There's not much here that differentiates it from any of the existing Markdown
implementations except that it's written in C instead of one of the vast flock
of scripting languages that are fighting it out for the Perl crown.
Markdown provides a library that gives you formatting functions suitable for
marking down entire documents or lines of text, a command-line program that you
can use to mark down documents interactively or from a script,
and a tiny (1 program so far) suite of example programs that show how to fully
utilize the markdown library.
WWW: http://www.pell.portland.or.us/~orc/Code/markdown/
PR: ports/134004
Submitted by: Julien Laffaye <kimelto at gmail.com>
documents.
It aims to support DocBook version 4.2, excepting the features that
cannot be supported or are not useful in a man page or Texinfo
document.
WWW: http://docbook2x.sourceforge.net/
to use the XML::LibXML parser for XML structures, where the original
uses plain Perl or SAX parsers.
WWW: http://http://search.cpan.org/dist/XML-LibXML-Simple/
PR: ports/133875
Submitted by: TERAMOTO Masahiro <markun at onohara.to>
translation of Grant McLean's Perl module XML::Simple. Simply put,
it automatically converts XML documents into a Ruby Hash.
WWW: http://rubyforge.org/projects/xml-simple
Sponsored by: RideCharge Inc.
The recommended version of FreeBSD to use them is 8-CURRENT.
FreeBSD-7.x is not fully compatible with compat.linux.osrelease
2.6.16. Some syscalls cannot be MFCed due to native FreeBSD
ABI breakage.
Usage (and package building):
1. define compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16;
2. add following variables to /etc/make.conf:
. OVERRIDE_LINUX_BASE_PORT=f8;
. OVERRIDE_LINUX_NONBASE_PORTS=f8.
Approved by: bsam (me) ;-)
Given a piece of text and some search terms, produces an object
which locates the search terms in the message, extracts a reasonable-length
string containing all the search terms, and optionally dumps the string out
as HTML text with the search terms highlighted in bold.
framework, developed by the developer of scim-python, includes all its
function, and much more.
This is the base port, you need input methods such as pinyin to input text.
WWW: http://code.google.com/p/ibus
PR: ports/128371
Submitted by: Henry Hu <henry.hu.sh@gmail.com>
mdoc-roff documents into a variety of output formats.
WWW: http://mdocml.bsd.lv/
PR: ports/132449
Submitted by: Ulrich Spoerlein <uspoerlein at gmail.com>
Java search library, with XML/HTTP and JSON APIs, hit highlighting,
faceted search, caching, replication, a web administration interface
and many more features. It runs in a Java servlet container such as
Tomcat.
WWW: http://lucene.apache.org/solr/
PR: ports/132665
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin at gslin.org>
"stemmed" form of a word. This is a form with most of the common
morphological endings removed; hopefully representing a common
linguistic base form. This is most useful in building search engines
and information retrieval software; for example, a search with stemming
enabled should be able to find a document containing "cycling" given the
query "cycles".
PyStemmer provides algorithms for several (mainly european) languages,
by wrapping the libstemmer library from the Snowball project in a Python
module. It also provides access to the classic Porter stemming algorithm
for english: although this has been superceded by an improved algorithm,
the original algorithm may be of interest to information retrieval
researchers wishing to reproduce results of earlier experiments.
WWW: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/PyStemmer/
PR: ports/132695
Submitted by: Wen Heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
indent "policy" for a text file (most likely a source code file).
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Text-FindIndent/
PR: ports/132406
Submitted by: Cezary Morga <cm at therek.net>
This isn't meant to be the Next Big Thing in templating; it's
just a handy little templating language for when your project
outgrows string.Template or % substitution. It's small, it
embeds Python in strings, and it doesn't do much else.
WWW: http://pythonpaste.org/tempita/
Submitted by: Wen Heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
creating, correcting, and repacking electronic books.
