The GIMP ToolKit (GTK+) is a collection of GUI widgets. GTK+
essentially provides the building blocks from which GUIs can be
built. It is highly themable, and its functionality is highly
extensible.
GTK+-3 is a very stable release, similar only in design to GTK+-2.
GTK+-3 can coexist happily alongside GTK+-2, but applications are
written for one version or the other.
GTK is a library for creating graphical user interfaces similar to
the Motif "look and feel". It is designed to be small and efficient, but
still flexible enough to allow the programmer freedom in the interfaces
created. GTK allows the programmer to use a variety of standard user
interface widgets such as push, radio and check buttons, menus, lists
and frames. It also provides several "container" widgets which can be
used to control the layout of the user interface elements.
GTK provides some unique features. (At least, I know of no other
widget library which provides them). For example, a button does not
contain a label, it contains a child widget, which in most instances
will be a label. However, the child widget can also be a pixmap, image
or any combination possible the programmer desires. This flexibility is
adhered to throughout the library.
This is a port of FVWM-Crystal. FVWM-Crystal aims to create an easy to use,
eye-candy but also powerful desktop environment for Linux or other Unix-like
operating systems. It uses following programs: FVWM as a window manager and
"main core", ROX-Filer as file manager (manages icons on the desktop), xterm,
aterm, mrxvt or urxvt as terminal emulators, MPD or XMMS as music players
(there's built-in support for controlling these programs), and several other
tools for different functions, like setting a wallpaper or making screen
shots.
Bricons program allows the user to quickly start up applications by
selecting the appropriate button from the display and pressing the left
mouse button. A maximum of up to sixteen main menu buttons can be
displayed. Each main menu button can launch an application or pop-up a
sub menu containing more buttons. The buttons can be represented as a
bitmap, text or a colour icon (i.e Pixmap).
VirtualGL is an open source program that redirects the 3D rendering commands
from Unix and Linux OpenGL applications to 3D accelerator hardware in a
dedicated server and displays the rendered output interactively to a thin
client located elsewhere on the network, or locally.
Small program that allows to query and change the XKB layout state from
command line.
GNU Network Object Model Environment
This metaport installs the entire GNOME 3 desktop, including
the user applications released with it.
Xlbiff lets you preview new mail to decide if you want to read it
immediately. Regular xbiff lets you know when you have mail but not what
it is.
Xlbiff lurks in the background, monitoring your mailbox file. When
something shows up there, it invokes the scanCommand (MH's scan by
default), and displays the output in a window. If more mail comes in, it
scans again and resizes accordingly.
If you're a Berkeley mail person, you can set scanCommand to:
echo x | mail | grep "^.[NU]"
Or use the ``frm'' utility that is part of the Elm port as your
scanCommand. A simular utility is the ``fromwho'' package, posted to
comp.sources.unix volume 25.
Lua 5.0.x bindings for ptys (pseudo-terminals.)
Japanese marumoji font collection for X