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.
dae, means goose, is a high-performance transparent proxy solution using eBPF.
Xray-bin is platform for building proxies to bypass network restrictions.
The systemd System and Service Manager
This package provides efficient vector-based hashtable implementation similar to .NET Generic Dictionary implementation (at the time of 2015). . See "Data.Vector.Hashtables" for documentation.
A quail-based input method for the Ogham script (beith-luis-nion).
podcaster.el is an podcast client which is derived from syohex's emacs-rebuildfm podcaster.el provides showing podscasts list. Its actions are - Play podcast mp3(requires `avplay or `ffplay or `itunes')
pcache provides a persistent way of caching data, in a hashtable-like structure. It relies on `eieio-persistent in the backend, so that any object that can be serialized by EIEIO can be stored with pcache. pcache handles objects called "repositories" (`pcache-repository') and "entries" (`pcache-entry'). Each repository is identified by a unique name, that defines an entry in `pcache-directory'. Subdirectories are allowed, by the use of a directory separator in the repository name. Example: (let ((repo (pcache-repository "plop"))) (pcache-put repo foo 42) ; store value 42 with key foo (pcache-get repo foo) ; => 42 ) Keys can be pretty much any Lisp object, and are compared for equality using `eql Optionally, cache entries can expire: (let ((repo (pcache-repository "plop"))) (pcache-put repo foo 42 1) ; store value 42 with key foo for 1 second (sleep-for 1) (pcache-get repo foo) ; => nil )
Copied from `lisp-mode and modified for LFE.
This is just dependency for ac-html, company-web `web-completion-data-sources is pair list of framework-name and directory of completion data This package provide default "html" completion data. Completion data directory structure: html-attributes-complete - attribute completion html-attributes-list - attributes of tags-add-tables html-attributes-short-docs - attributes documantation html-tag-short-docs - tags documantation If you decide extend with own completion data, let say "Bootstrap" data: (unless (assoc "Bootstrap" web-completion-data-sources) (setq web-completion-data-sources (cons (cons "Bootstrap" "/path/to/complete/data") web-completion-data-sources)))
Most of the general ledger-mode code is here.
`company-wordfreq is a company backend intended for writing texts in a human language. The completions it proposes are words already used in the current (or another open) buffer and matching words from a word list file. This word list file is supposed to be a simple list of words ordered by the frequency the words are used in the language. So the first completions are words already used in the buffer followed by matching words of the language ordered by frequency. `company-wordfreq does not come with the word list files directly, but it can download the files for you for many languages from <https://github.com/hermitdave/FrequencyWords>. I made a fork of that repo just in case the original changes all over sudden without my noticing. The directory where the word list files reside is determined by the variable `company-wordfreq-path', default `~/.emacs.d/wordfreq-dicts'. Their names must follow the pattern `<language>.txt where language is the `ispell-local-dictionary value of the current language. You need =grep= in your =$PATH= as =company-wordfreq= uses it to grep into the word list files. Should be the case by default on any UNIX like systems. On windows you might have to tweak it somehow. `company-wordfreq is supposed to be the one and only company backend and `company-mode should not transform or sort its candidates. This can be achieved by setting the variables `company-backends and `company-transformers buffer locally in `text-mode buffers by (add-hook text-mode-hook (lambda () (setq-local company-backends (company-wordfreq)) (setq-local company-transformers nil))) Usually you don't need to configure the language picked to get the word completions. `company-wordfreq uses the variable `ispell-local-dictionary'. It should work dynamically even if you use `auto-dictionary-mode'. To download a word list use M-x company-wordfreq-download-list You are presented a list of languages to choose. For some languages the word lists are huge, which can lead to noticeable latency when the completions are build. Therefore you are asked if you want to use a word list with only the 50k most frequent words. The file will then be downloaded, processed and put in place.
This package provides font-lock and basic REPL integration for the [J programming language](http://www.jsoftware.com) ; Installation The only method of installation is to check out the project, add it to the load path, and load normally. This may change one day. Put this in your emacs config (add-to-list load-path "/path/to/j-mode/") (load "j-mode") Add for detection of j source files if the auto-load fails (add-to-list auto-mode-alist ("\\.ij[rstp]$" . j-mode)))
BNF Mode is a GNU Emacs major mode for editing BNF grammars. Presently it provides basic syntax and font-locking for BNF files. BNF notation is supported exactly form as it was first announced in the ALGOL 60 report.
