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x11-fonts/stixfonts-1.1.1 (Score: 0.0023543502)
OpenType Unicode fonts for Scientific, Technical, and Math texts
The mission of the Scientific and Technical Information Exchange (STIX) font creation project is the preparation of a comprehensive set of fonts that serve the scientific and engineering community in the process from manuscript creation through final publication, both in electronic and print formats. Toward this purpose, the STIX fonts will be made available, under royalty-free license, to anyone, including publishers, software developers, scientists, students, and the general public. These fonts cover all the symbols in MathML and this port can replace the former x11-fonts/mathfonts.
x11-toolkits/fltk-1.3.x.r10370 (Score: 0.0023543502)
Cross-platform C++ graphical user interface toolkit
The Fast Light ToolKit ("FLTK", pronounced "fulltick") is a LGPL'd C++ graphical user interface for X11. FLTK provides modern GUI functionality without the bloat and supports 3D graphics via OpenGL and its built-in GLUT emulation. FLTK is designed to be small and modular enough to be statically linked, but works fine as a shared library. FLTK also includes an excellent UI builder called FLUID that can be used to create applications in minutes. This port tracks the development snapshot releases of FLTK.
x11-toolkits/XmHTML-1.1.10 (Score: 0.0023543502)
Motif widget set for displaying HTML 3.2 documents
XmHTML is a Motif widget capable of displaying HTML 3.2 documents. Features include a very good HTML parser (which is as also available as a Widget) with excellent document verification and repair capabilities. Features built in support for X11 bitmaps, pixmaps, GIF87a & GIF89a (using a patent free LZW decoding method), animated gifs, JPEG (baseline and progressive) and PNG (all features supported), anchor highlighting, text justification, full HTML <FRAME> support, HTML frames and many more. It also comes with four examples demonstrating possible use of the XmHTML widget.
x11-wm/devilspie-0.23 (Score: 0.0023543502)
Window manipulation tool
A window-matching utility, inspired by Sawfish's "Matched Windows" option and the lack of the functionality in Metacity. Metacity lacking window matching is not a bad thing -- Metacity is a lean window manager, and window manipulation does not have to be a window manager task. Devil's Pie can be configured to detect windows as they are created, and match the window to a set of rules. If the window matches the rules, it can perform a series of actions on that window. For example, I make all windows created by X-Chat appear on all workspaces, and the main Gkrellm1 window does not appear in the pager or task list.
x11-wm/xmonad-0.11.1 (Score: 0.0023543502)
Tiling window manager
xmonad is a tiling window manager for X. Windows are arranged automatically to tile the screen without gaps or overlap, maximising screen use. All features of the window manager are accessible from the keyboard: a mouse is strictly optional. xmonad is written and extensible in Haskell. Custom layout algorithms, and other extensions, may be written by the user in config files. Layouts are applied dynamically, and different layouts may be used on each workspace. Xinerama is fully supported, allowing windows to be tiled on several screens.
cad/eagle5-5.12.0 (Score: 0.0022197026)
Easy to use, yet powerful tool for designing printed circuit boards
The EAGLE Layout Editor is an easy to use, yet powerful tool for designing printed circuit boards (PCBs). The name EAGLE is an acronym, which stands for Easily Applicable Graphical Layout Editor. The program consists of three main modules: o Layout Editor o Schematic Editor o Autorouter which are embedded in a single user interface. Therefore there is no need for converting netlists between schematics and layouts. This is a Light Freeware Edition. It has the following limitations: o The useable board area is limited to 100 x 80 mm (4 x 3.2 inches). o Only two signal layers can be used (Top and Bottom). o The schematic editor can only create one sheet. o Support is only available via email or through our forum (no fax or phone support). o Use is limited to non-profit applications or evaluation purposes. Apart from these limitations the EAGLE Light Edition can do anything the Professional Edition can do. You can even load, view and print drawings that exceed these limits!
