a free, open XML-based
technology that allows Web applications created with any
platform to easily exchange data with one another over the
Web."
p5-XML-Bare is a minimal XML parser, schema checker and pretty-printer
using C internally.
The ultimate quest of this module is to produce from non-XML text
text, that will will most probably pass throught any XML parser one
could find.
Basic cleaning is just XML tag matching (for every opening tag there
will be closing tag as well, and they will form a tree structure).
When you add some extra parameters, you will receive complete XML
text, including XML head and root element (if none were defined in
text, then some will be added).
This module converts XML hash structures into plain text.
This package consists of Perl modules along with supporting Perl programs
that implement the semantic relatedness measures described by Leacock
Chodorow (1998), Jiang Conrath (1997), Resnik (1995), Lin (1998), Hirst St
Onge (1998), Wu Palmer (1994), the adapted gloss overlap measure by
Banerjee and Pedersen (2002), and a measure based on context vectors
by Patwardhan (2003). The details of the Vector measure are described in the
Master's thesis work done by Patwardhan (2003) at the University of Minnesota
Duluth. The Perl modules are designed as objects with methods that take as
input two word senses. The semantic relatedness of these word senses is
returned by these methods. A quantitative measure of the degree to which two
word senses are related has wide ranging applications in numerous areas, such
as word sense disambiguation, information retrieval, etc. For example, in
order to determine which sense of a given word is being used in a particular
context, the sense having the highest relatedness with its context word
senses is most likely to be the sense being used. Similarly, in information
retrieval, retrieving documents containing highly related concepts are more
likely to have higher precision and recall values.
A command line interface to these modules is also present in the package. The
simple, user-friendly interface returns the relatedness measure of two given
words.
Atom is a syndication, API, and archiving format for weblogs and other data.
XML::Atom implements the feed format as well as a client for the API.
This module creates a layer on top of DOM that allows you to program
in a "push" style rather than "pull". Once the document has been parsed
and you have a DOM object, you can call on the DOMHandler's traverse()
method to apply a set of call-back routines to all the nodes in a tree.
This module subclasses XML::ValidWriter and provides automatic
start and end tag generation, allowing you to emit only the
'important' tags.
This module provides an implementation of Canonical XML Recommendation (Version
1, 15 March 2001). It uses XML::GDOME for its DOM tree and XPath nodes.
It provides a XS wrapper around libxml2's Canonical XML code.