This library implements a Mediawiki back-end for Org exporter, based on `html back-end. It provides two commands for export, depending on the desired output: `org-mw-export-as-mediawiki (temporary buffer) and `org-mw-export-to-mediawiki ("mw" file).
This package provides a major mode for the pikchr (https://pikchr.org/) diagram markup language.
Skeletor provides project templates for Emacs. It also automates the mundane parts of setting up a new project like version control, licenses and tooling. Skeletor comes with a number of predefined templates and allows you to easily create your own. To create a new project interactively, run M-x skeletor-create-project'. To define a new project, create a project template inside `skeletor-user-directory', then configure the template with the `skeletor-define-template macro. See the info manual for all the details.
Adds 256 color handling to term/ansi-term by adding 247 customizable faces to ansi-term-color-vector and overriding term-handle-colors-array to handle additional escape sequences.
To play, type M-x threes, then use the arrow keys to move.
impatient-mode is a minor mode that publishes the live buffer through the local simple-httpd server under /imp/live/<buffer-name>/. To unpublish a buffer, toggle impatient-mode off. Start the simple-httpd server (`httpd-start') and visit /imp/ on the local server. There will be a listing of all the buffers that currently have impatient-mode enabled. This is likely to be found here: http://localhost:8080/imp/ Except for html-mode buffers, buffers will be prettied up with htmlize before being sent to clients. This can be toggled at any time with `imp-toggle-htmlize'. Because html-mode buffers are sent raw, you can use impatient-mode see your edits to an HTML document live! This is perhaps the primary motivation of this mode. To receive updates the browser issues a long poll on the client waiting for the buffer to change -- server push. The response happens in an `after-change-functions hook. Buffers that do not run these hooks will not be displayed live to clients.
Do trivial arithmetic on the numbers at point. Attempts to preserve padding when it can. Examples: M-x number/add 1 RET 1 -> 2 05 -> 06 6.30 -> 7.30 07.30 -> 08.30 -08.30 -> -07.30 M-x number/pad 2 RET 5 -> 05 M-x number/pad 2 RET 6 RET 3.141 -> 03.141000 The "guessing" where the number is isn't yet quite awesome, e.g. it doesn't know that the 05 in "2014-05-01" is a month and not, e.g. the number -05. But you can use the region to explicitly denote the start and end of the number. The following keybindings might be nice to use: (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-+") number/add) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C--") number/sub) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-*") number/multiply) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-/") number/divide) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-0") number/pad) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-=") number/eval)
This library implements a Slack backend for the Org exporter, based on the `md and `gfm back-ends.
Quickstart: Configure an extended Latin font for your default face, such as Monaco, Consolas, or DejaVu Sans Mono. Install these fonts https://dn-works.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/UFAS-Fonts/Symbola.zip http://www.quivira-font.com/files/Quivira.ttf ; or Quivira.otf http://sourceforge.net/projects/dejavu/files/dejavu/2.37/dejavu-fonts-ttf-2.37.tar.bz2 https://github.com/googlei18n/noto-fonts/raw/master/hinted/NotoSans-Regular.ttf https://github.com/googlei18n/noto-fonts/raw/master/unhinted/NotoSansSymbols-Regular.ttf Remove Unifont from your system. (require unicode-fonts) (unicode-fonts-setup) Testing: C-h h ; M-x view-hello-file M-x list-charset-chars RET unicode-bmp RET ; search for 210x M-x list-charset-chars RET unicode-smp RET ; if your backend supports astral chars M-x unicode-fonts-debug-insert-block RET Mathematical_Operators RET Explanation: Emacs maintains font mappings on a per-glyph basis, meaning that multiple fonts are used at the same time (transparently) to display any character for which you have a font. Furthermore, Emacs does this out of the box. However, font mappings via fontsets are a bit difficult to configure. In addition, the default setup does not always pick the most legible fonts. As the manual warns, the choice of font actually displayed for a non-ASCII character is "somewhat random". The Unicode standard provides a way to organize font mappings: it divides character