8 projects tagged "C++"
nut is nutrition software to record what you eat and analyze your meals for nutrient composition. The database included is the latest USDA Nutrient Database for Standard Reference. This database contains values for vitamins, minerals, fats, calories, protein, carbohydrates, fiber, etc., and includes the essential polyunsaturated fats, Omega-3 and Omega-6. Nutrient levels are expressed as a percentage of the Daily Value, the familiar standard of food labeling in the United States, but also can be fully customized. Foods can be added from recipes or food labels, and nutrient intake can be graphed. The program is completely menu-driven and there are no commands to learn.
Project: Starfighter is a 2D mission-based shoot-'em-up game. The game's story takes place after decades of war, in a world in which one company that had gained power by supplying both sides with weaponary. The company then stepped forward and crushed both warring factions in one swift movement. Using far superior weaponary and AI craft, the company was completely unstoppable, and now no one can stand in their way. Thousands began to perish under the iron fist of the company. The people cried out for a savior, for someone to light this dark hour... and someone did.
Fast File Validator (FFV) is a program for verifying files against a checksum file and for creating such checksum files. FFV supports both SFV files (which use the CRC32 algorithm) and MD5 files. "Checksum" is meant in the generic sense here. Technically, neither CRC32 nor MD5 is really a checksum.
SIMPLE-MTPFS (Simple Media Transfer Protocol FileSystem) is a file system for Linux (and other operating systems with a FUSE implementation, such as Mac OS X or FreeBSD) capable of operating on files on MTP devices attached via USB to local machine. It allows the end user to seamlessly interact with MTP device files.
Build Gear is a lightweight build tool for building embedded firmware. Its primary focus is to make it easy to create and maintain fully-customized embedded firmware. This is reflected in a straightforward commandline interface and support for easy-to-understand build files. The secondary focus is build performance and build integrity. Build Gear is easy to use and well-suited for rapid prototyping and product development of GNU/Linux firmware to be deployed in small-to-medium-sized embedded systems.