Net::Jabber is a collection of Perl modules that provide a Perl Developer
access to the Jabber protocol. Using OOP modules we provide a clean
interface to writing anything from a full client to a simple protocol
tester.
This package contains the following perl5 modules:
Time::CTime.pm ctime, strftime, and asctime
Time::JulianDay.pm Julian Day conversions
Time::ParseDate.pm Reverses strftime and also understands relative times
Time::Timezone.pm miscellaneous timezone manipulations routines
Time::DaysInMonth.pm simply report the number of days in a month
These are experimental modules to handle various Unicode issues. They
were made before perl included native UTF8 support.
The current set of modules are:
Unicode::String - represent strings of Unicode chars
Unicode::CharName - look up character names
Unicode::Map8 - mapping tables towards 8-bit char sets
(the Unicode::Map8 module is distributed separately)
YASM is a complete rewrite of the NASM assembler under the "new"
BSD License (some portions are currently under the GNU General
Public License (GPL) or the GNU Lesser General Public License
(LGPL)). It is designed from the ground up to allow for multiple
assembler syntaxes to be supported (eg, NASM, TASM, GAS, etc.)
in addition to multiple output object formats. Another primary
module of the overall design is an optimizer module.
HTTrack is a free (libre/open source) and easy-to-use offline
browser utility.
It allows you to download a World Wide Web site from the Internet
to a local directory, building recursively all directories, getting
HTML, images, and other files from the server to your computer.
HTTrack arranges the original site's relative link-structure.
Simply open a page of the "mirrored" website in your browser, and
you can browse the site from link to link, as if you were viewing
it online. HTTrack can also update an existing mirrored site, and
resume interrupted downloads. HTTrack is fully configurable, and
has an integrated help system.
poEdit is cross-platform gettext catalogs (.po files) editor. It is built
with wxWindows toolkit and can run on any platform supported by it (although
it was tested only on Unix with GTK+ and Windows). It aims to provide more
convenient approach to editing catalogs than launching vi and editing the
file by hand.
Here is a brief features list:
- User friendly way of editing entries. You can easily navigate in large
catalogs, easily enter or modify entries (fuzzy flag is automatically
removed if you change translation, you can copy original string to
translation by pressing Alt-I)
- Whitespaces highlighting
- Fuzzy and untranslated records highlighting. Furthermore, untranslated
and fuzzy translations are displayed at the top of the list
- Automatic compilation of .mo files (optional)
- Automatic headers update
- References browser lets you see where in what context the string is used
- You can use poEdit to scan source code for translatable strings
- Integration with KDE and GNOME desktops
Vim is an almost compatible version of the UNIX editor Vi. Many new features
have been added: multi level undo, syntax highlighting, command line history,
on-line help, filename completion, block operations, etc.
If you are building the package from source you may want to enable some
features such as a perl or python interpreter which are not enabled by
default.
This version also contains a X11 GTK+ 2.0 GUI. If you don't have X11,
look at the `vim' package instead.
Flynn is a tiny system load meter for gkrellm. I've picked
this idea from Timm Mueller's Amiga application which was
derived from a WindowMaker appicon. GKrellFlynn was
written by Henryk Richter.
Flynn is a guy who suffers from your activity, i.e. the
applications consuming precious processor time. Hurt him
plenty!
To make Flynn smile, just click onto his face.
gkrellm plugin for controlling XMMS from within GKrellM.
GKrellMMS Features:
-Local Playlist Editor
-Title scrolling
-Progress bar (Krell) to see where you are in a song
-Jumping in a file, by picking up the Krell
-LED indicator which indicates whether XMMS is on, off, stopped,
playing or paused
-Themeable buttons, to control XMMS
-A menu for some misc. XMMS-commands
gkrellm2-server is the "server" version of GKrellM2. You can run it on a
remote host and tell gkrellm2 to use values reported by it instead of
local ones.
With a single process, GKrellM manages multiple stacked monitors and supports
applying themes to match the monitors appearance to your window manager,
Gtk, or any other theme.
* SMP CPU, Disk, Proc, and active net interface monitors with LEDs.
* Internet monitor that displays current and charts historical port hits
* Memory and swap space usage meters and a system uptime monitor.
* File system meters show capacity/free space and can mount/umount.
* A mailbox monitor which can launch mail reader, remote mail fetch.
* Clock/calendar and hostname display.
* APM laptop battery monitor.
* CPU/motherboard temperature display if lm_sensors modules installed.
* Multiple monitors managed by a single process to reduce system load.
* A timer button that can execute PPP or ISDN logon/logoff scripts.
* Charts are autoscaling with configurable grid line resolution, or
can be set to a fixed scale mode.
* Separate colors for "in" and "out" data. The in color is used for
CPU user time, disk read, forks, and net receive data. The out color
is used for CPU sys time, disk write, load, and net transmit data.
* Commands can be configured to run when monitor labels are clicked.
* GKrellM is plugin capable so special interest monitors can be created.
* A different theme can be created with the GIMP.
This program has been written in frustration because some constructs in LaTeX
are sometimes non-intuitive, and easy to forget. It is _not_ a replacement
for the built-in checker in LaTeX; however it catches some typographic errors
LaTeX oversees. In other words, it is Lint for LaTeX. Filters are also
provided for checking the LaTeX parts of CWEB documents.