Software Programming:
Software Programming:ArgoUML — ArgoUML is a modelling tool that helps you design using UML diagrams CLISP — a Common Lisp interpreter and bytecode-compiler DJGPP — a 32-bit DOS port of GCC and other GNU utilities Eiffel Erlang Experix — command line and stack system for data acquisition and analysis and graphics Forth GCC — a set of compilers for multiple programming languages and platforms, including C C++ Ada Java Pascal Fortran GT.M is an open source MUMPS (a.k.a. M) compiler for Linux Harbour — compiler for the xBase superset language often referred to as Clipper Jikes — Java compiler LLVM — Optimizing compiler toolkit Logo — Derivative of Lisp without parenthesis, for kids, with Turtle Graphics MinGW — Windows port of +GCC Mono development platform — Multi-platform .NET implementation (C#) based on the ECMA/ISO standards MMIXware — simulator for MMIXAL language and MMIX processor Objective CAML — a practical and fast functional OO language Parser — a language for dynamic website creation Perl — a programming language strong on text processing PHP — a scripting language designed for web site applications Prolog — Logic programming Python — A high-level scripting language Refal Rexx Ruby StarUML — a software modeling tool and also platform that is a compelling replacement of commercial UML tools such as Rational Rose Tcl/Tk — A high-level scripting language with a graphical toolkit Code generatorsBison CodeSynthesis XSD — XML Data Binding compiler for C++ CodeWorker [43] Flex lexical analyser Kodos [44] phpCodeGenie [45] Ragel State Machine Compiler [46] Redet [47] ^txt2regex$ Configuration SoftwareAutoconf Automake Integrated development environmentsMain article: :Category:Free integrated development environmentsVersion control systemsMain article: :Category:Free_version_control_systemsPublishingPassepartout Scribus Screen saversElectric Sheep Flurry XScreenSaver Boinc SecurityAnti-virusClamAV EncryptionCrossCrypt GnuPG KGPG NeoCrypt [48] Seahorse TrueCrypt Windows Privacy Tray [49] FirewallCoyote Linux fdgw Firestarter FWBuilder [50] IPFilter ipfw IPCop M0n0wall PeerGuardian PF pfSense Rope SmoothWall RSS Specifications
Current RSS Specifications:According to RSS v1 specification RDF Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight multipurpose extensible metadata description and syndication format. RSS is an XML application, conforms to the W3C's RDF specification and is extensible via XML
Proposed RSS Spec. Changes - Proposed changes to the current specification.
RSS Specifications v2 - RSS originated in 1999, and has strived to be a simple, easy to understand format, with relatively modest goals. After it became a popular format, developers wanted to extend it using modules defined in namespaces, as specified by the W3C. RSS 2.0 adds that capability, following a simple rule. An RSS feed may contain elements not described, only if those elements are defined in the namespace.
RSS Specfications v1 - RDF Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight multipurpose extensible metadata description and syndication format. RSS is an XML application, conforms to the W3C's RDF Specification and is extensible via XML-namespace and/or RDF based modularization.
RSS Specfications v.93 - RSS specification v.93 enclosures per item. (previous version only allowed one). Also all dates need to conform to the Date and Time Specification of RFC 822.
RSS Specification v.9 - places restrictions on the first non-whitespace characters of the data in the link and url tags. RSS 0.9 supports the full ASCII character set, as well as all legal decimal
Current RSS Specifications:According to RSS v1 specification RDF Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight multipurpose extensible metadata description and syndication format. RSS is an XML application, conforms to the W3C's RDF specification and is extensible via XML
Proposed RSS Spec. Changes - Proposed changes to the current specification.
RSS Specifications v2 - RSS originated in 1999, and has strived to be a simple, easy to understand format, with relatively modest goals. After it became a popular format, developers wanted to extend it using modules defined in namespaces, as specified by the W3C. RSS 2.0 adds that capability, following a simple rule. An RSS feed may contain elements not described, only if those elements are defined in the namespace.
RSS Specfications v1 - RDF Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight multipurpose extensible metadata description and syndication format. RSS is an XML application, conforms to the W3C's RDF Specification and is extensible via XML-namespace and/or RDF based modularization.
RSS Specfications v.93 - RSS specification v.93 enclosures per item. (previous version only allowed one). Also all dates need to conform to the Date and Time Specification of RFC 822.
RSS Specification v.9 - places restrictions on the first non-whitespace characters of the data in the link and url tags. RSS 0.9 supports the full ASCII character set, as well as all legal decimal

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