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Results 5,8315,840 of 5,886 for /net-im/.(0.006 seconds)
x11-wm/tinywm-1.3 (Score: 0.004380208)
Ridiculously tiny window manager
TinyWM is a ridiculously tiny window manager implemented in nearly as few lines of C as possible, without being obfuscated or entirely useless. It allows you to move, resize, focus (sloppy), and raise windows.
x11/gtk-theme-switch-2.0.0.r2 (Score: 0.004380208)
Command line tool for switching GTK+ 2.0 themes
A command line tool for switching GTK+ 2.0 themes.
audio/Audio-CD-0.04 (Score: 0.0037675542)
Perl interface to libcdaudio (cd + cddb)
Perl interface to libcdaudio (cd + cddb): http://cdcd.undergrid.net/ This module was created for adding CDDB support to <Xmms::shell> and cd tray <eject>. I added methods for a good chunk of other <libcdaudio> functions while I was at it, but the docs and glue is not complete. I do not have interest in completing the interface and docs, because xmms/Xmms::shell provides everything I need (at the moment) for audio. If you have an interesting reason for needing the missing pieces, I'll probably be interested in adding them.
audio/taglib-sharp-2.0.3.7 (Score: 0.0037675542)
Tagging library for the Mono framework
TagLib# is a FREE and Open Source library for the .NET 2.0 and Mono frameworks which will let you tag your software with as much or as little detail as you like without slowing you down. It supports a large variety of movie and music formats which abstract away the work, handling all the different cases, so all you have to do is access file.Tag.Title, file.Tag.Lyrics, or my personal favorite file.Tag.Pictures. But don't think all this abstraction is gonna keep you from tagging's greatest gems. You can still get to a specific tag type's features with just a few lines of code.
devel/gnulib-20140202 (Score: 0.0037675542)
GNU portability library
Gnulib, the GNU portability library, offers a macro system and C declarations and definitions for commonly-used API elements and abstracted system behaviors. It can be used to improve portability and other functionality in your programs. Gnulib takes a different approach than libiberty. Gnulib components are intended to be shared at the source level, rather than being a library that gets built, installed, and linked against. Thus, there is no distribution tarball; the idea is to copy files from Gnulib into your own source tree. However, there are bimonthly stable snapshots of the Gnulib codebase published at http://erislabs.net/ianb/projects/gnulib/
devel/poco-1.7.2 (Score: 0.0037675542)
C++ libraries with a network/internet focus
The C++ Portable Components currently consist of four libraries. The Foundation library contains a platform abstraction layer (including classes for multithreading, file system access, logging, etc.), as well as a large number of useful utility classes, such various stream buffer and stream classes, URI handling, and many more. The Net library contains network classes (sockets, HTTP, etc.) The XML library contains an XML parser with SAX2 and DOM interfaces, as well as an XMLWriter. The Util library contains classes for working with configuration files and command line arguments, as well as various utility classes.
devel/pcre2-10.21 (Score: 0.0037675542)
Perl Compatible Regular Expressions library, version 2
PCRE2 is the name used for a revised API for the PCRE library, which is a set of functions, written in C, that implement regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and semantics as Perl, with just a few differences. Some features that appeared in Python and the original PCRE before they appeared in Perl are also available using the Python syntax. There is also some support for one or two .NET and Oniguruma syntax items, and there are options for requesting some minor changes that give better ECMAScript (aka JavaScript) compatibility.
editors/emacs-24.5 (Score: 0.0037675542)
GNU editing macros
GNU Emacs is a self-documenting, customizable, extensible real-time display editor. Users new to Emacs will be able to use basic features fairly rapidly by studying the tutorial and using the self-documentation features. Emacs also has an extensive interactive manual browser. It is easily extensible since its editing commands are written in Lisp. GNU Emacs's many special packages handle mail reading (RMail) and sending (Mail), outline editing (Outline), compiling (Compile), running subshells within Emacs windows (Shell), running a Lisp read-eval-print loop (Lisp-Interaction-Mode), automated psychotherapy (Doctor :-) and many more. Canna support is contributed by Yuji TAKANO (takachan@running-dog.net).
games/tads-2.5.9 (Score: 0.0037675542)
TADS compiler/interpreter for interactive fiction
TADS is a set of programming tools specially designed for writing adventure games. TADS consists of: * A programming language, which resembles C and Java. * A compiler, which reads a set of source files written in the TADS programming language and produces a portable binary game file. * A library, which provides a set of generic adventure game definitions. * An interactive debugger, which lets you examine your program's execution in order to find and fix programming errors. * An interpreter, which a player uses to run your game. See http://www.plover.net/~textfire/raiffaq/ifaq/ for more information about obtaining game files.
graphics/fv-1.03 (Score: 0.0037675542)
Viewer of hdr/pfm images
fv is an HDRI viewer. Currently supported formats are the followings: * Greg Ward's HDR (also known as Radiance/PIC/RGBE). See http://www.graphics.cornell.edu/~bjw/rgbe.html for details. * Paul Debevec's PFM (Portable Float Map). See http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/pfm.html for details. fv reads data from the standard input or files specified as arguments. In the latter case, each file may be compressed one with gzip or bzip2. The file may also change after fv is invoked, except its header part. fv checks whether the file changes and updates the display if necessary. This feature is useful for checking intermediate outputs from renderers.