home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Fresh Fish 7
/
FreshFishVol7.bin
/
bbs
/
contents
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-10-21
|
320KB
|
8,714 lines
This file is generated automatically from the product info files
included in this tree.
==========
ADDRESSMANAGER for MUI 1.0 Utility to manage name/address info
AddressManager is an utillity which makes it easier for you to master
all the information you have about your friends, familly, business
partners or pets. AddressManager for MUI is different from most other
similar programs, because it uses Stefan Stuntz`s Magic User Interface.
This great user interface gives you the possibilty to configure you
application as you like it.
Author: MICHAEL SCHIKORA
Path: biz/AM_Mui1.0-1.0.lha
==========
comicDemo 2.0 Database for comic books or magazines
Comic-Manager is a program for collectors of comics, magazines or novels.
You have to enter all your comics and rate them into different conditions.
With different kinds of evaluations you are able to get a good survey of
your collection, for example how many numbers are present or missing.
The most important program item concerns the printing of your data.
It is possible to print the data as a small book which you can take
everywhere.
Author: Andreas Zottmann
Path: biz/ComicDemo-2.0.lha
==========
db 2.3 Database with GadTool look
db is a small and fast database program that I wrote after having tested
numerous other PD database programs and always found something lacking or
irritating me. They might have dozzens of features not found in db, but
they lacked font sensitivity and a standard GUI look and OS 3.0 behaviour.
My main need was to keep record on addresses and telephone numbers of friends
and companies. Before this release db was fixed to be just an address and
telephone database, but this has changed now. The program is designed
to handle information of your choice. Currently you have to use a file
editor to specify the database fields and layout as there is no GUI for that.
Anyway that's a one time job, then you just USE the database and have fun.
Complete GUI support will probably only be included in a commercial product
I plan to call REG.
A partial list of db's features include:
o Dynamic memory handling. Number of records and fields only limited by
free memory.
o GadTool based, gives a standard look and feel.
o Mouse and keyboard driven.
o User definable fields and layout.
o Multiple views of the same database.
o Commodore's Clipboard for flexible interaction with other programs.
o AppWindow -just drag and drop database icons on db to load.
o Online MenuHelp -Press HELP key when selecting a menu item.
o Font sensitivity.
o ARexx
o ASL requesters for flexible loads and saves.
o Localized
o Dial numbers using a modem
o WB and Shell usage with Commodore's template parsing
o Fast and flexible find function using AmigaDOS patterns.
o Filter function.
o Fast and flexible sort function. Multiple sort orders can be specified.
o 'Export View' and two standard ASCII export features.
o Automatic ASCII import (tab-separated ASCII)
Author: David Ekholm, Datadosen
Path: biz/db-2.3.lha
==========
DDBase 6.42 Database that can view various formats
Have upto 3500 records,export-import data ASCII ,Superbase or BBaseII
Uses External fields {ASCII/IFF/MED-SOUNDTRACKER MODULES/8SVX/
AMIGAGUIDE/ANIMS/GIFF/JPEG/}, upto 20 fields.Draw upto 10 Bevel/FlipBoxes,
Box,Double Bevel Boxes. DDBASE is now compatible with PAL Lowres,Hires,
Hires Lace and NTSC Lowres,Hires/Hires Lace screen modes.
DDBASE can now create a AmigaGuide database from a DDBASE file.
Author: Peter Hughes
Path: biz/DDBASE-6.42.lha
==========
DFA 2.2 Address database with many features
DESCRIPTION
DFA is the ultimate address tool for you and the Amiga
computer. DFA supports email addresses, dialing of phone
numbers, grouping of addresses, different types of printing
addresses, online help, application icon/window and much more!
DFA has an Arexx port, font sensitive windows and can be fully
directed by keyboard. Native languages are supported as soon
as Workbench 2.1 (and above) is installed.
Nearly every aspect of DFA is customizable now, so you may
configure "your own" DFA.
This is version 2.2, a minor upgrade to version 2.1.
DFA is an SASG product! Shareware, binary only.
NEW FEATURES
------------
New window for more convenient and faster group editing.
Clipboard support.
Visual feedback for all button gadgets.
Speed optimizations for the address listview.
Should be up to 10 times faster now!
Even faster address file loading.
Larger buffers for all address string gadgets.
New Arexx command 'GUI' and 'OpenEditWindow'
Size optimization of the dfa.library. About 15K saved!
Sort function is 'locale sensitive' now.
Improved locale handling.
Additional and improved status messages.
Improved status text gadget (DFAEditor) now supports
centered propotional text on all Amiga-OS versions.
Improved Installer script, which now supplies a new
uninstall mechanism and german texts (optional).
Several bug fixes.
Author: Dirk Federlein
Path: biz/DFA-2.2.lha
==========
IntuiDex 1.1 Mailing list manager
Easy to use club membership database and mailing list manager.
Features:
- 1000 records per database
- Sort by six different fields:
last name, first name, ZIP,
member number, city, and
expiration date
- Print five different types of output:
mailing labels, complete data list,
phone lists, game stickers, and
merge files for word processors
- Uses Preferences printers
- Dials phone automatically with Hayes compatible modems
- On-line AmigaGuide help
- Most data field names are configurable
- Data is stored in ASCII files- export and import data from other
database software!
Author: Jeffery C. May
Path: biz/IntuiDex-1.1.lha
==========
INVOICER 1 Program to create and print Invoices
Invoicer is a program that will allow you to
enter and print Invoices. It is geared mainly
for regular customers and regular jobs etc.
It is however still quite easy to issue a
invoice on a one off basis. It will also save
all the Invoices that you print to disk enabling
you to print or edit any invoice that you have
issued.
Author: P.A.Hughes
Path: biz/INVOICER-1.lha
==========
TurboCalc 2.18E Demo version of powerful spreadsheet
A spreadsheet which was chosen as "spreadsheet of the year" for Amiga
computers by the readers of one of Germany's most important Amiga
magazines. This is a demo version with disabled save and print
functions. Has more than 100 functions and 120 macro commands,
include ARexx commands. Has an integrated database with search, sort,
copy, extract, delete, and other database functions such as number of
matches, average, etc. Diagrams and charts are included and very easy
to handle.
Author: Michael Friedrich
Path: biz/TurboCalc-2.18E.lha
==========
NDUK-V37 37 Partial CBM Native Developer Update Kit
Portions of the Commodore Native Developer Update Kit that can be
licensed for separate distribution. Includes the "fd" files,
libraries, startups, "C include" files, and tools. Does not include
the autodocs. This material copyright by Commodore-Amiga Inc, is
included under license from Commodore, and has restricted distribution
conditions. It is allowed to make copies from the CD-ROM for personal
use but not for redistribution. See the files included with the
distribution for further details.
Author: Commodore-Amiga Inc.
Path: CBM/NDUK-V37.lha
==========
NDUK-V39 39 Partial CBM Native Developer Update Kit
Portions of the Commodore Native Developer Update Kit that can be
licensed for separate distribution. Includes the "fd" files,
libraries, startups, "C include" files, and tools. Does not include
the autodocs. This material copyright by Commodore-Amiga Inc, is
included under license from Commodore, and has restricted distribution
conditions. It is allowed to make copies from the CD-ROM for personal
use but not for redistribution. See the files included with the
distribution for further details.
Author: Commodore-Amiga Inc.
Path: CBM/NDUK-V39.lha
==========
NDUK-V40 40 Partial CBM Native Developer Update Kit
Portions of the Commodore Native Developer Update Kit that can be
licensed for separate distribution. Includes the "fd" files,
libraries, startups, "C include" files, and tools. Does not include
the autodocs. This material copyright by Commodore-Amiga Inc, is
included under license from Commodore, and has restricted distribution
conditions. It is allowed to make copies from the CD-ROM for personal
use but not for redistribution. See the files included with the
distribution for further details.
Author: Commodore-Amiga Inc.
Path: CBM/NDUK-V40.lha
==========
NDUK include files 40 Amiga include files for gcc binary tree.
Portions of the Commodore Native Developer Update Kit that can be
licensed for separate distribution. Includes the "fd" files,
libraries, startups, "C include" files, and tools. Does not include
the autodocs. This material copyright by Commodore-Amiga Inc, is
included under license from Commodore, and has restricted distribution
conditions. It is allowed to make copies from the CD-ROM for personal
use but not for redistribution. See the files included with the
distribution for further details.
Author: Commodore-Amiga Inc.
Path: CBM/os-include-bin.lha
==========
NDUK libraries 40 Amiga libraries for gcc binary tree.
Portions of the Commodore Native Developer Update Kit that can be
licensed for separate distribution. Includes the "fd" files,
libraries, startups, "C include" files, and tools. Does not include
the autodocs. This material copyright by Commodore-Amiga Inc, is
included under license from Commodore, and has restricted distribution
conditions. It is allowed to make copies from the CD-ROM for personal
use but not for redistribution. See the files included with the
distribution for further details.
Author: Commodore-Amiga Inc.
Path: CBM/os-lib-bin.lha
==========
10000 1.5 Dice game, written exclusively for DLG
10,000 is a dice game, written exclusively for DLG. The object of the game
is to get 10,000 points first. This is achieved by rolling 6 dice, and
hopefully getting some points from either 1's, 5's, or any group of 3 dice
with the same number.
Author: Steve Herring
Path: comm/10000-1.5.lha
==========
ATOB 4.0 Programs to encode programs into ascii
BTOA and ATOB, are encode/decode programs for sending
binary files over Amateur Radio Packet. They are also
useful for transmitting/storing files when only 7 bit
ASCII characters are allowed. Typical overhead is 20%.
Author: Randy Lilly
Path: comm/ATOB-4.0.lha
==========
Bulletins 2.00 STDIO door for BBS bulletins
This program will allow a SYSOP to add a multi-level
bulletin program to a BBS. It is a STDIO door and works
with any BBS which supports them. This door has been used
with the Citadel BBS as an autodoor and a regular door.
The Amiga Zone BBS (609)953-8159, the primary support BBS.
Author: Tony Preston
Path: comm/bull-2.00.lha
==========
CyberPager 1.5 Send alpha-numeric messages to pagers.
Allows one to send alpha-numeric (i.e., full text) messages to a pager from
an Amiga. This is accomplished by dialing into an IXO protocol compliant
pager central and uploading messages. Features include: Alias file for
commonly paged people to be referred to by name rather than cryptic PIN
numbers; "Groups" file allowing messages to be easily sent to many people
working on the same project, in the same department, etc; Supports multiple
pager centrals through a services configuration file; Full logging of
messages spooled, dialout attempts, etc. Includes sample rexx scripts to
generating automatic messages, paging the current person on duty, etc.
Version 1.5 adds support for IXO TAP services that are out of spec and use
8N1 modem characteristics. This support will require you to update your
services file to include the new Use8N1 flag.
Author: Christopher A. Wichura
Path: comm/CyberPager-1.5.lha
==========
FidoMon 1.0 FidoNet In/Outbound viewer for TrapDoor.
FidoMon provides a real-time display of TrapDoor's inbound/outbound
directories. It provides a simple mechanism to change NetMail and Flow
file status, and it can execute a user defined polling script based on the
address of a selected file. It also provides FidoNet file type and address
information at a glance, and even more information is often available with
a few clicks of a mouse button. Finally, it provides a mechanism by which
a user can edit some of FidoNet's text based files without worrying about
the carriage return/line feed conversions that are often otherwise
necessary for FidoNet files.
Author: Elton VonCannon
Path: comm/FidoMon-1.0.lha
==========
Gothic_Tag ?.? Adds taglines to messages
Well, basically it's a thing for adding taglines to messages. Or
alternatively a thing for adding messages to taglines. Take your pick.
Author: James W Savage
Path: comm/Gothic_Tag.lha
==========
Mosaic 1.2 Amiga World-Wide-Web browser
Amiga Mosaic is a networked information discovery, retrieval, and
collaboration tool originally developed at the National Center for
Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana
and then ported to the Amiga by Michael Fischer, Michael Witbrock, Michael
Meyer, and Steve Dunham.
Mosaic provides a hypertext interface to the global Internet. Hypertext
is text which contains highlighted links, called hyperlinks or anchors,
to other texts. Each highlighted phrase (in color or underlined) is a
hyperlink to another document or information resource somewhere on the
Net. A single click with the left mouse button on any highlighted
phrase will follow the link, and Mosaic will retrieve the document
associated with the selected hyperlink and display it.
The Mosaic client communicates with HTTP servers. HTTP is the HyperText
Transfer Protocol of the WWW (World Wide Web). Mosaic can also communicate
with more traditional Internet protocols such as FTP, Gopher, WAIS, NNTP,
etc.
The hypertext documents viewed with Mosaic are written in HTML (HyperText
Markup Language), which is a subset of SGML (Standard Generalized Markup
Language). Among the many formatting features, HTML allows Mosaic to
display inlined images. (In fact, an inlined images can serve as a
hyperlink just like a word or phrase can).
Mosaic also features unlimited multimedia capabilities. File types
that Mosaic cannot handle internally, such as mpeg movies, sound
files, Postscript documents, and JPEG images, are automatically sent
to external viewers (or players).
Author: Originally from the NCSA at the University of Illinois at Urbana
Amiga port by Michael Fischer, Michael Witbrock, Michael Meyer,
and Steve Dunham
Path: comm/Mosaic-1.2.lha
==========
Nuclear Warfare 1.25 shareware game of strategy
World tensions mount! Everyone is stockpiling weapons and
trying to influence allies to side with them! Someone cracks
and pushes the big red button! Nuclear Warfare is a game of
economics and strategy in the early stages where you attempt
to build up your country and it's defenses. Spend too much
on defenses and you grow less than your enemies, too little
too late and your toast! Nuclear Warfare is a BBS door game
for up to 15 players. Each player controls a major country
and attempts to influence non-player countries into attacking
enemies. The games always have 15 players, any slots empty
at the start of the game are used by computer players. When
a human player wants to play, they take over from a computer
player. This game can be played from cli with just one player
and it will be you against the computer. It is primarily setup
to be a BBS door game for any BBS that supports STDIO type doors
such as Citadel, DLG, and several other popular BBS programs.
Author: Tony Preston
Path: comm/NW-1.25.lha
==========
Spot 1.3 A FidoNet tosser/editor for points.
Spot is a FidoNet tosser/editor for points. It features a userfriendly
font-sensitive GadTools interface that is fully localized. Spot uses a custom
message base format for fast importing and exporting. Some of Spot's main
features:t Supports new 3.0 features (newlook menus, memory pools,...) --
Automatically creates new areas for you, no tedious work -- Optional (fully
transparent) message base crunching -- Message list with powerful functions
(e.g. search body text) -- Excellent support for multiple character sets
(LATIN-1, IBM,...) -- Built-in, fully asynchronous, Fido file request --
Multi-bossing and multi-domain capable -- Userlist editor -- powerful twitlist
-- ARexx port (100+ commands).
Author: Nico Francois
Path: comm/Spot-1.3.lha
==========
Term 4.1 Very nice terminal program.
A telecommuncations program designed for use with any Commodore-Amiga
computer running Kickstart 2.04 or higher. Its features include:
* Fast built-in VT-220 terminal emulation
* Support for custom terminal emulation modules following the `XEM
2.0' standard
* Operates in any display environment, supports all screen display
modes
* Support for file transfer modules following the `XPR' standard
* File- and printer-capturing functions
* Review-buffer support
* Powerful phone book and dialing functions
* `Amiga User Interface Style Guide' conformant user interface
* Online-help (requires AmigaGuide package)
* Built-in `ARexx' interface
* File upload list, which permits selecting the files to be
transferred before the upload is started.
* Login script learn mode.
* Built-in keyword/response parser which makes it possible to have
`term' respond to BBS prompts and such with the user name,
password, etc. without having to program the ARexx interface.
* Interface for external programs to rendezvous with `term', taking
over serial I/O processing (such as `HydraCom').
Author: Olaf `Olsen' Barthel
Path: comm/term-4.1.lha
==========
ACE 2.0 FreeWare Amiga BASIC compiler + extras
ACE is a FreeWare Amiga BASIC compiler which, in conjunction with A68K
and Blink produces standalone executables.
The language defines a large subset of AmigaBASIC but also has many
features not found in the latter such as: turtle graphics, recursion,
SUBs with return values, structures, arguments, include files, a
better WAVE command which allows for large waveforms, external
references, named constants and a variety of other commands and
functions not found in AmigaBASIC.
New features in version 2.0 include: gadgets, three standard requester
types, serial I/O and menus (with optional command-keys for menu
items). New commands and functions for this version include EXIT FOR,
PTAB, SPC, DEF FN, ON ERROR and ERR (these last two handle file and
serial I/O at present). INPUT and PRINT can now be used transparently
for all screen/window combinations.
All user-defined windows are now fully-configurable and may be used in
conjunction with screens as per AmigaBASIC. Window close event
trapping is also a new feature.
In addition to event trapping, ACE now supports WAITing for both menus
and gadgets. Waiting is more operating-system-friendly than event
trapping.
A simple graphical front-end (Integrated Development Environment) is
also provided with the archive. This is written in ACE.
Author: David Benn
Path: dev/ACE-2.0.lha
==========
ADev11 3.0a Complete development sys for 68HC11 CPU
A complete development system for Motorola's 68HC11 processor, including a
macro assembler, linker, librarian, downloader and disassembler. Supports
multiple source file and multiple relocatable segments per file.
Author: Stan Burton
Path: dev/ADev11-3.0a.lha
==========
AmigaE 3.0a An Amiga specific E compiler
E is a powerful and flexible object oriented / procedural / unpure
functional higher programming language, mainly influenced by languages
such as C++, Ada, Lisp etc., and Amiga E a very fast compiler for it,
with features such as speed of >20000 lines/minute on a 7 Mhz amiga,
inline assembler and linker integrated into compiler, large set of
integrated functions, great module concept with v39 includes as
modules, flexible type-system, quoted expressions, immediate and typed
lists, low-level and object polymorphism, exception handling,
inheritance, data-hiding, methods, multiple return values, default
arguments, register allocation, fast memory management, unification,
LISP-Cells, and much much more...
Author: Wouter van Oortmerssen
Path: dev/Amiga_E-3.0a.lha
==========
BarflyDemo 1.10 Very powerful Debugger and Assembler.
Very powerful Intuition controlled Source Level Debugger and an
optimizing Assembler. The Debugger allows the parallel debugging
of several tasks in unlimited windows. Has different windows for
ASM/Copper-Disassembler, Memory, Source, Breakpoints, Watchpoints,
Checksums and a lot other functions. It supports SAS-C and GCC
Sourcelevel Debugging and allows dynamic include structure support.
Supports 68000-68040/6888x. The Assembler has multi-pass optimizing,
precompiled includes, include/incbin cache, highlevel macros, smalldata
and advanced hunk support. Supports 68000-68060/6888x.
Author: Ralph Schmidt
Path: dev/BarflyDemo-1.10.lha
==========
CManual 3.0 Amiga programming documents and examples
A 5 disk distribution of one of the largest collections of documents,
examples, and utilities in C for the Amiga. It consists of six
manuals, with more than 40 chapters, 175 fully executable examples
complete with source code, and several utilities and other goodies.
The manuals describe how to open and work with Screens, Windows,
Graphics, Gadgets, Requesters, Alerts, Menus, IDCMP, Sprites,
VSprites, AmigaDOS, Low Level Graphics Routines, etc. They also
explain how to use your C Compiler and give you important information
about how the Amiga works and how your programs should be designed.
When unpacked, the manuals and examples nearly fill up twelve standard
Amiga floppies.
Author: Anders Bjerin
Path: dev/CManual-3.0.lha
==========
Designer 1.50 GUI Creator for C & HSPascal, V1.42
The Designer is a tool which makes programming intuition interfaces far
easier. It allows you to create Windows and Menus which can then be turned
into source code by the Producers. At present there are two producers,
the CProducer and the PasProducer, more producers may become available in
the future. The Designer supports the importing of images which can then
be used in windows or menus as well as being placed in the produced source
code for your use. Menus are created using the GadTools library and
support V38+ features, text and image items are allowed, keyboard shortcuts
and mutual exclusion are supported along with all standard flags,
localization of menus is easily added. Menus are all NewLook menus in
V38+. Windows are the main part of the Designer. You can create all
standard GadTools Gadgets and intuition Boolean Gadgets with all standard
options. Text and Images can also be placed on the window as you choose.
Extensive options are available to edit the code produced which should cover
most eventualities, almost all tags for windows and gadgets are supported
including many V38+ tags. The Designer can produce IDCMP handling routines
for windows and menus and can create a main file which in many cases will
allow the production of an entire program, the programmer just has to fill
in the gaps. In V1.4 GadToolsBox files can now be imported to allow
enhancement of your previous creations. Full locale support is now
included to make programming in multiple languages as easy as possible.
Registered users can upgrade to the latest version by using the latest demo
version. Extensive on line help is available using amigaguide.library,
this must be available for this feature.
Author: Ian OConnor
Path: dev/DesignerDemo-1.50.lha
==========
Enforcer 37.62 Tool to monitor illegal memory access.
A tool to monitor illegal memory access for 68020/68851, 68030, and
68040 CPUs. This is a completely new Enforcer from the original idea
by Bryce Nesbitt. It contains many new and wonderful features and
options and no longer contains any exceptions for specific software.
Enforcer can now also be used with CPU or SetCPU FASTROM or most any
other MMU-Kick- start-Mapping tool. Major new output options such as
local output, stdout, and parallel port. Highly optimized to be as
fast as possible.
Author: Michael Sinz
Path: dev/Enforcer-37.62.lha
==========
Hc11Dev 1.0 Assembler+Monitor for HC11-MCUs
A development system for the Motorola 68HC11 MCU line of processors.
Included is a cross-assembler, supporting macros, local labels,
includefiles, conditional assembly and a rich set of pseudo opcodes.
The assembler will generate listfiles, Motorola S19 record files and
symbolfiles. (HitAsm v0.21)
Also in the package is a monitor that will interact with a "live" HC11
MCU over the serial port. Any serialport with a serial.device
compatible device driver can be used. Code present in the Hc11 can be
dumped or disassembled to your screen. Memory can be altered and S19
records can be downloaded and verifyed. The monitor transparently
reads and writes to on-chip EEPROM and RAM, and to what ever other
devices you have hooked up on the bus. The monitor will work with any
model of the Hc11 (I hope :). (HitMon11 v0.26)
Author: Richard Karlsson
Path: dev/Hc11Dev-1.0.lha
==========
MUI 2.2 Create and maintain user interfaces.
MUI is an object oriented system to create and maintain graphical user
interfaces. From a programmers point of view, using MUI saves a lot of
time and makes life much easier. Thinking about complicated terms like
window resizing or font sensitivity is simply not neccesary.\n
On the other hand, users of MUI based applications have the ability to
customize nearly every pixel of a programs interface according to their
personal taste.\n
This distribution is interesting for both, users and programmers. Please
have a look at the supplied demo programs and at the documentation to
see what MUI has to offer.\n
MUI is an SASG (Standardized Amiga Shareware Group) product.
Author: Stefan Stuntz
Path: dev/MUI-2.2.lha
==========
MungWall 37.64 Watches for illegal FreeMem's
Munges memory and watches for illegal FreeMem's. Especially useful in
combination with Enforcer. The output can go to either the serial or
parallel port. Includes a new MungList program that examines used
memory areas for MungWall tag info, and outputs a list of who owns the
various pieces of allocated memory, their sizes, etc. Can even
identify the owner of the memory by task name.
Author: Commodore Amiga; submitted by Carolyn Scheppner
Path: dev/MungWall-37.64.lha
==========
Oberon-A 1.4ß A freely-distributable Oberon-2 compiler
Oberon-A is a freely-distributable Oberon-2 compiler. Oberon-2 is a
modern object-oriented language designed by Niklaus Wirth, the creator
of Pascal and Modula-2, and Hanspeter Mössenböck. Oberon-A is an
implementation of the language for the Amiga computer, ported from a
compiler written by Niklaus Wirth.
Author: Frank Copeland
OEL by Johan Ferreira
Path: dev/Oberon-A-1.4ß.lha
==========
RevUp 1.2 Amiga Revision Update System
o RevUp generates and maintains include and header files with revision
information.
o RevUp is 100% compatible to the CBM developer tool BumpRev, but offers a
lot of new features.
o Multiple dependency files are supported.
o Beta count management for beta versions included.
Author: Boris Folgmann
Path: dev/RevUp-1.2.lha
==========
RKRM ?.? Source and executables from 3rd ed. RKM
A distribution of complete source code and executables of all the
examples in the third edition Amiga ROM Kernel Reference Manuals,
published by Addison-Wesley.
Author: Commodore CATS
Path: dev/RKRM.lha
==========
SerLog 1.3 Debugging device to monitor serial-IO
serlog.device passes all IOExtSer requests to a "real" serial.device
and writes the results to a file. You may configure the amount of
information to be stored in the log. The log-file created by
serlog.device contains a binary dump which can be formatted
(i.e. transferred into a readable version) using the supplied
formatter.
Note that serlog.device uses *significant* overhead over the underlying
serial.device, resulting in very low baud-rates.
Author: Stefan Pröls
Path: dev/SerLog-1.3.lha
==========
StackMon 1.3 Monitors stack usage of programs
When run StackMon presents a list of all the tasks and processes currently
running. The list is sorted alphabetically, with processes before tasks.
This list is not updated automatically, as constructing this list requires
suspension of multitasking. If you run a program you want to monitor after
starting StackMon, click on the 'Update list' gadget so that it appears in
the list.
If the program you want to monitor was run from the Workbench, its name will
be that of the icon; if run from the shell the name is the exact name typed
into the shell, with path.
Click on the program you wish to monitor and StackMon will begin monitoring.
The display consists of numbers and a fuel gauge showing the current stack
use relative to the size of the stack. The numbers are:
Current: This is the amount of stack in use when the program was last
monitored.
Largest: The largest recorded stack ever in use by this program.
Stack : The stack allocated for this program.
Author: David Kinder
Path: dev/StackMon-1.3.lha
==========
StdErr 3.0 A Standard Error Port for Amiga E
StdErr.m provides Amiga E users with an easy-to-use standard
error port for their Amiga E programs. The module is fairly
intelligent, handling things with a kind of grace and ease
anyone could hope for. You almost cannot foul the use of
this program module up (almost).
Author: Trey Van Riper
Path: dev/StdErr-3.0.lha
==========
Sushi 37.10 Intercept and display output of KPrintf
A tool to intercept the raw serial output of Enforcer 2.8b, MungWall,
Enforcer.megastack 26.f, and all other tool and application debugging
output that uses kprintf. This makes it possible to use serial
debugging on a single Amiga, without interfering with attached serial
hardware such as modems and serial printers. Sushi also provides
optional signalling and buffer access to an external display/watcher
program.
Author: Carolyn Scheppner
Path: dev/Sushi-37.10.lha
==========
Twilight Development System (TDS) 2.04 Environment for developing source files
Twilight Development System (TDS) provides an integrated environment
for writing and compiling source files like Turbo Pascal or Borland
C/C++. The main program of the package is a powerful text editor
called Twilight Editor (Ted) which includes an integrated project
manager. This project manager simplifies and speeds up the development
of programs composed of different source files (modules). With TDS
it's possible to compile and link these modules into an executable
file with a single command and if the compiler finds some errors, they
will be reported directly by the editor. TDS doesn't provide its own
compiler, but can use any compiler or assembler callable from Shell.
