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Komodo Edit for Linux 4.2
a free, multi-language editor more>> Focus on what your code can do; let your editor sweat the details. Based on the award-winning Komodo IDE, Komodo Edit is a free, multi-language editor that makes it easy to write quality code.
New in Komodo Edit 4.2
Auto-update: no more checking for the latest features or need to reinstall Komodo to get the latest version
Soft characters: automatic insertion of closing brackets, braces and parentheses
A new spell checker: find typos before they go live
Upgraded Scintilla to version 1.74
Cursor shape is now configurabl
Documentation improvements and new Creative Commons licensing to support translations contributed by users
Improved Vi emulation
Better Live Folders performance
New for Perl: autocomplete improvements
New for Python: code intelligence updates
New for PHP: better code intelligence and autocomplete performance
New for Ruby: improvements to the Rails project template
New for Tcl: bug fixes
New for JavaScript: code intelligence, autocomplete changes<<less
Download (33.14MB)
Added: 2009-04-24 License: Freeware Price: Free
191 downloads
Gimp User Manual 0.12
GIMP User Manual project is a user manual for the GIMP. more>>
GIMP User Manual project is a user manual for the GIMP. It is written for the GIMP Help Browser, but can produce help pages for other formats as well.
Enhancements:
- New content (incl. spelling and grammar fixes) for German, French, Italian, Norwegian, Russian, Spanish and Korean
- The PDF version of the manual is now generated using dblatex
- Lots of bug fixes
<<lessEnhancements:
- New content (incl. spelling and grammar fixes) for German, French, Italian, Norwegian, Russian, Spanish and Korean
- The PDF version of the manual is now generated using dblatex
- Lots of bug fixes
Download (40MB)
Added: 2007-03-08 License: (FDL) GNU Free Documentation License Price:
975 downloads
Cool Linux 2.3
Cool Linux CD is a bootable CD with Linux operating system, containing a 2.4 kernel and many free software packages. more>>
Cool Linux CD is a bootable CD with Linux operating system that contains a 2.4 kernel and many free software packages.
Enhancements:
- Kernel 2.4.20-wolk and 2.4.22 with supermount, squashfs, shfs patches and ALSA 0.9.6 drivers;
- Ability to choose a version of linux kernel and parameters for FrameBuffer and XFree86 (resolution);
- Save and restore your system configuration on floppy;
- Restore configuration from another session on CoolLinuxCD (in multissesion mode);
- Writing the CD-RW disks with CDRW device (if not a boot drive);
- Ability to choose the interface language during the bootup process (currently only English and Russian languages are supported);
- Autodetects all hardware and autoconfigures XFree86;
- USB mouse and keyboard support;
- IceWM window manager with ROX-filer as desktop and file manager.
<<lessEnhancements:
- Kernel 2.4.20-wolk and 2.4.22 with supermount, squashfs, shfs patches and ALSA 0.9.6 drivers;
- Ability to choose a version of linux kernel and parameters for FrameBuffer and XFree86 (resolution);
- Save and restore your system configuration on floppy;
- Restore configuration from another session on CoolLinuxCD (in multissesion mode);
- Writing the CD-RW disks with CDRW device (if not a boot drive);
- Ability to choose the interface language during the bootup process (currently only English and Russian languages are supported);
- Autodetects all hardware and autoconfigures XFree86;
- USB mouse and keyboard support;
- IceWM window manager with ROX-filer as desktop and file manager.
Download (617MB)
Added: 2005-12-22 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1406 downloads
Komodo Edit (Linux/x86 libstdc++6) 5.1.0
Komodo Edit is a free, open source, multi-platform, multi-language editor for dynamic languages and Ajax technology. Background syntax checking and syntax coloring catch errors immediately, while autocomplete and calltips guide you as you write. more>> <<less
Download (37.22MB)
Added: 2009-04-23 License: Freeware Price: $0.00
452 downloads
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SQL::Translator::Manual 0.07
SQL::Translator::Manual is a Perl module that contains a manual for SQL translator. more>>
SQL::Translator::Manual is a Perl module that contains a manual for SQL translator.