Current unpacking support is limited to PalmDoc and Mobipocket and
generation is limited to EPub. The metadata correction tools are
quite extensive, however. For more details, see the POD information
on EBook::Tools and EBook::Tools::Unpack.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/EBook-Tools/
PR: ports/131901
Submitted by: simond at irrelevant.org
devel/py-qt4-help
multimedia/py-qt4-phonon
textproc/py-qt4-xmlpatterns
www/py-qt4-webkit
Update QScintilla2 to 2.3.2, PyQt3 to 3.17.6, PyKDE3 to 3.16.2.
Pass maintainership to kde@FreeBSD.org. Thanks Danny Ricin for his great work.
PR: based on ports/130219
Submitted by: Dima Panov" <fluffy at fluffy.khv.ru>
convert them into plain text, formatted html, or token-separated strings.
This tool can be easily integrated into shellscripts, cron tasks, motd's,
etc.
WWW: http://nopcode.org/blog/rss2html.html
PR: ports/131266
Submitted by: Dennis Herrmann <adox at mcx2.org>
Liblinebreak is an implementation of the line breaking algorithm as
described in Unicode 5.1.0 Standard Annex 14, Revision 22. It breaks
lines that contain Unicode characters. It is designed to be used in a
generic text renderer. FBReader is one real-world example.
WWW: http://vimgadgets.sourceforge.net/liblinebreak/
PR: ports/130949
Submitted by: Yuri Pankov <yuri.pankov at gmail.com>
programming language Haskell, including the original HuttonMeijer set.
The Poly sets have features like good error reporting, arbitrary token
type, running state, lazy parsing, and so on. Finally, Text.Parse is a
proposed replacement for the standard Read class, for better
deserialisation of Haskell values from Strings.
WWW: http://www.cs.york.ac.uk/fp/polyparse/
Approved by: gabor
generated documents can be all nicely interlinked and to have the same
look and feel.
Currently it knows to handle input formats:
* POD * HTML
and knows to generate:
* HTML * PS * PDF
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/~stas/DocSet
input methods of the m17n library (devel/m17n-lib and textproc/m17n-contrib).
The following methods are customisable at the moment: Unicode, Vietnamese,
Malayalam, Tibetan, Thai, Japanese and Chinese.
WWW: http://www.m17n.orghttp://www.m17n.org/common/im-config/index.html
PR: ports/127893
Submitted by: Nikola Lecic <nikola.lecic at anthesphoria.net>
(the official ones are installed through devel/m17n-lib). It currently
supports Punjabi, Sinhala, Telugu, Nepali, Russian, Assamese, Bengali,
Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Oriya and Vietnamese layouts
with various sub-variants.
The port also provides the tbl2mim.awk script for conversion of keyboard
files used by textproc/scim-table-imengine into SCIM-independent .mim format
(usable by m17n library).
WWW: http://www.m17n.org/
PR: ports/127894
Submitted by: Nikola Lecic <nikola.lecic at anthesphoria.net>
side implementation of Dict protocol, with a browser interface
specialized for querying dictionaries.
WWW: http://diktv1.googlepages.com/
PR: ports/130000
Submitted by: Goran Tal <goran.tal at gmail.com>
support for over 50 languages. The syntax parsers are automatically
generated from Kate syntax descriptions [1], so any syntax supported by
Kate can be added. An (optional) command-line program is provided,
along with a utility for generating new parsers from Kate XML syntax
descriptions.
Currently the following languages are supported: Ada, Asp, Awk, Bash,
Bibtex, C, Cmake, Coldfusion, Commonlisp, Cpp, Css, D, Djangotemplate,
Doxygen, Dtd, Eiffel, Erlang, Fortran, Haskell, Html, Java, Javadoc,
Javascript, Json, Latex, Lex, LiterateHaskell, Lua, Makefile, Matlab,
Mediawiki, Modula3, Nasm, Objectivec, Ocaml, Pascal, Perl, Php,
Postscript, Prolog, Python, Rhtml, Ruby, Scala, Scheme, Sgml, Sql,
SqlMysql, SqlPostgresql, Tcl, Texinfo, Xml, Xslt, Yacc.
