While ANSI color escape codes are fairly simple, it can be hard to
remember the codes for all of the attributes and the code resulting
from hard-coding them into your script is definitely difficult to
read. This module is designed to fix those problems, as well as
provide a convenient interface to do a few things for you
automatically (like resetting attributes after the text you print out
so that you don't accidentally leave attributes set).
Despite its name, this module can also handle non-color ANSI text
attributes (bold, underline, reverse video, and blink). It uses either
of two interfaces, one of which uses "constants" for each different
attribute and the other of which uses two subs which take strings of
attributes as arguments.
SLIME is a new Emacs mode for Common Lisp development. Inspired by
existing systems such Emacs Lisp and ILISP, we are working to create a
fresh new environment for hacking Common Lisp in.
Features:
* slime-mode: An Emacs minor-mode to enhance lisp-mode with:
o Code evaluation, compilation, and macroexpansion.
o Online documentation (describe, apropos, hyperspec).
o Definition finding (aka Meta-Point aka M-.).
o Symbol and package name completion.
o Automatic macro indentation based on &body.
o Cross-reference interface (WHO-CALLS, etc).
o ... and more.
* SLDB: Common Lisp debugger with an Emacs-based user interface.
* REPL: The Read-Eval-Print Loop ("top-level") is written in Emacs
Lisp for tighter integration with Emacs. The REPL also has
builtin "shortcut" commands similar those of the McCLIM
Listener.
* Compilation notes: SLIME is able to take compiler messages and
annotate them directly into source buffers.
* Inspector: Interactive object-inspector in an Emacs buffer.
Dia is a GTK+ based diagram creation program released under the GPL license.
Dia is designed to be much like the commercial Windows program 'Visio'. It can
be used to draw many different kinds of diagrams. It currently has special
objects to help draw entity relationship diagrams, UML diagrams, flowcharts,
network diagrams, and simple circuits. It is also possible to add support for
new shapes by writing simple XML files, using a subset of SVG to draw the
shape.
It can load and save diagrams to a custom XML format (gzipped by default, to
save space), can export diagrams to EPS or SVG formats and can print diagrams
(including ones that span multiple pages).
pngcheck verifies the integrity of PNG, JNG and MNG files
(by checking the internal 32-bit CRCs [checksums] and decompressing
the image data); it can optionally dump almost all of the chunk-level
information in the image in human-readable form.
For example, it can be used to print the basic statistics about an image
(dimensions, bit depth, etc.); to list the color and transparency info
in its palette (assuming it has one); or to extract the embedded text
annotations. This is a command-line program with batch capabilities.
pngsplit - break a PNG, MNG or JNG image into constituent chunks
(numbered for easy reassembly)
png-fix-IDAT-windowsize - fix minor zlib-header breakage caused by
older libpng
Alpine is a screen-oriented message-handling tool for news, and POP, IMAP,
and local e-mail. In its default configuration it offers a limited set of
functions geared toward the novice user, but it also has a large list of
optional "power-user" and personal-preference features.
Alpine's basic feature set includes:
* View, Save, Export, Delete, Print, Reply and Forward messages.
Compose messages in a simple editor with word-wrap and a
spelling checker. Messages may be postponed for later completion.
* Selection and management of message folders.
* Address book to keep a list of long or frequently-used
addresses. Personal distribution lists may be defined.
Addresses may be taken into the address book from incoming mail
without retyping them.
* New mail checking/notification occurs automatically (configurable).
* On-line, context-sensitive help screens.
Alpine supports MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions), an Internet
Standard for representing multipart and multimedia data in email.
This is a port of xless (version 1.7), a handy text file viewer for X.
Useful as a viewer tool for other apps (e.g., xfm, the X file manager),
or as a standalone viewer. Presents a scrollable text window (both
vertical and horizontal scrolling), with a number of clickable buttons.
From the README file:
FEATURES:
Display either the file(s) specified on the command line or input from
standard input, supplied by a pipe. File/pipe may be optionally
monitored so that the display is continuously updated as new text is
added.
Display new files in the current window or by creating a new window.
Reload or print the displayed file.
Search the displayed file using either exact, case-insensitive, or
regular expression patterns.
Edit the displayed file with your favorite editor (as specified in
the VISUAL or EDITOR environment variable)
Netatalk is an OpenSource software package, that can be used to turn an
inexpensive *NIX machine into an extremely high-performance and reliable
file server for Macintosh computers.
Using Netatalk's AFP 3.2 compliant file-server leads to significantly higher
transmission speeds compared with Macs accessing a server via SaMBa/NFS
while providing clients with the best possible user experience (full support
for Macintosh metadata, flawlessly supporting mixed environments of classic
MacOS and MacOS X clients)
Due to Netatalk speaking AppleTalk, the print-server task can provide
printing clients with full AppleTalk support as well as the server itself
with printing capabilities for AppleTalk-only printers. Starting with
version 2.0, Netatalk seamlessly interacts with CUPS on the server.
After all, Netatalk can be used to act as an AppleTalk router, providing
both segmentation and zone names in Macintosh networks.
XORSearch is a program to search for a given string in an XOR or
ROL encoded binary file. An XOR encoded binary file is a file where
some (or all) bytes have been XORed with a constant value (the key).
A ROL (or ROR) encoded file has it bytes rotated by a certain number
of bits (the key). XOR and ROL/ROR encoding is used by malware
programmers to obfuscate strings like URLs.
XORSearch will try all XOR keys (0 to 255) and ROL keys (1 to 7)
when searching. I programmed XORSearch to include key 0, because
this allows to search in an unencoded binary file (X XOR 0 equals
X).
If the search string is found, XORSearch will print it until the 0
(byte zero) is encountered or until 50 characters have been printed,
which ever comes first. 50 is the default value, it can be changed
with option -l. Unprintable characters are replaced by a dot.
MultiMarkdown, or MMD, is a tool to help turn minimally marked-up plain
text into well formatted documents, including HTML, PDF (by way of
LaTeX), OPML, or OpenDocument (specifically, Flat OpenDocument or
'.fodt', which can in turn be converted into RTF, Microsoft Word, or
virtually any other word-processing format).
MMD is a superset of the Markdown syntax, originally created by John
Gruber. It adds multiple syntax features (tables, footnotes, and
citations, to name a few), in addition to the various output formats
listed above (Markdown only creates HTML). Additionally, it builds in
'smart' typography for various languages (proper left- and right-sided
quotes, for example).
NOTE: To use the mmd2pdf script, you must install print/latexmk.
Serialize your RSS as JavaScript.
Perhaps you use XML::RSS to generate RSS for consumption by RSS parsers.
Perhaps you also get requests for how to use the RSS feed by people who
have no idea how to parse XML, or write Perl programs for that matter.
Enter XML::RSS::JavaScript, a simle subclass of XML::RSS which writes your
RSS feed as a sequence of JavaScript print statements. This means you
can then write the JavaScript to disk, and a users HTML can simple
include it like so:
<script language="JavaScript" src="/myfeed.js"></script>
What's more the javascript emits HTML that can be fully styled with
CSS. See the CSS examples included with the distribution in the css directory.