1831 projects tagged "Windows"
Enterprise Reporting Server (Birt) aims to be a Free Software replacement for the standard Birt webviewer. Some its features are: uploading and managing Birt .rptdesign files, user accounts with role-based access controls, fine-grained permissions on reports, and scheduling of reports (using Quartz Enterprise Scheduler).
libj is a cross-platform native runtime library equipped with a Java/JavaScript-like API. The memory management of libj is automatic, based on either shared_ptr or bdw-gc. libj allows programmers familiar with Java/JavaScript to write efficient code easily in C++. libnode depends on libj as a base layer.
Sanzang is a compact and simple cross-platform machine translation system. It is especially useful for translating from the CJK languages (Chinese, Japanese, and Korean), and it is very suitable for working with ancient and otherwise difficult texts. Unlike most other machine translation systems, Sanzang is small and approachable. Any user can develop his or her own translation rules, and these rules are simply stored in a text file and applied at runtime.
papaya CMS is a Web Content Management System based on open standards (including XML, XSLT, PHP, and MySQL/PostgreSQL). It is compatible with almost every operating system, is platform-independent, is multi-lingual, offers great usability, and is easy to extend via its plugin system. It is scalable and perfect for business websites.
cipra is a simple, TAP-compatible Unit Testing Framework for C++. It's written in 100% standard C++11 and is only a couple of header files, making it easy to include in your C++11 project. TAP, the Test Anything Protocol, is a standard output format for software unit test frameworks which was originally designed for Perl, but can serve other languages. It has a rich number of tools ("harnesses") which parse TAP-formatted output and do useful things with it. TAP, however, is equally human-readable. The name cipra (pronounced /ˈʃi.pɾaː/ "SHEE-prah") comes from the lojban phrase "lo cipra", which means "the test". It is properly written with an initial minuscule "c", even when at the start of a sentence.