It can interface directly with many common compilers and assemblers
like DICE C, SAS C, Lattice C, Aztec C, DevPac, A68k, PCQ, HCC, GNU-C,
Amiga-E, Oberon and even programs like TeX, CatComp and MakeInfo. If
the compiler is not supported, it's possible to write a little
interface program to convert the error messages in a format readable
by the editor. The compile process will be executed concurrently using
another program called Twilight Make (TMake), so the user can continue
to edit the source files while the compiler is working.
Author: Claudio Zani
Path: dev/TDS-2.04.lha
==========
VisualArts 2.0 A powerful GUI designer
Visual Arts 2.0 is a new powerful GUI designer. Features includes: Menu and
List manager, Object Master, Insert custom codes into any GadTools or
GadTool Menu items, primitive drawing tools such as rectangle, circle and
lines; Supports AppWindow and MultiProcessing windows. Add AREXX to any
program, custom images, custom images for button, PopupMenu, get any IFF
color map and use it in your program, color palette and over 40 custom
patterns for fills. V2.0 now supports Context Sensitive.
An intuitive interface unlike other GUIs, unlimited windows can be opened,
supports PAL, NTSC, EURO, VGA, AGA screen modes, user perference,
automatic history and time interval saving, user configurable source
output, and many more features.
Author: Danny Y. Wong
Path: dev/VisualArts-2.0.lha
==========
AmiCDFS 37.5 CDROM fs, also reads Mac floppy & hd
AmiCDFileSystem is a file system which can read:
- ISO-9660 (w/ RockRidge extensions) and Macintosh HFS CD-ROMs
- Macintosh HFS floppy and hard disks
The ability to read Macintosh floppy and hard disks comes for free, since
they use the same file system used for HFS CD-ROMs.
This program was originally based on AmiCDROM 1.9 by Frank Munkert.
While the file system functions are mostly the original ones, the
packet handling routines have been completely re-written.
This file system can be installed on the Rigid Disk Block (RDB) of an hard
disk to automatically mount a Mac partition (you can even boot from it, if
you manage to put the necessary Amiga system files in it).
The code is reentrant and is shared among multiple instances of the file
system. This means that if you use AmiCDFileSystem on a CD-ROM drive, a
magneto-optical drive, two floppy drives and two hard disk partitions, like
a friend of mine does, only one copy will be loaded instead of six - saving
100K of memory.
Author: Nicola Salmoria, based on AmiCDROM by Frank Munkert
Path: disk/AmiCDFS-37.5.lha
==========
AmiCDROM 1.13 ISO-9660 standard CDROM filesystem
AmiCDROM is a CDROM disk filing system for the Commodore Amiga.
It supports the ISO-9660 standard, the Rock Ridge Interchange
Protocol and the Macintosh HFS format.
The CDROM drive is mounted as a DOS device (e.g. CD0:). You can
access files and directories on a CDROM disk by the usual syntax,
e.g. "type cd0:foo/readme.txt".
Author: Frank Munkert
Path: disk/AmiCDROM-1.13.lha
==========
AZap 2.21 Binary editor - files, memory, and devs.
AZap is a "new generation" binary editor able to edit files, memory or
devices like hard disks. It can open several windows at the same time,
and while this program cannot be considered as a tool to help you to
recover a disk, it has a lot of useful functions (print block, fill block,
search string, etc...).
Author: Denis Gounelle
Path: disk/AZap-2.21.lha
==========
BTNTape 3.0 A "Better-Than-Nothing" scsi tape driver
The "Better Than Nothing" SCSI tape device handler. It provides flat-file
access to a SCSI tape drive from application programs using simple calls to
DOS or C library I/O functions. It can also be used with the Amiga TAR
utility for disk backups. It uses your existing SCSI adapter's device
driver for access to the bus. This version fixes a number of bugs and
includes several new features including file number tracking and append-only
and read-only safety modes.
Author: Robert Rethemeyer
Path: disk/BTNtape-3.0.lha
==========
DiskSalv2 11.31 Disk repair, salvage, and undelete util
A disk repair, salvage, and undelete utility for all standard disk
devices and file system types. Has a full Intuition interface and
runs from Workbench or Shell. It can fix most problems in-place, and
can reverse a partial or QUICK format. It can copy out from disks
that can't be fixed due to physical damage, with a destination going
to any AmigaDOS disk device or pipe (eg, TAPE:). In English, locale
catalogs included for Danish, French, German, Italian, Norwegian,
Finnish, and Swedish, short manuals in English and Swedish.
Author: Dave Haynie
Path: disk/DiskSalv2-11.31.lha
==========
FileX 2.0 Very nice binary file editor
FileX is a binary file editor which offers the following features:
- Several files can be modified in several windows and/or views at
the same time.
- The edit windows can be opened on any public screen and sized to
any dimension you want.
- Small calculator
- Clipboard converter
- Fontsensitivity
- Locale support if you have OS 2.1 or higher. (English, Finnish,
French, German, Swedish (Dutch, Norwegian (not yet included)))
- Undo and Redo (only limited to your free memory)
- Search and replace with history
- Extensive blockfunctions
- ARexxport with 77 commands and asynchronical command shell
- Printing as hexdump
- `Grab memory' to show and modify memory
- AppWindow. If FileX runs on the workbench, icons can be moved onto
the FileX window and the related file will be loaded automatically.
- Iconify
- Moreover, FileX will be developed further permanently...
Author: Klaas Hermanns
Path: disk/FileX-2.0.lha
==========
Flat 1.3 Handler for block-mapped filing devices
A filing system handler which implements block-mapped filing devices
such as available under Un*x. Read and write calls are mapped to
low-level system IO operations which allow to treat devices such as
df0:, dh0:, rad:, etc. as big data files. These `virtual' files can
be copied, read and written just like any standard AmigaDOS file. It
is even possible to copy a whole disk with the CLI `Copy' command or
to archive disks with LhArc and the like. Written as a supplement for
the Amiga `tar' program.
Author: Olaf `Olsen' Barthel
Path: disk/Flat-1.3.lha
==========
MultiFileSystem 1.1 An interface to other file systems
Thanks to the versatility of AmigaDOS, we are able to use many different
file systems on our disks. The most popular is of course CrossDOS (tm), but
many other file systems can be found in the PD.
Adding a new file system to the Amiga is simplicity itself: just copy a
file in L:, provide a suitable mountlist, and there you go.
This works flawlessy if every physical unit is accessed by a single file
system, but if multiple file systems share the same device, some problems
arise:
- You have to call the same unit with different names (e.g. DF0: and PC0:)
depending of the kind of disk inserted.
- When you insert a PC disk, the Workbench shows a DF0:???? icon, and vice
versa; this can be very annoying especially for owners of more than one
drive.
- When a file system is busy (for example during a DiskCopy), the other file
systems can still access the disk; this goes against the concept of
"inhibiting" a device.
MultiFileSystem solves all of these problems. It isn't a file system in the
usual way: it is an interface to other file systems. When you mount it, you
tell it which file systems it should use; afterwards, when a disk is
inserted, MultiFileSystem will recognize it and pass the commands to the
appropriate file system. This means that with a single device name, for
example DF0:, you can access any conceivable file system!
You are not limited to floppy drives, of course: I successfully installed
MultiFileSystem over a 128Mb magnetooptical drive.
Author: Nicola Salmoria
Path: disk/MFS-1.1.lha
==========
mkisofs 1.00.5 Simple ISO-9660 pre-mastering utility.
A pre-mastering program to generate an ISO-9660 filesystem. It takes
a snapshot of a given directory tree, and generates a binary image
which will correspond to an ISO-9660 filesystem when written to a
block device.
It is also capable of generating the System Use Sharing Protocol
records specified by the Rock Ridge Interchange Protocol. This is
used to further describe the files in the ISO-9660 filesystem to a
unix host, and provides information such as longer filenames, uid/gid,
posix permissions, and block and character devices.
Each file written to the ISO-9660 filesystem must have a filename in
the 8.3 format (8 characters, period, 3 characters, all upper case),
even if Rock Ridge is in use. This filename is used on systems that
are not able to make use of the Rock Ridge extensions (such as
MS-DOS), and each filename in each directory must be different from
the other filenames in the same directory.
mkisofs generally tries to form correct names by forcing the unix
filename to upper case and truncating as required, but often times
this yields unsatisfactory results when there are cases where the
truncated names are not all unique. mkisofs assigns weightings to
each filename, and if two names that are otherwise the same are found
the name with the lower priority is renamed to have a 3 digit number
as an extension (where the number is guaranteed to be unique). An
example of this would be the files foo.bar and foo.bar.~1~ - the file
foo.bar.~1~ would be written as FOO.000;1 and the file foo.bar would
be written as FOO.BAR;1. "path" is the path of the directory tree to
be copied into the ISO-9660 filesystem.
(AmigaDOS Note: The AmigaDOS port relaxes the above restrictions to
produce ISO-9660 level 2 compatible ISO images)
Author: Eric Youngdale
Frank Munkert
Path: disk/mkisofs-1.00.5.lha
==========
NewZAP 3.3 Multipurpose file sector editing utility
A third-generation multi-purpose file sector editing utility, from the
author of FileZAP. Displays and edits full 512-byte sectors via a 106
character wide internal font. Includes a search feature to find
specific strings or hex digits, forwards or backwards.
User-customizable, with new printing feature added.
Author: Dallas J. Hodgson
Path: disk/NewZAP-3.3.lha
==========
PFS 9.5.4 Professional filing system for the Amiga
The standard AmigaDos filesystem (OFS) is very slow. Commodore has
tried to improve the performance of their filesystem a number of
times. Workbench 2.0 added the fast filing system (FFS), and now,
with Workbench 3.0, we have the fast filing system with directory
caching (FFS-DC). This makes directoryscan faster but writing to
disk and directory-operations like delete and rename are slower than
ever. This made me decide to write a filesystem that does better.
High performance
- write: 3-5 times faster
- read: 50% faster
- directoryscan: 10-20 times FFS, 3 times FFS-DC
- delete/rename/protect etc: 10-20 times faster
Other features
- full AmigaDos compatibility
- upto 10% more data on a disk
- better faulttolerance
- parallel access almost without performance loss
- disks NEVER get invalidated
Both double density and high density floppy disks are supported.
This version of the filesystem also supports small harddisk
partitions. Partitions up to 31MB are supported. A version for
larger partitions is under development and will be available to
registered users only.
Author: Michiel Pelt
Path: disk/PFS-9.5.4.lha
==========
StatRam 3.1 Very fast recoverable ram drive
StatRam is a recoverable ram drive.
It works on any Amiga using V2.04 or greater of the OS. It handles any
filesystem (either Amiga or foreign, like e.g. CrossDOS(tm)), has ten
units and may be layed out like a floppy disk for quick diskcopies.
It is dynamic, that is it allocates and frees memory as files are copied
and deleted, and is probably the most recoverable ram drive available.
Even the worst system crash will not erase it, as long as the portion
of memory where it resides is not corrupted.
New for V3.1 :
- Now works with ProfFileSystem
- Now works with .ZOM disk images
- Fixed the pyrotechnic crash that could occur mounting second and
subsequent volumes
Author: Richard Waspe
Nicola Salmoria
Based on code originally by Perry S. Kivolowitz.
Path: disk/StatRam-3.1.lha
==========
SuperDuper 3.1 Very fast disk copier and formatter
A very fast disk copier and formatter. Can make up to four unverified
copies from a ram buffer in 36 seconds. Verified copies from a ram
buffer take 67 seconds for one destination drive, plus 34 seconds for
each additional destination. Includes a program to fine tune some
fields in the trackdisk device, and a "no click" type program.
Author: Sebastiano Vigna
Path: disk/SuperDuper-3.1.lha
==========
UnDel 1.0 File Undeleting Utility
AmigaDos and its filesystem have been released some years ago. During
this long period, CBM didn't release any kind of tool which would be able
to check and repair disks and recover deleted files. There are many third-party
utilities capable of doing such a job, but they are usually terribly slow and
they don't support all standard filesystems. I have been so annoyed with this
situation that I decided to try to write a good unerasing tool. UnDel is the
result of this work.
Features:
- Supports any standard filesystem - OFS / FFS + DirCache / INTL mode
- Very fast (only free blocks are scanned, written in assembly etc.)
- Special option for systems with small amount of memory
- Nice user interface in shell window ;-)
- Recovered files are copied to another device
- Protection bits and file note are also recovered
- UNDEL is pure and can be made resident
Author: Martin Mares
Path: disk/UnDel-1.0.lha
==========
AmigaFAQ 94.10.14 "Frequently Asked Questions" about Amiga
Lists some frequently asked questions and trys to give answers. Its
intention is to help new users and to reduce the amount of news that most
experienced users don't like to read anymore. Sections on Hardware,
Software, Programming, Applications, Graphics and more. Formatted in plain
ascii, AmigaGuide, DVI, html, and texinfo. Drawer also contains some useful
text files on ftp sites, newgroups, hardware tips and one on the history of
the amiga.
Author: Jochen Wiedmann
Path: docs/AmigaFAQ-94.10.14.lha
==========
AmigaFAQ 94.10.14 "Frequently Asked Questions" about Amiga
Lists some frequently asked questions and trys to give answers. Its
intention is to help new users and to reduce the amount of news that most
experienced users don't like to read anymore. Sections on Hardware,
Software, Programming, Applications, Graphics and more. Formatted in plain
ascii, AmigaGuide, DVI, html, and texinfo. Drawer also contains some useful
text files on ftp sites, newgroups, hardware tips and one on the history of
the amiga.
Author: Jochen Wiedmann
Path: docs/AmigaFAQg-94.10.14.lha
==========
RRIP ?.? Rock Ridge / System Use Sharing Protocol
The anxiously awaited new, 1.12 versions of the System Use Sharing Protocol
and the Rock Ridge Interchange Protocol are now available for review and
comment. The documents are available through anonymous ftp at ftp.ossi.com
in /pub.
The documents are available in both MS Word 6 format (*.doc) and Postscript
format (*.ps). Otherwise, the file names should be self-explanatory. The
files are called: rrip112.doc, rrip112.ps, susp112.doc, and susp112.ps.
If you have comments or constructive criticism of these new versions of the
specifications, please feel free to respond to cdfdf@ymi.com. We are trying
to get these documents to ballot as an IEEE standard soon, so we would
appreciate prompt response. We hope to review all the responses at the next
working group meeting on August 26, 1994, so any responses we gather by end
of business of August 24 will be considered at that meeting.
Author: Andrew Young
CDFSF WG Chair
President, Young Minds, Inc.
Path: docs/RRIP.lha
==========
SystemGuide 1.0 Guide to Amiga software system files.
A comprehensive reference guide to Amiga software system files.
Author: Dan Elgaard
Path: docs/SystemGuide-1.0.lha
==========
Balder'sGrove 1.2 Yet another Boulderdash clone
This is yet another Boulderdash clone but this time it is inspired by the
Nordic mythology. Your task is to guide Balder - the god of light -
through groves filled with berserks and snakes. Collect rings, push
runestones and try to find the small passage to the next level.
This time you don't have to play alone. Get a helping hand from a friend
and I assure you the game will be easier as well as funnier.
The game comes with 40 levels and a level editor. Unfortunately the
levels are almost identical with those included in previous releases. The
only exception is that you can use them all in two player mode. If you
have made some own levels with the old level editor you can still use them
with this new game package in one player mode. To be able to use them
with two players you will have to load them into the level editor, place
entrances and exits for player two, and save them.
I hope you will have a good time!
Author: Morgan Antonsson
Path: game/Balder'sGrove-1.2.lha
==========
DungeonMap 2.1 Creates maps for Dongeons & Dragons game
DungeonMap is intended to be used as an aid to Dungeon Masters (DM's) © TSR
for creating dungeons for use in Advanced Dungeons & Dragons (AD&D) © TSR.
But, you can use it for what ever you like.
Author: Bill Elliot
Path: game/DungeonMap-2.1.lha
==========
ESnake 1.1 Classic game; grow snake by eating food.
This is a classic computer game. You control a snake moving about
on the screen. The purpose of the snake is to grow as long as possible
by eating food. As you eat more food the snake will speed up, and soon
it will be very difficult to control.
Author: Erik Johannessen
Path: game/ESnake-1.1.lha
==========
GothTest ?.? Test to find out how Gothic you are.
It is a simply a test to find out how Gothic you are. Of course, you
don't care how goth you are *for yourself* but you might get some red
neck demanding some sort of proof. You can then just stare them straight
in the eye and calmly tell them your score. Alternatively you can
hospitalise them in a really messy way.
Author: James W Savage
Path: game/GothTest.lha
==========
Mine Clone 1.1 Another clone of Minesweeper-style games
I've tried to make it looking like the IBM Minesweeper, but includes
some features the Original is missing. (sizeable window, changeable size
of minefields) And another difference: it needs Kick 3.0. I wanted
it running on the workbench screen but with nice colors. But palette
sharing is only available under Kick 3.0.
Here's a list about MineClones's features:
- sizeable window
- variable size of fields
- nice GUI and colors (and a nice smiley :-)
- flashing fields
- choose bombs by number or percentage
- Saveclick-option, Automark-option
- global Automark-function, clearing all the trivial cases
- needs Kick 3.0 and reqtools.library
- written in E
Author: Nico Max
Path: game/MineClone-1.1.lha
==========
MartinSoft Pengo ?.? Demo Game based on old Pengo game.
Pengo is a maze-game. The maze is made up of blocks of ice, which you can
push or melt. Blocks are melted by pushing a block that has another block
directly in front of it. If that sounds confusing (and it probably does),
play the game, and you'll understand what I meant.
The ice blocks that form the "border" around the maze can't be pushed or
melted.
Also, on some levels there are special gold blocks, which can't be moved.
On each level there are four enemies.
If an enemy catches you, you lose one life. Your weapon against the enemies
is the ice blocks; push an ice block onto an enemy, and the enemy will be
squashed (but it will re-appear after a while). If the level layout
makes it possible, try to "trap" the enemies into small spaces; that will
make it a piece of cake to squash them. Generally, trying to limit the ways
that the enemies can take (by pushing blocks to the right places) is a good
tactic. Learning the different movement patterns for the enemies is also
essential; the yellow ones are pretty easy to outsmart without understanding
how they move, but the red ones are professional escape artists, and
almost impossible to hit if you don't understand their "AI".
If you spend too much time on one level, a ghost will appear and start to
home in on you. The ghost can't be killed - but it will disappear as soon
as you get to the next level. If it catches you, you will lose one life, and
it will disappear for a while (the ghost, not the life :) ).
If it catches you while you're "invisible" to the enemies, it will simply
remove the invisibility and disappear - but it will re-appear very quickly.
The aim of the game is to defeat the evil Sarvebuk who awaits you on level
64. So the big question is: how do you get to the next level?
Getting to the next level can be achieved by either:
1. Squashing all enemies on the level with ice blocks.
2. Pushing the three ruby blocks together so that they form a horizontal or
vertical line.
3. Getting a warp bonus of some sort.
Method nr 1 is recommended, as it's the most fun.
Squashing many enemies with one block will give more score than squashing
them one by one.
There are also lots of bonuses and bonus systems in the game, but I won't
reveal them here (which would spoil the surprise). Find out about them
yourself!
Author: Martin Rebas
Path: game/MSoft-Pengo.lha
==========
ParaTeaser ?.? Demo for the forthcoming game "Paranoia"
This is the "teaser" demo for the forthcoming game "Paranoia" from AGE
Entertainment Software. It's a first person action/adventure game which has
elements in common with such classic Amiga games as Captive and Dungeon master
while throwing a new perspective on the whole thing.
Paranoia is the first in a trilogy of games which will be released over the next
two to three years. Each game has an independant storyline while being a small
part of an overall bigger picture. What's contained in the big picture will be
revealed slowly as you progress through each game.
Author: AGE Entertainment Software
Path: game/ParaTeaser.lha
==========
Schiffeversenken 1.0 Find and sink your opponents ships
A little game with 3 degrees of difficulty. The object is a battle of
ships. You have to find and sink the ships of your opponent before
he finds yours.
Author: Andreas Zottmann and Felix Eichhorn
Path: game/Schiffeversenken-1.0.lha
==========
Slots 2.05 Slots Game for BBS's
A long time ago, a friend of mine (Richard Muller) wanted to see a
"good" slots game on the Amiga. Well, when I first started the project,
I modeled the game after an MS-DOS slots door game. It had a small
distribution, and wasn't really that good. A year later (I think, check
the history part if you really care :) I was inspired again, and updated
Slots to 2.x, and dramatically changed the game play. It is now more
like a real slot machine (I think anyways).
Author: Steve Lee
Path: game/Slots-2.05.lha
==========
UChess 2.89 Nicely done Amiga port of GNU chess
A powerful version of the program GnuChess version 4PL66 for the Amiga.
Plays a very strong game of chess. Code has been rewritten and data
structures reorganized for optimal efficiency on 32 bit 68020 and
better Amiga systems. Eval/search and clock enhancements from
original gnu port.
Fully multitasking, automatically detects and supports 640X480X256
color AGA mode machines, and does not at any time BUSY wait. Supports
a variety of standard features such as load, save, edit board,
autoplay, swap sides, force move, undo, time limits, hints, show
thinking, and a supervisor mode that will allow two humans to play
with the computer acting as a "supervisor".
Author: FSF
Roger Uzun (amiga port + many enhancements)
Path: game/UChess-2.89.lha
==========
WipeOut! 1.3 The Ultimate non-commercial shoot'em up
Well, Wipe-Out! is the first game I've ever got finished. That
statement of course exludes numerous lame examples done by me
with programs like "Game Maker" or "S.E.U.C.K" during the past
10 years (on both Amiga and C=64, the only TRUE computers ever).
Wipe-Out! is of course 100% optimized METAL BANGING assembly.
(AMOS is for lamers ... C is too slow (and messy) ... )
My aim with this project was mainly to prove my capabilities
as a game graphics artist. (Check out the Giger-inspired 4th
level ... )
Author: Tero Lehtonen
Path: game/WipeOut-1.3.lha
==========
14balls ?.? two full-raytraced anims
In this 14balls.lha archive there are two full-raytraced anims
in Imagine format, 9 big balls, 5 small balls, and the whole
animscript in the right directory (*.imp).
It is full freeware!!! ........................................
I added a Imagine anims player called "PlayIanm".
To play anims you ought to type (in CLI or Shell ) :
df0:c/playianm df1:14balls.7frames.Ianim
It will work when you put "PlayIanm" in C directory in DF0:
and if you have the animation DF1:
This script uses Rotate2.0 effect.
My own remark:
One day I came into a computer shop. I saw there 486. In its
monitor screen there could be seen the same kind of animation.
At once I thought I am ABLE to create better animation using
A500 and Imagine2.0. I did it! in my opinion of course :^)
I hope it was my last animation using Mirror balls!
GOOD BYE MIRROR BALLS! :) and do not return anymore! >:-\
Warm greetings to Steven Worley - my idol and my guide in
Imagine world.
Author: Krzysztof Korski
Path: gfx/14balls.lha
==========
ADayAtTheBeach ?.? Animation of Flip the Frog at the beach.
Four and a half minutes of animation of Flip the Frog at the beach.
Flip was created around 1931 by animator Ub Iwerks. Iwerks was
originally a friend and partner with Walt Disney in their fledgeling
cartoon studio. Ub designed the original Mickey Mouse and animated the
first few Mickey short cartoons almost single-handed. Iwerks was the
skilled draftsman and animator, while Disney wrote and directed.
Around 1930/31, a producer named Pat Powers offered Iwerks the chance
to have his own studio and he Accepted. The cartoons Iwerks created
Powers would distribute to MGM. Iwerks' first character was Flip the
Frog, and flip's debut was in a VERY early 1931 two strip color(three
strips are needed for a full spectrum) cartoon called Fiddlesticks. In
this cartoon Flip resembled a real frog. after a couple cartoons, the
producer urged Iwerks to redesign Flip into something "cuter". In the
process Flip gained a hat, gloves, shoes and shorts, making him look a
lot less like a frog and more like Mickey Mouse with the ears and
black nose ripped off.
Flip the Frog cartoons, and Iwerks' cartoons in genenal, did not have
much success because Iwerks lacked the inventiveness and storytelling
ability to match his abilities as artist and animator. (The reverse
could be said about Walt Disney, which is why the two made a very good
team).
In 1933, Flip the Frog was abandoned for the character Willie Whopper.
several years after that, the Powers/Iwerks studio shut down
completely. Iwerks went back to Disney, and became a sort of
mechanical engineer, pioneering the process of xeroxing pencil
drawings onto clear cels (to make the animation process quicker and
cheaper). Flip the Frog and the Iwerks studio were almost completely
forgotten, except to animation historians. --- -- Until..
In the year 1990, Eric Schwartz attended a presentation of old cartoon
shorts at the Columbus College of Art and Design, wher he attends
classes. One of the Cartoons shown was a Flip the Frog cartoon, "Room
Runners", which impressed Schwartz with its good animation and
surprising amount of sexual jokes for a 1930's cartoon. Eric Began to
storyboard his own Flip the Frog Cartoon. He originally intended to
copy 'Room Runners' but switched to his own storyline. Flip was
redesigned, stylised, and modernized (he also looks something like a
frog).
Using the Amiga computer as his medium, Schwartz brought Flip the Frog
back to the world. Flip has appeared in two modern cartoons so far;
'The Dating Game'in 1991 and 'A Day at the Beach'in 1992. More
cartoons are planned, for an as yet undetermined date.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/ADayAtTheBeach.lha
==========
Aerotoons ?.? 2 animations of anthropomorphed aircraft
Two animations of anthropomorphed aircraft, "The Swiss Army F-16 in
Combat" and "Stealty Manuever II".
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Aerotoons.lha
==========
AGATunnel ?.? Hypnotic color cycling effects
Many years ago, when a friend of mine had convinced me
to buy a used Amiga, I got my hands on a small
program named Tunnel. It was originally a demo program
for some Modula-2 system; thus source code in Modula-2
was included. The program was so cool, my brother and I
used to turn off the light in the room and watch the
psychedelic colours flickering by.
The program didn't work on my new AGA Amiga - there was
no synchronization and the colours shift much too fast.
I wrote this quick hack to produce a similar effect,
but enhanced to make use of all the 24 color bits of AGA.
The 'tunnel' is a very simple effect, but it is cheaper
than hallucinogen drugs - unless there are Psilocybin
mushrooms growing where you live anyway ;-)
Author: Jörgen Grahn
Path: gfx/AGATunnel.lha
==========
Aggressor ?.? Animation of anthropomorphed aircraft
An animation of an anthropomorphed aircraft.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Aggressor.lha
==========
AmyJogs ?.? Loop anim of Amy The Squirrel jogging.
Looping animation of Amy the Squirrel jogging, with the bouncing Amiga
balls thrown in for good measure.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/AmyJogs.lha
==========
AmyVsWalker ?.? Anim of Amy chasing Star Wars Walker.
Looping animation of Amy the Squirrel chasing a Star Wars walker
around an Amiga.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/AmyVsWalker.lha
==========
AmyVsWalkerII ?.? Anim of Amy versus Star Wars Walker.
Looping animation of Amy the Squirrel getting the best of the Star Wars
walker.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/AmyVsWalkerII.lha
==========
AmyWalks ?.? Animation of Amy The Squirrel walking.
Looping animation of Amy the Squirrel walking down a sidewalk.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/AmyWalks.lha
==========
AmyWalks2 ?.? Promo of upcoming Eric Schwartz video.
This Anim is basically a shameless ad for a new Video I will be coming
out with: The Amy the Squirrel video special. The AmyWalks_2 anim
itself contains a very small portion of the work that appears in the
video itself, in looping form. If any of you were wondering why I had
not produced any new animations over the last half of 1992, this is
the reason. This tape contains the following animations:
AmyWalks
At the Movies
Amy vs. Walker
The History of Amy the Squirrel
At the Movies 2
Amy vs. Walker 2
aaaand...
