Juergen Weigert
jnweiger
Involved Projects and Packages
This contains packages for IPA ex-Gothic and Mincho TrueType fonts.
"Proportional Gothic" Japanese TrueType font made by IPA
(Information-technology Promotion Agency).
This package contains the old IPA UI Gothic font that was dropped from
the latest IPA fonts.
Free fonts which are metric compatible to "Arial", "Times New Roman"
and "Courier New".
Free serif fonts from the LinuxLibertine project. These might be useful
when exchanging documents using Times fonts.
"Lanka Linux User Group" OpenType font for Sinhala copyright 2004 by
Yannis Haralambous. OTF tables added by Anuradha Ratnaweera an d
Harshani Devadithya, and modified by Harshula Jayasuriya. "Kunddaliya"
glyph Copyright (c) 2006 Harshula Jayasuriya
Maya covers the glyphs in J. Eric S. Thompson’s “A Catalog of Maya Hieroglyphs”, as well as some extra glyphs for days, months and numbers. This is a work-font that may be of some scholarly use; it is not a proposal of any kind. There are no plans to improve or expand it.
Free high-quality Greek fonts created by Magenta Ltd.
Free Japanese fonts in "handwriting" style by Mika-Chan.
"Monapo" font is a combined font that uses ipagp.otf (April 2009 Ver.003.01)
and mona.ttf.
It has almost same width as MS P Gothic,
so it can show Japanese Ascii Art properly.
The M+ outline fonts are distributed with proportional Latin (4 variations),
fixed-halfwidth Latin (3 variations) and fixed-fullwidth Japanese (2 Kana variations)
character set. 7 weights from Thin to Black are included, but fixed-halfwidth
Latin with 5 weights from Thin to Bold.
Contains the complete official openSUSE documentation in HTML
format. It can be accessed via the Desktop's help centers.
The following manuals are included:
* Installation Quick Start
* Start-Up
* GNOME Quick Start
* GNOME User Guide
* KDE Quick Start
* KDE User Guide
* Application Guide
* Reference
* Security Guide
* AppArmor Quick Start
Contains the complete official openSUSE documentation in Japanese.
SQLite is a small fast embedded SQL database engine.
DBD::SQLite embeds that database engine into a DBD driver, so
if you want a relational database for your project, but don`t
want to install a large RDBMS system like MySQL or PostgreSQL,
then DBD::SQLite may be just what you need.
It supports quite a lot of features, such as transactions (atomic
commit and rollback), indexes, DBA-free operation, a large subset
of SQL92 supported, and more.
The perl-Devel-Leak package
The 'File::LibMagic' is a simple perlinterface to libmagic from the file-
4.x or file-5.x package from Christos Zoulas
(ftp://ftp.astron.com/pub/file/).You can use the simple Interface like
MagicBuffer() or MagicFile(), use the functions of libmagic(3) or use
the OO-Interface.Simple Interface MagicBuffer() fixme
HTML::TokeParser::Simple is a subclass of HTML::TokeParser that uses
easy-to-remember method calls to work with the tokens. Rather than
try to remember a bunch of array indices or try to write a bunch of
constants for them, you can now do something like:
$token->is_start_tag( 'form' )
Instead of
$token->[0] eq 'S' and $token->[1] eq 'form'
Prima is an extensible Perl toolkit for multi-platform GUI development.
The toolkit contains a rich set of standard widgets and has emphasis on
2D image processing tasks. A Perl program using PRIMA looks and behaves
identically on X, Win32 and OS/2. The toolkit includes VB, a visual
builder and a graphic POD viewer.
Sometimes subroutines need to be overridden. In fact, your author does
this constantly for tests. Particularly when testing, using a
Mock Object can be overkill when all you want to do is override
one tiny, little function.
Magic is Perl's way of enhancing variables. This mechanism lets the user
add extra data to any variable and hook syntactical operations (such as
access, assignment or destruction) that can be applied to it. With this
module, you can add your own magic to any variable without having to write
a single line of XS.
WWW::Mechanize, or Mech for short, helps you automate interaction with a
website. It supports performing a sequence of page fetches including following
links and submitting forms. Each fetched page is parsed and its links and
forms are extracted. A link or a form can be selected, form fields can be
filled and the next page can be fetched. Mech also stores a history of the
URLs you've visited, which can be queried and revisited.
This software is a Python library which can prepare IPP requests with
the help of a somewhat high level API. These requests can then be sent
to an IPP printer or print server (e.g. CUPS).
This library can also parse IPP answers received, and create high level
Python objects from them.
Both of these actions can be done through an IPPRequest class and its
instance methods.
Finally, a CUPS class can be leveraged to easily deal with CUPS print
servers.
All of this library being written in the Python language, there is no
need to link the code with the CUPS' API, which makes it independant of
the CUPS version being installed.
Nevertheless some features require an appropriate CUPS version which
supports the functionality (e.g. IPP subscriptions require CUPS 1.2.x).