This is a keyboard for input of the complex Biblical Hebrew (including
cantillation marks) with Unicode fonts. It is written in Keyman keyboard
language and developed by SIL Non-Roman Script Initiative (NRSI).
This port installs the keyboard so that it can be used through SCIM or
IBus KMFL IMEngine (textproc/scim-kmfl-imengine, textproc/ibus-kmfl).
The keyboard is provided under the terms of MIT/X11 License.
http://scripts.sil.org/SILHebrUni_Documentation
Enchant is a binder for libenchant. Libenchant
provides a common API for many spell libraries,
such as aspell/pspell(intended to replace
ispell),hspell(hebrew),ispell,myspell/hunspell
(OpenOffice project, mozilla),uspell (primarily
Yiddish, Hebrew, and Eastern European languages)
Remind is a sophisticated calendar and alarm program. It includes the
following features:
* A sophisticated scripting language and intelligent handling of
exceptions and holidays.
* Plain-text, PostScript and HTML output.
* Timed reminders and pop-up alarms.
* A friendly graphical front-end for people who don't want to learn
the scripting language.
* Facilities for both the Gregorian and Hebrew calendars.
* Support for 12 different languages.
Figlet is a program that creates large ASCII art characters out of ordinary
screen characters
_ _ _ _ _ _
| (_) | _____ | |_| |__ (_)___
| | | |/ / _ \ | __| '_ \| / __|
| | | < __/ | |_| | | | \__ \_
|_|_|_|\_\___| \__|_| |_|_|___(_)
Figlet can print in a variety of fonts, both left-to-right and right-to-left.
Figlet comes with several fonts. Also, many other fonts are avaiable,
including Hebrew, Cyrillic (Russian), and Greek.
There is also a "Figlet Home Page" on the Worldwide Web.
http://www.surfplaza.com/figlet/
Alef has been designed to meet very high standards whilst at a very small
size. It was created under the consideration of its primary use for digital
media, and overcomes great challenges in the rendition of small characters
and cross-platform adjustment.
The font supports Hebrew and various European Languages.
Alef has been designed to meet very high standards whilst at a very small
size. It was created under the consideration of its primary use for digital
media, and overcomes great challenges in the rendition of small characters
and cross-platform adjustment.
The font supports Hebrew and various European Languages.
Ruby-calendar includes the following modules.
Calendrical Calculations module:
This module supports the following calendars:
Gregorian (current civil), Calendar week (ISO), Julian (old
civil), Islamic (Moslem), Hebrew (Jewish), Mayan, French
Revolutionary, Old Hindu, Achelis', Coptic, Ethiopian, Jalaali
(incomplete), Kyureki (Japanese traditional with CE) A "Getdate"
module
Getdate module:
This module provides a method which creates a Time object reflecting
the given representation of dates and times. An "Sdn" module
Sdn module:
This is an interface to the Scott E. Lee's SDN package.
This module supports the following calendars:
Gregorian, Julian, French Republican, Jewish
UW ttyp0 is a family of bitmap screen fonts in bdf format. It covers most of
the Latin and Cyrillic alphabet, Greek, Armenian, Georgian (only Mkhedruli),
Hebrew (without cantillation marks), Thai, most of IPA (but no UPA), standard
punctuation, common symbols, some mathematics, line graphics, a few dingbats,
and Powerline delimiter symbols. In addition to Unicode (ISO 10646-1), UW ttyp0
supports about thirty 8-bit encodings (code pages).
UW ttyp0 comes in nine sizes from 6x11 to 11x22. In all of the sizes there are
regular and bold versions; for some there is also an italic.
Gcal is a program for calculating and printing calendars. Gcal
displays hybrid and proleptic Julian and Gregorian calendar sheets,
respectively, for one month, three months or a whole year. It also
displays eternal holiday lists for many countries around the globe,
and features a very powerful creation of fixed date lists that can
be used for reminding purposes. Gcal can calculate various
astronomical data and times of the Sun and the Moon for any location,
precisely enough for most civil purposes. Gcal supports some other
calendar systems, for example the Chinese and Japanese calendar,
the Hebrew calendar and the civil Islamic calendar.
Note that this port will install these utilities with a `g' prefix,
eg., gdate, gexpr, gtest, but the texinfo documentation will refer to
these utilities without the `g' prefix.
libLASi is a library written by Larry Siden that provides a C++ stream
output interface ( with operator << ) for creating Postscript documents
that can contain characters from any of the scripts and symbol blocks
supported in Unicode and by Owen Taylor's Pango layout engine. The
library accommodates right-to-left scripts such as Arabic and Hebrew as
easily as left-to-right scripts. Indic and Indic-derived Complex Text
Layout (CTL) scripts, such as Devanagari, Thai, Lao, and Tibetan are
supported to the extent provided by Pango and by the OpenType fonts
installed on your system. All of this is provided without need for any
special configuration or layout calculation on the programmer's part.