SYNOPSIS
SQL::Translator (AKA "SQLFairy") is a collection of modules for transforming (mainly) SQL DDL files into a variety of other formats, including other SQL dialects, documentation, images, and code. In this manual, we will attempt to address how to use SQLFairy for common tasks. For a lower-level discussion of how the code works, please read the documentation for SQL::Translator.
It may prove helpful to have a general understanding of the SQLFairy code before continuing. The code can be broken into three conceptual groupings:
Parsers
The parsers are responsible for reading the input files and describing them to the Schema object middleware.
Producers
The producers create the output as described by the Schema middleware.
Schema objects
The Schema objects bridge the communication between the Parsers and Producers by representing any parsed file through a standard set of generic objects to represent concepts like Tables, Fields (columns), Indices, Constraints, etc.
Its not necessary to understand how to write or manipulate any of these for most common tasks, but you should aware of the concepts as they will be referenced later in this document.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
SQL::Translator (AKA "SQLFairy") is a collection of modules for transforming (mainly) SQL DDL files into a variety of other formats, including other SQL dialects, documentation, images, and code. In this manual, we will attempt to address how to use SQLFairy for common tasks. For a lower-level discussion of how the code works, please read the documentation for SQL::Translator.
It may prove helpful to have a general understanding of the SQLFairy code before continuing. The code can be broken into three conceptual groupings:
Parsers
The parsers are responsible for reading the input files and describing them to the Schema object middleware.
Producers
The producers create the output as described by the Schema middleware.
Schema objects
The Schema objects bridge the communication between the Parsers and Producers by representing any parsed file through a standard set of generic objects to represent concepts like Tables, Fields (columns), Indices, Constraints, etc.
Its not necessary to understand how to write or manipulate any of these for most common tasks, but you should aware of the concepts as they will be referenced later in this document.
Download (0.31MB)
Added: 2006-09-15 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1139 downloads
KConfigEditor 0.9.6
KConfigEditor is an application which lets power users and administrators directly edit all aspects of their desktops. more>>
KConfigEditor is an application which lets power users and administrators directly edit all aspects of their desktops.
<<less Download (0.66MB)
Added: 2005-07-13 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1564 downloads
The Modular Manual Browser 1.2
The Modular Manual Browser is a set scripts designed as a man/apropos work-alike. more>>
The Modular Manual Browser is a set scripts designed as a man/apropos work-alike. It indexes manual pages across different operating systems and displays them in a searchable database in a Web browser.
It is easy to set up and includes highlighting, linking support in man pages, browsing and searching of pages, categories, and manuals.
It can also optionally set up a database containing descriptions of pages from the page titles.
Enhancements:
- BUGS, COPYING, INSTALL, INSTALL.roff, Makefile, README, README.roff, TODO.sh, config.php, index.php, mandb.php, modfunc.php, modman.php, api/files.php, api/modfunc.php, api/pages.php, api/whatis.php, install/BUGS, install/COPYING, install/INSTALL, install/INSTALL.roff, install/Makefile, install/README, install/README.roff, install/TODO.sh, tmp/.local: api split up, install data moved, so that modman may be dropped directly into webspace. mandb.php can pick up multi-line descriptions now.
Apropos results can be filtered by Section or Manual, but not Page (obviously).
whatis pseudo-database implemented, enabled by default in config.
Sections include Subsections (3->3ucb, 3ucb->3ucblib). Local Apropos and description support added via apropos/whatis programs.
- Release 1.2 -- The Small-Box/WhatIS Release.
<<lessIt is easy to set up and includes highlighting, linking support in man pages, browsing and searching of pages, categories, and manuals.
It can also optionally set up a database containing descriptions of pages from the page titles.
