Menu driven binary editor. Dataformats are
ascii, unsigned and signed integers, float, bitflags,
bitfields, labels, ebcdic and time_t. Different sizes
and byte ordenings are possible. Datatypes can
be used in structures. Other dataformats, filters and
procedures can be defined in plugins. Contains copy,
past, undo, redo, search, replace, marks, record/play and
context sensitive help. Linux & FreeBSD: edit block devices
(linux limit 1023 gigabyte).
PR: 27200
Submitted by: Jaap Korthals Altes <jkaltes@cyberbrain.com>
(updated based on the port in the 0.2.19 distfile)
Zoinks is a programmer's editor and development environment
for Unix/X11 systems. The editor has features similar to
Mac text editors like MPW and CodeWarrior. It also has
some features for HTML authoring. Zoinks supports
comparing/diffing files and directory hierarchies. It also
supports inputting and editing multi-byte text (e.g. Japanese
and other Asian languages).
PR: ports/54886
Submitted by: Mike Lockwood <mike@mikelockwood.com>
This port disappeared from its main (and only) site in 2001.
Although it can still be found in various places on the
web, the fact that no one has complained recently means
it's time to let it go.
PR: ports/56868
Submitted by: Mark Linimon <linimon@lonesome.com>
Approved by: msmith@freebsd.org (maintainer)
Puff is an editor that is named after "Puff the fractal dragon" (see fortune).
Primary features:
- Simple and lightweight
- Can open multiple files
- Clipboard is an open file
- Keys may be reassigned
- Source is easy to extend
PR: ports/50607
Submitted by: Leif Pedersen <bilbo@developerpit.com>
bitedit is a simple ncurses program for editing a file. It allows
you to directly edit of the individual bits of a binary file in a
graphical fashion. It is useful for editing all sorts of binary files.
PR: 40732
Submitted by: Michael L.Hostbaek <mich@freebsdcluster.org>
original versions of these ports, so some PORTREVISIONs were bumped. See
http://freebsd.kde.org/ and mailing lists linked to from there for info
on the packages generated to test these ports.
bsd.kde.mk has already been updated a few days ago to work with these.
Some patches applied to fix a few bugs were:
deskutils/kdepim3:
[1] Remove kpilot from build because it wasn't ready at release.
editors/koffice-kde3:
[2] Fix compile time bugs for FreeBSD.
misc/kdeedu3:
[3] Fix compile problem with kvoctrain.
x11/kdebase3:
[4] Fix KDM CPU usage and login bug.
Some caveats:
* All PLISTs are broken for deinstall due to script bug that I
didn't notice until very recently. This will be fixed when I
commit an update tomorrow. These ports should still install
perfectly fine though. They should also deinstall without
giving errors, but will leave directories behind.
* You can't install this with any other version of QT or KDE
already installed. I am not sure the checks are 100% working,
but fixes for these will be forthcoming. This is mainly due
to a policy decision made by kde@ to make QT/KDE ports install
the way the rest of the world expects it to while also still
conforming to FreeBSD's hier(7). For reference on this decision,
please consult the KDE/FreeBSD mailing list archives. This
decision fixes 2-year-old bug reports relating to how we handled
this for KDE2 vs KDE1.
Submitted by: [1] Adrian de Groot <adridg@cs.kun.nl>,
[2] David Faure <faure@kde.org>,
Andy Fawcett <andy@athame.co.uk>
Lauri Watts <lauri@kde.org>
[3] Lauri Watts <lauri@kde.org>
[4] Alan Eldridge <alane@geeksrus.net>
Oswald Buddenhagen <ossi@kde.org>
Reviewed by: kde
Inactivate flim-{emacs,mule,emacs20,xemacs21-mule}-current.
Activate flim113-{emacs,mule,emacs20,xemacs21-mule}.
Stop to support flim-{emacs,mule,emacs20,xemacs21-mule}.
Synchronize the dependency with changing port name of flim/semi.
Approved by: maintainers
Several people have requested this, so here it is.
This port is intended to track the GAMMA version of the XEmacs
editor.
This is version is based on xemacs-21.4.4, which has a GTK binding.
Note that the GTK support is buggy (at least on my system), although
I haven't noticed any fatal problems, just annoying ones.
There are other bugs in this version, e.g. any attempts to make font
changes in the Options menu result in a Lisp error.
Please do not file any PRs on XEmacs errors, the maintaine will terminate
them with extreme prejudice.
I haven't tested this at all on Alpha because beast won't let me in.
Approved by: gj (MAINTAINER of the xemacs and xemacs20 ports)
shige (MAINTAINER of the apel, flim, semi and wemi ports)
ports (no objection seen for seven days)
Ted is a text editor running under X Windows on Unix/Linux systems. Ted was
developed as an operating system accessory like Wordpad on MS-Windows.
Features
--------
* Wysiwyg rich text editing.
* Ted uses Microsoft RTF as its native file format.
* In line bitmap pictures.
* Postscript printing.
* Spelling checking in several Latin languages. (English, Dutch, German,
Portuguese, French and Spanish.)
* Directly mailing documents from Ted.
* Cut/Copy/Paste, also with other applications.
* Find/Replace.
* Ruler: Paragraph indentation, Indentation of first line, Tabs.
* Copy/Paste
Ruler.
* Page breaks.
* Tables: Insert Table, Row, Column. Changing the column width of tables
with their ruler.
* Symbols and accented characters are fully supported.
* Hyperlinks.
* Saving a document in HTML format.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
ImPressTM is a WYSIWYG layout program designed especially for Linux [sic]. It
allows you to create presentations and Postscript documents using fully scalable
graphics similar to programs like Macromedia Freehand, Corel Draw, Adobe
Illustrator and Visio. It is different from raster graphic packages like gimp,
Adobe PhotoShop and Jasc's PaintShop Pro in that it deals with graphical
objects which can be manipulated on a canvas rather than just layers of paint.
Obtained from: OpenBSD