The Murrine gtk engine intends to provide the ability to make your
desktop look like a "Murrine", beautiful glass artworks created by
Venician glass blowers. This cairo-based engine is very fast due to
optimization and removal of slow gradients.
from Brad Walker <bradmwalker at cableone dot net> with some tweaks
File Roller is an archive manager for the GNOME environment. This
means that you can : create and modify archives; view the content
of an archive; view a file contained in the archive; extract files
from the archive.
ok alek@, jasper@ (who also added a RUN_DEPEND)
Devhelp is an API documentation browser for GNOME 2. It works natively
with gtk-doc (the API reference framework developed for GTK+ and used
throughout GNOME for API documentation).
ok ajacoutot@
This package contains a few media utilities for the GNOME desktop:
* the GNOME GStreamer-based audio mixer;
* a volume level meter for ESD;
* the GNOME Sound Recorder;
* the GStreamer properties capplet.
feedback and ok martynas@
- pick up jpeg and png
- fmt DESCR, remove USE_MAKE
based on a diff by new maintainer Nicholas Marriott
<nicm at users dot sourceforge dot net>, with some tweaks by myself
Liberation font software consists of TrueType-OpenType formatted font
software for rendering Liberation typefaces in sans serif, serif, and
monospaced character styles.
There are three sets:
* Sans (a substitute for Arial, Albany, Helvetica, Nimbus Sans L, and
Bitstream Vera Sans)
* Serif (a substitute for Times New Roman, Thorndale, Nimbus Roman, and
Bitstream Vera Serif)
* Mono (a substitute for Courier New, Cumberland, Courier, Nimbus Mono
L, and Bitstream Vera Sans Mono).
"seems ok" matthieu@
YeahLaunch is a simple animated autohiding menu for launching
applications.
Based on a submission by Scott Vokes <vokes dot s at gmail dot com>
(maintainer)
inputs, testing, feedback and ok steven@
rendercheck is a set of simple tests of the X Render extension. It is
designed for authors of Render implementations in X servers
Tests currently include:
* destination coordinates correctness
* source coordinates correctness
* transformed (FilterNearest) source coordinates correctness
* composite with and without mask (with/without component alpha), with
1x1 repeating Pictures and 10x10 Pictures.
* linear gradients
* repeating sources/masks at POT and non-POT sizes
* some regression tests for bugs from freedesktop.org bugzilla
ok aanriot@
py-gnome (also known as gnome-python) is a set of bindings for the Gnome
platform libraries. It builds on top of the PyGTK bindings for GTK and
the PyORBit bindings for ORBit2.
"commit commit!" jasper@
This is the back-end component for the GNUstep GUI Library. The
implementation of the GNUstep GUI Library is designed in two parts. The
first part is the front-end component which is independent of platform
and display system. This front-end is combined with a back-end
component which handles all of the display system dependent such as
specific calls to the X Window System. This design allows the GNUstep
applications to have the "look and feel" of the underlying display
system without any changes to the application, and the library can be
easily ported to other display systems.
The GNUstep GUI Backend is for platforms using the X-Window System or
Window's Systems. It works via a DPS emulation engine to emulate the
DPS functions required by the front-end system.
The GNUstep gui library is a library of graphical user interface classes
written completely in the Objective-C language; the classes are based
upon the OpenStep specification as release by NeXT Software, Inc. These
classes include graphical objects such as buttons, text fields, popup
lists, browser lists, and windows; there are also many associated
classes for handling events, colors, fonts, pasteboards and images.
The GNUstep Base Library is a library of general-purpose, non-graphical
Objective C objects. For example, it includes classes for strings,
object collections, byte streams, typed coders, invocations,
notifications, notification dispatchers, moments in time, network ports,
remote object messaging support (distributed objects), and event loops.
It provides functionality that aims to implement the non-graphical
portion of the OpenStep standard (the Foundation library).
The makefile package is a simple, powerful and extensible way to write
makefiles for a GNUstep-based project. It allows the user to write a
project without having to deal with the complex issues associated with
configuration, building, installation, and packaging. It also allows
the user to easily create cross-compiled binaries.
GNUstep is a cross-platform, object-oriented framework for desktop
application development. Based on the OpenStep specification originally
created by NeXT (now Apple), GNUstep enables developers to rapidly build
sophisticated software by employing a large library of reusable software
components.
Not connected to the build yet as this is a work in progress and there
might be some glitches.
Now that it's in CVS, hopefully more people will test this.
ok robert@
Gossip is an instant messaging client for GNOME. Layered on top of the
open protocol Jabber is a clean and easy-to-use interface, providing
users of the GNOME Desktop a friendly way to keep in touch with their
friends.
help and ok ajacoutot@
floating layouts. Either layout can be applied dynamically, optimizing
the environment for the application in use and the task performed. It is
the little brother of wmii.
ok jasper@
PCManfm is an extremely fast and lightweight file manager which features
tabbed browsing and a user-friendly interface.
Some of its highlights:
* can be started in one second on normal machine
* tabbed browsing (similar to Firefox)
* drag & drop support
* files can be dragged among tabs
* load large directories in reasonable time
* file association support (default application)
* basic thumbnail support
* bookmarks support
* handles non-UTF-8 encoded filenames correctly
* provide icon view and detailed list view
* standard compliant (follows freedesktop.org)
tested by steven@ and kili@, ok kili@
- add @conflict with control-center-1.4, spotted by kurt@
feedback and ok martynas@
this is the last commit to create a useable gnome 2.18.1 desktop.
we'll now focus on fixing little bugs. so stay tuned :)
Gcalctool is the default GNOME desktop calculator.
It has Basic, Financial and Scientific modes. Internally it uses
multiple precision arithmetic to produce results to a high degree of
accuracy.
- the infrastructure now uses autoconf 2.60.
- don't bother to patch libtool, we have USE_LIBTOOL across the board.
- set LIBTOOL_FLAGS to ignore static libraries by default. We will no
longer bother building arts with static libs, since arts is going to
die with kde4, and nothing hardly ever uses it now (in fact, the 3.5.7
release of arts includes no new code, only infrastructure changes)
ok alek@
I'd like to use this commit to say thanks to:
Aleksander Piotrowski (alek@)
Martynas Venckus (martynas@)
Steven Mestdagh (steven@)
Mikolaj Kucharski (mikolaj.kucharski@gmail.com)
for testing, sending and commenting on the diffs to update our Gnome to 2.18
(still some more commits coming)