Enhancements:
- BUGS, COPYING, INSTALL, INSTALL.roff, Makefile, README, README.roff, TODO.sh, config.php, index.php, mandb.php, modfunc.php, modman.php, api/files.php, api/modfunc.php, api/pages.php, api/whatis.php, install/BUGS, install/COPYING, install/INSTALL, install/INSTALL.roff, install/Makefile, install/README, install/README.roff, install/TODO.sh, tmp/.local: api split up, install data moved, so that modman may be dropped directly into webspace. mandb.php can pick up multi-line descriptions now.
Apropos results can be filtered by Section or Manual, but not Page (obviously).
whatis pseudo-database implemented, enabled by default in config.
Sections include Subsections (3->3ucb, 3ucb->3ucblib). Local Apropos and description support added via apropos/whatis programs.
- Release 1.2 -- The Small-Box/WhatIS Release.
Download (0.018MB)
Added: 2005-07-18 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1558 downloads

Open IT Online 2.5.1
Open IT Online will improve your browsers capability greatly. It is designed as a Firefox addon that allows to open and edit your documents from everywhere! more>> <<less
Added: 2009-07-21 License: MPL Price: FREE
13 downloads
Maypole::Manual::View 2.11
Maypole::Manual::View is a Perl module for Maypole View Classes. more>>
Maypole::Manual::View is a Perl module for Maypole View Classes.
In a large application, you will almost certainly want to customize the layout and design of the output pages. This task may even be the purview of a separate team of HTML designers rather than the programmers. Since a typical programmer will try to avoid touching HTML as much as possible and a typical designer will try to avoid touching Perl code, programmers have evolved a system of templating to separate the concerns of programming and designing.
One of the core concepts in Maypole is the view class, and this is responsible for routing the data produced in the model class into the templates produced by the designers. Of course, there are a great many possible templating systems and styles, and so there can be a great many possible Maypole view classes. Each view class will take the data from the controller, locate a template to be processed, and hand the whole lot to its preferred templating module, which will then do the hard work of filling in the template and coming up with the output.
You can choose whatever Maypole view class you want, but the default view class is Maypole::View::TT, and it feeds its data and templates to a module called the Template Toolkit.
<<lessIn a large application, you will almost certainly want to customize the layout and design of the output pages. This task may even be the purview of a separate team of HTML designers rather than the programmers. Since a typical programmer will try to avoid touching HTML as much as possible and a typical designer will try to avoid touching Perl code, programmers have evolved a system of templating to separate the concerns of programming and designing.
One of the core concepts in Maypole is the view class, and this is responsible for routing the data produced in the model class into the templates produced by the designers. Of course, there are a great many possible templating systems and styles, and so there can be a great many possible Maypole view classes. Each view class will take the data from the controller, locate a template to be processed, and hand the whole lot to its preferred templating module, which will then do the hard work of filling in the template and coming up with the output.
You can choose whatever Maypole view class you want, but the default view class is Maypole::View::TT, and it feeds its data and templates to a module called the Template Toolkit.
Download (0.14MB)
Added: 2006-09-23 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1127 downloads
Edit Brushes 1.0
Edit Brushes is a script in Python for The Gimp, this script allows you to generate, delete, duplicate and EDIT brushes. more>>
Edit Brushes is a script in Python for The Gimp, this script allows you to generate, delete, duplicate and EDIT brushes generated from images.
<<less Download (MB)
Added: 2006-09-15 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1136 downloads
SourceEditor 0.2
SourceEditor allows you to view and Edit source of HTML element. more>>
SourceEditor allows you to view and Edit source of HTML element.
View and Edit source of HTML element.
Use the button on status bar to activate/desactivate and the double click or the context menu to edit source of the selected element
<<lessView and Edit source of HTML element.
Use the button on status bar to activate/desactivate and the double click or the context menu to edit source of the selected element
Download (0.014MB)
Added: 2007-04-13 License: MPL (Mozilla Public License) Price:
930 downloads
Maypole::Manual::About 2.11
Maypole::Manual::About is an introduction to Maypole. more>>
This chapter serves as a gentle introduction to Maypole and setting up Maypole applications. We look at what Maypole is, how to get it up and running, and how to start thinking about building Maypole applications.