WWW: http://johnmacfarlane.net/highlighting-kate
[1] http://kate-editor.org
PR: ports/129690
Submitted by: pgj
Approved by: miwi
2008-09-19 java/java-gcj-compat: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 lang/screamer: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-10-01 misc/documancer: Unmaintained upstream
2008-09-19 misc/ipbt: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-10-13 multimedia/manslide: Use multimedia/smile instead
2008-09-19 net/globus4: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 net/p5-Parallel-MPI: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-01-28 net/p54u: website disappeared
2008-09-19 net-im/ginsu: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 net-p2p/py-kenosis-bittorrent: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 sysutils/sjog: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 textproc/Ebnf2ps: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 www/roxen: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 x11-fm/evidence: Has been broken for more than 6 months
operations for encoding UTF8 strings to Word8 lists and back, and for reading
and writing UTF8 without truncation.
WWW: http://github.com/glguy/utf8-string/
PR: ports/129427
Submitted by: Samy Al Bahra <sbahra at kerneled.org>
functionality provided by the internal gnu aspell API. This allows
one to deal with blocks of text, rather than just words. For
instance, we provide methods for iterating through the text,
serializing the object (thus remembering where we left off), and
highlighting the current misspelled word within the text.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Text-SpellChecker/
BSD-licensed c implementation of John Gruber's Markdown plus
some aspects of SmartyPants. Markdown is a text-to-HTML
conversion language for web writers, inspired by the format
of plain-text e-mail messages. Markdown allows you to write
in an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then
convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).
WWW: http://github.com/rtomayko/rdiscount/
PR: ports/128548
Submitted by: Daniel Roethlisberger <daniel at roe.ch>
common subsequence (LCS) algorithm to compute intelligent differences between
two sequenced enumerable containers.
WWW: http://rubyforge.org/projects/ruwiki/
PR: ports/128591
Submitted by: Daniel Roethlisberger <daniel at roe.ch>
by Nassib Nassar and distributed as open source software under the terms
of version 2 of the GNU General Public License (GPL). Its distinguishing
features are indexing/search of semi-structured text (i.e. both free tex
and multiply nested fields), built-in support for XML documents using the
Xerces library, structured queries allowing generalized field/tag paths,
hierarchical result sets (XML only), automatic searching across multiple
databases (allowing modular indexing), TREC format results, efficient
indexing, and relatively low memory requirements during indexing (and the
ability to index documents larger than available memory). Z39.50 support
is available. Other features include Boolean queries, right truncation,
phrase searching, relevance ranking, support for multiple documents per
file, incremental indexing, and easy integration with other UNIX tools,
The architecture is also designed to permit proximity queries; however,
they are not fully implemented at present.
WWW: http://www.etymon.com/tr.html
This port also includes the Porter stemming algorithm for suffix
stripping, available at:
http://www.tartarus.org/~martin/PorterStemmer
PR: ports/127580
Submitted by: Pedro Giffuni
1.0, as described at http://www.wikicreole.org. It reads Creole 1.0
markup and returns XHTML.
In addition to the official Creole 1.0 markup elements, it also supports
several extensions, such as plugins, superscript, subscript, underline,
definition lists, indented paragraphs, plugins, etc.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Text-WikiCreole/
PR: ports/127705
Submitted by: Matthew Fuller <fullermd at over-yonder.net>
Scim-bridge is wrapper library for SCIM, written in C. Scim-bridge
is seperated in two parts, the agent and the clients. The agent is
the IME server which communicates with SCIM. The clients are IMModules
which communicate only with the agent so that there is no binary
dependency between the clients and SCIM.
WWW: http://www.scim-im.org/projects/scim_bridge/
PR: 126603
Submitted by: Henry Hu <henry.hu.sh at gmail.com>
Approved by: miwi (mentor)
Add new port textproc/stardict3 (update stardict-2.x to
stardict-3.x).