A Walk in the Park -- A four and a half minute Amy cartoon that will
be available nowhere else but this video.
All animations are professionally recorded and presented on Video by
an accomplished video production house.
This video will be available in early 1993. When production is
finished, Versions for NTSC and PAL video formats will be available.
If you are interested in obtaining a copy, please write to:
E.S. Productions
P.O. Box 292684
Kettering, OH 45429-0684
U.S.A.
Do Not send any money, as prices have not yet been determined. You
will be put on our mailing list to be notified when the tape is ready.
This notification will include information about pricing,
availability, formats, and any other things I didn't think of here.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/AmyWalks2.lha
==========
Amy_Does_Schwab ?.? Parody of Leo's famous Berserk anim.
Here's a short looping animation starring Amy the Squirrel which
represents my small tribute to that Amiga animation pioneer, Leo "Bols
Ewhac" Schwab. It was created with the Disney Animation Studio(major parts
of which were programmed by Leo), DeluxePaint 3, and Animation Station. In
case nobody guessed, it is a 'slight' parody of Leo's famous "Dream goes
berserk" Videoscape anim. I hope he likes it.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Amy_Does_Schwab.lha
==========
Anim3D 1.4 Plays anims written in special language
Anim3D is my first Amiga program longer than a few dozen lines of code and
was mainly to teach myself how to program a 'real' application for the Amiga.
Basically it plays vector movies that are written in a special programming
language that I designed.
The original idea was:
"Wouldn't it be neat if vector demos could be created and played using a
standard program, use the screenmode that you wanted, were smoother on
faster machines and multitasked properly?"
After all, we can't impress PC users from fast animation 'cos they have
faster processors, but we can beat them by making something totally
impossible through Windows ;-)
Anim3D is a real-time vector movie player for Workbench 3 machines. It has
three main features which I think most Amiga software (and demos) should
have nowadays:
1) It is extremely friendly to the OS and multitasks properly; I've
played animations whilst downloading files on the modem and been
playing a tracker module so I think I can safely say this :-)
2) Animations are played at the SAME speed whatever the machine is...
slower machines just have a lower frame update rate. This works fine
because the display is double-buffered (as you'd expect) so there are
no half drawn screens to be seen.
3) It can use any of the display modes available on the machine;
the same image is displayed on the screen whatever the resolution.
This allows those lucky A4000/040 owners to display anims in mega hi-res
while running at the same frame rate that an A1200 might run in lo-res.
It also makes use of a special dithering method that I worked out which
gives the appearance of more shades of each colour without slowing screen
rendering down. This does however require more chip memory than normal.
I have designed a language for creating these animations and some simple
demo anims have been included to give you an idea of what it can do. Take a
look at the animation files by all means (they are only ASCII text), but I
wouldn't try writing your own without any documentation!
Author: Michael George
Path: gfx/Anim3D-1.4.lha
==========
Anims ?.? 3 short anims with skewed sense of humor
Three short animations with a skewed sense of humor and following no
particular formula.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Anims.lha
==========
Anti-Lemmin ?.? Cute parody of Psygnosis' Lemmings game.
This Animation is one I take great pride in. I'm not sure why,
possibly because I spent a lot more time on the still graphics, but in
any case I think it's one of my best for overall looks, humor, timing,
and cinematic nature. I hope I know what's good, I came out with some
real turkeys through trial and error.
This animation lasts a full two minutes and ten seconds (including
titles) and should run in two megabytes of memory if your workbench is
not very demanding.
NOTE: I have noticed that the Movieplayer program will not always work
in some cases, giving a "Can't find libraries" error. I have yet to
determine exactly what libraries Movieplayer wants, but I know that
Movieplayer will ALWAYS run on a standard commodore-issue
workbench(you know, JUST a workbench disk, nothing else), and will
rarely run on a 'stripped' workbench like what comes on some other
program's disk (i.e. it WON'T run on Deluxepaint's workbench)
In case you haven't figured it out already, the Anti-Lemmin' Demo is a
rather NASTY parody on that great game company Psygnosis' great game,
Lemmings. I sure hope I don't get sued.
This animation is freely distributable as long as all files (including
this readme) are present upon distribution. The concept and animation
are copyright 1991 Eric Schwartz (but I'll admit Psygnosis has some
title to the characters).
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Anti-Lemmin.lha
==========
Armoured_Walker ?.? Cycleobject of Armoured Walker.
Imagine 2.0 cycleobject of Armoured Walker. There is neither
texture nor brush applyied. This archive consists of two anims
and an cycleobject: Armoured_Walker.
Some important information:
Full cyclemotion = 40 frames
Length of step = 300 units
Animations were created in Imagine format of animation on:
A500 , 2.5 MB RAM , DF1: (5.25") , my own imagination :-) .
This is shareware! If you like it, send me a colorful postcard
from your town and then you'll become the right owner of
Armoured Walker. Have a nice animation using this IOB !
Author: Mr. Krzysztof Korski
Path: gfx/Armoured_Walker!.lha
==========
ATF_Agility ?.? Animation of a jetliner being "buzzed".
While attending my freshman year at the Columbus College of Art and
Design, I came up with the idea for this animation, My father had
recently purchased the Disney Animation studio, and, due to the nature
of my animation idea, I chose the fast pageflipping Disney studio
other than my usual workhorse, Moviesetter, which,from the nature of
its animation system and Hardware/software limitations, can only do
about 8-10 frames per second.
ATF Agility was fully animated, with many more drawings per second
than one of my Moviesetter works, which blits still and animated
brushes around the screen. Disney worked wonderfully. Its onion skin
feature greatly speeded up production. Disney also promises
frame-synched sound, and timing and pallete changes in mid-animation,
just like Moviesetter. All those features work beautifully, if you're
willing to learn the language of the slightly-esoteric exposure sheet
module, But these features are only available when you use Disney's
proprietary CFAST animation file format. No biggie, I thought, I'm
used to that (Moviesetter's proprietary too), and I would get a lot of
benefits that a garden variety ANIM cant do. I colored the Animation
in Disney's Ink'n'Paint module, which could use a LOT more capability,
so I could keep with the beautiful, clever CFAST format, Right? HAH!!
The final CFAST file saved out at 880K for a 22 second, 15 fps,
8-color animation - Just slightly bigger than a disk. because I had no
Hard drive, I compressed the file and wrote a script to decompress
upon running. Hardly a good solution; the overhead caused it to
require 2.5 megs to run properly from a floppy, or 1.5 and an ASSIGN
command to run from a hard drive. This was November of 1990. The
situation didn't change for a while.
June 1991. I purchased Progressive Peripherals' Animation Station,
Which promised some of the abilites of the Disney program using
standard ANIMs I resaved the CFAST file as an ANIM-5. 432k - Quite an
improvement over 880k, Cfast files are just plain huge. Animation
Station and its Animplayer allow Pallete changes during an animation,
Timing changes for holds on frames without adding duplicate frames,
and digitised sound synching via a script file that works exactly like
a Sculpt/Movie sound script.
It has its share of limitations and problems, (My Animation Station
seems to know the GURU personally) but it works, The New ATF Agility
runs nearly identically to the original version. Takes up only a bit
more than half a disk including player program. only requires 1-meg,
and can run from any directory. You can even load it into Dpaint and
check it out, but youll probably lose the fringe benefits.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/ATF_Agility.lha
==========
At the Movies ?.? Amy the Squirrel at the movies
Amy the Squirrel goes to a movie with a date.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/AtMovies.lha
==========
BaitMasking ?.? Cute animation of fishing bait and mask.
Here's one of those simple ones. This one actually happens to be a
remake of a similar animation I did on the Macintosh (Boo!) to promote
Gold Disk's Animation Works software, which is basically an expanded
and improved version of the Moviesetter program I use on the Amiga. I
have written to Gold Disk, asking them to port the software to the
Amiga, as Moviesetter is looking a bit dated now and an AGA compatible
program like Moviesetter or Animation Works would be welcome. If you
would like to see Animation Works on Amiga, I would urge you to write
as well.
This animation should run on any Amiga with 2 megs memory. It may run
with less memory, depending on your personal setup. If you have
problems with the animation, look at the Animlist text file that is
with this animation for troubleshooting guidelines.
This animation is ©1993 Eric W. Schwartz. It can be freely
distributed as long as all files are included (including this readme).
More information on my copyrights are included in the AnimList file.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/BaitMasking.lha
==========
BluffTitler 1.0 A Realtime 3D Titling System
BluffTitler is Realtime 3D Titling program. It allows you to animate 3D
texts in all sorts of 3D effects using a simple graphical user interface.
You no longer have to use difficult,expensive and slow 3D rendering software
to make those stunning 3D leaders. All you need is BluffTitler !!
And because BluffTitler works in realtime, you can immediately start
recording your leader to video . No more heavy disk operations, memory
problems and single frame recorders : simply start BluffTitler and press
the record button on your video !
Since computer power is limited you can't expect broadcast quality from a
realtime titler, but the result is perfectly suitable for
-home video's
-semi-professional productions
-cable networks
-computer presentations
Author: Michiel den Outer
Path: gfx/BluffTitler-1.0.lha
==========
Bview 1.10 IFF Viewer with extensive GUI (ECS/AGA)
Bview 1.10 IFF ILBM viewer with GUI for all functions
for kickstart 37.175 and higher ECS & AGA support.
copyright 1992-1994 by Joeri Alberty.
> Features of Bview <
- Gadget Intuition interface (gadtools.library) for every function.
- Easy change Viewmodes with a click of your mouse
- Easy scale your bitmap to fit on screen.
- Print a picture with adjustment of printer settings
- Save a picture in IFF ILBM , Scr , Raw on disk
- View the IFF ILBM -> BMHD CAMG etc ...
- Save your environment of Bview to ENV: etc ...
- Save information about picture to disk or printer. (MakeText
- Make a Slide show by pressing a button..
- Use Double buffered mode (load one pic & view the other.
-----> Improvements from 1.02 to 1.05
- HAM KEY USING message fixed.
- Save problem with 256 colors fixed.
- Scaling routines can now enlarge a picture if it is a brush etc...
(Use Fit & Scale (Aspect & Scale) in Change mode menu and press Render)
- Ilbm to source generates now colortables for
LoadRGB4(),LoadRGB32(),SetRGB32().
- You can now use an AppIcon Set 'PRO_START=2' in Tooltypes (Bview icon)
('PRO_START=0'
- load and display, 'PRO_START=1' make Bview an Commodity)
- Compiled with SAS C/C++ 6.51 with optimiser ... (__inline)
-----> Improvements from 1.06 to 1.10
- Information & Option menu's rewritten
Now you can use DBmode ,promoted mode etc..
- Loader & saver rewritten to improve speed.
- BIG problem fixed with some pointers of the IFFparse library
Now you don't loose your colors anymore.
- More stable than 1.06 by rewriting the process routines.
Now you have a viewer,GUI with a loader and not the other way around.
- SHELL support improved.
Now you can use #? & / for loading directories & wildcards.
see guide for more information & examples.
Gives you information when something did go wrong
- Other smaller improvements in the code ...
- Changed save routine of ENV: so it doesn't crash anymore.
- You can load mangled pictures & display them partly.
Author: Joeri Alberty
Path: gfx/Bview-1.10.lha
==========
Camouflage ?.? An Aerotoon by Eric Schwartz.
This was an interesting experiment in visual style, and looks very
different from most of my other Aerotoons. This is due to the fact
that much of the graphics for it were created in Deluxepaint, Scene
Generator, and Sculpt 4D jr, with the Art Department as an
intermediary between them and Moviesetter. I thought it was an
interesting thing to try, but don't expect many more like it because
its almost too much work.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Camouflage.lha
==========
City_Jumper ?.? Simple animation of "pogo'ing" in a city
An amination that is reminiscent of using a very good "pogo stick"
inside a city with skyscrapers.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/City_Jumper.lha
==========
Clinton ?.? Political jab at Bill Clinton.
Political jab at Bill Clinton.
Author: Bill Graham
Path: gfx/Clinton.lha
==========
CowAnimAGA ?.? 252 frame anim, finger cows dancing?
A 252 frame animation, 320x200x6 AGA resolution, of "finger cows"
doing something that is best described as dancing.
Author: Bill Graham
Path: gfx/CowAnimAGA.lha
==========
CowAnimECS ?.? 252 frame anim, finger cows dancing?
A 252 frame animation, 320x200x4 ECS resolution, of "finger cows"
doing something that is best described as dancing.
Author: Bill Graham
Path: gfx/CowAnimECS.lha
==========
Coyote_2 ?.? Coyote and Road Runner animation
Coyote and Road Runner animation
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Coyote2.lha
==========
DepackIFF 1.7 Depacks file packed by ByteRun algorithm
This program lets you depack any IFF ILBM file with BODY chunk
crunched by standard ByteRun algorithm which is always used by all
Amiga graphics programs (like DPaint, Brilliance, ADPro, Real) while
saving image, brushes and so on. I decided to code this, because
ByteRun is not so effective as XPK, LhA (but not always!). If you
want to repack images, you will reach the best results only when you
pack pure image data, and this is why this program was born and
should be useful for all the people wanting save own disk space, eg. BBS
SYSOPs (more images and less bytes!).
Author: Marcin Orlowski
Path: gfx/DepackIFF-1.7.lha
==========
DustAnims ?.? Dust 3D-Special-Effects
Dust is a programm which manipules 3d-objects.
It reads in one object and creates a sequence of new objects.
Special-Effects:
-Morph between two VARIOUS Objects
-1d,2d,3D-Waves (TWaves and LWaves), incl. Damping
-Gravity and more
NOTE: This is a Demo-package of animations. Have a look at them
and write the author your suggestions.
Maybe you will get a full version later.
Author: Andreas Maschke
Path: gfx/Dust.lha
==========
ES_Tor ?.? Not quite the MGM lion, but similar.
An animation that is somewhat reminescent of the MGM "lion" intro.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/ES_Tor.lha
==========
Flaminator 1.5 Assists creating/animating flames, etc.
FLAMINATOR takes care of the drudgery of creating and animating
flames, explosions and similar special effects. The 'look' that
FLAMINATOR creates can be anywhere from movie-like to cartoonish.
FLAMINATOR can take a single image, and create animated flames on
top of it, or add flames to an existing animation.
Author: Carmen Rizzolo
Path: gfx/Flaminator-1.5.lha
==========
Gulf_Conflict ?.? Satirical look at the Gulf Conflict.
All During the war with Iraq, various people kept asking me to do an
animation concerning the event. It may be a little late, but here it
is. Gulf Conflict was created with the aid of such things as
DeluxePaint 3, Imagine, Disney Animation Studio, the AProDraw and
Tablet, Draw 4D Pro(on loan from Merical Computers), The Art
Department, and the ever-present Moviesetter. The anim's visual style
is heavily inspired by the Planetside CDTV demo by Psygnosis(sorry, no
super-fast fractal scapes here tho'). One thing I would fix if I had
to do it over again are the ugly pallete shifts between some scenes.
Those were all my fault, as my palletes were all wildly different when
they didn't need to be.
This Animation requires at least two megabytes of RAM to run. If your
workbench is not too demanding, you probably can run this with 2 megs.
If you have a Hard Drive or a demanding workbench eating up your
memory, you will most likely need about 2.5 megs.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/GulfConflict.lha
==========
HowToRunWall ?.? Animation - how to run into a wall.
A short and cute animation from Eric Schwartz.
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/HowToRunWall.lha
==========
ImageStudio 1.0.0 manipulates various graphic formats
ImageStudio is written for the casual graphics user who wishes to
convert or manipulate various graphics formats on a modest Amiga
system. There are several commercial offerings available, however the
casual user is paying a lot of money for many facilities and options
they would probably never use.
Bitmap graphics, by their nature, usually require large amounts of
RAM. One of the main objectives of ImageStudio was to reduce this
burden by utilising virtual memory - most users have more spare hard
disk space than spare RAM.
ImageStudio works with several buffers at any one time (dependant on
how many levels of undo are specified), each of these buffers can hold
either colour-mapped or 24-bit images. For a detailed description of
colour-mapped and 24-bit images, See Image types.
Author: Andy Dean
Graham Dean
Path: gfx/ImageStudio-1.0.0.lha
==========
JcGraph 1.21 Business grapher w/Intuition interface
JcGraph can show your data as bar,line, planes, stack, blocks, 2D and
3D, etc... Features: Real-time rotation around X, Y, Z axis, on-line
help,professionnal looking 2D and 3D graphs output. ARexx interface
with 40+ commands. User manual on disk in French and English version.
Output: EPS, 3D GEO, AegisDraw2000 and IFF ILBM.
Freely restributable (PostcardWare) (Save enabled and >3X3 charts).
v1.21. Binary Only.
Author:
Author: Jean-Christophe Clément
Path: gfx/JcGraph-1.21.lha
==========
Juggette ?.? 3 Animations of female Juggler
3 Animations of female Juggler
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Juggette.lha
==========
Juggette_3 ?.? Animation of a female juggler
Animation of a female juggler
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Juggette3.lha
==========
KoreanConflict ?.? Animation of fighter aircraft
Animation of fighter aircraft
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/KoreanConflict.lha
==========
MainActor 1.54 A modular animation package
MainActor is a modular animation package which is able to
create/edit/time/play animations (of any size) of the provided
animation modules. Modules included in this release :
IFF-Anim3/5/7/8/Brush/J, FLI, FLC, DL, AVI. You also have a great
number of functions for animation proccessing. MainActor is also able
to read and write Picture Modules : IFF, PCX, GIF, WB-ICON. You can
associate sound effects to every frame of your animations. Support
for the Picasso-II, Retina, Merlin and EGS cards is integrated.
Author: Markus Moenig
Path: gfx/MainActor-1.54.lha
==========
Manga Babes Demo ?.? Demo jpegs of Manga Babes
This is the demo version of Manga Babes. Manga Babes are essentially 3D models
of the human female form designed and constructed in the style of Japanese
comics and animation. Take a look at the accompanying JPEGS to see what they
look like.
Manga Babes are designed for use with the Imagine raytracer from Impulse, Inc.
However, it has been converted to 3D Studio and DXF format for PC users and
any program that accepts Imagine, 3DS or DXF formats.
The demo version contains 2 Babe models (Imagine and 3DS) with some vital
bodyparts missing. However, they are fine for rendering as long as the missing
parts don't show. Only periphery limbs such as hands and foot are absent from
the models. Also, some of the parts are fused together so you can't manipulate
them as easily as the registered version. Furthermore, the brush map included
for the face is only in 4 colors and the hair is missing
Author: Tomwoof
Path: gfx/MangaBabesDemo.lha
==========
Navigator ?.? A Virtual Reality presentation system
This program allows you to walk, drive and fly around in a 3 dimensional
computer generated world in realtime. It is used to visualize architectural,
industrial and artistic designs for presentation or analysis purposes.
You can use this program - live at your presentation
- tape it to VHS
- print out some pictures
Author: Michiel den Outer
Path: gfx/Navigator.lha
==========
OpaqueMove 1.0 An Opaque Window Movement Commodity
OpaqueMove is a commodity that provides opaque window movement for Intuition
windows. That is, instead of simply moving the outline of a window, the
entire window contents are moved as you move the mouse. The EGS window
system provides this capability, but does not extend it to standard Intuition
screens. Hence this commodity.
This commodity is intended for use with accelerated graphics cards such as
the @{i}GVP Spectrum. @{ui} Although it is possible to use it with standard
Amiga AGA screens, it is likely to be impractically slow except possibly in
single bitplane modes. However, there are various controls which allow
selection of the conditions under which windows should be moved opaquely, and
under which they should be moved as an outline.
Author: Steve Koren
Path: gfx/OpaqueMove-1.0.lha
==========
PicMerge 2.1 Merges two same-sized BitMaps
This little program merges two same-sized BitMaps by using logical
operators. All Amiga-Viewmodes are available, except of the HAM-
and 8HAM-Mode. That means, you can work with pictures with up to
256 colors.
The idea for this program was born as I was in trouble. How can I
merge two animations (one on the left, one on the right) in one?
So I done a simple hack to 'OR' the BitMaps. After adding a little
GUI-Interface I decided to make PicMerge public.
Author: Frank Düber
Path: gfx/PicMerge-2.1.lha
==========
QualityTime ?.? Flip the Frog animation
Flip the Frog animation
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/QualityTime.lha
==========
ShuttleCock ?.? Animation of Space Shuttles
Animation of Space Shuttles
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/ShuttleCock.lha
==========
SIRDS_GEN 3.14 Single Image Random Dot Stereogram genr.
Single-Image-Random-Dot Stereogram generator. SIRDSs are "real"
three-dimensional pictures. The dots (which seem random) are calculated
in such a way that if you focus "behind" the picture (monitor,etc), you
will see a 3D pic with a real feeling of "depth". This version features:
Function plotting, and viewing as SIRDS; Free choice of screen-mode;
Scaling of the picture; Should run on Graphics cards too (not much tested,
but Picasso II is working); Automatic correction of the eyewidth to the
displaymode; Uses datatypes for reading the picture; 32-bit color
functions used; Uses a symmetric algorithm; Generation of "SIS" possible;
Flimmering, various settings possible, 3 different pattern-modes and more!
Author: Michael Mutschler
Path: gfx/SIRDS_GEN-3.14.lha
==========
Skydive ?.? Animation of a harrier jet
Animation of a harrier jet doing a skydive
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/Skydive.lha
==========
Soviet Soft Landing ?.? Animation of a Soviet fighter "landing"
Animation of a Soviet fighter "landing"
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/SovietSoftLandin.lha
==========
StealthyBomber ?.? Animation of a Stealth Bomber
Animation of a Stealth Bomber
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/StealthyBomber.lha
==========
StealthyManeuver ?.? Animation of a Stealth fighter
Animation of a Stealth fighter
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/StealthyManeuver.lha
==========
SuperView 4.0 Graphics Viewer/Converter/ScreenGrabber
A localized Graphics Viewer for the superview.library, with ARexx-Support,
GUI, Online-Help and many other features. Converting of graphics and
"Screen-Grabbing" is also possible. When used with the superview.library
V3.6 the following file formats and graphic displays are supported:
File Formats - IFF-ILBM, IFF-ACBM, PCX, GIF, BMP (Windows), TIFF, FBM
(Unix), IMG (GEM), WPG (WordPerfect), C64 (Koala,Doodle), SVO (own Format)
and all OS3-Datatypes! Displays: - ECS, AGA, EGS-Cards.
Author: Andreas Ralph Kleinert
Path: gfx/SuperView-4.0.lha
==========
SuperView-Lib 8.2 Modular graphics viewing shared library.
Superview-Library is a modularian shared library system for loading,
saving and displaying of various graphic file formats via
datatype-like sub-libraries (SVObjects). Supports graphic
cards/framebuffers via various external driver libraries (SVDrivers).
Includes all needed programming stuff and example source code.
Author: Andreas Ralph Kleinert
Path: gfx/SuperView-Lib-8.2.lha
==========
svoJPEG 2.3 JPEG svobject for superview library V6+
JPEG svobject for superview.library V6+. Allows switching between 8
and 24 bit output via control pads, writes JPEG (24 Bit) from 1-8 and
24 bit, worked fine with all tested 24 bit JPEGs.
Author: Andreas Ralph Kleinert
Path: gfx/svoJPEG-2.3.lha
==========
The Dating Game ?.? Animation featuring Flip the Frog
Animation featuring Flip the Frog
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/TheDatingGame.lha
==========
The History of Amy ?.? Animation of Amy the Squirrel
Animation of the past of Amy the Squirrel
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/TheHistoryOfAmy.lha
==========
TriceraWalk ?.? Bones animated triceratops.
Finally got around to animating the triceratops that comes with Imagine
using bones. This is a test animation in HAM Interlace quarterscreen to keep
the file size down. The triceratops gallops across the flatland in front of
an erupting volcano, stops and shakes his head furiously, lowers his head
and snaps at the ground. The motion of the triceratops still needs some
tweaking to look more realistic but this bones stuff becomes addictive. BTW,
this animation uses Particles, Applique, the new Mountain Top texture, the
new Leather texture and Bones.
Author: Ted Stethem
Path: gfx/TriceraWalk.lha
==========
U_Paint 1.0 Paint Program for A1200 and A4000
Paint Program for A1200 and A4000
Author: Andreas Meinert
Path: gfx/U_PAINT-1.0.lha
==========
VietnamConflict ?.? Animation of 2 fighter jets
Animation of 2 fighter jets
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/VietnamConflict.lha
==========
Viewtek 2.1.378 Feature packed picture/animation viewer
A feature packed Picture/Animation Viewer. Shows most ILBM's (including
24-bit ILBM's), most Compuserve GIF format images, most JFIF format JPEG
images and most ANIM Op-5 format animations, with support for different
palettes for each frame. Supports SHAM, CTBL, and PCHG images, full
support of ECS/AGA display modes (ie. show 256 color GIF's directly, show
800x600 HAM animations, etc.). Supports viewing contents of clipboard.
Iconifies to a Workbench AppIcon. Includes versions for DCTV, EGS, IV-24,
Firecracker, OpalVision, Retina, and Picasso
Author: Thomas Krehbiel
Path: gfx/Viewtek-2.1.378.lha
==========
VTOLContest ?.? Animation of 2 competing VTOL aircraft
Animation of 2 competing VTOL aircraft
Author: Eric Schwartz
Path: gfx/VTOLContest.lha
==========
APlusPlus 1.01 C++ class library for AmigaDOS functions
The A++ Library is a library written in C++ that consists of classes
assigned to the task of encapsulating the Amiga® system software. Its
aim is to provide a stable and effective method of programming the
Amiga®. That should include Exec, Dos, Intuition, ARexx, ..just
everything that makes sense being encapsulated with a proper C++ class
interface.
The A++ Library collects the hundreds of system functions, groups them
into classes that 'know' about the specialities of each function and
thus shields the programmer from using them incorrectly. The C++
programming language provides the object oriented paradigm that holds
no limitations to evolution of existing solutions.
The contents of this archive do not represent a complete and ready to
use tool but the expression of an idea showing promise. It gives only
a slight impression of what is possible. But much more can be done.
Author: Armin Vogt
Path: GNU/APlusPlus-1.01-src.lha
==========
autoconf 1.11 GNU automatic configuration generator.
Autoconf is an extensible package of m4 macros that produce shell
scripts to automatically configure software source code packages.
These scripts can adapt the packages to many kinds of UNIX-like
systems without manual user intervention. Autoconf creates a
configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the
operating system features that the package can use, in the form of m4
macro calls.
Autoconf requires GNU m4. The configuration scripts produced by
Autoconf are independent of Autoconf when they are run, so their users
do not need to have Autoconf (or GNU m4).
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/autoconf-1.11-bin.lha
==========
autoconf 1.11 GNU automatic configuration generator.
Autoconf is an extensible package of m4 macros that produce shell
scripts to automatically configure software source code packages.
These scripts can adapt the packages to many kinds of UNIX-like
systems without manual user intervention. Autoconf creates a
configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the
operating system features that the package can use, in the form of m4
macro calls.
Autoconf requires GNU m4. The configuration scripts produced by
Autoconf are independent of Autoconf when they are run, so their users
do not need to have Autoconf (or GNU m4).
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/autoconf-1.11-diffs.lha
==========
autoconf 1.11 GNU automatic configuration generator.
Autoconf is an extensible package of m4 macros that produce shell
scripts to automatically configure software source code packages.
