6 projects tagged "Internationalization"
Javascript VirtualKeyboard allows you to use any existing keyboard layouts without having them installed on your local PC. This tool is useful for embedding into a WYSIWYG HTML editor, a Web mail system, chat, forum, or any other application requiring user input. About 80 languages/170 keyboard layouts are supported. It has an easy and powerful design, allowing it to implement complex layouts like Korean, Japanese, Chinese, and so on. It has full support for keyboard and mouse input. It features a completely CSS-driven UI that is easy skinnable.
[fleXive] is a Java EE 5 content repository aiming to support upcoming industry standards like CMIS. It strives to provide a holistic approach by offering a comprehensive set of tools and building blocks for building content-centric Web applications around a [fleXive] content repository. It speeds up development by easing many tedious and repetitive programming tasks and helping to keep your application(s) flexible during the development cycle and in production. It concentrates on enterprise-scale content modeling, storage, and retrieval, and includes comprehensive JSF support for displaying and manipulating these contents in (Web) applications. Key features include persistence, security, versioning, multi-language support, and scripting.
[fleXive] CMS is a Java EE content management system based on JavaServer Faces 1.2. It combines the power of JSF XHTML templating with that of the Java EE 5 content repository, [fleXive]. Some highlights include dynamic JSF templating (Facelets), easy integration of custom logic with EJB or JSF beans, a modular structure, Maven support, generic data structures, and WebDAV and CMIS support. It incorporates all core [fleXive] features like security, versioning, multilinguism, and scripting.
BidiChecker is a tool for the automated testing of Web pages for errors in support of right-to-left (RTL) languages (also known as bidirectional/BiDi). It provides a JavaScript API to be called from automated test suites that regression-test live Web pages in a browser, usually using an automated testing framework such as JSUnit.
iLib is an internationalization library for JavaScript that was created because with the advent of AJAX, it is no longer possible to avoid internationalization. Previously, you could format dates in the user's locale on the server. Now, Web services called via AJAX return time stamps in Unix time and formatting has to be done in the browser, but the standard library is inadequate. In addition to dates, the library handles times, numbers, currency, percentages, calendar calculations (Arabic, Hebrew, Gregorian, and Julian), time zones, string translation, string formatting and choice formats, locale info, ctype functions, and Unicode normalization.
A library of synchronization primitives and concurrent data structures for specific update-heavy workloads.