ranges into logical groups called "blocks". This library configures Emacs in a Unicode-friendly way by providing mappings from each Unicode block ---to---> a font with good coverage and makes the settings available via the customization interface. This library provides font mappings for 233 of the 255 blocks in the Unicode 8.0 standard which are public and have displayable characters. It assumes that 6 Latin blocks are covered by the default font. 16/255 blocks are not mapped to any known font. To use unicode-fonts, place the unicode-fonts.el file somewhere Emacs can find it, and add the following to your ~/.emacs file: (require unicode-fonts) (unicode-fonts-setup) See important notes about startup speed below. To gain any benefit from the library, you must have fonts with good Unicode support installed on your system. If you are running a recent version of OS X or Microsoft Windows, you already own some good multi-lingual fonts, though you would do very well to download and install the four items below: From https://dejavu-fonts.github.io/ DejaVu Sans, DejaVu Sans Mono From http://www.quivira-font.com/downloads.php Quivira From https://dn-works.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/UFAS-Fonts/Symbola.zip Symbola Many non-free fonts are referenced by the default settings. However, free alternatives are also given wherever possible, and patches are of course accepted to improve every case. On the assumption that an extended Latin font such as Monaco, Consolas, or DejaVu Sans Mono is already being used for the default face, no separate mappings are provided for the following Unicode blocks: Basic Latin Latin Extended Additional Latin Extended-A Latin Extended-B Latin-1 Supplement Spacing Modifier Letters though some of these remain configurable via `customize'. It is also recommended to remove GNU Unifont from your system. Unifont is very useful for debugging, but not useful for reading. The default options favor correctness and completeness over speed, and can add many seconds to initial startup time in GUI mode. However, when possible a font cache is kept between sessions. If you have persistent-soft.el installed, when you start Emacs the second time, the startup cost should be negligible. The disk cache will be rebuilt during Emacs startup whenever a font is added or removed, or any relevant configuration variables are changed. To increase the speed of occasionally building the disk cache, you may use the customization interface to remove fonts from `unicode-fonts-block-font-mapping which are not present on your system. If you are using a language written in Chinese or Arabic script, try customizing `unicode-fonts-skip-font-groups to control which script you see, and send a friendly bug report. Color Emoji are enabled by default when using the Native Mac port on OS X. This can be disabled by customizing each relevant mapping, or by turning off all multicolor glyphs here: M-x customize-variable RET unicode-fonts-skip-font-groups RET See Also M-x customize-group RET unicode-fonts RET M-x customize-variable RET unicode-fonts-block-font-mapping RET Notes Free fonts recognized by this package may be downloaded from the following locations. For any language, it is increasingly likely that Noto Sans provides coverage: From http://www.google.com/get/noto/ Noto Sans and friends ; 181 Unicode blocks and counting; sole ; source for these blocks: ; ; Bamum / Bamum Supplement / Kaithi ; Mandaic / Meetei Mayek Extensions ; Sundanese Supplement ; ; Also a good source for recently-added ; glyphs such as "Turkish Lira Sign". From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?item_id=CharisSIL_download or http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?item_id=DoulosSIL_download Charis SIL or Doulos SIL ; Extended European and diacritics From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?item_id=Gentium_download Gentium Plus ; Greek From http://users.teilar.gr/~g1951d/ Aegean, Aegyptus, Akkadian ; Ancient languages Analecta ; Ancient languages, Deseret Anatolian ; Ancient languages Musica ; Musical Symbols Nilus ; Ancient languages From http://www.wazu.jp/gallery/views/View_MPH2BDamase.html MPH 2B Damase ; Arabic, Armenian, Buginese, Cherokee, Georgian, ; Glagolitic, Hanunoo, Kharoshthi, Limbu, Osmanya, ; Shavian, Syloti Nagri, Tai Le, Thaana From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?site_id=nrsi&id=NamdhinggoSIL Namdhinggo SIL ; Limbu From http://wenq.org/wqy2/index.cgi?FontGuide WenQuanYi Zen Hei ; CJK (Simplified Chinese) From http://babelstone.co.uk/Fonts/ BabelStone Han ; CJK (Simplified Chinese) BabelStone Phags-pa Book ; Phags-pa BabelStone Modern ; Tags / Specials / Selectors From http://vietunicode.sourceforge.net/fonts/fonts_hannom.html HAN NOM A, HAN NOM B ; CJK (Nôm Chinese) From http://kldp.net/projects/unfonts/ Un Batang ; CJK (Hangul) From http://sourceforge.jp/projects/hanazono-font/releases/ Hana Min A, Hana Min B ; CJK (Japanese) From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?site_id=nrsi&id=SILYi_home Nuosu SIL ; CJK (Yi) From http://www.daicing.com/manchu/index.php?page=fonts-downloads Daicing Xiaokai ; Mongolian From http://www.library.gov.bt/IT/fonts.html Jomolhari ; Tibetan From http://www.thlib.org/tools/scripts/wiki/tibetan%20machine%20uni.html Tibetan Machine Uni ; Tibetan From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?item_id=Padauk Padauk ; Myanmar From https://code.google.com/p/myanmar3source/downloads/list Myanmar3 ; Myanmar From http://www.yunghkio.com/unicode/ Yunghkio ; Myanmar From https://code.google.com/p/tharlon-font/downloads/list TharLon ; Myanmar From http://sourceforge.net/projects/prahita/files/Myanmar%20Unicode%20Fonts/MasterpieceUniSans/ Masterpiece Uni Sans ; Myanmar From http://sarovar.org/projects/samyak/ Samyak ; Gujarati, Malayalam, Oriya, Tamil From http://software.sil.org/annapurna/download/ Annapurna SIL ; Devanagari From http://guca.sourceforge.net/typography/fonts/anmoluni/ AnmolUni ; Gurmukhi From http://brahmi.sourceforge.net/downloads2.html Kedage ; Kannada From http://www.omicronlab.com/bangla-fonts.html Mukti Narrow ; Bengali From http://www.kamban.com.au/downloads.html Akshar Unicode ; Sinhala From http://tabish.freeshell.org/eeyek/download.html Eeyek Unicode ; Meetei Mayek From http://scripts.sil.org/CMS/scripts/page.php?&item_id=Mondulkiri Khmer Mondulkiri ; Khmer From http://www.laoscript.net/downloads/ Saysettha MX ; Lao From http://www.geocities.jp/simsheart_alif/taithamunicode.html Lanna Alif ; Tai Tham From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?site_id=nrsi&id=DaiBannaSIL Dai Banna SIL ; New Tai Lue From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?item_id=TaiHeritage Tai Heritage Pro ; Tai Viet From http://sabilulungan.org/aksara/ Sundanese Unicode ; Sundanese From http://www.amirifont.org/ Amiri ; Arabic (Naskh) From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?item_id=Scheherazade Scheherazade ; Arabic (Naskh) From http://www.farsiweb.ir/wiki/Persian_fonts Koodak ; Arabic (Farsi) From http://openfontlibrary.org/font/ahuramazda/ Ahuramzda ; Avestan From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?site_id=nrsi&id=AbyssinicaSIL Abyssinica SIL ; Ethiopic From http://www.bethmardutho.org/index.php/resources/fonts.html Estrangelo Nisibin ; Syriac From http://www.evertype.com/fonts/nko/ Conakry ; N'ko From http://uni.hilledu.com/download-ribenguni Ribeng ; Chakma From http://www.virtualvinodh.com/downloads Adinatha Tamil Brahmi ; Brahmi From http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/freefont/ FreeMono, etc (FreeFont) ; Kayah Li (and others) From http://ulikozok.com/aksara-batak/batak-font/ Batak-Unicode ; Batak From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?site_id=nrsi&id=Mingzat Mingzat ; Lepcha From http://phjamr.github.io/lisu.html#install http://phjamr.github.io/miao.html#install http://phjamr.github.io/mro.html#install Miao Unicode ; Miao Lisu Unicode ; Lisu Mro Unicode ; Mro From http://scholarsfonts.net/cardofnt.html Cardo ; Historical Languages From http://sourceforge.net/projects/junicode/files/junicode/ Junicode ; Historical Languages From http://www.evertype.com/fonts/vai/ Dukor ; Vai From http://sourceforge.net/projects/zhmono/ ZH Mono ; Inscriptional Pahlavi / Parthian From http://culmus.sourceforge.net/ancient/index.html Aramaic Imperial Yeb ; Imperial Aramaic From http://www.languagegeek.com/font/fontdownload.html Aboriginal Sans ; Aboriginal Languages Aboriginal Serif From http://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?site_id=nrsi&id=EzraSIL_Home Ezra SIL ; Hebrew From http://www.evertype.com/fonts/coptic/ Antinoou ; Coptic / General Punctuation From http://apagreekkeys.org/NAUdownload.html New Athena Unicode ; Ancient Languages / Symbols From http://markmail.org/thread/g57mk4sbdycblxds KhojkiUnicodeOT ; Khojki From https://github.com/andjc/ahom-unicode/tree/master/font AhomUnicode ; Ahom From https://github.com/MihailJP/oldsindhi/releases OldSindhi ; Khudawadi From https://github.com/MihailJP/Muktamsiddham/releases MuktamsiddhamG ; Siddham (note trailing "G" on font name) From