These scripts can adapt the packages to many kinds of UNIX-like
systems without manual user intervention. Autoconf creates a
configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the
operating system features that the package can use, in the form of m4
macro calls.
Autoconf requires GNU m4. The configuration scripts produced by
Autoconf are independent of Autoconf when they are run, so their users
do not need to have Autoconf (or GNU m4).
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/autoconf-1.11-src.lha
==========
autoconf 1.11 GNU automatic configuration generator.
Autoconf is an extensible package of m4 macros that produce shell
scripts to automatically configure software source code packages.
These scripts can adapt the packages to many kinds of UNIX-like
systems without manual user intervention. Autoconf creates a
configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the
operating system features that the package can use, in the form of m4
macro calls.
Autoconf requires GNU m4. The configuration scripts produced by
Autoconf are independent of Autoconf when they are run, so their users
do not need to have Autoconf (or GNU m4).
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/autoconf-1.11.tar.gz
==========
bc 1.02 GNU arbitrary precision calculator lang.
A language that supports arbitrary precision numbers with interactive
execution of statements. There are some similarities in the syntax to
the C programming language.
A standard math library is available by command line option. If
requested, the math library is defined before processing any files.
bc starts by processing code from all the files listed on the command
line in the order listed. After all files have been processed, bc
reads from the standard input. All code is executed as it is read.
(If a file contains a command to halt the processor, bc will never
read from the standard input.)
This version of bc contains several extensions beyond traditional bc
implementations and the POSIX draft standard. Command line options
can cause these extensions to print a warning or to be rejected. This
document describes the language accepted by this processor.
Extensions will be identified as such.
Author: Philip A. Nelson
Path: GNU/bc-1.02-bin.lha
==========
bc 1.02 GNU arbitrary precision calculator lang.
A language that supports arbitrary precision numbers with interactive
execution of statements. There are some similarities in the syntax to
the C programming language.
A standard math library is available by command line option. If
requested, the math library is defined before processing any files.
bc starts by processing code from all the files listed on the command
line in the order listed. After all files have been processed, bc
reads from the standard input. All code is executed as it is read.
(If a file contains a command to halt the processor, bc will never
read from the standard input.)
This version of bc contains several extensions beyond traditional bc
implementations and the POSIX draft standard. Command line options
can cause these extensions to print a warning or to be rejected. This
document describes the language accepted by this processor.
Extensions will be identified as such.
Author: Philip A. Nelson
Path: GNU/bc-1.02-diffs.lha
==========
bc 1.02 GNU arbitrary precision calculator lang.
A language that supports arbitrary precision numbers with interactive
execution of statements. There are some similarities in the syntax to
the C programming language.
A standard math library is available by command line option. If
requested, the math library is defined before processing any files.
bc starts by processing code from all the files listed on the command
line in the order listed. After all files have been processed, bc
reads from the standard input. All code is executed as it is read.
(If a file contains a command to halt the processor, bc will never
read from the standard input.)
This version of bc contains several extensions beyond traditional bc
implementations and the POSIX draft standard. Command line options
can cause these extensions to print a warning or to be rejected. This
document describes the language accepted by this processor.
Extensions will be identified as such.
Author: Philip A. Nelson
Path: GNU/bc-1.02-src.lha
==========
bc 1.02 GNU arbitrary precision calculator lang.
A language that supports arbitrary precision numbers with interactive
execution of statements. There are some similarities in the syntax to
the C programming language.
A standard math library is available by command line option. If
requested, the math library is defined before processing any files.
bc starts by processing code from all the files listed on the command
line in the order listed. After all files have been processed, bc
reads from the standard input. All code is executed as it is read.
(If a file contains a command to halt the processor, bc will never
read from the standard input.)
This version of bc contains several extensions beyond traditional bc
implementations and the POSIX draft standard. Command line options
can cause these extensions to print a warning or to be rejected. This
document describes the language accepted by this processor.
Extensions will be identified as such.
Author: Philip A. Nelson
Path: GNU/bc-1.02.tar.gz
==========
binutils 1.8.x GNU binary file utilities.
Various tools for operating on object and executable files. Includes "ld",
"size", "nm", "strip", "ar", "objdump", and "ranlib".
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/binutils-1.8.x-bin.lha
==========
binutils 1.8.x GNU binary file utilities.
Various tools for operating on object and executable files. Includes "ld",
"size", "nm", "strip", "ar", "objdump", and "ranlib".
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/binutils-1.8.x-diffs.lha
==========
binutils 1.8.x GNU binary file utilities.
Various tools for operating on object and executable files. Includes "ld",
"size", "nm", "strip", "ar", "objdump", and "ranlib".
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/binutils-1.8.x-src.lha
==========
binutils 1.8.x GNU binary file utilities.
Various tools for operating on object and executable files. Includes "ld",
"size", "nm", "strip", "ar", "objdump", and "ranlib".
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/binutils-1.8.x.tar.gz
==========
bison 1.22 GNU parser generator yacc replacement
Bison is a parser generator in the style of yacc (1). It should be
upwardly compatible with input files designed for yacc. Input files
should follow the yacc convention of ending in ".y". Unlike yacc, the
generated files do not have fixed names, but instead use the prefix of
the input file. For instance, a grammar description file named
parse.y would produce the generated parser in a file named
parse.tab.c, instead of yacc 's y.tab.c.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/bison-1.22-bin.lha
==========
bison 1.22 GNU parser generator yacc replacement
Bison is a parser generator in the style of yacc (1). It should be
upwardly compatible with input files designed for yacc. Input files
should follow the yacc convention of ending in ".y". Unlike yacc, the
generated files do not have fixed names, but instead use the prefix of
the input file. For instance, a grammar description file named
parse.y would produce the generated parser in a file named
parse.tab.c, instead of yacc 's y.tab.c.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/bison-1.22-diffs.lha
==========
bison 1.22 GNU parser generator yacc replacement
Bison is a parser generator in the style of yacc (1). It should be
upwardly compatible with input files designed for yacc. Input files
should follow the yacc convention of ending in ".y". Unlike yacc, the
generated files do not have fixed names, but instead use the prefix of
the input file. For instance, a grammar description file named
parse.y would produce the generated parser in a file named
parse.tab.c, instead of yacc 's y.tab.c.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/bison-1.22-src.lha
==========
bison 1.22 GNU parser generator yacc replacement
Bison is a parser generator in the style of yacc (1). It should be
upwardly compatible with input files designed for yacc. Input files
should follow the yacc convention of ending in ".y". Unlike yacc, the
generated files do not have fixed names, but instead use the prefix of
the input file. For instance, a grammar description file named
parse.y would produce the generated parser in a file named
parse.tab.c, instead of yacc 's y.tab.c.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/bison-1.22.tar.gz
==========
cpio 2.3 GNU utility to copy to/from archives.
Cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive, which is a
file that contains other files plus information about them, such as
their pathname, owner, timestamps, and access permissions. The
archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe.
Cpio has three operating modes. In copy-out mode, cpio copies files
into an archive. It reads a list of filenames, one per line, on the
standard input, and writes the archive onto the standard output. A
typical way to generate the list of filenames is with the find
command; you should give find the -depth option to minimize problems
with permissions on directories that are unwritable or not searchable.
In copy-in mode, cpio copies files out of an archive or lists the
archive contents. It reads the archive from the standard input. Any
non-option command line arguments are shell globbing patterns; only
files in the archive whose names match one or more of those patterns
are copied from the archive. Unlike in the shell, an initial `.' in a
filename does match a wildcard at the start of a pattern, and a `/' in
a filename can match wildcards. If no patterns are given, all files
are extracted.
In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to
another, combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually
using an archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the
standard input; the directory into which it will copy them is given as
a non-option argument.
Cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new
ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar, and POSIX.1 tar.
The binary format is obsolete because it encodes information about the
files in a way that is not portable between different machine
architectures. The old ASCII format is portable between different
machine architectures, but should not be used on file systems with
more than 65536 i-nodes. The new ASCII format is portable between
different machine architectures and can be used on any size file
system, but is not supported by all versions of cpio; currently, it is
only supported by GNU and Unix System V R4. The crc format is like
the new ASCII format, but also contains a checksum for each file which
cpio calculates when creating an archive and verifies when the file is
extracted from the archive. The HPUX formats are provided for
compatibility with HPUX's cpio which stores device files differently.
The tar format is provided for compatability with the tar program. It
can not be used to archive files with names longer than 100
characters, and can not be used to archive "special" (block or
character devices) files. The POSIX.1 tar format can not be used to
archive files with names longer than 255 characters (less unless they
have a "/" in just the right place).
By default, cpio creates binary format archives, for compatibility
with older cpio programs. When extracting from archives, cpio
automatically recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can
read archives created on machines with a different byte-order.
Some of the options to cpio apply only to certain operating modes; see
the SYNOPSIS section for a list of which options are allowed in which
modes.
Author: Phil Nelson
David MacKenzie
John Oleynick
Path: GNU/cpio-2.3-bin.lha
==========
cpio 2.3 GNU utility to copy to/from archives.
Cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive, which is a
file that contains other files plus information about them, such as
their pathname, owner, timestamps, and access permissions. The
archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe.
Cpio has three operating modes. In copy-out mode, cpio copies files
into an archive. It reads a list of filenames, one per line, on the
standard input, and writes the archive onto the standard output. A
typical way to generate the list of filenames is with the find
command; you should give find the -depth option to minimize problems
with permissions on directories that are unwritable or not searchable.
In copy-in mode, cpio copies files out of an archive or lists the
archive contents. It reads the archive from the standard input. Any
non-option command line arguments are shell globbing patterns; only
files in the archive whose names match one or more of those patterns
are copied from the archive. Unlike in the shell, an initial `.' in a
filename does match a wildcard at the start of a pattern, and a `/' in
a filename can match wildcards. If no patterns are given, all files
are extracted.
In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to
another, combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually
using an archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the
standard input; the directory into which it will copy them is given as
a non-option argument.
Cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new
ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar, and POSIX.1 tar.
The binary format is obsolete because it encodes information about the
files in a way that is not portable between different machine
architectures. The old ASCII format is portable between different
machine architectures, but should not be used on file systems with
more than 65536 i-nodes. The new ASCII format is portable between
different machine architectures and can be used on any size file
system, but is not supported by all versions of cpio; currently, it is
only supported by GNU and Unix System V R4. The crc format is like
the new ASCII format, but also contains a checksum for each file which
cpio calculates when creating an archive and verifies when the file is
extracted from the archive. The HPUX formats are provided for
compatibility with HPUX's cpio which stores device files differently.
The tar format is provided for compatability with the tar program. It
can not be used to archive files with names longer than 100
characters, and can not be used to archive "special" (block or
character devices) files. The POSIX.1 tar format can not be used to
archive files with names longer than 255 characters (less unless they
have a "/" in just the right place).
By default, cpio creates binary format archives, for compatibility
with older cpio programs. When extracting from archives, cpio
automatically recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can
read archives created on machines with a different byte-order.
Some of the options to cpio apply only to certain operating modes; see
the SYNOPSIS section for a list of which options are allowed in which
modes.
Author: Phil Nelson
David MacKenzie
John Oleynick
Path: GNU/cpio-2.3-diffs.lha
==========
cpio 2.3 GNU utility to copy to/from archives.
Cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive, which is a
file that contains other files plus information about them, such as
their pathname, owner, timestamps, and access permissions. The
archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe.
Cpio has three operating modes. In copy-out mode, cpio copies files
into an archive. It reads a list of filenames, one per line, on the
standard input, and writes the archive onto the standard output. A
typical way to generate the list of filenames is with the find
command; you should give find the -depth option to minimize problems
with permissions on directories that are unwritable or not searchable.
In copy-in mode, cpio copies files out of an archive or lists the
archive contents. It reads the archive from the standard input. Any
non-option command line arguments are shell globbing patterns; only
files in the archive whose names match one or more of those patterns
are copied from the archive. Unlike in the shell, an initial `.' in a
filename does match a wildcard at the start of a pattern, and a `/' in
a filename can match wildcards. If no patterns are given, all files
are extracted.
In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to
another, combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually
using an archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the
standard input; the directory into which it will copy them is given as
a non-option argument.
Cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new
ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar, and POSIX.1 tar.
The binary format is obsolete because it encodes information about the
files in a way that is not portable between different machine
architectures. The old ASCII format is portable between different
machine architectures, but should not be used on file systems with
more than 65536 i-nodes. The new ASCII format is portable between
different machine architectures and can be used on any size file
system, but is not supported by all versions of cpio; currently, it is
only supported by GNU and Unix System V R4. The crc format is like
the new ASCII format, but also contains a checksum for each file which
cpio calculates when creating an archive and verifies when the file is
extracted from the archive. The HPUX formats are provided for
compatibility with HPUX's cpio which stores device files differently.
The tar format is provided for compatability with the tar program. It
can not be used to archive files with names longer than 100
characters, and can not be used to archive "special" (block or
character devices) files. The POSIX.1 tar format can not be used to
archive files with names longer than 255 characters (less unless they
have a "/" in just the right place).
By default, cpio creates binary format archives, for compatibility
with older cpio programs. When extracting from archives, cpio
automatically recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can
read archives created on machines with a different byte-order.
Some of the options to cpio apply only to certain operating modes; see
the SYNOPSIS section for a list of which options are allowed in which
modes.
Author: Phil Nelson
David MacKenzie
John Oleynick
Path: GNU/cpio-2.3-src.lha
==========
cpio 2.3 GNU utility to copy to/from archives.
Cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive, which is a
file that contains other files plus information about them, such as
their pathname, owner, timestamps, and access permissions. The
archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe.
Cpio has three operating modes. In copy-out mode, cpio copies files
into an archive. It reads a list of filenames, one per line, on the
standard input, and writes the archive onto the standard output. A
typical way to generate the list of filenames is with the find
command; you should give find the -depth option to minimize problems
with permissions on directories that are unwritable or not searchable.
In copy-in mode, cpio copies files out of an archive or lists the
archive contents. It reads the archive from the standard input. Any
non-option command line arguments are shell globbing patterns; only
files in the archive whose names match one or more of those patterns
are copied from the archive. Unlike in the shell, an initial `.' in a
filename does match a wildcard at the start of a pattern, and a `/' in
a filename can match wildcards. If no patterns are given, all files
are extracted.
In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to
another, combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually
using an archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the
standard input; the directory into which it will copy them is given as
a non-option argument.
Cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new
ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar, and POSIX.1 tar.
The binary format is obsolete because it encodes information about the
files in a way that is not portable between different machine
architectures. The old ASCII format is portable between different
machine architectures, but should not be used on file systems with
more than 65536 i-nodes. The new ASCII format is portable between
different machine architectures and can be used on any size file
system, but is not supported by all versions of cpio; currently, it is
only supported by GNU and Unix System V R4. The crc format is like
the new ASCII format, but also contains a checksum for each file which
cpio calculates when creating an archive and verifies when the file is
extracted from the archive. The HPUX formats are provided for
compatibility with HPUX's cpio which stores device files differently.
The tar format is provided for compatability with the tar program. It
can not be used to archive files with names longer than 100
characters, and can not be used to archive "special" (block or
character devices) files. The POSIX.1 tar format can not be used to
archive files with names longer than 255 characters (less unless they
have a "/" in just the right place).
By default, cpio creates binary format archives, for compatibility
with older cpio programs. When extracting from archives, cpio
automatically recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can
read archives created on machines with a different byte-order.
Some of the options to cpio apply only to certain operating modes; see
the SYNOPSIS section for a list of which options are allowed in which
modes.
Author: Phil Nelson
David MacKenzie
John Oleynick
Path: GNU/cpio-2.3.tar.gz
==========
dc 0.2 GNU reverse-polish (RPN) desk calculator
DC is a reverse-polish desk calculator which supports unlimited
precision arithmetic. It also allows you to define and call macros.
Normally DC reads from the standard input; if any command arguments
are given to it, they are filenames, and DC reads and executes the
contents of the files before reading from standard input. All output
is to standard output.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/dc-0.2-bin.lha
==========
dc 0.2 GNU reverse-polish (RPN) desk calculator
DC is a reverse-polish desk calculator which supports unlimited
precision arithmetic. It also allows you to define and call macros.
Normally DC reads from the standard input; if any command arguments
are given to it, they are filenames, and DC reads and executes the
contents of the files before reading from standard input. All output
is to standard output.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/dc-0.2-diffs.lha
==========
dc 0.2 GNU reverse-polish (RPN) desk calculator
DC is a reverse-polish desk calculator which supports unlimited
precision arithmetic. It also allows you to define and call macros.
Normally DC reads from the standard input; if any command arguments
are given to it, they are filenames, and DC reads and executes the
contents of the files before reading from standard input. All output
is to standard output.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/dc-0.2-src.lha
==========
dc 0.2 GNU reverse-polish (RPN) desk calculator
DC is a reverse-polish desk calculator which supports unlimited
precision arithmetic. It also allows you to define and call macros.
Normally DC reads from the standard input; if any command arguments
are given to it, they are filenames, and DC reads and executes the
contents of the files before reading from standard input. All output
is to standard output.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/dc-0.2.tar.gz
==========
diffutils 2.6 GNU diff, diff3, sdiff and cmp utilities
This directory contains the GNU diff, diff3, sdiff, and cmp utilities.
Their features are a superset of the Unix features and they are
significantly faster. cmp has been moved here from the GNU textutils.
Computer users often find occasion to ask how two files differ.
Perhaps one file is a newer version of the other file. Or maybe the
two files started out as identical copies but were changed by
different people.
You can use the diff command to show differences between two files, or
each corresponding file in two directories. diff outputs differences
between files line by line in any of several formats, selectable by
command line options. This set of differences is often called a diff
or patch. For files that are identical, diff normally produces no
output; for binary (non-text) files, diff normally reports only that
they are different.
You can use the cmp command to show the offsets and line numbers where
two files differ. Cmp can also show all the characters that differ
between the two files, side by side.
You can use the diff3 command to show differences among three files.
When two people have made independent changes to a common original,
diff3 can report the differences between the original and the two
changed versions, and can produce a merged file that contains both
persons' changes together with warnings about conflicts.
You can use the sdiff command to merge two files interactively.
You can use the set of differences produced by diff to distribute
updates to text files (such as program source code) to other people.
This method is especially useful when the differences are small
compared to the complete files. Given diff output, you can use the
patch program to update, or patch, a copy of the file. If you think
of diff as subtracting one file from another to produce their
difference, you can think of patch as adding the difference to one
file to reproduce the other.
Author: Free Software Foundation
et. al.
Path: GNU/diffutils-2.6-bin.lha
==========
diffutils 2.6 GNU diff, diff3, sdiff and cmp utilities
This directory contains the GNU diff, diff3, sdiff, and cmp utilities.
Their features are a superset of the Unix features and they are
significantly faster. cmp has been moved here from the GNU textutils.
Computer users often find occasion to ask how two files differ.
Perhaps one file is a newer version of the other file. Or maybe the
two files started out as identical copies but were changed by
different people.
You can use the diff command to show differences between two files, or
each corresponding file in two directories. diff outputs differences
between files line by line in any of several formats, selectable by
command line options. This set of differences is often called a diff
or patch. For files that are identical, diff normally produces no
output; for binary (non-text) files, diff normally reports only that
they are different.
You can use the cmp command to show the offsets and line numbers where
two files differ. Cmp can also show all the characters that differ
between the two files, side by side.
You can use the diff3 command to show differences among three files.
When two people have made independent changes to a common original,
diff3 can report the differences between the original and the two
changed versions, and can produce a merged file that contains both
persons' changes together with warnings about conflicts.
You can use the sdiff command to merge two files interactively.
You can use the set of differences produced by diff to distribute
updates to text files (such as program source code) to other people.
This method is especially useful when the differences are small
compared to the complete files. Given diff output, you can use the
patch program to update, or patch, a copy of the file. If you think
of diff as subtracting one file from another to produce their
difference, you can think of patch as adding the difference to one
file to reproduce the other.
Author: Free Software Foundation
et. al.
Path: GNU/diffutils-2.6-diffs.lha
==========
diffutils 2.6 GNU diff, diff3, sdiff and cmp utilities
This directory contains the GNU diff, diff3, sdiff, and cmp utilities.
Their features are a superset of the Unix features and they are
significantly faster. cmp has been moved here from the GNU textutils.
Computer users often find occasion to ask how two files differ.
Perhaps one file is a newer version of the other file. Or maybe the
two files started out as identical copies but were changed by
different people.
You can use the diff command to show differences between two files, or
each corresponding file in two directories. diff outputs differences
between files line by line in any of several formats, selectable by
command line options. This set of differences is often called a diff
or patch. For files that are identical, diff normally produces no
output; for binary (non-text) files, diff normally reports only that
they are different.
You can use the cmp command to show the offsets and line numbers where
two files differ. Cmp can also show all the characters that differ
between the two files, side by side.
You can use the diff3 command to show differences among three files.
When two people have made independent changes to a common original,
diff3 can report the differences between the original and the two
changed versions, and can produce a merged file that contains both
persons' changes together with warnings about conflicts.
You can use the sdiff command to merge two files interactively.
You can use the set of differences produced by diff to distribute
updates to text files (such as program source code) to other people.
This method is especially useful when the differences are small
compared to the complete files. Given diff output, you can use the
patch program to update, or patch, a copy of the file. If you think
of diff as subtracting one file from another to produce their
difference, you can think of patch as adding the difference to one
file to reproduce the other.
Author: Free Software Foundation
et. al.
Path: GNU/diffutils-2.6-src.lha
==========
diffutils 2.6 GNU diff, diff3, sdiff and cmp utilities
This directory contains the GNU diff, diff3, sdiff, and cmp utilities.
Their features are a superset of the Unix features and they are
significantly faster. cmp has been moved here from the GNU textutils.
Computer users often find occasion to ask how two files differ.
Perhaps one file is a newer version of the other file. Or maybe the
two files started out as identical copies but were changed by
different people.
You can use the diff command to show differences between two files, or
each corresponding file in two directories. diff outputs differences
between files line by line in any of several formats, selectable by
command line options. This set of differences is often called a diff
or patch. For files that are identical, diff normally produces no
output; for binary (non-text) files, diff normally reports only that
they are different.
You can use the cmp command to show the offsets and line numbers where
two files differ. Cmp can also show all the characters that differ
between the two files, side by side.
You can use the diff3 command to show differences among three files.
When two people have made independent changes to a common original,
diff3 can report the differences between the original and the two
changed versions, and can produce a merged file that contains both
persons' changes together with warnings about conflicts.
You can use the sdiff command to merge two files interactively.
You can use the set of differences produced by diff to distribute
updates to text files (such as program source code) to other people.
This method is especially useful when the differences are small
compared to the complete files. Given diff output, you can use the
patch program to update, or patch, a copy of the file. If you think
of diff as subtracting one file from another to produce their
difference, you can think of patch as adding the difference to one
file to reproduce the other.
Author: Free Software Foundation
et. al.
Path: GNU/diffutils-2.6.tar.gz
==========
doschk 1.1 Check DOS/SYSV filename limits.
This program is intended as a utility to help software developers
ensure that their source file names are distinguishable on MS-DOS and
14-character SYSV platforms. To perform this task, doschk reads a
list of filenames and produces a report of all the conflicts that
would arise if the files were transferred to a MS-DOS or SYSV
platform.
Author: DJ Delorie
Path: GNU/doschk-1.1-bin.lha
==========
doschk 1.1 Check DOS/SYSV filename limits.
This program is intended as a utility to help software developers
ensure that their source file names are distinguishable on MS-DOS and
14-character SYSV platforms. To perform this task, doschk reads a
list of filenames and produces a report of all the conflicts that
would arise if the files were transferred to a MS-DOS or SYSV
platform.
Author: DJ Delorie
Path: GNU/doschk-1.1-diffs.lha
==========
doschk 1.1 Check DOS/SYSV filename limits.
This program is intended as a utility to help software developers
ensure that their source file names are distinguishable on MS-DOS and
14-character SYSV platforms. To perform this task, doschk reads a
list of filenames and produces a report of all the conflicts that
would arise if the files were transferred to a MS-DOS or SYSV
platform.
Author: DJ Delorie
Path: GNU/doschk-1.1-src.lha
==========
doschk 1.1 Check DOS/SYSV filename limits.
This program is intended as a utility to help software developers
ensure that their source file names are distinguishable on MS-DOS and
14-character SYSV platforms. To perform this task, doschk reads a
list of filenames and produces a report of all the conflicts that
would arise if the files were transferred to a MS-DOS or SYSV
platform.
Author: DJ Delorie
Path: GNU/doschk-1.1.tar.gz
==========
ed 0.1 8-bit-clean POSIX compliant line editor.
"Ed" is a line-oriented text editor. It is used to create, display,
modify and otherwise manipulate text files. "Red" is a restricted ed:
it can only edit files in the current directory and cannot execute
shell commands.
Author: Andrew Moore
Path: GNU/ed-0.1-bin.lha
==========
ed 0.1 8-bit-clean POSIX compliant line editor.
"Ed" is a line-oriented text editor. It is used to create, display,
modify and otherwise manipulate text files. "Red" is a restricted ed:
it can only edit files in the current directory and cannot execute
shell commands.
Author: Andrew Moore
Path: GNU/ed-0.1-diffs.lha
==========
ed 0.1 8-bit-clean POSIX compliant line editor.
"Ed" is a line-oriented text editor. It is used to create, display,
modify and otherwise manipulate text files. "Red" is a restricted ed:
it can only edit files in the current directory and cannot execute
shell commands.
Author: Andrew Moore
Path: GNU/ed-0.1-src.lha
==========
ed 0.1 8-bit-clean POSIX compliant line editor.
"Ed" is a line-oriented text editor. It is used to create, display,
modify and otherwise manipulate text files. "Red" is a restricted ed:
it can only edit files in the current directory and cannot execute
shell commands.
Author: Andrew Moore
Path: GNU/ed-0.1.tar.gz
==========
emacs 18.59 GNU Emacs editor
GNU Emacs is the GNU incarnation of the advanced, self-documenting,
customizable, extensible real-time display editor Emacs. (The `G' in
`GNU' is not silent.)
We say that Emacs is a "display" editor because normally the text
being edited is visible on the screen and is updated automatically as
you type your commands.
We call it a "real-time" editor because the display is updated very
frequently, usually after each character or pair of characters you
type. This minimizes the amount of information you must keep in your
head as you edit.
We call Emacs advanced because it provides facilities that go beyond
simple insertion and deletion: filling of text; automatic indentation
of programs; viewing two or more files at once; and dealing in terms
of characters, words, lines, sentences, paragraphs, and pages, as well
as expressions and comments in several different programming
languages. It is much easier to type one command meaning "go to the
end of the paragraph" than to find that spot with simple cursor keys.
"Self-documenting" means that at any time you can type a special
character, `Control-h', to find out what your options are. You can
also use it to find out what any command does, or to find all the
commands that pertain to a topic.
"Customizable" means that you can change the definitions of Emacs
commands in little ways. For example, if you use a programming
language in which comments start with `<**' and end with `**>', you
can tell the Emacs comment manipulation commands to use those strings.
Another sort of customization is rearrangement of the command set.
For example, if you prefer the four basic cursor motion commands (up,
down, left and right) on keys in a diamond pattern on the keyboard,
you can have it.
"Extensible" means that you can go beyond simple customization and
write entirely new commands, programs in the Lisp language to be run
by Emacs's own Lisp interpreter. Emacs is an "on-line extensible"
system, which means that it is divided into many functions that call
each other, any of which can be redefined in the middle of an editing
session. Any part of Emacs can be replaced without making a separate
copy of all of Emacs. Most of the editing commands of Emacs are
written in Lisp already; the few exceptions could have been written in
Lisp but are written in C for efficiency. Although only a programmer
can write an extension, anybody can use it afterward.
