A 64x64 pixel application that displays nine buttons.
Each of these buttons can be configured via a configuration file to
run just about any application you'd like to. Basically, if you can
type it in a shell command, wmbutton can run it. It is based on wmcp,
by Ben Cohen.
Xautolock monitors console activity under the X window system, and
fires up a program of your choice if nothing happens during a
user configurable period of time. You can use this to automatically
start up a screen locker in case you tend to forget to do so manually
before having a coffee break.
Xdialog is designed to be a drop in replacement for the "dialog" or
"cdialog" programs. It converts any terminal based program into a
program with an X-windows interface. The dialogs are easier to see
and use while adding even more functionalities.
xrootconsole is a small utility which displays its input in a transparent
text box on X's root window. It will read from any file listed on the
command line or, by default, from stdin. It is most useful when it reads
from a FIFO; this allows you to redirect multiple commands to the FIFO
and monitor their output.
ADMesh is a program for processing triangulated solid meshes. Currently,
ADMesh only reads the STL file format that is used for rapid prototyping
applications, although it can write STL, VRML, OFF, and DXF files.
Features
* Read and write binary and ASCII STL files
* Check STL files for flaws (i.e. unconnected facets, bad normals)
* Repair facets by connecting nearby facets that are within a given tolerance
* Fill holes in the mesh by adding facets.
* Repair normal directions (i.e. facets should be CCW)
* Repair normal values (i.e. should be perpendicular to facet with length=1)
* Remove degenerate facets (i.e. facets with 2 or more vertices equal)
* Translate in x, y, and z directions
* Rotate about the x, y, and z axes
* Mirror about the xy, yz, and xz planes
* Scale the part by a factor
* Merge 2 STL files into one
* Write an OFF file
* Write a VRML file
* Write a DXF file
* Calculate the volume of a part
hamsterdb is a lightweight embedded database engine. It is
in development for more than three years and concentrates
on ease of use, high performance, stability and portability.
The hamsterdb API is simple and self-documenting. The interface
is similar to other widely-used database engines. Fast algorithms
and data structures guarantee high performance for all scenarios.
Hamsterdb has hundreds of unittests with a test coverage of over
90%. Each release is tested with thousands of acceptance tests in
many different configurations, tested on up to six different
hardware architectures and operating systems. Written in plain
ANSI-C, hamsterdb runs on many architectures: Intel-compatible
(x86, x64), PowerPC, SPARC, ARM, RISC and others. Tested operating
systems include Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Windows CE, Linux,
SunOS and other Unices.
This is a meta-port for boost libraries, depends on all of them.
Boost provides free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.
The emphasis is on libraries that work well with the C++ Standard
Library. Boost libraries are intended to be widely useful, and usable
across a broad spectrum of applications. The Boost license encourages
both commercial and non-commercial use.
The goal is to establish "existing practice" and provide reference
implementations so that Boost libraries are suitable for eventual
standardization. Ten Boost libraries are already included in the C++
Standards Committee's Library Technical Report (TR1) and will be in
the new C++0x Standard now being finalized. C++0x will also include
several more Boost libraries in addition to those from TR1. More Boost
libraries are proposed for TR2.
Boost provides free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.
The emphasis is on libraries that work well with the C++ Standard
Library. Boost libraries are intended to be widely useful, and usable
across a broad spectrum of applications. The Boost license encourages
both commercial and non-commercial use.
The goal is to establish "existing practice" and provide reference
implementations so that Boost libraries are suitable for eventual
standardization. Ten Boost libraries are already included in the C++
Standards Committee's Library Technical Report (TR1) and will be in
the new C++0x Standard now being finalized. C++0x will also include
several more Boost libraries in addition to those from TR1. More Boost
libraries are proposed for TR2.
Boost provides free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.
The emphasis is on libraries that work well with the C++ Standard
Library. Boost libraries are intended to be widely useful, and usable
across a broad spectrum of applications. The Boost license encourages
both commercial and non-commercial use.
The goal is to establish "existing practice" and provide reference
implementations so that Boost libraries are suitable for eventual
standardization. Ten Boost libraries are already included in the C++
Standards Committee's Library Technical Report (TR1) and will be in
the new C++0x Standard now being finalized. C++0x will also include
several more Boost libraries in addition to those from TR1. More Boost
libraries are proposed for TR2.
NOTE: This package does not contain Boost.Python, it's in
'devel/boost-python-libs'.
xwpe is a X-window programming environment designed for UNIX systems.
It is similar to 'Borland C++' MS-DOS programming IDE environment.
xwpe supports many compilers, linkers, and debuggers, so you are not tied to
any particular set of tools. There is both a curses and X11 interface
(the later with mouse support).
Errors that occur while compiling and linking a program can be examined in
the sources -- the cursor will jump to the corresponding line in the
source file. Programs composed of more than one source file, can be
managed with the project-option. Your program may be run and debugged from
within xwpe -- allowing the user to set breakpoints and watch variables.
Note: there are both English and German language version of the man pages,
and help files. The German language version will be installed if
"GERMAN_LANG" is set during ``make install'' of the port.