The ej module makes it easier to work with Erlang terms representing
JSON in the format returned by jiffy, mochijson2, or ejson. You can use
ej:get/2 to walk an object and return a particular value, ej:set/3 to
update a value within an object, or ej:delete/2 to remove a value from
an object.
ok aja@
Depsolver is a dependency solver package for erlang. You supply it with a list
of versioned objects that are in the world and then you can solve for
different version constraints.
ok aja@
erl-bear is a set of statistics functions for Erlang.
Currently bear is focused on use inside the Folsom Erlang metrics
library but all of these functions are generic and useful in other
situations.
ok aja@
Free Pascal (aka FPK Pascal) is a 32 and 64 bit professional Pascal
compiler. It is available for different processors: Intel x86,
Amd64/x86_64, PowerPC, PowerPC64, Sparc, ARM. The discontinued 1.0
version also supports the Motorola 680x0. The following operating
systems are supported: Linux, FreeBSD, Haiku, Mac OS X/Darwin, DOS,
Win32, Win64, WinCE, OS/2, Netware (libc and classic) and MorphOS.
Thanks to pierre at freepascal dot org for taking care of the patches
and to aja@ for mirroring the bootstrap.
tweaks and ok jasper@ sthen@
This is an Erlang MySQL driver, based on a rewrite at Electronic Arts.
Easy to use, strong connection pooling, prepared statements & stored
procedures. Optimized for a central node architecture and OLTP.
ok aja@
The pooler application allows you to manage pools of OTP behaviors such as
gen_servers, gen_fsms, or supervisors, and provide consumers with exclusive
access to pool members using pooler:take_member.
ok aja@
Baikal offers ubiquitous and synchronized access to your calendars and
address books over CalDAV and CardDAV. Baikal implements the current
IETF recommendation drafts of these industry standards for centralized
calendar and address book collections.
ok aja@
SilverStripe CMS is an open source web content management system used by
governments, businesses, and non-profit organisations around the world.
It is a power tool for professional web development teams, and web
content authors rave about how easy it is to use.
ok aja@
WhatWeb identifies websites. It's goal is to answer the question, "What
is that Website?". WhatWeb recognises web technologies including content
management systems (CMS), blogging platforms, statistic/analytics
packages, JavaScript libraries, web servers, and embedded devices.
WhatWeb has over 900 plugins, each to recognise something different.
WhatWeb also identifies version numbers, email addresses, account ID's,
web framework modules, SQL errors, and more.
ok jasper@