comms/lirc-0.9.0 (Score: 0.0022197026)
Linux Infrared Remote Control
LIRC is a package that allows you to decode and send infra-red signals of many (but not all) commonly used remote controls. The most important part of LIRC is the lircd daemon that will decode IR signals received by the device drivers and provide the information on a socket. It will also accept commands for IR signals to be sent if the hardware supports this. The second daemon program called lircmd will connect to lircd and translate the decoded IR signals to mouse movements. You can e.g. configure X to use your remote control as an input device. The user space applications will allow you to control your computer with your remote control. You can send X events to applications, start programs and much more on just one button press. The possible applications are obvious: Infra-red mouse, remote control for your TV tuner card or CD-ROM, shutdown by remote, program your VCR and/or satellite tuner with your computer, etc.
devel/nana-2.5 (Score: 0.0022197026)
Support for assertion checking and logging using GNU C and GDB
Nana provides improved support for assertion checking and logging in C, C++ using GDB. In particular it provides: o Operations can be implemented directly in C or by generating debugger commands which do the checking and logging only if the application is run under the debugger. The debugger based calls require are very space efficient (0 or 1 bytes per call). o Support for checking real time constraints. o Support for assertion (invariant checking) including: + Space and time efficient (at least versus <assert.h>) For example: assert(i>=0) uses 53 bytes on a i386 vs an optimised nana call which uses 10 bytes per call. + Checking can be turned on or off at compile or run time. + The action taken when an error is detected can be modified on a global and per/call basis. o Support for logging (printf style debugging) including: + Logging can be turned on and off at compile or run time. + Logging to files, processes or circular buffers in memory with optional time stamping. o Support for the quantifiers of predicate calculus (forall, exists). o Support for before and after state saving and checking (x, x').
graphics/cimg-1.7.7 (Score: 0.0022197026)
C++ Template Image Processing Library
CImg stands for Cool Image: it is simple to use and efficient. . The CImg Library is a free C++ toolkit providing simple classes and functions to load, save, process and display images in your own C++ code. . It is highly portable and fully works on Unix/X11, Windows and MacOS X operating systems. It should compile on other systems as well (eventually without display capabilities). . It consists only of a single header file CImg.h that must be included in your program source. . It contains useful image processing algorithms for loading/saving, resizing/ rotating, filtering, object drawing (text, lines, faces, ellipses,..), etc. . Images are instancied by a class able to represent images up to 4-dimension wide (from 1-D scalar signals to 3-D volumes of vector-valued pixels), with template pixel types. . It depends on a minimal number of libraries: you can compile it with only standard C libraries. No need for exotic libraries and complex dependencies. . Additional features appear with the use of GraphicsMagick: install the GraphicsMagick package to be able to load and save compressed image formats (GIF,BMP,TIF,JPG,PNG,...). . Additional features appear with the use of LAPACK: link your code with the lapack library to be able to compute eigenvalues or eigenvectors of big matrices.
lang/scheme48-1.9.2 (Score: 0.0022197026)
Scheme Underground's implementation of R5RS
Scheme 48 is an implementation of the Scheme programming language as described in the Revised^5 Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme. It is based on a compiler and interpreter for a virtual Scheme machine. The name derives from our desire to have an implementation that is simple and lucid enough that it looks as if it were written in just 48 hours. We don't claim to have reached that stage yet; much more simplification is necessary. Scheme 48 is an implementation of the Scheme programming language as described in the Revised5 Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme [6]. It is based on a compiler and interpreter for a virtual Scheme machine. Scheme 48 tries to be faithful to the Revised5 Scheme Report, providing neither more nor less in the initial user environment. (This is not to say that more isn't available in other environments; see below.) Scheme 48 is under continual development. Please report bugs, especially in the VM, especially core dumps, to scheme-48-bugs@s48.org. Include the version number x.yy from the "Welcome to Scheme 48 x.yy" greeting message in your bug report. It is a goal of this project to produce a bullet-proof system; we want no bugs and, especially, no crashes.