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>