PyStemmer provides access to efficient algorithms for calculating a
"stemmed" form of a word. This is a form with most of the common
morphological endings removed; hopefully representing a common
linguistic base form. This is most useful in building search engines
and information retrieval software; for example, a search with stemming
enabled should be able to find a document containing "cycling" given the
query "cycles".
PyStemmer provides algorithms for several (mainly european) languages,
by wrapping the libstemmer library from the Snowball project in a Python
module. It also provides access to the classic Porter stemming algorithm
for english: although this has been superceded by an improved algorithm,
the original algorithm may be of interest to information retrieval
researchers wishing to reproduce results of earlier experiments
This is a mobile-friendly sphinx theme I made for readthedocs.org. It's
currently in development there and includes some rtd variable checks that
can be ignored if you're just trying to use it on your project outside of
that site.
Alabaster is a visually (c)lean, responsive, configurable theme for the
Sphinx documentation system. It is Python 2+3 compatible.
It began as a third-party theme, and is still maintained separately, but
as of Sphinx 1.3, Alabaster is an install-time dependency of Sphinx and
is selected as the default theme.
Sourcecode::Spellchecker is a Perl module that scans a source file
for common misspellings - including in comments, string literals,
and identifier names - and suggests corrections.
OK sthen@
parts despite building its own patched version). So it still takes a while
to build but at least it doesn't have to wait for qt4 before it starts.
From maintainer Frank Groeneveld.