The gettext module permits access from perl to the gettext() family of
functions for retrieving message strings from databases constructed to
internationalize software.
by Waldemar Brodkorb with some small corrections for more recent package
system changes
ok xsa@
Locale::Maketext::Gettext joins the GNU gettext and Maketext frameworks.
It is a subclass of Locale::Maketext(3) that follows the way GNU gettext
works. It works seamlessly, both in the sense of GNU gettext and
Maketext. As a result, you enjoy both their advantages, and get rid of
both their problems, too.
See what modules are shipped with versions of Perl.
Module::CoreList contains the hash of hashes %Module::CoreList::version,
this is keyed on Perl version as indicated in $]. The second level hash
is module => version pairs.
It also contains %Module::CoreList::released hash, which has ISO
formatted versions of the release dates, as gleaned from perlhist.
ok msf@.
It is a common feature of applications (whether run directly, or via the
Web) for them to be "localized" -- i.e., for them to a present an
English interface to an English-speaker, a German interface to a
German-speaker, and so on for all languages it's programmed with.
Locale::Maketext is a framework for software localization; it provides
you with the tools for organizing and accessing the bits of text and
text-processing code that you need for producing localized applications.
Log::Dispatch is a suite of OO modules for logging messages to
multiple outputs, each of which can have a minimum and maximum log
level. It is designed to be easily subclassed, both for creating a
new dispatcher object and particularly for creating new outputs.
It also allows both global (dispatcher level) and local (logging
object) message formatting callbacks which allows greater flexibility
and should reduce the need for subclassing.
Coccinella is a Jabber chat client with whiteboard communication. The
whiteboard let you share your mp3s, photos, and lots of other stuff.
Further it accepts any fonts. So you will also be able to share
mathematical formulas with your contacts.
From Marc Bruenink <marc@bruenink.de>
ok xsa@, mbalmer@
More importantly, pull out the NetBSD diff that dealt with
*BSDesque dlopen issues and, now that we have a working
RTLD_DEFAULT, go with the FreeBSD hack^H^H^H^H method which works
better.
which no executable is installed by this port but which conflicted with
the courier-utils subpackage of mail/maildrop (which installs the executables
and manual pages).
ok naddy@