The MPC library is a C library for multiple-precision complex number
computations with exact rounding. It is based on the MPFR C library
which, in turn, is based on the GMP C library.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Math-MPC
PR: ports/133396
Submitted by: Wen Heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the result.
It is built upon and follows the same principles as Mpfr. The
library is written by Andreas Enge, Philippe Theveny and Paul
Zimmermann and is distributed under the Gnu Lesser General Public
License, either version 2.1 of the license, or (at your option)
any later version. The Mpc library has been registered in France
by the Agence pour la Protection des Programmes on 2003-02-05
under the number IDDN FR 001 060029 000 R P 2003 000 10000.
WWW: http://www.multiprecision.org/
PR: ports/133395
Submitted by: Wen Heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
http://library.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/2.26/ for a list of what's new.
On the FreeBSD front, we introduced a port of libxul 1.9 as an alternative
for Firefox 2.0 as a Gecko provider. Almost all of the Gecko consumers
can make use of this provider by setting:
WITH_GECKO=libxul
The GNOME 2.26 port was done by ahze, kwm, marcus, and mezz with
contributions by Joseph S. Atkinson, Peter Wemm, Eric L. Chen,
Martin Matuska, Craig Butler, and Pawel Worach.
results of, an enormous range of statistical models. It literally is "everyone's
statistical software" because Zelig's simple unified framework incorporates
everyone else's (R) code. We also hope it will become "everyone's statistical
software" for applications and teaching, and so have designed Zelig so that
anyone can easily use it or add their programs to it. Zelig also comes with
infrastructure that facilitates the use of any existing method, such as by
allowing multiply imputed data for any model, and mimicking the program Clarify
(for Stata) that takes the raw output of existing statistical procedures and
translates them into quantities of direct interest.
WWW: http://gking.harvard.edu/zelig
PR: ports/133115
Submitted by: Wen Heping <wenheping at gmail.com>