Author: Richard Stallman
Path: GNU/emacs-18.59-bin.lha
==========
emacs 18.59 GNU Emacs editor
GNU Emacs is the GNU incarnation of the advanced, self-documenting,
customizable, extensible real-time display editor Emacs. (The `G' in
`GNU' is not silent.)
We say that Emacs is a "display" editor because normally the text
being edited is visible on the screen and is updated automatically as
you type your commands.
We call it a "real-time" editor because the display is updated very
frequently, usually after each character or pair of characters you
type. This minimizes the amount of information you must keep in your
head as you edit.
We call Emacs advanced because it provides facilities that go beyond
simple insertion and deletion: filling of text; automatic indentation
of programs; viewing two or more files at once; and dealing in terms
of characters, words, lines, sentences, paragraphs, and pages, as well
as expressions and comments in several different programming
languages. It is much easier to type one command meaning "go to the
end of the paragraph" than to find that spot with simple cursor keys.
"Self-documenting" means that at any time you can type a special
character, `Control-h', to find out what your options are. You can
also use it to find out what any command does, or to find all the
commands that pertain to a topic.
"Customizable" means that you can change the definitions of Emacs
commands in little ways. For example, if you use a programming
language in which comments start with `<**' and end with `**>', you
can tell the Emacs comment manipulation commands to use those strings.
Another sort of customization is rearrangement of the command set.
For example, if you prefer the four basic cursor motion commands (up,
down, left and right) on keys in a diamond pattern on the keyboard,
you can have it.
"Extensible" means that you can go beyond simple customization and
write entirely new commands, programs in the Lisp language to be run
by Emacs's own Lisp interpreter. Emacs is an "on-line extensible"
system, which means that it is divided into many functions that call
each other, any of which can be redefined in the middle of an editing
session. Any part of Emacs can be replaced without making a separate
copy of all of Emacs. Most of the editing commands of Emacs are
written in Lisp already; the few exceptions could have been written in
Lisp but are written in C for efficiency. Although only a programmer
can write an extension, anybody can use it afterward.
Author: Richard Stallman
Path: GNU/emacs-18.59-diffs.lha
==========
emacs 18.59 GNU Emacs editor
GNU Emacs is the GNU incarnation of the advanced, self-documenting,
customizable, extensible real-time display editor Emacs. (The `G' in
`GNU' is not silent.)
We say that Emacs is a "display" editor because normally the text
being edited is visible on the screen and is updated automatically as
you type your commands.
We call it a "real-time" editor because the display is updated very
frequently, usually after each character or pair of characters you
type. This minimizes the amount of information you must keep in your
head as you edit.
We call Emacs advanced because it provides facilities that go beyond
simple insertion and deletion: filling of text; automatic indentation
of programs; viewing two or more files at once; and dealing in terms
of characters, words, lines, sentences, paragraphs, and pages, as well
as expressions and comments in several different programming
languages. It is much easier to type one command meaning "go to the
end of the paragraph" than to find that spot with simple cursor keys.
"Self-documenting" means that at any time you can type a special
character, `Control-h', to find out what your options are. You can
also use it to find out what any command does, or to find all the
commands that pertain to a topic.
"Customizable" means that you can change the definitions of Emacs
commands in little ways. For example, if you use a programming
language in which comments start with `<**' and end with `**>', you
can tell the Emacs comment manipulation commands to use those strings.
Another sort of customization is rearrangement of the command set.
For example, if you prefer the four basic cursor motion commands (up,
down, left and right) on keys in a diamond pattern on the keyboard,
you can have it.
"Extensible" means that you can go beyond simple customization and
write entirely new commands, programs in the Lisp language to be run
by Emacs's own Lisp interpreter. Emacs is an "on-line extensible"
system, which means that it is divided into many functions that call
each other, any of which can be redefined in the middle of an editing
session. Any part of Emacs can be replaced without making a separate
copy of all of Emacs. Most of the editing commands of Emacs are
written in Lisp already; the few exceptions could have been written in
Lisp but are written in C for efficiency. Although only a programmer
can write an extension, anybody can use it afterward.
Author: Richard Stallman
Path: GNU/emacs-18.59-src.lha
==========
emacs 18.59 GNU Emacs editor
GNU Emacs is the GNU incarnation of the advanced, self-documenting,
customizable, extensible real-time display editor Emacs. (The `G' in
`GNU' is not silent.)
We say that Emacs is a "display" editor because normally the text
being edited is visible on the screen and is updated automatically as
you type your commands.
We call it a "real-time" editor because the display is updated very
frequently, usually after each character or pair of characters you
type. This minimizes the amount of information you must keep in your
head as you edit.
We call Emacs advanced because it provides facilities that go beyond
simple insertion and deletion: filling of text; automatic indentation
of programs; viewing two or more files at once; and dealing in terms
of characters, words, lines, sentences, paragraphs, and pages, as well
as expressions and comments in several different programming
languages. It is much easier to type one command meaning "go to the
end of the paragraph" than to find that spot with simple cursor keys.
"Self-documenting" means that at any time you can type a special
character, `Control-h', to find out what your options are. You can
also use it to find out what any command does, or to find all the
commands that pertain to a topic.
"Customizable" means that you can change the definitions of Emacs
commands in little ways. For example, if you use a programming
language in which comments start with `<**' and end with `**>', you
can tell the Emacs comment manipulation commands to use those strings.
Another sort of customization is rearrangement of the command set.
For example, if you prefer the four basic cursor motion commands (up,
down, left and right) on keys in a diamond pattern on the keyboard,
you can have it.
"Extensible" means that you can go beyond simple customization and
write entirely new commands, programs in the Lisp language to be run
by Emacs's own Lisp interpreter. Emacs is an "on-line extensible"
system, which means that it is divided into many functions that call
each other, any of which can be redefined in the middle of an editing
session. Any part of Emacs can be replaced without making a separate
copy of all of Emacs. Most of the editing commands of Emacs are
written in Lisp already; the few exceptions could have been written in
Lisp but are written in C for efficiency. Although only a programmer
can write an extension, anybody can use it afterward.
Author: Richard Stallman
Path: GNU/emacs-18.59.tar.gz
==========
f2c 93.04.28 Fortran 77 to C translator
F2c converts Fortran 77 source code in files with names ending in `.f'
or `.F' to C (or C++) source files in the current directory, with `.c'
substituted for the final `.f' or `.F'. If no Fortran files are
named, f2c reads Fortran from standard input and writes C on standard
output. Filenames that end with `.p' or `.P' are taken to be
prototype files, as produced by option `-P', and are read first.
Author: David Gay
Stu Feldman
Mark Maimone
Norm Schryer
Path: GNU/f2c-1993.04.28-bin.lha
==========
f2c 93.04.28 Fortran 77 to C translator
F2c converts Fortran 77 source code in files with names ending in `.f'
or `.F' to C (or C++) source files in the current directory, with `.c'
substituted for the final `.f' or `.F'. If no Fortran files are
named, f2c reads Fortran from standard input and writes C on standard
output. Filenames that end with `.p' or `.P' are taken to be
prototype files, as produced by option `-P', and are read first.
Author: David Gay
Stu Feldman
Mark Maimone
Norm Schryer
Path: GNU/f2c-1993.04.28-diffs.lha
==========
f2c 93.04.28 Fortran 77 to C translator
F2c converts Fortran 77 source code in files with names ending in `.f'
or `.F' to C (or C++) source files in the current directory, with `.c'
substituted for the final `.f' or `.F'. If no Fortran files are
named, f2c reads Fortran from standard input and writes C on standard
output. Filenames that end with `.p' or `.P' are taken to be
prototype files, as produced by option `-P', and are read first.
Author: David Gay
Stu Feldman
Mark Maimone
Norm Schryer
Path: GNU/f2c-1993.04.28-src.lha
==========
f2c 93.04.28 Fortran 77 to C translator
F2c converts Fortran 77 source code in files with names ending in `.f'
or `.F' to C (or C++) source files in the current directory, with `.c'
substituted for the final `.f' or `.F'. If no Fortran files are
named, f2c reads Fortran from standard input and writes C on standard
output. Filenames that end with `.p' or `.P' are taken to be
prototype files, as produced by option `-P', and are read first.
Author: David Gay
Stu Feldman
Mark Maimone
Norm Schryer
Path: GNU/f2c-1993.04.28.tar.gz
==========
fileutils 3.9 File management utilities.
These are the GNU file management utilities. Most of these programs
have significant advantages over their Unix counterparts, such as
greater speed, additional options, and fewer arbitrary limits.
The programs that can be built with this package are: chgrp, chown,
chmod, cp, dd, df, du, install, ln, dir, vdir, ls, mkdir, mvdir,
mkfifo, mknod, mv, rm, rmdir and touch. But mvdir is built only on
systems that lack the rename system call.
The programs cat, cut, expand, head, paste, split, tac, tail and
unexpand, which used to be part of the fileutils, are now part of the
textutils. Cmp is now part of the diff distribution.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/fileutils-3.9-bin.lha
==========
fileutils 3.9 File management utilities.
These are the GNU file management utilities. Most of these programs
have significant advantages over their Unix counterparts, such as
greater speed, additional options, and fewer arbitrary limits.
The programs that can be built with this package are: chgrp, chown,
chmod, cp, dd, df, du, install, ln, dir, vdir, ls, mkdir, mvdir,
mkfifo, mknod, mv, rm, rmdir and touch. But mvdir is built only on
systems that lack the rename system call.
The programs cat, cut, expand, head, paste, split, tac, tail and
unexpand, which used to be part of the fileutils, are now part of the
textutils. Cmp is now part of the diff distribution.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/fileutils-3.9-diffs.lha
==========
fileutils 3.9 File management utilities.
These are the GNU file management utilities. Most of these programs
have significant advantages over their Unix counterparts, such as
greater speed, additional options, and fewer arbitrary limits.
The programs that can be built with this package are: chgrp, chown,
chmod, cp, dd, df, du, install, ln, dir, vdir, ls, mkdir, mvdir,
mkfifo, mknod, mv, rm, rmdir and touch. But mvdir is built only on
systems that lack the rename system call.
The programs cat, cut, expand, head, paste, split, tac, tail and
unexpand, which used to be part of the fileutils, are now part of the
textutils. Cmp is now part of the diff distribution.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/fileutils-3.9-src.lha
==========
fileutils 3.9 File management utilities.
These are the GNU file management utilities. Most of these programs
have significant advantages over their Unix counterparts, such as
greater speed, additional options, and fewer arbitrary limits.
The programs that can be built with this package are: chgrp, chown,
chmod, cp, dd, df, du, install, ln, dir, vdir, ls, mkdir, mvdir,
mkfifo, mknod, mv, rm, rmdir and touch. But mvdir is built only on
systems that lack the rename system call.
The programs cat, cut, expand, head, paste, split, tac, tail and
unexpand, which used to be part of the fileutils, are now part of the
textutils. Cmp is now part of the diff distribution.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/fileutils-3.9.tar.gz
==========
find 3.8 GNU find, xargs, and locate
This package contains the GNU find, xargs, and locate programs. This
version of find and xargs comply with POSIX 1003.2, and also support
some additional options, some borrowed from Unix and some unique to
GNU.
To gain speed, GNU find now avoids statting files whenever possible.
It does this by: (1) Checking the number of links to directories and
not statting files that it knows aren't directories until it
encounters a test or action that needs the stat info. (2) Rearranging
the command line, where possible, so that it can do tests that don't
require a stat before tests that do, in hopes that the latter will be
skipped because of an OR or AND. (But it only does this where it will
leave the output unchanged.)
The locate utility is based on James Woods' public domain fast-find
code, which is also distributed with the 4.3BSD find. Because POSIX
requires `find foo' to have the same effect as `find foo -print', the
fast-find searching has been moved to a separate program, `locate';
the same thing has been done in 4.3BSD-reno/4.4BSD. If you use
locate, you should run the included `updatedb' script from cron
periodically (typically nightly).
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/find-3.8-bin.lha
==========
find 3.8 GNU find, xargs, and locate
This package contains the GNU find, xargs, and locate programs. This
version of find and xargs comply with POSIX 1003.2, and also support
some additional options, some borrowed from Unix and some unique to
GNU.
To gain speed, GNU find now avoids statting files whenever possible.
It does this by: (1) Checking the number of links to directories and
not statting files that it knows aren't directories until it
encounters a test or action that needs the stat info. (2) Rearranging
the command line, where possible, so that it can do tests that don't
require a stat before tests that do, in hopes that the latter will be
skipped because of an OR or AND. (But it only does this where it will
leave the output unchanged.)
The locate utility is based on James Woods' public domain fast-find
code, which is also distributed with the 4.3BSD find. Because POSIX
requires `find foo' to have the same effect as `find foo -print', the
fast-find searching has been moved to a separate program, `locate';
the same thing has been done in 4.3BSD-reno/4.4BSD. If you use
locate, you should run the included `updatedb' script from cron
periodically (typically nightly).
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/find-3.8-diffs.lha
==========
find 3.8 GNU find, xargs, and locate
This package contains the GNU find, xargs, and locate programs. This
version of find and xargs comply with POSIX 1003.2, and also support
some additional options, some borrowed from Unix and some unique to
GNU.
To gain speed, GNU find now avoids statting files whenever possible.
It does this by: (1) Checking the number of links to directories and
not statting files that it knows aren't directories until it
encounters a test or action that needs the stat info. (2) Rearranging
the command line, where possible, so that it can do tests that don't
require a stat before tests that do, in hopes that the latter will be
skipped because of an OR or AND. (But it only does this where it will
leave the output unchanged.)
The locate utility is based on James Woods' public domain fast-find
code, which is also distributed with the 4.3BSD find. Because POSIX
requires `find foo' to have the same effect as `find foo -print', the
fast-find searching has been moved to a separate program, `locate';
the same thing has been done in 4.3BSD-reno/4.4BSD. If you use
locate, you should run the included `updatedb' script from cron
periodically (typically nightly).
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/find-3.8-src.lha
==========
find 3.8 GNU find, xargs, and locate
This package contains the GNU find, xargs, and locate programs. This
version of find and xargs comply with POSIX 1003.2, and also support
some additional options, some borrowed from Unix and some unique to
GNU.
To gain speed, GNU find now avoids statting files whenever possible.
It does this by: (1) Checking the number of links to directories and
not statting files that it knows aren't directories until it
encounters a test or action that needs the stat info. (2) Rearranging
the command line, where possible, so that it can do tests that don't
require a stat before tests that do, in hopes that the latter will be
skipped because of an OR or AND. (But it only does this where it will
leave the output unchanged.)
The locate utility is based on James Woods' public domain fast-find
code, which is also distributed with the 4.3BSD find. Because POSIX
requires `find foo' to have the same effect as `find foo -print', the
fast-find searching has been moved to a separate program, `locate';
the same thing has been done in 4.3BSD-reno/4.4BSD. If you use
locate, you should run the included `updatedb' script from cron
periodically (typically nightly).
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/find-3.8.tar.gz
==========
flex 2.4.7 Fast lexical analyzer generator
Flex is a tool for generating scanners, programs which recognized
lexical patterns in text. Flex reads the given input files, or its
standard input if no file names are given, for a description of a
scanner to generate. The description is in the form of pairs of
regular expressions and C code, called rules. Flex generates as
output a C source file, lex.yy.c, which defines a routine yylex().
This file is compiled and linked with the -lfl library to produce an
executable. When the executable is run, it analyzes its input for
occurrences of the regular expressions. Whenever it finds one, it
executes the corresponding C code.
Author: Vern Paxson
Van Jacobson
Jef Poskanzer
Path: GNU/flex-2.4.7-bin.lha
==========
flex 2.4.7 Fast lexical analyzer generator
Flex is a tool for generating scanners, programs which recognized
lexical patterns in text. Flex reads the given input files, or its
standard input if no file names are given, for a description of a
scanner to generate. The description is in the form of pairs of
regular expressions and C code, called rules. Flex generates as
output a C source file, lex.yy.c, which defines a routine yylex().
This file is compiled and linked with the -lfl library to produce an
executable. When the executable is run, it analyzes its input for
occurrences of the regular expressions. Whenever it finds one, it
executes the corresponding C code.
Author: Vern Paxson
Van Jacobson
Jef Poskanzer
Path: GNU/flex-2.4.7-diffs.lha
==========
flex 2.4.7 Fast lexical analyzer generator
Flex is a tool for generating scanners, programs which recognized
lexical patterns in text. Flex reads the given input files, or its
standard input if no file names are given, for a description of a
scanner to generate. The description is in the form of pairs of
regular expressions and C code, called rules. Flex generates as
output a C source file, lex.yy.c, which defines a routine yylex().
This file is compiled and linked with the -lfl library to produce an
executable. When the executable is run, it analyzes its input for
occurrences of the regular expressions. Whenever it finds one, it
executes the corresponding C code.
Author: Vern Paxson
Van Jacobson
Jef Poskanzer
Path: GNU/flex-2.4.7-src.lha
==========
flex 2.4.7 Fast lexical analyzer generator
Flex is a tool for generating scanners, programs which recognized
lexical patterns in text. Flex reads the given input files, or its
standard input if no file names are given, for a description of a
scanner to generate. The description is in the form of pairs of
regular expressions and C code, called rules. Flex generates as
output a C source file, lex.yy.c, which defines a routine yylex().
This file is compiled and linked with the -lfl library to produce an
executable. When the executable is run, it analyzes its input for
occurrences of the regular expressions. Whenever it finds one, it
executes the corresponding C code.
Author: Vern Paxson
Van Jacobson
Jef Poskanzer
Path: GNU/flex-2.4.7.tar.gz
==========
gas 2.3 GNU assembler, Amiga source
The GNU assembler.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/gas-2.3-bin.lha
==========
gas 2.3 GNU assembler, Amiga source
The GNU assembler.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/gas-2.3-diffs.lha
==========
gas 2.3 GNU assembler, Amiga source
The GNU assembler.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/gas-2.3-src.lha
==========
gas 2.3 GNU assembler, Amiga source
The GNU assembler.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/gas-2.3.tar.gz
==========
gawk 2.15.5 Pattern scanning & processing.
Gawk is the GNU Project's implementation of the AWK programming
language. It conforms to the definition of the language in the POSIX
1003.2 Command Language And Utilities Standard. This version in turn
is based on the description in "The AWK Programming Language", by Aho,
Kernighan, and Weinberger, with the additional features defined in the
System V Release 4 version of UNIX awk. Gawk also provides some
GNU-specific extensions.
The command line consists of options to gawk itself, the AWK program
text (if not supplied via the -f or --file options), and values to be
made available in the ARGC and ARGV pre-defined AWK variables.
Author: Paul Rubin
Jay Fenlason
Path: GNU/gawk-2.15.5-bin.lha
==========
gawk 2.15.5 Pattern scanning & processing.
Gawk is the GNU Project's implementation of the AWK programming
language. It conforms to the definition of the language in the POSIX
1003.2 Command Language And Utilities Standard. This version in turn
is based on the description in "The AWK Programming Language", by Aho,
Kernighan, and Weinberger, with the additional features defined in the
System V Release 4 version of UNIX awk. Gawk also provides some
GNU-specific extensions.
The command line consists of options to gawk itself, the AWK program
text (if not supplied via the -f or --file options), and values to be
made available in the ARGC and ARGV pre-defined AWK variables.
Author: Paul Rubin
Jay Fenlason
Path: GNU/gawk-2.15.5-diffs.lha
==========
gawk 2.15.5 Pattern scanning & processing.
Gawk is the GNU Project's implementation of the AWK programming
language. It conforms to the definition of the language in the POSIX
1003.2 Command Language And Utilities Standard. This version in turn
is based on the description in "The AWK Programming Language", by Aho,
Kernighan, and Weinberger, with the additional features defined in the
System V Release 4 version of UNIX awk. Gawk also provides some
GNU-specific extensions.
The command line consists of options to gawk itself, the AWK program
text (if not supplied via the -f or --file options), and values to be
made available in the ARGC and ARGV pre-defined AWK variables.
Author: Paul Rubin
Jay Fenlason
Path: GNU/gawk-2.15.5-src.lha
==========
gawk 2.15.5 Pattern scanning & processing.
Gawk is the GNU Project's implementation of the AWK programming
language. It conforms to the definition of the language in the POSIX
1003.2 Command Language And Utilities Standard. This version in turn
is based on the description in "The AWK Programming Language", by Aho,
Kernighan, and Weinberger, with the additional features defined in the
System V Release 4 version of UNIX awk. Gawk also provides some
GNU-specific extensions.
The command line consists of options to gawk itself, the AWK program
text (if not supplied via the -f or --file options), and values to be
made available in the ARGC and ARGV pre-defined AWK variables.
Author: Paul Rubin
Jay Fenlason
Path: GNU/gawk-2.15.5.tar.gz
==========
gcc 2.3.3 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.3.3-bin.lha
==========
gcc 2.3.3 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.3.3-diffs.lha
==========
gcc 2.3.3 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.3.3-src.lha
==========
gcc 2.3.3 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.3.3.tar.gz
==========
gcc 2.5.8 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers.
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.5.8-bin.lha
==========
gcc 2.5.8 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers.
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.5.8-diffs.lha
==========
gcc 2.5.8 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers.
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.5.8-src.lha
==========
gcc 2.5.8 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers.
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.5.8.tar.gz
==========
gcc 2.6.0 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers.
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.6.0-bin.lha
==========
gcc 2.6.0 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers.
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.6.0-diffs.lha
==========
gcc 2.6.0 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers.
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.6.0-src.lha
==========
gcc 2.6.0 GNU C/C++/Obj-C compilers.
The GNU C, C++, and Objective C compilers. Includes all support for
compiling C, C++ and Objective C, including a run-time library for
Objective C.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gcc-2.6.0.tar.gz
==========
gdb 4.12 GNU debugger (incomplete port)
The purpose of a debugger such as GDB is to allow you to see what is
going on "inside" another program while it executes, or what another
program was doing at the moment it crashed.
GDB can do four main kinds of things (plus other things in support of
these) to help you catch bugs in the act: (1) start your program,
specifying anything that might affect its behavior, (2) make your
program stop on specified conditions, (3) examine what has happened,
when your program has stopped, (4) change things in your program, so
you can experiment with correcting the effects of one bug and go on to
learn about another.
You can use GDB to debug programs written in C, C++, and Modula-2.
Fortran support will be added when a GNU Fortran compiler is ready.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gdb-4.12-bin.lha
==========
gdb 4.12 GNU debugger (incomplete port)
The purpose of a debugger such as GDB is to allow you to see what is
going on "inside" another program while it executes, or what another
program was doing at the moment it crashed.
GDB can do four main kinds of things (plus other things in support of
these) to help you catch bugs in the act: (1) start your program,
specifying anything that might affect its behavior, (2) make your
program stop on specified conditions, (3) examine what has happened,
when your program has stopped, (4) change things in your program, so
you can experiment with correcting the effects of one bug and go on to
learn about another.
You can use GDB to debug programs written in C, C++, and Modula-2.
Fortran support will be added when a GNU Fortran compiler is ready.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gdb-4.12-diffs.lha
==========
gdb 4.12 GNU debugger (incomplete port)
The purpose of a debugger such as GDB is to allow you to see what is
going on "inside" another program while it executes, or what another
program was doing at the moment it crashed.
GDB can do four main kinds of things (plus other things in support of
these) to help you catch bugs in the act: (1) start your program,
specifying anything that might affect its behavior, (2) make your
program stop on specified conditions, (3) examine what has happened,
when your program has stopped, (4) change things in your program, so
you can experiment with correcting the effects of one bug and go on to
learn about another.
You can use GDB to debug programs written in C, C++, and Modula-2.
Fortran support will be added when a GNU Fortran compiler is ready.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gdb-4.12-src.lha
==========
gdb 4.12 GNU debugger (incomplete port)
The purpose of a debugger such as GDB is to allow you to see what is
going on "inside" another program while it executes, or what another
program was doing at the moment it crashed.
GDB can do four main kinds of things (plus other things in support of
these) to help you catch bugs in the act: (1) start your program,
specifying anything that might affect its behavior, (2) make your
program stop on specified conditions, (3) examine what has happened,
when your program has stopped, (4) change things in your program, so
you can experiment with correcting the effects of one bug and go on to
learn about another.
You can use GDB to debug programs written in C, C++, and Modula-2.
Fortran support will be added when a GNU Fortran compiler is ready.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/gdb-4.12.tar.gz
==========
gdbm 1.7.3 GNU database manager library
GNU dbm is a library of routines that manages data files that contain
key/data pairs. The access provided is that of storing, retrieval,
and deletion by key and a non-sorted traversal of all keys. A process
is allowed to use multiple data files at the same time.
Author: Philip A. Nelson
Path: GNU/gdbm-1.7.3-bin.lha
==========
gdbm 1.7.3 GNU database manager library
GNU dbm is a library of routines that manages data files that contain
key/data pairs. The access provided is that of storing, retrieval,
and deletion by key and a non-sorted traversal of all keys. A process
is allowed to use multiple data files at the same time.
Author: Philip A. Nelson
Path: GNU/gdbm-1.7.3-diffs.lha
==========
gdbm 1.7.3 GNU database manager library
GNU dbm is a library of routines that manages data files that contain
key/data pairs. The access provided is that of storing, retrieval,
and deletion by key and a non-sorted traversal of all keys. A process
is allowed to use multiple data files at the same time.
Author: Philip A. Nelson
Path: GNU/gdbm-1.7.3-src.lha
==========
gdbm 1.7.3 GNU database manager library
GNU dbm is a library of routines that manages data files that contain
key/data pairs. The access provided is that of storing, retrieval,
and deletion by key and a non-sorted traversal of all keys. A process
is allowed to use multiple data files at the same time.
Author: Philip A. Nelson
Path: GNU/gdbm-1.7.3.tar.gz
==========
gmp 1.3.2 Arbitrary precision math library.
GNU MP is a library for arbitrary precision arithmetic, operating on
signed integers and rational numbers. It has a rich set of functions,
and the functions have a regular interface.
The author has tried to make these functions as fast as possible, both
for small operands and for huge operands. The speed is achieved by
using fullwords as the basic arithmetic type, by using fast
algorithms, by defining inline assembler for mixed sized
multiplication and division (i.e 32*32->64 bit multiplication and
64/32->32,32 bit division), and by hacking the code with emphasis on
speed (and not simplicity and elegance).
The speed of GNU MP is about 5 to 100 times that of Berkeley MP for
small operands. The speed-up increases with the operand sizes for
certain operations, for which GNU MP has asymptotically faster
algorithms.
Author: Torbjorn Granlund
Path: GNU/gmp-1.3.2-bin.lha
==========
gmp 1.3.2 Arbitrary precision math library.
GNU MP is a library for arbitrary precision arithmetic, operating on
signed integers and rational numbers. It has a rich set of functions,
and the functions have a regular interface.
The author has tried to make these functions as fast as possible, both
for small operands and for huge operands. The speed is achieved by
using fullwords as the basic arithmetic type, by using fast
algorithms, by defining inline assembler for mixed sized
multiplication and division (i.e 32*32->64 bit multiplication and
64/32->32,32 bit division), and by hacking the code with emphasis on
speed (and not simplicity and elegance).
The speed of GNU MP is about 5 to 100 times that of Berkeley MP for
small operands. The speed-up increases with the operand sizes for
certain operations, for which GNU MP has asymptotically faster
algorithms.