What is Maypole?
Presumably you have some idea of what Maypole is all about, or otherwise you wouldnt be reading this manual. But Maypole is good at many different things, and you may have accidentally focussed on one aspect of Maypole while missing the big picture.
For instance, you may know that Maypole is extremely good at putting web front-ends onto databases. This is true, but its only a part of what Maypole does. You may have heard that Maypole is a web application framework, which is true, but it doesnt mean very much. There are a huge number of things that Maypole can do, because its very much a blank slate. You can make it do what you will. In this manual, well be making it act as a front-end to a database, as a social network site, as an intranet portal, and many other things besides.It is a framework.
I like to think that Maypole is a way of going from a URL to a method call to some output. If you have a URL like /product/order/12, Maypole is a way of having it load up product number 12, call an order method, and produce a page about what its just done. The reason Maypole is such a big deal is because it does all this for you. You no longer have to care about your web server. You hardly have to care about your database. You dont have to care about templating modules, parsing CGI parameters, or anything else. You only need to care about business logic, and the business logic in this instance is how you order a product, and what you need to display about it once youve done so. This is what programming should be: only caring about the work that distinguishes one program from another.
It does this using a technique called MVC for web applications.
What is MVC for web applications?
Maypole was originally called Apache::MVC, reflecting its basis in the Model-View-Controller design pattern. (I had to change it firstly because Maypole isnt tied to Apache, and secondly because Apache::MVC is a really dull name.) Its the same design pattern that forms the foundation of similar projects in other languages, such as Javas Struts framework.
This design pattern is found primarily in graphical applications; the idea is that you have a Model class which represents and manipulates your data, a View class which is responsible for displaying that data to the user, and a Controller class which controls the other classes in response to events triggered by the user. This analogy doesnt correspond precisely to a web-based application, but we can take an important principle from it. As Template Toolkit author Andy Wardley explains:
What the MVC-for-the-web crowd are really trying to achieve is a clear
separation of concerns. Put your database code in one place, your
application code in another, your presentation code in a third place.
That way, you can chop and change different elements at will,
hopefully without affecting the other parts (depending on how well your
concerns are separated, of course). This is common sense and good practice.
MVC achieves this separation of concerns as a by-product of clearly
separating inputs (controls) and outputs (views).
This is what Maypole does. It has a number of database drivers, a number of front-end drivers and a number of templating presentation drivers. In common cases, Maypole provides precisely what you need for all of these areas, and you get to concentrate on writing just the business logic of your application. This is one of the reasons why Maypole lets you develop so rapidly: because most of the time, you dont need to do any development at all.
Download (0.14MB)
Added: 2006-10-17 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1102 downloads
Bio::Phylo::Manual 0.15
Bio::Phylo::Manual is a Perl module that contains a Bio::Phylo v.0.14 user guide. more>>
Bio::Phylo::Manual is a Perl module that contains a Bio::Phylo v.0.14 user guide.
This is the manual for Bio::Phylo. Bio::Phylo is a perl5 package for phylogenetic analysis. For installation instructions, read the README file in the root directory of the distribution. The stable URL for the most recent distribution is http://search.cpan.org/~rvosa/Bio-Phylo/
<<lessThis is the manual for Bio::Phylo. Bio::Phylo is a perl5 package for phylogenetic analysis. For installation instructions, read the README file in the root directory of the distribution. The stable URL for the most recent distribution is http://search.cpan.org/~rvosa/Bio-Phylo/
Download (0.10MB)
Added: 2006-09-29 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1121 downloads
Cool Blue 1.0
Cool Blue is a desktop widget for SuperKaramba for system monitoring. more>>
Cool Blue is a desktop widget for SuperKaramba for system monitoring.
It has cool blue translucent background (which I made with help of Karbon14, Krita and the mighty Gimp) and displays everything I need (and probably what you need too).
It can interact with XMMS. Well, its a matter of personal taste, but I still like XMMS more than AmaroK...