https://github.com/MihailJP/MarathiCursive/releases MarathiCursiveG ; Modi (note trailing "G" on font name) From https://github.com/OldHungarian/old-hungarian-font/releases OldHungarian ; Old Hungarian From http://tutohtml.perso.sfr.fr/unicode.html Albanian ; Elbasan / Takri / Sharada From https://github.com/enabling-languages/cham-unicode/tree/master/fonts/ttf Cham OI_Tangin ; Cham From https://ctan.org/tex-archive/fonts/Asana-Math?lang=en Asana Math ; Mathematical Symbols Compatibility and Requirements GNU Emacs version 23.3 and higher : yes GNU Emacs version 22.3 and lower : no Requires font-utils.el, ucs-utils.el Bugs The default choice of font for each code block balances coverage versus appearance. This is necessarily subjective. Unicode also defines the notion of a "script" as a higher-level abstraction which is independent of "blocks". Modern fonts can report their script coverage, and Emacs may also access that information. However, this library ignores scripts in favor of blocks and glyphs. Checking for font availability is slow. This library can add anywhere between 0.1 - 10 secs to startup time. It is slowest under X11. Some per-architecture limitations are documented in font-utils.el Calling `set-fontset-font can easily crash Emacs. There is a workaround, but it may not be sufficient on all platforms. Tested on Cocoa Emacs, Native Mac Emacs, X11/XQuartz, MS Windows XP. Glyph-by-glyph fallthrough happens differently depending on the font backend. On Cocoa Emacs, glyph-by-glyph fallthrough does not occur, and manual per-glyph overrides are required to maximize coverage. Fallthrough works on MS Windows, but not perfectly. X11/FreeType behaves most predictably. The following ranges cannot be overridden within the "fontset-default" fontset: Latin Extended Additional Latin Extended-B Spacing Modifier Letters `unicode-fonts-overrides-mapping shows some order-dependence, which must indicate a bug in this code. A number of the entries in `unicode-fonts-overrides-mapping are workarounds for the font Monaco, and therefore specific to OS X. Widths of alternate fonts do not act as expected on MS Windows. For example, DejaVu Sans Mono box-drawing characters may use a different width than the default font. TODO provide additional interfaces - dump set-fontset-font instructions - immediately set font for character/current-character/range - recommend font for current character - alternatives to customize, which can be called before unicode-fonts-setup - eg "prefer this font for this block" - also character/range ie overrides scripts vs blocks - further doc note - provide alternative interface via scripts reorganize font list by language? - break down into living/dead/invented support MUFI for PUA support ConScript for PUA Aramaic as a style of Hebrew (set-language-environment "UTF-8") ? Include all Windows 8 fonts Include all Windows 10 fonts Remove very old Microsoft entries (eg Monotype.com which was renamed Andale) Recognize the default font and make smarter choices when it is one of the provided mappings. (On Cocoa, the default font is returned when font-info fails, which is not a good thing overall.) For every font, list font version and unicode blocks which are complete. Note all decorative fonts Adobe international fonts which are supplied with Reader Apple fonts which could not be mapped Wawati TC Weibei TC Weibei SC Wawati SC ; License Simplified BSD License: Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. This software is provided by Roland Walker "AS IS" and any express or implied warranties, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose are disclaimed. In no event shall Roland Walker or contributors be liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, special, exemplary, or consequential damages (including, but not limited to, procurement of substitute goods or services; loss of use, data, or profits; or business interruption) however caused and on any theory of liability, whether in contract, strict liability, or tort (including negligence or otherwise) arising in any way out of the use of this software, even if advised of the possibility of such damage. The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either expressed or implied, of Roland Walker. No rights are claimed over data created by the Unicode Consortium, which are included here under the terms of the Unicode Terms of Use.
This package provides font-locking, indentation and navigation support for the Elixir programming language.
This package provides a simple command to restart Emacs from within Emacs