Author: Torbjorn Granlund
Path: GNU/gmp-1.3.2-diffs.lha
==========
gmp 1.3.2 Arbitrary precision math library.
GNU MP is a library for arbitrary precision arithmetic, operating on
signed integers and rational numbers. It has a rich set of functions,
and the functions have a regular interface.
The author has tried to make these functions as fast as possible, both
for small operands and for huge operands. The speed is achieved by
using fullwords as the basic arithmetic type, by using fast
algorithms, by defining inline assembler for mixed sized
multiplication and division (i.e 32*32->64 bit multiplication and
64/32->32,32 bit division), and by hacking the code with emphasis on
speed (and not simplicity and elegance).
The speed of GNU MP is about 5 to 100 times that of Berkeley MP for
small operands. The speed-up increases with the operand sizes for
certain operations, for which GNU MP has asymptotically faster
algorithms.
Author: Torbjorn Granlund
Path: GNU/gmp-1.3.2-src.lha
==========
gmp 1.3.2 Arbitrary precision math library.
GNU MP is a library for arbitrary precision arithmetic, operating on
signed integers and rational numbers. It has a rich set of functions,
and the functions have a regular interface.
The author has tried to make these functions as fast as possible, both
for small operands and for huge operands. The speed is achieved by
using fullwords as the basic arithmetic type, by using fast
algorithms, by defining inline assembler for mixed sized
multiplication and division (i.e 32*32->64 bit multiplication and
64/32->32,32 bit division), and by hacking the code with emphasis on
speed (and not simplicity and elegance).
The speed of GNU MP is about 5 to 100 times that of Berkeley MP for
small operands. The speed-up increases with the operand sizes for
certain operations, for which GNU MP has asymptotically faster
algorithms.
Author: Torbjorn Granlund
Path: GNU/gmp-1.3.2.tar.gz
==========
gnat 1.80 GNU Ada compiler.
Port of the GNU Ada compiler. Requires matching gcc 2.5.8 distribution.
Author:
Path: GNU/gnat-1.80-bin.lha
==========
gnat 1.80 GNU Ada compiler.
Port of the GNU Ada compiler. Requires matching gcc 2.5.8 distribution.
Author:
Path: GNU/gnat-1.80-diffs.lha
==========
gnat 1.80 GNU Ada compiler.
Port of the GNU Ada compiler. Requires matching gcc 2.5.8 distribution.
Author:
Path: GNU/gnat-1.80-src.lha
==========
gnat 1.80 GNU Ada compiler.
Port of the GNU Ada compiler. Requires matching gcc 2.5.8 distribution.
Author:
Path: GNU/gnat-1.80.tar.gz
==========
GNU-misc-bin ?.? Miscellaneous files for GNU utility tree
These are some miscellaneous files that go in the installation of a
GNU utility binary tree. Included are the GNU General Public License
and General Library Public License files, a README file, some top
level drawer icons, and the GNU coding standards document in
AmigaGuide format.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/GNU-misc-bin.lha
==========
GNU-misc-src ?.? Miscellaneous files for GNU utility tree
These are some miscellaneous files that go in the installation of a
GNU utility source tree. Included are the GNU General Public License
and General Library Public License files, a README file, manifest lists
of files that go in archive distributions, the source README, and the
configuration files for doing a top level configure.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/GNU-misc-src.lha
==========
GNU-Startup 1.0 Script and files to setup GNU environ.
This archive contains the GNU:Sys/S/GNU-Startup script which
should be called from S:User-Startup at boot time to setup the
GNU environment. It also contains a few other files that
are no other convenient home.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/GNU-Startup-bin.lha
==========
grep 2.0 GNU grep package
GNU grep is based on a fast lazy-state deterministic matcher (about
twice as fast as stock Unix egrep) hybridized with a Boyer-Moore-
Gosper search for a fixed string that eliminates impossible text from
being considered by the full regexp matcher without necessarily having
to look at every character. The result is typically many times faster
than Unix grep or egrep. (Regular expressions containing
backreferencing will run more slowly, however.)
Author: Mike Haertel
Arthur David Olson
Richard Stallman
Karl Berry
Henry Spencer
Scott Anderson
David MacKenzie
James Woods
Andrew Hume
Path: GNU/grep-2.0-bin.lha
==========
grep 2.0 GNU grep package
GNU grep is based on a fast lazy-state deterministic matcher (about
twice as fast as stock Unix egrep) hybridized with a Boyer-Moore-
Gosper search for a fixed string that eliminates impossible text from
being considered by the full regexp matcher without necessarily having
to look at every character. The result is typically many times faster
than Unix grep or egrep. (Regular expressions containing
backreferencing will run more slowly, however.)
Author: Mike Haertel
Arthur David Olson
Richard Stallman
Karl Berry
Henry Spencer
Scott Anderson
David MacKenzie
James Woods
Andrew Hume
Path: GNU/grep-2.0-diffs.lha
==========
grep 2.0 GNU grep package
GNU grep is based on a fast lazy-state deterministic matcher (about
twice as fast as stock Unix egrep) hybridized with a Boyer-Moore-
Gosper search for a fixed string that eliminates impossible text from
being considered by the full regexp matcher without necessarily having
to look at every character. The result is typically many times faster
than Unix grep or egrep. (Regular expressions containing
backreferencing will run more slowly, however.)
Author: Mike Haertel
Arthur David Olson
Richard Stallman
Karl Berry
Henry Spencer
Scott Anderson
David MacKenzie
James Woods
Andrew Hume
Path: GNU/grep-2.0-src.lha
==========
grep 2.0 GNU grep package
GNU grep is based on a fast lazy-state deterministic matcher (about
twice as fast as stock Unix egrep) hybridized with a Boyer-Moore-
Gosper search for a fixed string that eliminates impossible text from
being considered by the full regexp matcher without necessarily having
to look at every character. The result is typically many times faster
than Unix grep or egrep. (Regular expressions containing
backreferencing will run more slowly, however.)
Author: Mike Haertel
Arthur David Olson
Richard Stallman
Karl Berry
Henry Spencer
Scott Anderson
David MacKenzie
James Woods
Andrew Hume
Path: GNU/grep-2.0.tar.gz
==========
groff 1.09 GNU groff document formatting system
This is the GNU groff document formatting system. Included in this
release are implementations of troff, pic, eqn, tbl, refer, the -man
macros and the -ms macros, and drivers for PostScript, TeX dvi format,
and typewriter-like devices. Also included is a modified version of
the Berkeley -me macros, an enhanced version of the X11 xditview
previewer, and an implementation of the -mm macros.
Author: James Clark
Path: GNU/groff-1.09-bin.lha
==========
groff 1.09 GNU groff document formatting system
This is the GNU groff document formatting system. Included in this
release are implementations of troff, pic, eqn, tbl, refer, the -man
macros and the -ms macros, and drivers for PostScript, TeX dvi format,
and typewriter-like devices. Also included is a modified version of
the Berkeley -me macros, an enhanced version of the X11 xditview
previewer, and an implementation of the -mm macros.
Author: James Clark
Path: GNU/groff-1.09-diffs.lha
==========
groff 1.09 GNU groff document formatting system
This is the GNU groff document formatting system. Included in this
release are implementations of troff, pic, eqn, tbl, refer, the -man
macros and the -ms macros, and drivers for PostScript, TeX dvi format,
and typewriter-like devices. Also included is a modified version of
the Berkeley -me macros, an enhanced version of the X11 xditview
previewer, and an implementation of the -mm macros.
Author: James Clark
Path: GNU/groff-1.09-src.lha
==========
groff 1.09 GNU groff document formatting system
This is the GNU groff document formatting system. Included in this
release are implementations of troff, pic, eqn, tbl, refer, the -man
macros and the -ms macros, and drivers for PostScript, TeX dvi format,
and typewriter-like devices. Also included is a modified version of
the Berkeley -me macros, an enhanced version of the X11 xditview
previewer, and an implementation of the -mm macros.
Author: James Clark
Path: GNU/groff-1.09.tar.gz
==========
ghostscript 2.6.1.4 GNU postscript interpreter
Ghostscript is the name of a set of software that provides an
interpreter for the PostScript (TM) language, and a set of C
procedures (the Ghostscript library) that implement the graphics
capabilities that appear as primitive operations in the PostScript
language.
Author: L. Peter Deutsch
Path: GNU/gs-2.6.1.4-bin.lha
==========
ghostscript 2.6.1.4 GNU postscript interpreter
Ghostscript is the name of a set of software that provides an
interpreter for the PostScript (TM) language, and a set of C
procedures (the Ghostscript library) that implement the graphics
capabilities that appear as primitive operations in the PostScript
language.
Author: L. Peter Deutsch
Path: GNU/gs-2.6.1.4-diffs.lha
==========
ghostscript 2.6.1.4 GNU postscript interpreter
Ghostscript is the name of a set of software that provides an
interpreter for the PostScript (TM) language, and a set of C
procedures (the Ghostscript library) that implement the graphics
capabilities that appear as primitive operations in the PostScript
language.
Author: L. Peter Deutsch
Path: GNU/gs-2.6.1.4-src.lha
==========
ghostscript 2.6.1.4 GNU postscript interpreter
Ghostscript is the name of a set of software that provides an
interpreter for the PostScript (TM) language, and a set of C
procedures (the Ghostscript library) that implement the graphics
capabilities that appear as primitive operations in the PostScript
language.
Author: L. Peter Deutsch
Path: GNU/gs-2.6.1.4.tar.gz
==========
ghostscript-fonts 2.6.1 GNU postscript interpreter fonts
Ghostscript is the name of a set of software that provides an
interpreter for the PostScript (TM) language, and a set of C
procedures (the Ghostscript library) that implement the graphics
capabilities that appear as primitive operations in the PostScript
language.
Author: L. Peter Deutsch
Path: GNU/gs-fonts-2.6.1-bin.lha
==========
ghostscript-fonts 2.6.1 GNU postscript interpreter fonts
Ghostscript is the name of a set of software that provides an
interpreter for the PostScript (TM) language, and a set of C
procedures (the Ghostscript library) that implement the graphics
capabilities that appear as primitive operations in the PostScript
language.
Author: L. Peter Deutsch
Path: GNU/gs-fonts-2.6.1-diffs.lha
==========
ghostscript-fonts 2.6.1 GNU postscript interpreter fonts
Ghostscript is the name of a set of software that provides an
interpreter for the PostScript (TM) language, and a set of C
procedures (the Ghostscript library) that implement the graphics
capabilities that appear as primitive operations in the PostScript
language.
Author: L. Peter Deutsch
Path: GNU/gs-fonts-2.6.1-src.lha
==========
ghostscript-fonts 2.6.1 GNU postscript interpreter fonts
Ghostscript is the name of a set of software that provides an
interpreter for the PostScript (TM) language, and a set of C
procedures (the Ghostscript library) that implement the graphics
capabilities that appear as primitive operations in the PostScript
language.
Author: L. Peter Deutsch
Path: GNU/gs-fonts-2.6.1.tar.gz
==========
gzip 1.2.4 GNU compressing/decompressing programs
Gzip reduces the size of the named files using Lempel-Ziv coding
(LZ77). Whenever possible, each file is replaced by one with the
extension .gz, while keeping the same ownership modes, access and
modification times. (The default extension is -gz for VMS, z for
MSDOS, OS/2 FAT, Windows NT FAT and Atari.) If no files are specified,
or if a file name is "-", the standard input is compressed to the
standard output. Gzip will only attempt to compress regular files.
In particular, it will ignore symbolic links.
If the compressed file name is too long for its file system, gzip
truncates it. Gzip attempts to truncate only the parts of the file
name longer than 3 characters. (A part is delimited by dots.) If the
name consists of small parts only, the longest parts are truncated.
For example, if file names are limited to 14 characters,
gzip.msdos.exe is compressed to gzi.msd.exe.gz. Names are not
truncated on systems which do not have a limit on file name length.
By default, gzip keeps the original file name and timestamp in the
compressed file. These are used when decompressing the file with the
-N option. This is useful when the compressed file name was truncated
or when the time stamp was not preserved after a file transfer.
Compressed files can be restored to their original form using gzip -d
or gunzip or zcat. If the original name saved in the compressed file
is not suitable for its file system, a new name is constructed from
the original one to make it legal.
gunzip takes a list of files on its command line and replaces each
file whose name ends with .gz, -gz, .z, -z, _z or .Z and which begins
with the correct magic number with an uncompressed file without the
original extension. gunzip also recognizes the special extensions
".tgz" and ".taz" as shorthands for .tar.gz and .tar.Z respectively.
When compressing, gzip uses the .tgz extension if necessary instead of
truncating a file with a .tar extension.
gunzip can currently decompress files created by gzip, zip, compress,
compress -H or pack. The detection of the input format is automatic.
When using the first two formats, gunzip checks a 32 bit CRC. For
pack, gunzip checks the uncompressed length. The standard compress
format was not designed to allow consistency checks. However gunzip
is sometimes able to detect a bad .Z file. If you get an error when
uncompressing a .Z file, do not assume that the .Z file is correct
simply because the standard uncompress does not complain. This
generally means that the standard uncompress does not check its input,
and happily generates garbage output. The SCO compress -H format (lzh
compression method) does not include a CRC but also allows some
consistency checks.
Files created by zip can be uncompressed by gzip only if they have a
single member compressed with the 'deflation' method. This feature is
only intended to help conversion of tar.zip files to the tar.gz
format. To extract zip files with several members, use unzip instead
of gunzip.
zcat is identical to gunzip -c. (On some systems, zcat may be
installed as gzcat to preserve the original link to compress.) zcat
uncompresses either a list of files on the command line or its
standard input and writes the uncompressed data on standard output.
zcat will uncompress files that have the correct magic number whether
they have a .gz suffix or not.
Gzip uses the Lempel-Ziv algorithm used in zip and PKZIP. The amount
of compression obtained depends on the size of the input and the
distribution of common substrings. Typically, text such as source
code or English is reduced by 60-70%. Compression is generally much
better than that achieved by LZW (as used in compress), Huffman coding
(as used in pack), or adaptive Huffman coding (compact).
Compression is always performed, even if the compressed file is
slightly larger than the original. The worst case expansion is a few
bytes for the gzip file header, plus 5 bytes every 32K block, or an
expansion ratio of 0.015% for large files. Note that the actual number
of used disk blocks almost never increases. gzip preserves the mode,
ownership and timestamps of files when compressing or decompressing.
Author: Jean-loup Gailly
Path: GNU/gzip-1.2.4-bin.lha
==========
gzip 1.2.4 GNU compressing/decompressing programs
Gzip reduces the size of the named files using Lempel-Ziv coding
(LZ77). Whenever possible, each file is replaced by one with the
extension .gz, while keeping the same ownership modes, access and
modification times. (The default extension is -gz for VMS, z for
MSDOS, OS/2 FAT, Windows NT FAT and Atari.) If no files are specified,
or if a file name is "-", the standard input is compressed to the
standard output. Gzip will only attempt to compress regular files.
In particular, it will ignore symbolic links.
If the compressed file name is too long for its file system, gzip
truncates it. Gzip attempts to truncate only the parts of the file
name longer than 3 characters. (A part is delimited by dots.) If the
name consists of small parts only, the longest parts are truncated.
For example, if file names are limited to 14 characters,
gzip.msdos.exe is compressed to gzi.msd.exe.gz. Names are not
truncated on systems which do not have a limit on file name length.
By default, gzip keeps the original file name and timestamp in the
compressed file. These are used when decompressing the file with the
-N option. This is useful when the compressed file name was truncated
or when the time stamp was not preserved after a file transfer.
Compressed files can be restored to their original form using gzip -d
or gunzip or zcat. If the original name saved in the compressed file
is not suitable for its file system, a new name is constructed from
the original one to make it legal.
gunzip takes a list of files on its command line and replaces each
file whose name ends with .gz, -gz, .z, -z, _z or .Z and which begins
with the correct magic number with an uncompressed file without the
original extension. gunzip also recognizes the special extensions
".tgz" and ".taz" as shorthands for .tar.gz and .tar.Z respectively.
When compressing, gzip uses the .tgz extension if necessary instead of
truncating a file with a .tar extension.
gunzip can currently decompress files created by gzip, zip, compress,
compress -H or pack. The detection of the input format is automatic.
When using the first two formats, gunzip checks a 32 bit CRC. For
pack, gunzip checks the uncompressed length. The standard compress
format was not designed to allow consistency checks. However gunzip
is sometimes able to detect a bad .Z file. If you get an error when
uncompressing a .Z file, do not assume that the .Z file is correct
simply because the standard uncompress does not complain. This
generally means that the standard uncompress does not check its input,
and happily generates garbage output. The SCO compress -H format (lzh
compression method) does not include a CRC but also allows some
consistency checks.
Files created by zip can be uncompressed by gzip only if they have a
single member compressed with the 'deflation' method. This feature is
only intended to help conversion of tar.zip files to the tar.gz
format. To extract zip files with several members, use unzip instead
of gunzip.
zcat is identical to gunzip -c. (On some systems, zcat may be
installed as gzcat to preserve the original link to compress.) zcat
uncompresses either a list of files on the command line or its
standard input and writes the uncompressed data on standard output.
zcat will uncompress files that have the correct magic number whether
they have a .gz suffix or not.
Gzip uses the Lempel-Ziv algorithm used in zip and PKZIP. The amount
of compression obtained depends on the size of the input and the
distribution of common substrings. Typically, text such as source
code or English is reduced by 60-70%. Compression is generally much
better than that achieved by LZW (as used in compress), Huffman coding
(as used in pack), or adaptive Huffman coding (compact).
Compression is always performed, even if the compressed file is
slightly larger than the original. The worst case expansion is a few
bytes for the gzip file header, plus 5 bytes every 32K block, or an
expansion ratio of 0.015% for large files. Note that the actual number
of used disk blocks almost never increases. gzip preserves the mode,
ownership and timestamps of files when compressing or decompressing.
Author: Jean-loup Gailly
Path: GNU/gzip-1.2.4-diffs.lha
==========
gzip 1.2.4 GNU compressing/decompressing programs
Gzip reduces the size of the named files using Lempel-Ziv coding
(LZ77). Whenever possible, each file is replaced by one with the
extension .gz, while keeping the same ownership modes, access and
modification times. (The default extension is -gz for VMS, z for
MSDOS, OS/2 FAT, Windows NT FAT and Atari.) If no files are specified,
or if a file name is "-", the standard input is compressed to the
standard output. Gzip will only attempt to compress regular files.
In particular, it will ignore symbolic links.
If the compressed file name is too long for its file system, gzip
truncates it. Gzip attempts to truncate only the parts of the file
name longer than 3 characters. (A part is delimited by dots.) If the
name consists of small parts only, the longest parts are truncated.
For example, if file names are limited to 14 characters,
gzip.msdos.exe is compressed to gzi.msd.exe.gz. Names are not
truncated on systems which do not have a limit on file name length.
By default, gzip keeps the original file name and timestamp in the
compressed file. These are used when decompressing the file with the
-N option. This is useful when the compressed file name was truncated
or when the time stamp was not preserved after a file transfer.
Compressed files can be restored to their original form using gzip -d
or gunzip or zcat. If the original name saved in the compressed file
is not suitable for its file system, a new name is constructed from
the original one to make it legal.
gunzip takes a list of files on its command line and replaces each
file whose name ends with .gz, -gz, .z, -z, _z or .Z and which begins
with the correct magic number with an uncompressed file without the
original extension. gunzip also recognizes the special extensions
".tgz" and ".taz" as shorthands for .tar.gz and .tar.Z respectively.
When compressing, gzip uses the .tgz extension if necessary instead of
truncating a file with a .tar extension.
gunzip can currently decompress files created by gzip, zip, compress,
compress -H or pack. The detection of the input format is automatic.
When using the first two formats, gunzip checks a 32 bit CRC. For
pack, gunzip checks the uncompressed length. The standard compress
format was not designed to allow consistency checks. However gunzip
is sometimes able to detect a bad .Z file. If you get an error when
uncompressing a .Z file, do not assume that the .Z file is correct
simply because the standard uncompress does not complain. This
generally means that the standard uncompress does not check its input,
and happily generates garbage output. The SCO compress -H format (lzh
compression method) does not include a CRC but also allows some
consistency checks.
Files created by zip can be uncompressed by gzip only if they have a
single member compressed with the 'deflation' method. This feature is
only intended to help conversion of tar.zip files to the tar.gz
format. To extract zip files with several members, use unzip instead
of gunzip.
zcat is identical to gunzip -c. (On some systems, zcat may be
installed as gzcat to preserve the original link to compress.) zcat
uncompresses either a list of files on the command line or its
standard input and writes the uncompressed data on standard output.
zcat will uncompress files that have the correct magic number whether
they have a .gz suffix or not.
Gzip uses the Lempel-Ziv algorithm used in zip and PKZIP. The amount
of compression obtained depends on the size of the input and the
distribution of common substrings. Typically, text such as source
code or English is reduced by 60-70%. Compression is generally much
better than that achieved by LZW (as used in compress), Huffman coding
(as used in pack), or adaptive Huffman coding (compact).
Compression is always performed, even if the compressed file is
slightly larger than the original. The worst case expansion is a few
bytes for the gzip file header, plus 5 bytes every 32K block, or an
expansion ratio of 0.015% for large files. Note that the actual number
of used disk blocks almost never increases. gzip preserves the mode,
ownership and timestamps of files when compressing or decompressing.
Author: Jean-loup Gailly
Path: GNU/gzip-1.2.4-src.lha
==========
gzip 1.2.4 GNU compressing/decompressing programs
Gzip reduces the size of the named files using Lempel-Ziv coding
(LZ77). Whenever possible, each file is replaced by one with the
extension .gz, while keeping the same ownership modes, access and
modification times. (The default extension is -gz for VMS, z for
MSDOS, OS/2 FAT, Windows NT FAT and Atari.) If no files are specified,
or if a file name is "-", the standard input is compressed to the
standard output. Gzip will only attempt to compress regular files.
In particular, it will ignore symbolic links.
If the compressed file name is too long for its file system, gzip
truncates it. Gzip attempts to truncate only the parts of the file
name longer than 3 characters. (A part is delimited by dots.) If the
name consists of small parts only, the longest parts are truncated.
For example, if file names are limited to 14 characters,
gzip.msdos.exe is compressed to gzi.msd.exe.gz. Names are not
truncated on systems which do not have a limit on file name length.
By default, gzip keeps the original file name and timestamp in the
compressed file. These are used when decompressing the file with the
-N option. This is useful when the compressed file name was truncated
or when the time stamp was not preserved after a file transfer.
Compressed files can be restored to their original form using gzip -d
or gunzip or zcat. If the original name saved in the compressed file
is not suitable for its file system, a new name is constructed from
the original one to make it legal.
gunzip takes a list of files on its command line and replaces each
file whose name ends with .gz, -gz, .z, -z, _z or .Z and which begins
with the correct magic number with an uncompressed file without the
original extension. gunzip also recognizes the special extensions
".tgz" and ".taz" as shorthands for .tar.gz and .tar.Z respectively.
When compressing, gzip uses the .tgz extension if necessary instead of
truncating a file with a .tar extension.
gunzip can currently decompress files created by gzip, zip, compress,
compress -H or pack. The detection of the input format is automatic.
When using the first two formats, gunzip checks a 32 bit CRC. For
pack, gunzip checks the uncompressed length. The standard compress
format was not designed to allow consistency checks. However gunzip
is sometimes able to detect a bad .Z file. If you get an error when
uncompressing a .Z file, do not assume that the .Z file is correct
simply because the standard uncompress does not complain. This
generally means that the standard uncompress does not check its input,
and happily generates garbage output. The SCO compress -H format (lzh
compression method) does not include a CRC but also allows some
consistency checks.
Files created by zip can be uncompressed by gzip only if they have a
single member compressed with the 'deflation' method. This feature is
only intended to help conversion of tar.zip files to the tar.gz
format. To extract zip files with several members, use unzip instead
of gunzip.
zcat is identical to gunzip -c. (On some systems, zcat may be
installed as gzcat to preserve the original link to compress.) zcat
uncompresses either a list of files on the command line or its
standard input and writes the uncompressed data on standard output.
zcat will uncompress files that have the correct magic number whether
they have a .gz suffix or not.
Gzip uses the Lempel-Ziv algorithm used in zip and PKZIP. The amount
of compression obtained depends on the size of the input and the
distribution of common substrings. Typically, text such as source
code or English is reduced by 60-70%. Compression is generally much
better than that achieved by LZW (as used in compress), Huffman coding
(as used in pack), or adaptive Huffman coding (compact).
Compression is always performed, even if the compressed file is
slightly larger than the original. The worst case expansion is a few
bytes for the gzip file header, plus 5 bytes every 32K block, or an
expansion ratio of 0.015% for large files. Note that the actual number
of used disk blocks almost never increases. gzip preserves the mode,
ownership and timestamps of files when compressing or decompressing.
Author: Jean-loup Gailly
Path: GNU/gzip-1.2.4.tar.gz
==========
indent 1.9.1 C code beautifier
The `indent' program can be used to make code easier to read. It can
also convert from one style of writing C to another, and understands a
substantial amount about the syntax of C, but it also attempts to cope
with incomplete and misformed syntax. In version 1.2 and more recent
versions, the GNU style of indenting is the default.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/indent-1.9.1-bin.lha
==========
indent 1.9.1 C code beautifier
The `indent' program can be used to make code easier to read. It can
also convert from one style of writing C to another, and understands a
substantial amount about the syntax of C, but it also attempts to cope
with incomplete and misformed syntax. In version 1.2 and more recent
versions, the GNU style of indenting is the default.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/indent-1.9.1-diffs.lha
==========
indent 1.9.1 C code beautifier
The `indent' program can be used to make code easier to read. It can
also convert from one style of writing C to another, and understands a
substantial amount about the syntax of C, but it also attempts to cope
with incomplete and misformed syntax. In version 1.2 and more recent
versions, the GNU style of indenting is the default.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/indent-1.9.1-src.lha
==========
indent 1.9.1 C code beautifier
The `indent' program can be used to make code easier to read. It can
also convert from one style of writing C to another, and understands a
substantial amount about the syntax of C, but it also attempts to cope
with incomplete and misformed syntax. In version 1.2 and more recent
versions, the GNU style of indenting is the default.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/indent-1.9.1.tar.gz
==========
ispell 4.0 GNU spelling checker
Ispell is a program that helps you to correct typos in a file, and to
find the correct spelling of words. When presented with a word that
is not in the dictionary, ispell attempts to find near misses that
might include the word you meant.
The best way to use ispell is with GNU EMACS. For documentation about
this mode, see the info topic "ispell".
Ispell can also be used by itself, and in this case the most common
usage is "ispell filename". If ispell finds a word that is not in the
dictionary, it is printed at the top of the screen. Ispell then
checks the dictionary for near misses \- words that differ only by a
single letter, a missing or extra letter, or a pair of transposed
letters. Any that are found are printed on the following lines, and
finally, two lines of context containing the word are printed at the
bottom of the screen. If your terminal can type in reverse video, the
word itself is highlighted.
If you think the word is correct as it stands, you can type either
"Space" to accept it this one time, "A" to accept it for the rest of
this file, or "I" to accept it and put it in your private dictionary.
If one of the near misses is the word you want, type the corresponding
number. Finally, you can type "R" and you will be prompted for a
replacement word. The string you type will be broken into words, and
each one will also be checked. You can also type "?" for help.
If ispell is started with no arguments, it enters a loop reading words
from the standard input, and printing messages about them on the
standard output. You can use this mode to find the spelling of a
problem word.
