Enter the query into the form above. You can look for specific version of a package by using @ symbol like this: gcc@10.
API method:
GET /api/packages?search=hello&page=1&limit=20
where search is your query, page is a page number and limit is a number of items on a single page. Pagination information (such as a number of pages and etc) is returned
in response headers.
If you'd like to join our channel webring send a patch to ~whereiseveryone/toys@lists.sr.ht adding your channel as an entry in channels.scm.
Chez-sockets is an extensible sockets library for Chez Scheme.
Chez Scheme is both a programming language and a high-performance implementation of that language. The language is a superset of R6RS Scheme with numerous extensions, including native threads, non-blocking I/O, local modules, and much more. Chez Scheme compiles source expressions incrementally to machine code, providing the speed of compiled code in an interactive system. The system is intended to be as reliable and efficient as possible, with reliability taking precedence over efficiency if necessary.
This is the precise pre-release version of Chez Scheme from a specific Racket release. It is used to build Racket and to bootstrap the released version of Chez Scheme.
Schemesh is an interactive shell scriptable in Lisp. It supports interactive line editing, autocompletion, history and the familiar Unix shell syntax.
Chez Scheme is a self-hosting compiler: building it requires ``boot files'' containing the Scheme-implemented portions compiled for the current platform. (Chez can then cross-compile bootfiles for all other supported platforms.)
This package provides boot files for the released version of Chez Scheme bootstrapped by chez-scheme-for-racket. Chez Scheme 9.5.4 or any later version can be used for bootstrapping. Guix ultimately uses the Racket package cs-bootstrap to bootstrap its initial version of Chez Scheme.
The stex package extends LaTeX with a handful of commands for including Scheme code (or pretty much any other kind of code, as long as you don't plan to use the Scheme-specific transcript support) in a document. It provides the programs scheme-prep and html-prep to convert stex documents to LaTeX and HTML, respectively, plus makefile templates, style files, and other resources. The stex system is used to typeset The Scheme Programming Language and the Chez Scheme User's Guix, among other documents.
This package provides a port of the MIT/GNU Scheme Scmutils program to Chez Scheme. The port consists of a set of libraries providing most of the functionality of the original.
CHICKEN is a compiler for the Scheme programming language. CHICKEN produces portable and efficient C, supports almost all of the R5RS Scheme language standard, and includes many enhancements and extensions.
This CHICKEN Scheme library provides a facility for creating and using variant records, as described in the book Essentials of Programming Languages by Friedman, Wand, and Haynes.
This ``integer set'' CHICKEN Scheme library implements bit vectors. Bit-vectors provide an abstract interface to bitwise operations typically done with integers.
This egg provides a way to do on-the-fly compilation of source code and load it into the running process.
This package provides an implementation of SRFI-69 hash tables for CHICKEN Scheme, along with SRFI-90 extensions.
This package provides the SRFI-13 string library for Chicken scheme.
The threads implemented in CHICKEN are so called "green" threads, based on first-class continuations. Native threads that map directly to the threads provided by the operating system are not supported. The advantage of this is that threads are very lightweight and somewhat larger degree of determinism. The disadvantage is that execution of Scheme code on multiple processor cores is not available.
This library implements the Wu-Manber algorithm for approximate string searching with errors, popularized by the agrep Unix command and the glimpse file indexing tool.
This package provides a simple testing utility for CHICKEN Scheme.
The list library defined in SRFI-1 contains a lot of useful list processing procedures for construction, examining, destructuring and manipulating lists and pairs.
Character sets can be created, extended, tested for the membership of a characters and be compared to other character sets
The crypto-tools egg implements useful cryptographic primitives. More specifically, provided are:
binary blobs
marshallers to and from hex strings
blob xor
blob padding using either PKCS#5 or ISO7816-4
Block cipher modes of operation
CBC with or without incorporated encrypted IV in the ciphertext
CTR with or without incorporated IV in the ciphertext
Ungoogled-Chromium is the Chromium web browser, with some functionality disabled in order to protect the users privacy. This package also includes the chromedriver command, which can be useful for automated web testing.
Ungoogled-Chromium is the Chromium web browser, with some functionality disabled in order to protect the users privacy. This package also includes the chromedriver command, which can be useful for automated web testing.
Forgejo Runner is a daemon that connects to a Forgejo instance and runs jobs for continuous integration.
Laminar is a lightweight and modular continuous integration service. It doesn't have a configuration web UI instead uses version-controllable configuration files and scripts.
Laminar encourages the use of existing tools such as bash and cron instead of reinventing them.
Cuirass is a continuous integration tool using GNU Guix. It is intended as a replacement for Hydra.