GTK-Doc is used to document C code. It is typically used to document the
public API of libraries, such as the GTK+ and GNOME libraries, but it
can also be used to document application code.
help and ok alek@
Okan Demirmen <okan@demirmen.com>.
This module returns an object that works like a Hash, Array, Scalar,
Code and Glob object at the same time.
help and ok sturm@
These are XSL stylesheets for transforming DocBook XML document
instances into various output formats. (They would also work for
transforming DocBook SGML document instances, modulo certain namecase
problems and the fact that there aren't (yet) any XSL implementations
that work with SGML source documents.)
From Bernd Ahlers <b.ahlers@ba-net.org>
help & ok aanriot@
--
OCaml-RSS is a library to parse RSS 2.0 files (which are XML files)
and build a structure representing the document. Some functions
are also provided to print RSS documents from the structure.
The parser tries also to parse some RDF files, but many fields of
these RDF files are not taken into account.
--
Xml Light is a minimal Xml parser & printer for OCaml. It provides
a few functions to parse a basic Xml document into an OCaml data
structure and to print back the data structures to an Xml document.
Xml Light has also support for DTD (Document Type Definition).
PyRTF is a pure python module for the efficient generation of rich text
format documents. It has good support for tables and tries to maintain
compatibility with as many RTF readers as possible.
Docutils is a set of tools for processing plaintext documentation into
useful formats, such as HTML, XML, and LaTeX. Includes reStructuredText,
the easy to read, easy to use, what-you-see-is-what-you-get plaintext
markup language.
From Ben Lovett <ben@tilderoot.com>
This is a package of a XML::Parser style and
generic classes for easily parsing XML documents into
native object-oriented perl form.
from Sam Smith <s at msmith.net>
This is a rather incomplete implementation of work done by Gudrun Putze-Meier
<gudrun.pm@t-online.de>. I have to confess that I never read her original
paper. So all credit belongs to her, all bugs are mine. I tried to get some
insight from an implementation of two students of mine. They remain anonymous
because their work was the wost piece of code I ever saw. My code behaves
mostly as their implementation did except it is about 75 times faster.