Author: Pace Willisson
Path: GNU/ispell-4.0-bin.lha
==========
ispell 4.0 GNU spelling checker
Ispell is a program that helps you to correct typos in a file, and to
find the correct spelling of words. When presented with a word that
is not in the dictionary, ispell attempts to find near misses that
might include the word you meant.
The best way to use ispell is with GNU EMACS. For documentation about
this mode, see the info topic "ispell".
Ispell can also be used by itself, and in this case the most common
usage is "ispell filename". If ispell finds a word that is not in the
dictionary, it is printed at the top of the screen. Ispell then
checks the dictionary for near misses \- words that differ only by a
single letter, a missing or extra letter, or a pair of transposed
letters. Any that are found are printed on the following lines, and
finally, two lines of context containing the word are printed at the
bottom of the screen. If your terminal can type in reverse video, the
word itself is highlighted.
If you think the word is correct as it stands, you can type either
"Space" to accept it this one time, "A" to accept it for the rest of
this file, or "I" to accept it and put it in your private dictionary.
If one of the near misses is the word you want, type the corresponding
number. Finally, you can type "R" and you will be prompted for a
replacement word. The string you type will be broken into words, and
each one will also be checked. You can also type "?" for help.
If ispell is started with no arguments, it enters a loop reading words
from the standard input, and printing messages about them on the
standard output. You can use this mode to find the spelling of a
problem word.
Author: Pace Willisson
Path: GNU/ispell-4.0-diffs.lha
==========
ispell 4.0 GNU spelling checker
Ispell is a program that helps you to correct typos in a file, and to
find the correct spelling of words. When presented with a word that
is not in the dictionary, ispell attempts to find near misses that
might include the word you meant.
The best way to use ispell is with GNU EMACS. For documentation about
this mode, see the info topic "ispell".
Ispell can also be used by itself, and in this case the most common
usage is "ispell filename". If ispell finds a word that is not in the
dictionary, it is printed at the top of the screen. Ispell then
checks the dictionary for near misses \- words that differ only by a
single letter, a missing or extra letter, or a pair of transposed
letters. Any that are found are printed on the following lines, and
finally, two lines of context containing the word are printed at the
bottom of the screen. If your terminal can type in reverse video, the
word itself is highlighted.
If you think the word is correct as it stands, you can type either
"Space" to accept it this one time, "A" to accept it for the rest of
this file, or "I" to accept it and put it in your private dictionary.
If one of the near misses is the word you want, type the corresponding
number. Finally, you can type "R" and you will be prompted for a
replacement word. The string you type will be broken into words, and
each one will also be checked. You can also type "?" for help.
If ispell is started with no arguments, it enters a loop reading words
from the standard input, and printing messages about them on the
standard output. You can use this mode to find the spelling of a
problem word.
Author: Pace Willisson
Path: GNU/ispell-4.0-src.lha
==========
ispell 4.0 GNU spelling checker
Ispell is a program that helps you to correct typos in a file, and to
find the correct spelling of words. When presented with a word that
is not in the dictionary, ispell attempts to find near misses that
might include the word you meant.
The best way to use ispell is with GNU EMACS. For documentation about
this mode, see the info topic "ispell".
Ispell can also be used by itself, and in this case the most common
usage is "ispell filename". If ispell finds a word that is not in the
dictionary, it is printed at the top of the screen. Ispell then
checks the dictionary for near misses \- words that differ only by a
single letter, a missing or extra letter, or a pair of transposed
letters. Any that are found are printed on the following lines, and
finally, two lines of context containing the word are printed at the
bottom of the screen. If your terminal can type in reverse video, the
word itself is highlighted.
If you think the word is correct as it stands, you can type either
"Space" to accept it this one time, "A" to accept it for the rest of
this file, or "I" to accept it and put it in your private dictionary.
If one of the near misses is the word you want, type the corresponding
number. Finally, you can type "R" and you will be prompted for a
replacement word. The string you type will be broken into words, and
each one will also be checked. You can also type "?" for help.
If ispell is started with no arguments, it enters a loop reading words
from the standard input, and printing messages about them on the
standard output. You can use this mode to find the spelling of a
problem word.
Author: Pace Willisson
Path: GNU/ispell-4.0.tar.gz
==========
ixemul 39.47 Unix emulation environment, Amiga lib.
The ixemul.library provides a Unix emulation environment for the Amiga.
This makes porting of typical Unix applications very easy, with almost
no changes required to the Unix source code.
This archive contains two versions of the runtime dynamic library
"ixemul.library" that is needed by Amiga binaries that have been
compiled to use this environment. It also contains a couple of
auxiliary programs, "ixconfig" and "ixtrace", for configuring the
environment and for doing library tracing when the tracing version
of the library is installed.
Author: Markus Wild
Path: GNU/ixemul-39.47-bin.lha
==========
ixemul 39.47 Unix emulation environment, devel files.
The ixemul.library provides a Unix emulation environment for the Amiga.
This makes porting of typical Unix applications very easy, with almost
no changes required to the Unix source code.
This archive contains the include files, the C runtime startup modules,
the link time library that interfaces to ixemul.library (libc.a), and
the manual pages for the supported functions.
Author: Markus Wild
Path: GNU/ixemul-39.47-env-bin.lha
==========
libg++ 2.5.3 GNU C++ class library
A C++ class library for use with the GNU C++ compiler.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/libg++-2.6-bin.lha
==========
libg++ 2.5.3 GNU C++ class library
A C++ class library for use with the GNU C++ compiler.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/libg++-2.6-diffs.lha
==========
libg++ 2.5.3 GNU C++ class library
A C++ class library for use with the GNU C++ compiler.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/libg++-2.6-fsf.lha
==========
libg++ 2.5.3 GNU C++ class library
A C++ class library for use with the GNU C++ compiler.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/libg++-2.6-src.lha
==========
libg++ 2.5.3 GNU C++ class library
A C++ class library for use with the GNU C++ compiler.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/libg++-2.6.tar.gz
==========
libm 5.4 Runtime math library
This runtime math library is from BSD. It is used with the GNU C
compiler when the -lm option is given to gcc.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/libm-5.4-bin.lha
==========
libm 5.4 Runtime math library
This runtime math library is from BSD. It is used with the GNU C
compiler when the -lm option is given to gcc.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/libm-5.4-diffs.lha
==========
libm 5.4 Runtime math library
This runtime math library is from BSD. It is used with the GNU C
compiler when the -lm option is given to gcc.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/libm-5.4-src.lha
==========
libm 5.4 Runtime math library
This runtime math library is from BSD. It is used with the GNU C
compiler when the -lm option is given to gcc.
Author: (null)
Path: GNU/libm-5.4.tar.gz
==========
libnix ?.? A lib for amiga specific devel with gcc.
This is libnix, a static (i.e. link) library for gcc 2.3.3 or above.
It's not a replacement for ixemul.library (though it's possible to
recompile most of the gcc environment with libnix) but a good thing
for amiga specific development on gcc:
* It's mostly compatible to SAS's way of handling things, i.e.
you get even an automatic shared library opening feature and
some other things you may miss in ixemul.library.
This also means it's ANSI compliant.
* It doesn't need any shared libraries than normal Amiga OS ones.
* It is not copyrighted by the FSF. Therefore you neither need
to include sources nor objects together with your executable.
(read the GLGPL _before_ flaming on this statement)
* And it's short! I was able to compile a 492 byte 'hello, world'
using normal main.
* It uses OS20 features whenever necessary.
To cut it short:
Use ixemul.library for porting Un*x programs, libnix for compiling
amiga-only programs and gcc is one of the best Amiga compilers.
Author: fleischr@izfm.uni-stuttgart.de
gnikl@informatik.uni-rostock.de
Path: GNU/libnix-bin.lha
==========
m4 1.2 GNU macro processor
This is GNU m4, a program which copies its input to the output,
expanding macros as it goes. m4 has built-in functions for including
named files, running Unix commands, doing integer arithmetic,
manipulating text in various ways, recursion, etc... Macros can also
be user-defined, and can take any number of arguments.
Author: Rene' Seindal
Path: GNU/m4-1.2-bin.lha
==========
m4 1.2 GNU macro processor
This is GNU m4, a program which copies its input to the output,
expanding macros as it goes. m4 has built-in functions for including
named files, running Unix commands, doing integer arithmetic,
manipulating text in various ways, recursion, etc... Macros can also
be user-defined, and can take any number of arguments.
Author: Rene' Seindal
Path: GNU/m4-1.2-diffs.lha
==========
m4 1.2 GNU macro processor
This is GNU m4, a program which copies its input to the output,
expanding macros as it goes. m4 has built-in functions for including
named files, running Unix commands, doing integer arithmetic,
manipulating text in various ways, recursion, etc... Macros can also
be user-defined, and can take any number of arguments.
Author: Rene' Seindal
Path: GNU/m4-1.2-src.lha
==========
m4 1.2 GNU macro processor
This is GNU m4, a program which copies its input to the output,
expanding macros as it goes. m4 has built-in functions for including
named files, running Unix commands, doing integer arithmetic,
manipulating text in various ways, recursion, etc... Macros can also
be user-defined, and can take any number of arguments.
Author: Rene' Seindal
Path: GNU/m4-1.2.tar.gz
==========
make 3.71 POSIX compatible "make" program
The "make" utility automatically determines which pieces of a large
program need to be recompiled, and issues commands to recompile them.
GNU "make" conforms to section 6.2 of "IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992"
(POSIX.2).
Author: Richard Stallman
Roland McGrath
Path: GNU/make-3.71-bin.lha
==========
make 3.71 POSIX compatible "make" program
The "make" utility automatically determines which pieces of a large
program need to be recompiled, and issues commands to recompile them.
GNU "make" conforms to section 6.2 of "IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992"
(POSIX.2).
Author: Richard Stallman
Roland McGrath
Path: GNU/make-3.71-diffs.lha
==========
make 3.71 POSIX compatible "make" program
The "make" utility automatically determines which pieces of a large
program need to be recompiled, and issues commands to recompile them.
GNU "make" conforms to section 6.2 of "IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992"
(POSIX.2).
Author: Richard Stallman
Roland McGrath
Path: GNU/make-3.71-src.lha
==========
make 3.71 POSIX compatible "make" program
The "make" utility automatically determines which pieces of a large
program need to be recompiled, and issues commands to recompile them.
GNU "make" conforms to section 6.2 of "IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992"
(POSIX.2).
Author: Richard Stallman
Roland McGrath
Path: GNU/make-3.71.tar.gz
==========
patch 2.1 Apply diff files
Patch will take a patch file containing any of the four forms of
difference listing produced by the diff program and apply those
differences to an original file, producing a patched version. By
default, the patched version is put in place of the original, with the
original file backed up to another name.
Author: Larry Wall
Path: GNU/patch-2.1-bin.lha
==========
patch 2.1 Apply diff files
Patch will take a patch file containing any of the four forms of
difference listing produced by the diff program and apply those
differences to an original file, producing a patched version. By
default, the patched version is put in place of the original, with the
original file backed up to another name.
Author: Larry Wall
Path: GNU/patch-2.1-diffs.lha
==========
patch 2.1 Apply diff files
Patch will take a patch file containing any of the four forms of
difference listing produced by the diff program and apply those
differences to an original file, producing a patched version. By
default, the patched version is put in place of the original, with the
original file backed up to another name.
Author: Larry Wall
Path: GNU/patch-2.1-src.lha
==========
patch 2.1 Apply diff files
Patch will take a patch file containing any of the four forms of
difference listing produced by the diff program and apply those
differences to an original file, producing a patched version. By
default, the patched version is put in place of the original, with the
original file backed up to another name.
Author: Larry Wall
Path: GNU/patch-2.1.tar.gz
==========
pdksh 4.9 A UNIX ksh compatible shell for AmigaDOS
A KSH-like shell that is compatible enough with the real UNIX ksh to
be used with most scripts that the UNIX ksh can run.
Author: Eric Gisin
Charles Forsyth
John R MacMillan
Simon J. Gerraty
Markus Wild
Path: GNU/pdksh-4.9-bin.lha
==========
pdksh 4.9 A UNIX ksh compatible shell for AmigaDOS
A KSH-like shell that is compatible enough with the real UNIX ksh to
be used with most scripts that the UNIX ksh can run.
Author: Eric Gisin
Charles Forsyth
John R MacMillan
Simon J. Gerraty
Markus Wild
Path: GNU/pdksh-4.9-diffs.lha
==========
pdksh 4.9 A UNIX ksh compatible shell for AmigaDOS
A KSH-like shell that is compatible enough with the real UNIX ksh to
be used with most scripts that the UNIX ksh can run.
Author: Eric Gisin
Charles Forsyth
John R MacMillan
Simon J. Gerraty
Markus Wild
Path: GNU/pdksh-4.9-src.lha
==========
pdksh 4.9 A UNIX ksh compatible shell for AmigaDOS
A KSH-like shell that is compatible enough with the real UNIX ksh to
be used with most scripts that the UNIX ksh can run.
Author: Eric Gisin
Charles Forsyth
John R MacMillan
Simon J. Gerraty
Markus Wild
Path: GNU/pdksh-4.9.tar.gz
==========
perl 4.036 Practical Extraction and Report Language
Perl is an interpreted language optimized for scanning arbitrary text
files, extracting information from those text files, and printing
reports based on that information. It's also a good language for many
system management tasks. The language is intended to be practical
(easy to use, efficient, complete) rather than beautiful (tiny,
elegant, minimal). It combines (in the author's opinion, anyway) some
of the best features of C, sed, awk, and sh, so people familiar with
those languages should have little difficulty with it. (Language
historians will also note some vestiges of csh, Pascal, and even
BASIC-PLUS.) Expression syntax corresponds quite closely to C
expression syntax.
Unlike most Unix utilities, perl does not arbitrarily limit the size
of your data. If you've got the memory, perl can slurp in your whole
file as a single string. Recursion is of unlimited depth. And the
hash tables used by associative arrays grow as necessary to prevent
degraded performance. Perl uses sophisticated pattern matching
techniques to scan large amounts of data very quickly. Although
optimized for scanning text, perl can also deal with binary data, and
can make dbm files look like associative arrays (where dbm is
available). Setuid perl scripts are safer than C programs through a
dataflow tracing mechanism which prevents many stupid security holes.
If you have a problem that would ordinarily use sed or awk or sh, but
it exceeds their capabilities or must run a little faster, and you
don't want to write the silly thing in C, then perl may be for you.
There are also translators to turn your sed and awk scripts into perl
scripts.
Author: Larry Wall
Path: GNU/perl-4.036-bin.lha
==========
perl 4.036 Practical Extraction and Report Language
Perl is an interpreted language optimized for scanning arbitrary text
files, extracting information from those text files, and printing
reports based on that information. It's also a good language for many
system management tasks. The language is intended to be practical
(easy to use, efficient, complete) rather than beautiful (tiny,
elegant, minimal). It combines (in the author's opinion, anyway) some
of the best features of C, sed, awk, and sh, so people familiar with
those languages should have little difficulty with it. (Language
historians will also note some vestiges of csh, Pascal, and even
BASIC-PLUS.) Expression syntax corresponds quite closely to C
expression syntax.
Unlike most Unix utilities, perl does not arbitrarily limit the size
of your data. If you've got the memory, perl can slurp in your whole
file as a single string. Recursion is of unlimited depth. And the
hash tables used by associative arrays grow as necessary to prevent
degraded performance. Perl uses sophisticated pattern matching
techniques to scan large amounts of data very quickly. Although
optimized for scanning text, perl can also deal with binary data, and
can make dbm files look like associative arrays (where dbm is
available). Setuid perl scripts are safer than C programs through a
dataflow tracing mechanism which prevents many stupid security holes.
If you have a problem that would ordinarily use sed or awk or sh, but
it exceeds their capabilities or must run a little faster, and you
don't want to write the silly thing in C, then perl may be for you.
There are also translators to turn your sed and awk scripts into perl
scripts.
Author: Larry Wall
Path: GNU/perl-4.036-diffs.lha
==========
perl 4.036 Practical Extraction and Report Language
Perl is an interpreted language optimized for scanning arbitrary text
files, extracting information from those text files, and printing
reports based on that information. It's also a good language for many
system management tasks. The language is intended to be practical
(easy to use, efficient, complete) rather than beautiful (tiny,
elegant, minimal). It combines (in the author's opinion, anyway) some
of the best features of C, sed, awk, and sh, so people familiar with
those languages should have little difficulty with it. (Language
historians will also note some vestiges of csh, Pascal, and even
BASIC-PLUS.) Expression syntax corresponds quite closely to C
expression syntax.
Unlike most Unix utilities, perl does not arbitrarily limit the size
of your data. If you've got the memory, perl can slurp in your whole
file as a single string. Recursion is of unlimited depth. And the
hash tables used by associative arrays grow as necessary to prevent
degraded performance. Perl uses sophisticated pattern matching
techniques to scan large amounts of data very quickly. Although
optimized for scanning text, perl can also deal with binary data, and
can make dbm files look like associative arrays (where dbm is
available). Setuid perl scripts are safer than C programs through a
dataflow tracing mechanism which prevents many stupid security holes.
If you have a problem that would ordinarily use sed or awk or sh, but
it exceeds their capabilities or must run a little faster, and you
don't want to write the silly thing in C, then perl may be for you.
There are also translators to turn your sed and awk scripts into perl
scripts.
Author: Larry Wall
Path: GNU/perl-4.036-src.lha
==========
perl 4.036 Practical Extraction and Report Language
Perl is an interpreted language optimized for scanning arbitrary text
files, extracting information from those text files, and printing
reports based on that information. It's also a good language for many
system management tasks. The language is intended to be practical
(easy to use, efficient, complete) rather than beautiful (tiny,
elegant, minimal). It combines (in the author's opinion, anyway) some
of the best features of C, sed, awk, and sh, so people familiar with
those languages should have little difficulty with it. (Language
historians will also note some vestiges of csh, Pascal, and even
BASIC-PLUS.) Expression syntax corresponds quite closely to C
expression syntax.
Unlike most Unix utilities, perl does not arbitrarily limit the size
of your data. If you've got the memory, perl can slurp in your whole
file as a single string. Recursion is of unlimited depth. And the
hash tables used by associative arrays grow as necessary to prevent
degraded performance. Perl uses sophisticated pattern matching
techniques to scan large amounts of data very quickly. Although
optimized for scanning text, perl can also deal with binary data, and
can make dbm files look like associative arrays (where dbm is
available). Setuid perl scripts are safer than C programs through a
dataflow tracing mechanism which prevents many stupid security holes.
If you have a problem that would ordinarily use sed or awk or sh, but
it exceeds their capabilities or must run a little faster, and you
don't want to write the silly thing in C, then perl may be for you.
There are also translators to turn your sed and awk scripts into perl
scripts.
Author: Larry Wall
Path: GNU/perl-4.036.tar.gz
==========
rcs 5.6.0.1 Revision Control System
RCS, the Revision Control System, manages multiple revisions of files.
RCS can store, retrieve, log, identify, and merge revisions. It is
useful for files that are revised frequently, e.g. programs,
documentation, graphics, and papers.
Author: Walter F. Tichy
et. al.
Path: GNU/rcs-5.6.0.1-bin.lha
==========
rcs 5.6.0.1 Revision Control System
RCS, the Revision Control System, manages multiple revisions of files.
RCS can store, retrieve, log, identify, and merge revisions. It is
useful for files that are revised frequently, e.g. programs,
documentation, graphics, and papers.
Author: Walter F. Tichy
et. al.
Path: GNU/rcs-5.6.0.1-diffs.lha
==========
rcs 5.6.0.1 Revision Control System
RCS, the Revision Control System, manages multiple revisions of files.
RCS can store, retrieve, log, identify, and merge revisions. It is
useful for files that are revised frequently, e.g. programs,
documentation, graphics, and papers.
Author: Walter F. Tichy
et. al.
Path: GNU/rcs-5.6.0.1-src.lha
==========
rcs 5.6.0.1 Revision Control System
RCS, the Revision Control System, manages multiple revisions of files.
RCS can store, retrieve, log, identify, and merge revisions. It is
useful for files that are revised frequently, e.g. programs,
documentation, graphics, and papers.
Author: Walter F. Tichy
et. al.
Path: GNU/rcs-5.6.0.1.tar.gz
==========
sed 2.05 GNU stream editor
Sed copies named files, or the standard input, to the standard output,
edited according to a script of commands.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/sed-2.05-bin.lha
==========
sed 2.05 GNU stream editor
Sed copies named files, or the standard input, to the standard output,
edited according to a script of commands.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/sed-2.05-diffs.lha
==========
sed 2.05 GNU stream editor
Sed copies named files, or the standard input, to the standard output,
edited according to a script of commands.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/sed-2.05-src.lha
==========
sed 2.05 GNU stream editor
Sed copies named files, or the standard input, to the standard output,
edited according to a script of commands.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/sed-2.05.tar.gz
==========
sh-utils 1.10 GNU shell programming utilities
This is a package of small shell programming utilities. They are
mostly compliant with POSIX.2, where applicable. The programs that
can be built with this package are: basename date dirname echo env
expr false groups id logname nice nohup pathchk printenv printf sleep
stty tee test true tty uname who whoami yes Some programs (uname,
nice, nohup, and stty) are built and installed only on systems that
have the features to support them.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/sh-utils-1.10-bin.lha
==========
sh-utils 1.10 GNU shell programming utilities
This is a package of small shell programming utilities. They are
mostly compliant with POSIX.2, where applicable. The programs that
can be built with this package are: basename date dirname echo env
expr false groups id logname nice nohup pathchk printenv printf sleep
stty tee test true tty uname who whoami yes Some programs (uname,
nice, nohup, and stty) are built and installed only on systems that
have the features to support them.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/sh-utils-1.10-diffs.lha
==========
sh-utils 1.10 GNU shell programming utilities
This is a package of small shell programming utilities. They are
mostly compliant with POSIX.2, where applicable. The programs that
can be built with this package are: basename date dirname echo env
expr false groups id logname nice nohup pathchk printenv printf sleep
stty tee test true tty uname who whoami yes Some programs (uname,
nice, nohup, and stty) are built and installed only on systems that
have the features to support them.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/sh-utils-1.10-src.lha
==========
sh-utils 1.10 GNU shell programming utilities
This is a package of small shell programming utilities. They are
mostly compliant with POSIX.2, where applicable. The programs that
can be built with this package are: basename date dirname echo env
expr false groups id logname nice nohup pathchk printenv printf sleep
stty tee test true tty uname who whoami yes Some programs (uname,
nice, nohup, and stty) are built and installed only on systems that
have the features to support them.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/sh-utils-1.10.tar.gz
==========
tar 1.11.2 GNU Tape Archiver
Tar collects files into an archive which is normally written to tape or
other backup media. It can also be written to a normal file, and such
files have become a common intersystem exchange mechanism.
Author: John Gilmore
Path: GNU/tar-1.11.2-bin.lha
==========
tar 1.11.2 GNU Tape Archiver
Tar collects files into an archive which is normally written to tape or
other backup media. It can also be written to a normal file, and such
files have become a common intersystem exchange mechanism.
Author: John Gilmore
Path: GNU/tar-1.11.2-diffs.lha
==========
tar 1.11.2 GNU Tape Archiver
Tar collects files into an archive which is normally written to tape or
other backup media. It can also be written to a normal file, and such
files have become a common intersystem exchange mechanism.
Author: John Gilmore
Path: GNU/tar-1.11.2-src.lha
==========
tar 1.11.2 GNU Tape Archiver
Tar collects files into an archive which is normally written to tape or
other backup media. It can also be written to a normal file, and such
files have become a common intersystem exchange mechanism.
Author: John Gilmore
Path: GNU/tar-1.11.2.tar.gz
==========
termcap 1.2 GNU termcap library.
This is the GNU termcap library, a library of C functions that enable
programs to send control strings to terminals in a way independent of
the terminal type. Most of this package is also distributed with GNU
Emacs, but it is available in this separate distribution to make it
easier to install as -ltermcap.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/termcap-1.2-bin.lha
==========
termcap 1.2 GNU termcap library.
This is the GNU termcap library, a library of C functions that enable
programs to send control strings to terminals in a way independent of
the terminal type. Most of this package is also distributed with GNU
Emacs, but it is available in this separate distribution to make it
easier to install as -ltermcap.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/termcap-1.2-diffs.lha
==========
termcap 1.2 GNU termcap library.
This is the GNU termcap library, a library of C functions that enable
programs to send control strings to terminals in a way independent of
the terminal type. Most of this package is also distributed with GNU
Emacs, but it is available in this separate distribution to make it
easier to install as -ltermcap.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/termcap-1.2-src.lha
==========
termcap 1.2 GNU termcap library.
This is the GNU termcap library, a library of C functions that enable
programs to send control strings to terminals in a way independent of
the terminal type. Most of this package is also distributed with GNU
Emacs, but it is available in this separate distribution to make it
easier to install as -ltermcap.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/termcap-1.2.tar.gz
==========
texinfo 3.1 GNU documentation system
Texinfo is a documentation system that uses a single source file to
produce both on-line information and printed output. This means that
instead of writing two different documents, one for the on-line help
or other on-line information and the other for a typeset manual or
other printed work, you need write only one document. When the work
is revised, you need revise only one document. You can read the
on-line information, known as an "Info file", with an Info
documentation-reading program.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/texinfo-3.1-bin.lha
==========
texinfo 3.1 GNU documentation system
Texinfo is a documentation system that uses a single source file to
produce both on-line information and printed output. This means that
instead of writing two different documents, one for the on-line help
or other on-line information and the other for a typeset manual or
other printed work, you need write only one document. When the work
is revised, you need revise only one document. You can read the
on-line information, known as an "Info file", with an Info
documentation-reading program.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/texinfo-3.1-diffs.lha
==========
texinfo 3.1 GNU documentation system
Texinfo is a documentation system that uses a single source file to
produce both on-line information and printed output. This means that
instead of writing two different documents, one for the on-line help
or other on-line information and the other for a typeset manual or
other printed work, you need write only one document. When the work
is revised, you need revise only one document. You can read the
on-line information, known as an "Info file", with an Info
documentation-reading program.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/texinfo-3.1-src.lha
==========
texinfo 3.1 GNU documentation system
Texinfo is a documentation system that uses a single source file to
produce both on-line information and printed output. This means that
instead of writing two different documents, one for the on-line help
or other on-line information and the other for a typeset manual or
other printed work, you need write only one document. When the work
is revised, you need revise only one document. You can read the
on-line information, known as an "Info file", with an Info
documentation-reading program.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/texinfo-3.1.tar.gz
==========
textutils 1.9 GNU text processing utilities
These are the GNU text file (actually, file contents) processing
utilities. Most of these programs have significant advantages over
their Unix counterparts, such as greater speed, additional options,
and fewer arbitrary limits. The programs that can be built with this
package are: cat, cksum, comm, csplit, cut, expand, fold, head, join,
nl, od paste, pr, sort, split, sum, tac, tail, tr, unexpand, uniq, and
wc. The cmp program has moved to the GNU diff distribution.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/textutils-1.9-bin.lha
==========
textutils 1.9 GNU text processing utilities
These are the GNU text file (actually, file contents) processing
utilities. Most of these programs have significant advantages over
their Unix counterparts, such as greater speed, additional options,
and fewer arbitrary limits. The programs that can be built with this
package are: cat, cksum, comm, csplit, cut, expand, fold, head, join,
nl, od paste, pr, sort, split, sum, tac, tail, tr, unexpand, uniq, and
wc. The cmp program has moved to the GNU diff distribution.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/textutils-1.9-diffs.lha
==========
textutils 1.9 GNU text processing utilities
These are the GNU text file (actually, file contents) processing
utilities. Most of these programs have significant advantages over
their Unix counterparts, such as greater speed, additional options,
and fewer arbitrary limits. The programs that can be built with this
package are: cat, cksum, comm, csplit, cut, expand, fold, head, join,
nl, od paste, pr, sort, split, sum, tac, tail, tr, unexpand, uniq, and
wc. The cmp program has moved to the GNU diff distribution.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/textutils-1.9-src.lha
==========
textutils 1.9 GNU text processing utilities
These are the GNU text file (actually, file contents) processing
utilities. Most of these programs have significant advantages over
their Unix counterparts, such as greater speed, additional options,
and fewer arbitrary limits. The programs that can be built with this
package are: cat, cksum, comm, csplit, cut, expand, fold, head, join,
nl, od paste, pr, sort, split, sum, tac, tail, tr, unexpand, uniq, and
wc. The cmp program has moved to the GNU diff distribution.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/textutils-1.9.tar.gz
==========
uuencode 1.0 Encode/decode utilities
These programs are used to encode binary data in a printable ASCII
format which may be safely sent through e-mail or other communication
channel which does not support the transmission of eight bit data.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/uuencode-1.0-bin.lha
==========
uuencode 1.0 Encode/decode utilities
These programs are used to encode binary data in a printable ASCII
format which may be safely sent through e-mail or other communication
channel which does not support the transmission of eight bit data.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/uuencode-1.0-diffs.lha
==========
uuencode 1.0 Encode/decode utilities
These programs are used to encode binary data in a printable ASCII
format which may be safely sent through e-mail or other communication
channel which does not support the transmission of eight bit data.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/uuencode-1.0-src.lha
==========
uuencode 1.0 Encode/decode utilities
These programs are used to encode binary data in a printable ASCII
format which may be safely sent through e-mail or other communication
channel which does not support the transmission of eight bit data.
