28 projects tagged "XML"
Bare XML is a "bare" XML parser with all primary parsing done via a simple state engine with about 20 or so different states. A tree structure is created during parsing, with all node names and values linked via pointers directly into the original text buffer. As such, Bare XML is extremely fast and simple. Currently, the parser is available in a perl module with Perl glue to turn the created tree into a Perl hash tree. The module name is XML::Bare.
CMS Master is an easy-to-use tool for Web content management. It is completely Web-based with a WYSIWYG editor and an intuitive user interface. It allows you to create and update site content, manage the site structure, menu, page order, images, and files on your site, install new modules, and more.
CPAINT (Cross-Platform Asynchronous INterface Toolkit) is a true AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript+XML) and JSRS (JavaScript Remote Scripting) implementation that supports both PHP and ASP/VBscript. CPAINT provides the code required to implement AJAX and JSRS on the back-end, while the returned data is manipulated, formatted, and displayed on the front-end in JavaScript. This allows you to build Web applications that can provide nearly real-time feedback to the user, including nearly real-time data updates.
Cameleon is an integrated development environment for Objective Caml and eventually other languages. Its features include a graphical user interface, configuration management based on CVS, easy access to and browsing of documentation, various editors, customizable file types, a plug-in architecture, and a highly customizable interface.
DBX works using XML files as its native format. The database can be queried using standard SQL queries. DBX is the smallest, platform independent DBMS, and is extremely easy to migrate to. For small databases, it is a good substitute for MySQL, Oracle, etc. The added advantage is that it saves the data as neat, readable, XML files, allowing easy compatibility.
FramerD is a semi-structured object database integrated with a Scheme-based scripting language which supports multi-lingual programming (with pervasive Unicode), a stable module system for programming in the large, distributed applications (via an extensible RPC protocol), non-deterministic (PROLOG-like) evaluation for search and set operations, multi-threaded program execution, extensive tools for text and language analysis, built-in HTML/XML/MIME parsers, and intuitive (CGI- and FastCGI-based) Web scripting. The built-in object database robustly supports millions of objects and indexed access to those objects, both through disk files and networked servers.
HEBCI is a technique that allows a Web form handler to transparently detect the character set with which its data was encoded. By using carefully-chosen character references, the browser's encoding can be inferred. Thus, it is possible to guarantee that data is in a standard encoding without relying on (often unreliable) Web server/browser encoding interactions.
OTRS is a platform independent Web-based help desk system that supports service organization of any kind (e.g. IT service, customer and technical product service, complaint management, public services, etc.) to increase their efficiency. It increases transparency as well as service quality and lowers your total cost of ownership. It has been certified ITIL V3 compatible by PinkVERIFY for incident, problem, change, service asset and configuration, request fulfillment, and knowledge management. Other ITIL processes like service catalog and service level management are supported as well.
Qexo (Query Expressions for XML Objects aka Kawa-XQuery) is an implementation of W3C's draft XML query language XQuery. XQuery is a high-level expression language whose values are sequences of nodes (as in DOM) and simple values. It includes syntax for embedding XML or HTML results, and a 'for' statement comparable to SQL's 'select'. This implementation uses the Kawa tools to compile XQuery programs to Java bytecodes that can run on any JVM. XQuery programs can run as servlets, as standalone applications, or from the command-line.