7 projects tagged "Import"
Assimp is a portable and extensible library designed for reading various well-known 3D file formats. It provides APIs for C and C++ and several wrappers for other languages. It reads more than 20 different 3D file formats (including Collada, 3DS, OBJ, LWO, and X) into a straightforward, hierarchical in-memory data structure that can easily be read and processed by applications. Several post processing steps can be applied, such as normal and tangent computations, index buffer, and vertex cache optimization. The library supports complex multi-layer materials and skinned meshes with multiple animations. A Windows-based viewer utility is provided as an implementation reference.
univis2typo3 is a tool to import data from UnivIS into a TYPO3 Web site. This lets you create a Web site for a university department with a few clicks. It automaticaly imports information about people, lectures, projects, publications, and other department information. It has a user-friendly interface to create and edit personal and course Web pages. It can automatically backup and update the data. The Web site will remain available even if the UnivIS server becomes unavailable.
Rapid Photo Downloader is an application for professional and amateur photographers, designed for use on the Linux desktop. It can download photos and videos from multiple cameras, memory cards, and portable storage devices simultaneously. It provides many flexible, user-defined options for subfolder creation, photo and video renaming, and backup.
Whiteboard lets the user draw freehand graphics on a Web page. It can create a canvas object for the whiteboard (if one does not exist) and let the user draw on the canvas area by dragging the mouse around. The color, thickness, line join, and line cap of the drawing pen can be configured. The object can also clear the whiteboard, export the coordinates of the drawn lines, or import previously drawn lines.
imapfoo allows one to quickly add email messages to a specified IMAP folder. These messages can either be composed of random hexadecimal text, data specified on the command line, generated from an input file using Markov Chains (e.g. Lorem Ipsum style content), or read from an mbox file. It is written in Perl and uses a couple of standard modules, which are all part of Debian Lenny and also available on CPAN.