StarDict is a Cross-Platform and international dictionary
written in Gtk2. It has powerful features such as "Glob-style
pattern matching," "Scan selection word," "Fuzzy query,"
etc.
WWW: http://stardict.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/125924
Submitted by: "Eric L. Chen" <d9364104@mail.nchu.edu.tw>
This module supplies features similar as wcwidth(3) and wcswidth(3) in C
language.
Characters have its own width on terminal depending on locale. For example,
ASCII characters occupy one column per character, east Asian fullwidth
characters (like Hiragana or Han Ideograph) occupy two columns per
character, and combining characters (apperaring in ISO-8859-11 Thai,
Unicode, and so on) occupy zero columns per character. mbwidth() gives the
width of the first character of the given string and mbswidth() gives the
width of the whole given string.
The names of mbwidth and mbswidth came from "multibyte" versions of wcwidth
and wcswidth which are "wide character" versions.
mblen(string) returns number of bytes of the first character of the string.
Please note that a character may consist of multiple bytes in multibyte
encodings such as UTF-8, EUC-JP, EUC-KR, GB2312, or Big5.
mbwidth(string) returns the width of the first character of the string.
mbswidth(string) returns the width of the whole string.
Parameters are to be given in locale encodings, not always in UTF-8.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Text-CharWidth/
output.
This module provides a flexible way to wrap and flow text for both ASCII and
non-ASCII outputs.
The main purpose of this module is to provide text wrapping and flowing
features without being tied down to ASCII based output and fixed-width
fonts. My needs were for a more sophisticated text control in PDF and GIF
output formats in particular.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Text-Flow/
for FreeBSD. The official KDE 4.1.0 release notes can be found at
http://www.kde.org/announcements/4.1/.
Some note:
* Prefix
KDE4 will be install into a custom prefixes namely ${LOCALBASE}/kde4.
KDE4 and KDE3 can co-exist
* Sound
For sound to work, it is necessary to have dbus and hal enabled
in your system. Please see the respective documentation on how
to enable these.
For more Informations see the HEADS UP at ports@ and kde-freebsd@
or our wiki page http://wiki.freebsd.org/KDE4/Install.
Have fun!
object-oriented C++/QT4 framework for RDF data. It uses different RDF storage
solutions as backends through a simple plugin system. Soprano is targetted at
desktop applications that need a RDF data storage solution. It has been
optimized for easy usage and simplicity.
WWW: http://soprano.sourceforge.net/
Note:
With this update several ports specific problems
have been fixed. Qt4 headers and libraries have
been moved to include/qt4 and lib/qt4. bsd.qt.mk
defines QT_INCDIR and QT_LIBDIR now, which could
be used in qt4-dependent ports if required.
Thanks to: Max Brazhnikov Danny Pansters
documents, and is less concerned with XML compliance than alternatives.
Rather than rely on XML::Parser, it uses heuristics and good old-fashioned
Perl regular expressions.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/XML-RSSLite/
PR: ports/126116
Submitted by: Tomoyuki Sakurai <cherry at trombik.org>
version of this module is already available to you. This CPAN
package is only here to update core distributions prior 5.005.
The version provided is the same that comes with perl 5.00502.
If you run a newer version of perl, the version of Text::ParseWords
included there may be newer. This package is not fully synchronized
with the perl distributions.
Please run "perldoc Text::ParseWords" to see what this module
is for.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Text-ParseWords/
Approved by: araujo (mentor)
attribute rewriting. You simply specify a callback to run for each
attribute and we do the rest for you. This module is designed to
be subclassable to make handling special cases eaiser.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/HTML-RewriteAttributes/
papers about computer hardware and software (though it is by no means limited
to these applications).
The Version 5.0 release is a complete rewrite of DocBook in RELAX NG.
The intent of this rewrite is to produce a schema that is true to the spirit
of DocBook while simultaneously removing inconsistencies that have arisen as
a natural consequence of DocBook's long, slow evolution. The Technical
Committee has taken this opportunity to simplify a number of content models
and tighten constraints where RELAX NG makes that possible.
