The man page for this is really essential. If the user choose not to
build the man page, simply copy the original `asciidoc` file to #{doc}.
Signed-off-by: Adam Vandenberg <flangy@gmail.com>
A small program that parses Message Sequence Chart descriptions and
produces PNG, SVG, EPS or server side image maps (ismaps) as the output.
Mscgen aims to provide a simple text language that is clear to create, edit
and understand, which can also be transformed into common image formats for
display or printing.
Signed-off-by: Adam Vandenberg <flangy@gmail.com>
TiMBL (Tilburg Memory-Based Learner) is a machine learning program implementing
a family of Memory-Based Learning techniques. TiMBL stores a representation of
the training set explicitly in memory (hence `Memory Based'), and classifies new
cases by extrapolating from the most similar stored cases.
Signed-off-by: Adam Vandenberg <flangy@gmail.com>
Riverbank has a nasty habit of pulling old tarballs whenever new releases are
made. New releases are made fairly often--- this leads to a state where the
PyQT and SIP formulae are chronically broken due to outdated tarball links.
This changeset patches the SIP formula to install from the Mercurial repository
for SIP located at:
http://www.riverbankcomputing.co.uk/hg/sip
By default this formula installs an archived tarball from a tag corresponding to
the released version of SIP. Tarballs are fetched using HTTP.
If the user has Mercurial installed, bleeding-edge versions can be installed by
specifying the --HEAD switch.
Signed-off-by: Adam Vandenberg <flangy@gmail.com>
The ImageMagick mirrors like to drop old tarballs, which means that our
formula breaks whenever the version we're using disappears.
So I've switched to using their SVN repo (and added a --HEAD build.)
Caveat: Their SVN repo is only served over https, with a bad cert,
so this brew know has a custom SVN download strategy that auto-accepts
that cert.
If this bothers you, get ImageMagick to fix their cert upstream (or
let us know where a stable tarball mirror lives.)
The File Information Tool Set (FITS) identifies, validates, and extracts
technical metadata for various file formats. It wraps several third-party open
source tools, normalizes and consolidates their output, and reports any
errors. FITS was created by the Harvard University Library Office for
Information Systems for use in its Digital Repository Service (DRS).
Signed-off-by: Adam Vandenberg <flangy@gmail.com>