Anyway, if you want, it should be easy changing it to use amaroK. Maybe even Ill do this if I have free time and appropriate mood.
<<lessIt has cool blue translucent background (which I made with help of Karbon14, Krita and the mighty Gimp) and displays everything I need (and probably what you need too).
It can interact with XMMS. Well, its a matter of personal taste, but I still like XMMS more than AmaroK...
Anyway, if you want, it should be easy changing it to use amaroK. Maybe even Ill do this if I have free time and appropriate mood.
Download (0.066MB)
Added: 2005-07-22 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1557 downloads
Sub::Slice::Manual 1.048
Sub::Slice::Manual is a Perl module with user guide for Sub::Slice. more>>
Sub::Slice::Manual is a Perl module with user guide for Sub::Slice.
USING Sub::Slice
Sub::Slice is a way of breaking down a long-running process and maintaining state across a stateless protocol. This allows the client to draw a progress bar or abort the process part-way through.
The mechanism used by Sub::Slice is similar to the session management used on many web user authentication systems. However rather than simply passing an ID back as a token as these systems do, in Sub::Slice a data structure with richer information is passed to the client, allowing the client to make some intelligent decisions rather than blindly maintain state.
Use of Sub::Slice is best explained with a minimal example. Assume that there is a remoting protocol between the client and server such as XML/HTTP. For the sake of brevity, assume that methods called in package Server:: on the client are magically remoted to the server.
The server does two things. The first is to issue a token for the client to use:
#Server
sub create_token {
my $job = new Sub::Slice();
return $job->token;
}
The second is to provide the routine into which the token is passed for each iteration:
sub do_work {
my $token = shift;
my $job = new Sub::Slice(token => $token);
at_start $job sub {
my $files = files_to_process();
#Store some data defining the work to do
$job->store("files", $files);
};
at_stage $job "each_iteration" sub {
#Get some work
my $files = $job->fetch("files");
my $file = shift @$files;
my $was_ok = process_file($file);
#Record we did the work
$job->store("files", $files);
#Check if theres any more work left to do
$job->done() unless(@$files);
};
}
The client somehow gets a token back from the server. It then passes this back to the server for each iteration. It can inspect the token to check if there is any more work left.
#Client
my $token = Server::create_token();
for(1 .. MAX_ITERATIONS) {
Server::do_work($token);
last if $token->{done};
}
<<lessUSING Sub::Slice
Sub::Slice is a way of breaking down a long-running process and maintaining state across a stateless protocol. This allows the client to draw a progress bar or abort the process part-way through.
The mechanism used by Sub::Slice is similar to the session management used on many web user authentication systems. However rather than simply passing an ID back as a token as these systems do, in Sub::Slice a data structure with richer information is passed to the client, allowing the client to make some intelligent decisions rather than blindly maintain state.
Use of Sub::Slice is best explained with a minimal example. Assume that there is a remoting protocol between the client and server such as XML/HTTP. For the sake of brevity, assume that methods called in package Server:: on the client are magically remoted to the server.
The server does two things. The first is to issue a token for the client to use:
#Server
sub create_token {
my $job = new Sub::Slice();
return $job->token;
}
The second is to provide the routine into which the token is passed for each iteration:
sub do_work {
my $token = shift;
my $job = new Sub::Slice(token => $token);
at_start $job sub {
my $files = files_to_process();
#Store some data defining the work to do
$job->store("files", $files);
};
at_stage $job "each_iteration" sub {
#Get some work
my $files = $job->fetch("files");
my $file = shift @$files;
my $was_ok = process_file($file);
#Record we did the work
$job->store("files", $files);
#Check if theres any more work left to do
$job->done() unless(@$files);
};
}
The client somehow gets a token back from the server. It then passes this back to the server for each iteration. It can inspect the token to check if there is any more work left.
#Client
my $token = Server::create_token();
for(1 .. MAX_ITERATIONS) {
Server::do_work($token);
last if $token->{done};
}
Download (0.027MB)
Added: 2006-09-18 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1132 downloads
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