The Technical Committee provides the DocBook 5.0 schema in other schema
languages, including W3C XML Schema and an XML DTD, but the RELAX NG Schema
is now the normative schema.
WWW: http://www.docbook.org/specs/docbook-5.0-spec-cd-04.html
for computer documentation, with a primary emphasis on software
documentation and related classes of technical documents. Its
main high-level hierarchical structures are for books, reference
entries (for example, ``man pages''), and articles. It is
maintained by the DocBook Technical Committee of OASIS.
This port contains DocBook 4.5. Note that DocBook 4.5 includes
the XML DocBook DTD as part of the SGML DTD distribution. If
you do not need SGML DTD you should install:
textproc/docbook-xml-450
instead. There are no conflicts if both ports are installed
but you will have duplicates of most of the files.
WWW: http://www.docbook.org/specs/docbook-4.5-spec-cs-01.html
for computer documentation, with a primary emphasis on software
documentation and related classes of technical documents. Its
main high-level hierarchical structures are for books, reference
entries (for example, ``man pages''), and articles. It is
maintained by the DocBook Technical Committee of OASIS.
This port contains DocBook 4.4. Note that DocBook 4.4 includes
the XML DocBook DTD as part of the SGML DTD distribution. If
you do not need SGML DTD you should install:
textproc/docbook-xml-440
instead. There are no conflicts if both ports are installed
but you will have duplicates of most of the files.
WWW: http://www.docbook.org/specs/cd-docbook-docbook-4.4.html
Ansifilter is a customizable ANSI Code converter. ansifilter can
output to plain text, HTML, and RTF.
PR: 125444
Submitted by: Yi-Jheng Lin <yzlin@cs.nctu.edu.tw> (new maintainer)
Remove EMACS_PORT_NAME to use system default emacs version
Note: to avoid conflicts please remove dictem-emacs22 port first.
PR: ports/117580
Submitted by: Max N. Boyarov <m.boyarov@bsd.by>
standard input, or the named files) into random order. It is in a
sense the very inverse of sort(1)).
WWW: http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/src/#shuffle
PR: ports/124100
Submitted by: Greg Larkin <glarkin at sourcehosting.net>
implemented in many programming languages. The port uses my patchset
which adds three new implementations, some build infrastructure,
a manual page and a couple of other fixes.
Author: Mechiel Lukkien <mechiel@xs4all.nl>
WWW: http://www.xs4all.nl/~mechiel/projects/bomstrip/
that will help make your code better.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Perl-Critic-Bangs/
PR: ports/124333
Submitted by: vany <ivan@serezhkin.com>
Approved by: gabor (mentor, implicit)
The main classes in this framework are OPMLDocument and OPMLOutline.
OPML is a file format used to store all kinds of outlines. It's based
on XML and also usually stores some meta information. This includes
author and creation time information and a document title.
WWW: http://www.etoile-project.org/
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)
WWW: http://pecl.php.net/package/enchant/
PR: ports/122820
Submitted by: Wen heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
parses makefiles as "documents" and the parsing is lossless. The
results are data structures similar to DOM trees. The DOM trees hold
every single bit of the information in the original input files,
including white spaces, blank lines and makefile comments. That means
it's possible to reproduce the original makefiles from the DOM trees.
In addition, each node of the DOM trees is modifiable and so is the
whole tree, just like the PPI module used for Perl source parsing and
the HTML::TreeBuilder module used for parsing HTML source.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Makefile-DOM/
PR: ports/122843
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin at gslin.org>
Libwps is a library (for use by word procesors, for example) for importing the
Microsoft Works word processor file format. It imports Works format versions 2,
3, 4, 5 (aka 2000), and 8 with some formatting. The scope of this project is
just a Works word processor import filter, so there are no plans for supporting
an export filter, spreadsheets, or databases.
WWW: http://libwps.sourceforge.net/