This port provides two input method utility applications for GNOME desktop
environments.
GIMLET - GNOME Input Method Language Enabling Tool
As a gnome-panel applet, this UI is used to select input languages for IIIM
client applications (IIIMGCF and IIIMXCF).
GIMPET - GNOME Input Method Property Edittingggg Tool
As a gnome capplet, this UI is to allow user to customize input methods,
for enabling/disabling input method infrastucuture itself, and
enabling/disabling input method statur bar and candidate choice window.
PR: ports/72617
Submitted by: Kuang-che Wu <kcwu@csie.org>
The ultimate quest of this module is to produce from non-XML text
text, that will will most probably pass throught any XML parser one
could find.
Basic cleaning is just XML tag matching (for every opening tag there
will be closing tag as well, and they will form a tree structure).
When you add some extra parameters, you will receive complete XML
text, including XML head and root element (if none were defined in
text, then some will be added).
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/~pkubanek/XML-Clean/
PR: ports/71829
Submitted by: Rong-En Fan <rafan AT infor dot org>
Approved by: mentor (vanilla)
(currently English only, based on Guttenburg's Moby thesaurus) using native
GUI on several platforms: UNIX (GTK+ & Qt), Win32 & MacOSX (Cocoa). The core
library itself is platform-independent. The principal language is C++, with
some use of Cocoa/ObjC++; wrappers are provided for C and Cocoa/ObjC.
Aiksausus plugins exist for AbiWord on UNIX and Win32; the library is also
used by Lyx; and the new Cocoa port provides a MacOSX NSService hook so that
Safari and other such applications can use this thesaurus without
Aiksaurus-specific development.
WWW: http://aiksaurus.sourceforge.net/
"The Saxon 8.0 package is a collection of tools for processing XML documents.
The main components are:
- An XSLT 2.0 processor, that can be used from the command line, or invoked
from a Java application by use of the standard JAXP API. Saxon can be
integrated with Java applications using the JAXP API, which means it is
possible for a Java application to switch between different XSLT processors
without changing the application code. As well as conforming closely with the
XSLT 2.0 specification, Saxon offers a number of powerful extensions.
- An XPath 2.0 processor accessible via an API to Java applications.
- An XQuery 1.0 processor that can be used from the command line, or invoked
from a Java application by use of an API.
- An XML Schema 1.0 processor. This can be used on its own to validate a schema
for correctness, or to validate a source document against the definitions in
a schema. It is also used to support the schema-aware functionality of the
XSLT and XQuery processors.
So you can use Saxon to process XML by writing XSLT stylesheets, by writing
XQuery queries, by writing Java applications, or by combinations of the
approaches."
PR: 68637
Submitted by: Herve Quiroz <herve.quiroz@esil.univ-mrs.fr>