Showing 33 open source projects for "user-defined language notepad"

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  • 1
    K-automaton is a new parsing (syntactic analysis) machine isomorphous to language. Implemented in Java. Can generate Java code from grammars described in EBNF.
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  • 2
    An experimental language API and interpreter which combine ideas from functional programming and graph theory.
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  • 3
    A Java API for using suffix trees with natural language and an Eclipse/SWT-based GUI for suffix tree visualization using Graphviz.
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  • 4
    Meaningful acronym and name generator from a list of keywords provided by the user. The software checks that the random words generated exist in the specified language by checking against a spelling engine publicy available as a web service
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  • 5
    Find case inconsistencies in the source tree. May be useful for porting applications in any programming language from case-insensitive (like Windows) to case-sensitive (like Linux) runtime environment.
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  • 6
    YABI93 is an Interpreter for the esoteric programming language Befunge, version "Befunge93". It is written in Java 1.5 and uses Swing for its graphical interface. YABI supports a multilanguage GUI.
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  • 7
    phonet4j is the port of a extensible, rule based algortihm for phonetic conversions written by Joerg Michael to java. His code was first published in the computer magazine c't (issue 25/1999, pp. 252). Includes two rulesets for the german language.
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  • 8

    Firefly's Clean Lzo

    A human-readable ISC-Licensed implementation of the LZO1X algorithm.

    LZO is a compression library which is widely used around the world. The main problem with LZO is that it is absolutely not human readable. People have done crazy stuff to get LZO to run in their language. Usually it implies inline assembly or trying to execute data which actually contains machine code. This is sick. Whoever is responsible for this sorry situation ought to be ashamed. So I'm going to deobfuscate LZO and provide a ISC implementation of this algorithm in Python and C. In...
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