Author: Free Software Foundation
Path: GNU/uuencode-1.0.tar.gz
==========
SerMouse 2.0 Driver/Docs for serial PC Mouse on Amiga
A full package on how to use a PC mouse on the Amiga. Not only a
serial mouse driver but also how to rewire a 9-pin Sub-D serial to
25-pin Sub-D serial and how to rewire 9-pin Sub-D BUS or 9-pin Mini-Din
BUS to an Amiga mouse plug. YOU CAN USE ALMOST ANY PC-MOUSE WITH THIS
ONE!
Author: Patrick van Beem
Path: hard/SerMouse-2.0.lha
==========
CPK 2.5 Molecular renderer & manipulation prog.
Program renders spacefilling, wireframe and ball and stick representations
of molecules in the standard molecule format provided by the Brookhaven
Protein Databank. The program features a complete ARexx command set,
interactive molecule manipulation capabilities and provides an
interface to the popular ray tracing program POV-Ray. This
allows the user to generate high quality ray traced renderings of
molecules as well.
Author: Eric G. Suchanek, Ph.D.
Path: misc/cpk-2.5.lha
==========
MULTI-PRED 1.1 Lotto, pools, horse race prediction tool
Demo version of a powerful prediction tool for LOTTO, POOLS, SWEEP,
DIGIT (eg 4d) and HORSE (races) systems available worldwide. The
program uses an identical framework for all five systems but they
are run completely individually so that any number of them can
be used simultaneously. All records, updates, predictions, bets
and results are stored separately and can be saved to disk or sent
to the printer at any time.
Author: Joe Taylor
Path: misc/multi-pred-demo-1.1.lha
==========
Multiplot XLN-S 1.01 Intuitive data plotting program
Multiplot XLN is a fully intuitive data plotting program. It plots
data points as (x,y) co-ordinates with or without x or y error
bars. It can plot an unlimited number of sets with any number of data
points using colour, line type, line weight, point shape and point
size to represent the different sets. A set may be joined by a line or
plotted as discrete points. Data may be impulse plotted, scatter
plotted, or shown as a histogram or step graph. Additions to the data
may be made in the form of lines of best fit (logarithmic,
exponential, linear and polynomial) and data smoothing utilising
modified open b-splines or averaging filtration.
The input file for Multiplot is a simple textfile and my be created
in any ASCII text editor or saved from any spreadsheet. Multiplot
supports the clipboard, and data input may be achieved solely through
it. Multiplot has a full ARexx interface which provides potential for
a wide variety of data manipulations including statistical analysis.
Output may be in any of the following formats: IntroCAD, Draw, mCAD,
IFF, Revised Hewlett-Packard Graphics Language (HPGL/2), Encapsulated
Postscript (EPSF) or Postscript. The graph can be printed to any
workbench printer by transparent use of the PLT: device. Multiplot
directly supports the HP LaserJet III and Postscript laser printers
such as the Apple Laser printer.
Author: Alan G Baxter
Path: misc/Multiplot-XLN-S1.01.lha
==========
Night Math Attack ?.? Educational math game
Want a game for the kids that's educational and constructive? Tired of them
blasting aliens? Night Math Attack is a motivational game for practicing all 4
math operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division), created
with help from an educational consultant. Faster speed and accuracy at these
skills result in better problem-solving math ability and higher test scores.
The program has up-beat music, quality graphics, and no requirement for fast
hand control. Following the title screen and instructions, the player chooses
which math operation to practice. The game screen has a question at the top,
4 answers down the left side, a helicopter in the middle, and a choice of sound
on/off at the bottom. The player uses the joystick or cursor keys to fly the
chopper up or down so it is level with the correct answer, and then uses the
joystick or space bar to fire a missile at the answer. A message then reports
whether the choice was right or wrong. The wrong messages are followed by the
question with the correct answer to reinforce learning. Wrong choices are
generated randomly so that students will no become used to the same choices
after repeated plays. After 20 questions a "report card" gives the accuracy
rate. There is a print-out option which prints wrong questions and out-of-time
questions for further study, which requires the printer driver to be in the
devs directory of the boot disk. Practicing math facts as little as 5 minutes
a day usually results in a grade score improvement.
Author: Chris Evans
Path: misc/Night_Math_Attack.lha
==========
OPlot 1.99b Full-Features function plotter
OPlot is the strongest Amiga-2D-Plot-Program producing
professional diagrams.
Features:
*PLOTTING
-function plots y=f(x)
-parametrical plots y=f(x,t);x=f(t)
-data plots
*DATA-CONTOURING
-cubic splines
-basic splines
*COORDINATES
-cartesian
-polar
*OUTPUT
-Screens (every Resolution and NUMBER you want)
-WB-Printer
*EXPORT
-ProDraw-Genies
-LaTeX
-HPGL
-ILBM
*GRAFIX
-lines (free thickness)
-points (12 kinds)
-bars
*FREE SCALABLE, ROTATABLE NICE-LOOKING FONT
*AXIS
-Log-Scale
-Grid
*DOUBLE PRECISION
*ONLINE CALCULATOR
*LINEAR REGRESSION
*ONLINE HELP
*AND MANY MORE
Author: Andreas Maschke
Path: misc/OPlot-1.99b.lha
==========
SatTrack 4.2 Full-featured Satellite tracking program
SatTrack is a full-featured Satellite tracking program which uses
mathematical formulas developed a hundred years ago. The program
provides the ability to enter the numerical information needed to
track any satellite that orbits the Earth. SatTrack can read both
standards of satellite input format, as well as allowing for entering
and modifying the information interactively. SatTrack allows for
multiple databases, each with a capacity of 300 satellites.
Author: Randy Stackhouse
Path: misc/SatTrack-4.2.lha
==========
Splines 1.1 SAS/C 6.5x port of spline program.
This is a port to SAS/C6.5x of a spline program original issued
on Fish Disk 97 by Helene (Lee) Taran.
start-quote (from README.ORIGINAL):-
This program demonstrates various curve fitting and rendering
techniques. The user chooses a sequence of points and a curve
type, and the program generates and displays the appropriate
curve. A simple <..well...it looks simple> interface allows
the user to add, remove, and relocate points, in addition to
selecting a curve type.
Historical Note:
This program was written for my third assignment in
CS248A "Introduction to Computer Graphics" at Stanford.
end-quote
Author: Helene (Lee) Taran
Path: misc/Splines-1.1.lha
==========
DeviceLock 1.2 GUI interface for CLI command 'lock'
This is a GUI interface for the CLI programm 'lock'. You can
lock or allow writing to partitions via gadgets or hotkeys.
You can configure it to your own needs and it should work
with other (CLI-)lock programs, too.
Author: Thomas Wagner
Path: os20/DeviceLock-1.2.lha
==========
PowerSnap 2.2a Commodity to cut and paste text
PowerSnap is a utility that allows you to use the mouse to mark
characters anywhere on the screen and paste them somewhere else, like
in the CLI or in a string gadget. PowerSnap will check what font is
used in the window you snap from and will look for the position of the
characters automatically. It recognizes all non proportional fonts of
up to 24 pixels wide and of any height so this should cover most fonts
used. Snapping and pasting text is done using the mouse, making
PowerSnap fast and easy to use.
Author: Nico François
Path: os20/PowerSnap-2.2a.lha
==========
24BitComix ?.? A 24-bit raytraced comic strip series.
A 24-bit raytraced comic strip series staring Dexter and Elmo,
the tongue monsters.
Author: Bill Graham
Path: pix/24BitComix.lha
==========
ABC-Patterns 1.1 200+ WorkBench backdrop patterns
A collection of over 200 WorkBench backdrop patterns
The patterns are designed for ...
- a proportional ScreenMode (640x512, for example) with square pixels
- an 8-color Workbench Screen (3 bitplanes)
- colors similar to the colors of "MagicWB"
(© 1993 by Martin Huttenloher)
Author: Dietmar Knoll
Path: pix/ABC-Patterns-1.1.lha
==========
BootPics ?.? Some nice pictures for bootpic/backdrop
These four pictures are the first of a possible series of pictures
intended to be used in conjunction with "BootPic" or any other utility
which displays a picture during the startup sequence.
Author: Christian Hayden
Path: pix/BootPics.lha
==========
CreaTV-Icons 1.0 Icons for MagicWB-styled Workbenches
A sample bunch of Drive-icons, Dock-icons (usable with
e.g. Toolmanager or as Tool-icons), default icons for
use with the whatis.library-package and more.
These artworks are reflecting the style of the Magic-
WorkBenchIcons.
Author: Karsten Böhm
Path: pix/CreaTV-Icons-1.0.lha
==========
imgnbabe ?.? Raytraced image of Manga Babe by Tomwoof
This took about 1 hour 45 minutes to render on my Amiga 1200/030/40MHz.
The sky backdrop was composited after the render and some rough edges were
smoothed. It's amazing what you can do with Imagine.int and Manga Babes ;)
Author: Tomwoof
Path: pix/imgnbabe.lha
==========
RD001 ?.? 787x529x24 JPEG, clown fish over anemone
A 787x529x24 JPEG image of a clown fish over anemone.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD001.lha
==========
RD002 ?.? 788x553x24 JPEG, coral polyps
A 788x553x24 JPEG image of coral polyps.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD002.lha
==========
RD003 ?.? 787x545x24 JPEG, clown fish and anemone
A 787x545x24 JPEG image of a clown fish over a green-tip purple
anemone.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD003.lha
==========
RD004 ?.? 784x541x24 JPEG, spotted moray on reef
A 784x541x24 JPEG image of a spotted moray poking out of a reef wall.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD004.lha
==========
RD005 ?.? 788x547x24 JPEG, purple soft coral
A 788x547x24 JPEG image of purple soft coral and staghorn coral.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD005.lha
==========
RD006 ?.? 786x543x24 JPEG, red hind fish in sponge
An 786x543x24 JPEG image of a red hind fish inside a sponge.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD006.lha
==========
RD007 ?.? 788x555x24 JPEG, tomato clown fish
An 788x555x24 JPEG image of a tomato clown fish and anemone.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD007.lha
==========
RD008 ?.? 788x545x24 JPEG, brittlestar on sponge
An 788x545x24 JPEG image of a brittlestar on red sponge.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD008.lha
==========
RD009 ?.? 788x521x24 JPEG, asparagus anemones
An 788x521x24 JPEG image of asparagus anemones.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD009.lha
==========
RD010 ?.? 786x557x24 JPEG, splendid toadfish
An 786x557x24 JPEG image of a splendid toadfish under a coral head.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD010.lha
==========
RD011 ?.? 545x787x24 JPEG, golden hind and coral
An 545x787x24 JPEG image of a golden hind fish and coral head.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD011.lha
==========
RD012 ?.? 788x561x24 JPEG, finger coral & sponges
An 788x561x24 JPEG image of finger coral and sponges.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD012.lha
==========
RD013 ?.? 786x557x24 JPEG, yellow crinoid & sponge
An 786x557x24 JPEG image of a yellow crinoid and red sponge.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD013.lha
==========
RD014 ?.? 784x543x24 JPEG, lettuce coral & sponge
An 784x543x24 JPEG image of lettuce coral and sponge.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD014.lha
==========
RD015 ?.? 787x539x24 JPEG, spiney lobsters & coral
An 787x539x24 JPEG image of spiney lobsters under coral head.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD015.lha
==========
RD016 ?.? 787x533x24 JPEG, diver over coral head
An 787x533x24 JPEG image of a diver hanging behind a coral head.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD016.lha
==========
RD017 ?.? 787x545x24 JPEG, asparagus anemone
An 787x545x24 JPEG image of an asparagus anemone and purple sponges.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD017.lha
==========
RD018 ?.? 787x543x24 JPEG, blue chromis, gorgonian
An 787x543x24 JPEG image of blue chromis fish, gorgonian, and sponge.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD018.lha
==========
RD019 ?.? 539x787x24 JPEG, angel fish & coral
An 539x787x24 JPEG image of angel fish and coral.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD019.lha
==========
RD020 ?.? 787x541x24 JPEG, purple vase sponge
An 787x541x24 JPEG image of purple vase sponge and coral head.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD020.lha
==========
RD021 ?.? 783x547x24 JPEG, red soft coral.
An 783x547x24 JPEG image of red soft coral.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD021.lha
==========
RD022 ?.? 788x541x24 JPEG, lion fish on reef
An 788x541x24 JPEG image of a lion fish on a reef.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD022.lha
==========
RD023 ?.? 788x539x24 JPEG, spotted moray eel
An 788x539x24 JPEG image of a spotted moray eel.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD023.lha
==========
RD024 ?.? 489x783x24 JPEG, banded shrimp
An 489x783x24 JPEG image of a closeup of a banded shrimp.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD024.lha
==========
RD025 ?.? 787x537x24 JPEG, angel fish & coral
An 787x537x24 JPEG image of an angel fish & coral.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD025.lha
==========
RD026 ?.? 535x785x24 JPEG, red crinoid & coral
An 535x785x24 JPEG image of a red crinoid and coral head.
The photographer, R. W. Dick, is a PADI certified dive instructor and
amateur photographer who has been diving for 10+ years, and has been
doing underwater photography for about 8 years. He has traveled all
over the globe in pursuit of underwater fun and photos.
To be placed on a mailing list for notification of the availability of
a full CD-ROM or photo CD containing 100-500 high quality dive images,
by this photographer and others, contact Amiga Library Services at the
below address or via FAX at (602) 917-0917.
Author: R. W. Dick
Path: pix/RD026.lha
==========
ST-CLIPS.lha 0.07 3 Star Trek logo's
Contains a TNG, TOS and the Klingon Logo
Author: Ernest Otte
Path: pix/ST-CLIPS-0.07.lha
==========
TrashIntel ?.? "Intel Inside" trashcan icon
I put together this icon from Intel In/Out WB pics downloaded here.
Author: Bill Chin
Path: pix/TrashIcon.lha
==========
VoyageToAtlantis ?.? Imagine2.9 raytraced image
This is a single frame from a long animation I have been working on.
It uses several new features from Imagine 2.9. The entire animation
is over 200 Megabytes in HAM Interlace Overscan. It looks pretty good
genlocked onto videotape. The sub comes from out of the distance,
makes a turn in front of the camera, and goes on to find the domed
underwater city of Atlantis. The undersea plants
were made with the new twist, bend, and taper tools in the Detail
Editor. The ocean floor is a plane with the new Wave texture. The
sunken galleon is from the Imagine 2.0 included objects. The seashells
were made with Shelley, which I got off aminet (thanks!). The
submarine is my concept of the proposed Centurion class. Yes, I
know submarines don't travel underwater with their mast and
and periscope up but I thought it looked cooler. Some things I
am working on are a better hull texture, cavitation bubbles as the
prop turns (maybe with particles), and adding more detail to the hull.
Since then, I have made models of the Seawolf, Typhoon, and am working
on the Akula plus a zillion other projects.
Author: Ted Stethem
Path: pix/Voyage2Atlantis.lha
==========
AGWriter 1.03 Produce AmigaGuide files from text files
This program is capable of taking text files produced using any text
editor and with little effort producing an AmigaGuide File.
AGW has the following features :
» Allows Creation of AmigaGuide Files simply and easily
» Reads/Writes AmigaGuide files
» Converts AmigaGuide files to Text
» Simple GUI interface
» Create/Delete/Modify LINK/ALINK/RX/RXS/SYSTEM commands
» Modify Node information
» Modify File information
New Loading of files now more stable.
Added QUIT command.
AmigaGuide commands commented out now ignored (ie \).
Textual commands now read/write.
Added Cmd line parameter -w to put AGW on current Public Screen.
Split menu command now calls split command :-)
Unknown AmigaGuide commands are kept.
Author: David McPaul
Path: text/AGWriter-1.03.lha
==========
AmigaGuide 34.6 Commodore AmigaGuide hypertext utility
Archive distribution of the AmigaGuide hypertext utility direct from
Commodore. Contains developer examples and tools for AmigaGuide under
V34/V37 and V39, plus a new free print/sign/send-in distribution
license for AmigaGuide, amigaguide.library, WDisplay, and their icons.
Author: Commodore Business Machines
Path: text/AmigaGuide-34.6.lha
==========
DviHP 2.1 Print DVI files on HP-LJ (PCL5 support)
DviHP is a program for printing DVI files (generated by TeX) on HP
LaserJet and compatibiles printers.
Features
========
o DviHP downloads fonts to printer; printing is therefore much
faster, especially when printing large documents. Version 2.1 uses
PCL5 font compression.
o User friendlyness: you can set parameters through environmental
variable "DVIHPOPTS", in a command-line when invoking it from CLI
or Shell, via ToolTypes when invoking it from Workbench or via
graphical user interface.
o It supports printing in landscape orientation.
o DviHP allows you to include IFF ILBM files (raster pictures) and
PostScript files in your documents.
o DviHP lets you redirect output to a file, even when you're printing
IFF ILBM pictures and/or PostScript files.
o PCL5/PJL support and PCL5 font compression.
Author: Ales Pecnik
Path: text/DviHP-2.1.lha
==========
DviPS 5.58 Converts TeX DVI files to PostScript
DviPS takes a DVI file produced by TeX (or by some other processor such
as GFtoDVI) and converts it to PostScript, normally sending the result
directly to the laserprinter. The DVI file may be specified without the
extension. Fonts used may either be resident in the printer or defined
as bitmaps in PK files, or a `virtual' combination of both. If the
MakeTeXPK program is installed, DviPS will automatically invoke METAFONT
to generate fonts that don't already exist. *LOTS* of command line
options.
Author: Tomas Rokicki, Amiga port by Giuseppe Ghibò
Path: text/DviPS-5.58.lha
==========
GastonFonts ?.? Three new fonts, 2 proportional, 1 fixed
A set of three new fonts:
GastonIntuition 12/13 Point
---------------------------
a proportional font - it looks great on the workbench and
in applications (best lookin´ in high resolutions [800x600])
GastonPiktogram 11/12 Point
---------------------------
a proportional font for your icons on the workbench
GastonShell 10/11
-----------------
a fixedwidth font for AMIGA-shell and apps like DOpus etc.
Author: Martin Rolfsmeyer
Path: text/GastonFonts.lha
==========
Heddley 1.18 Composes AmigaGuide files easily.
Heddley allows you to compose AmigaGuide files with greater ease than
by hand. It provides you with an overview of all the documents in the
database (an AmigaGuide file is called a 'database', made up of many
documents).
Author: Edd Dumbill
Path: text/Heddley-1.18.lha
==========
HWGPost 22.24 PostScript Library w/many Level 2 feat.
The fourth publically available version of HWGPOST. It is _extremely_
raw, very incomplete, and probably buggy as hell. My intention is to
abuse you as beta tester. ;^)
HWGPOST is project that I started because I had some problems with
post.library 1.7 (and 1.86 where post.library stayed the same) not handling
some PostScript code correctly. So I built on the post 1.7 source. HWGPOST
is IMHO a major step towards PostScript Level 2 already and as time and
motivation permits it will hopefully become a R&W book compliant PostScript
Level 2 interpreter library with maybe some Display PostScript extensions.
Currently this archive is probably mostly useful to users of post.library
up to 1.7.
Major new features for HWGPOST beta 4
=====================================
- image operators support files as source.
- startjob/exitserver.
- execform.
- composite font support.
- setsystemparams (pretty much a dummy though).
Sorry, setpagedevice has to wait.
Author: Heinz Wrobel
Path: text/HWGPost-22.24.lha
==========
Less 1.6Z Amiga port of UNIX text file reader
A text file reader, descended from Unix "Less." Less has features
found on no other Amiga file reader; it can use pipes, accepts
multiple filenames, and has many convenient positioning commands for
forward and backward movement, marking positions, etc. This version
adds an option to suppress opening a new window, using the existing
CLI window instead (especially useful with an AUX: shell), and
includes some minor bug fixes.
Author: Ray Zarling et. al.
Path: text/Less-1.6Z.lha
==========
Linea ?.? A very thin font
This is a very, very thin font. Comes in three versions: light, medium, bold.
Beware: Light consists of lines that have only a width of one (1) pixel!!!
You'll need a very, very good printer (with a very, very high resolution)
to produce nice output. Medium's lines are 5 pixel wide and Bold consists of
lines that are a massive of 15 pixels!
Font Formats: - Adobe (Type 1 [pfa & pfb], Type 3, Bitmap)
- DMF (+ bitmap)
- Bitmap (Black&White)
- IntelliFont
- Truetype
Author: Daniel Amor
Path: text/Linea.lha
==========
MuchMore 4.4 Soft scroll text viewer with xpk-support
A soft scrolling text viewer. Can run in a window on a public screen
or on his own screen. Display mode can be choosen with ASL screen
mode requester. Supports ANSI, pipes, xpk, locale. Includes 7
catalogs.
Author: Fridtjof Siebert
Christian Stiens
Path: text/MuchMore-4.4.lha
==========
PasTeX 1.3 TeX - Part 1 of 8 - misc files
A very well done Amiga port of the incredibly powerful TeX typesetting
system originally written by Donald Knuth at Stanford University.
Author: Donald Knuth
Georg Hessmann
Path: text/PasTeX-1.3-1of8.lha
==========
PasTeX 1.3 TeX - Part 2 of 8 - PasTeX/mf
A very well done Amiga port of the incredibly powerful TeX typesetting
system originally written by Donald Knuth at Stanford University.
Author: Donald Knuth
Georg Hessmann
Path: text/PasTeX-1.3-2of8.lha
==========
PasTeX 1.3 TeX - Part 3 of 8 - PasTeX/macros
A very well done Amiga port of the incredibly powerful TeX typesetting
system originally written by Donald Knuth at Stanford University.
Author: Donald Knuth
Georg Hessmann
Path: text/PasTeX-1.3-3of8.lha
==========
PasTeX 1.3 TeX - Part 4 of 8 - PasTeX/bin
A very well done Amiga port of the incredibly powerful TeX typesetting
system originally written by Donald Knuth at Stanford University.
Author: Donald Knuth
Georg Hessmann
Path: text/PasTeX-1.3-4of8.lha
==========
PasTeX 1.3 TeX - Part 5 of 8 - PasTeX/pk (partial)
A very well done Amiga port of the incredibly powerful TeX typesetting
system originally written by Donald Knuth at Stanford University.
Author: Donald Knuth
Georg Hessmann
Path: text/PasTeX-1.3-5of8.lha
==========
PasTeX 1.3 TeX - Part 6 of 8 - PasTeX/pk/180x180
A very well done Amiga port of the incredibly powerful TeX typesetting
system originally written by Donald Knuth at Stanford University.
Author: Donald Knuth
Georg Hessmann
Path: text/PasTeX-1.3-6of8.lha
==========
PasTeX 1.3 TeX - Part 7 of 8 - PasTeX/pk/360x360
A very well done Amiga port of the incredibly powerful TeX typesetting
system originally written by Donald Knuth at Stanford University.
Author: Donald Knuth
Georg Hessmann
Path: text/PasTeX-1.3-7of8.lha
==========
PasTeX 1.3 TeX - Part 8 of 8 - PasTeX/pk/300x300
A very well done Amiga port of the incredibly powerful TeX typesetting
system originally written by Donald Knuth at Stanford University.
Author: Donald Knuth
Georg Hessmann
Path: text/PasTeX-1.3-8of8.lha
==========
WANT 1.017 Searches textfiles for keywords
WANT let's you search a textfile, like INDEX, for one or two "search
terms". If two terms are entered, you may select AND or OR as logical
operators. WANT is very fast. Searches on a 1200 take about one second
for a 1MB file. A full GUI interface and presetable options via tooltypes
make this is a powerful search facility. The output of a search can be
directed to your favorite filereader or text editor. This is version 1.017,
with a planned release of version 2 around December 1994.
WB2.04 & up. ReqTools Library required, but not included. EGREP and GAWK
are required and included. CLI or WorkBench. GiftWare.
IMPORTANT: The docs for WANT are located in WANT/DOCS. Please read
them before installing and using WANT. Installation requires you to
leave all of the included files in their directories.
Author: Will Bow
Colin Thompson
Path: text/WANT-1.017.lha
==========
AIBB 6.5 GUI-based CPU performance tester
AIBB is a system performance analysis tool designed with built-in tests
for exercising CPU, FPU, and graphics portions of system performance.
Comparisons to 4 different machines can be displayed, with a default of
the A600, A1200, A3000/25, and A4000/040 contained within AIBB.
The option to create and/or load data files from other systems for
comparison is also included within the program.
Author: LaMonte Koop
Path: util/AIBB-6.5.lha
==========
AlarmingClock 2.5 Alarm Clock that plays 8SVX sounds
AlarmingClock is an alarm clock that plays a user selectable
IFF 8SVX sound for the alarm. It has 12 or 24 hour modes,
an optional hourly chime and a snooze button. It can be
iconified down to just a title bar or opened to reveal
a graphic user interface.
Author: Brian Neal
Path: util/AlarmingClock-2.5.lha
==========
AmigaWorkStation 1.3a Shows "Windows" like screen during boot
This utility opens Windows like screen during boot and shows some
information about your machine: CPU, FPU, GFX Chips, Kickstart,
memory, current time and date. You can change palette from 7 presets
and select hour system if you want.
Author: Paul Hernik
Path: util/AmigaWorkStation-1.3a.lha
==========
AntiCicloVir 2.3a Link/File/BB/Validator/Memory virus elim
A link virus detector and exterminator. Also detects other types of
viri. This version recognizes: 188 Bootblock, 28 File, 15 Link,
7 Disk-Validator, 11 Trojans, and 17 Bombs. Automatically checks each
inserted disk for boot block and disk-validator viruses. Can scan all
files of a specified directory for known link viruses, and constantly
monitors memory and system vectors. Now public domain and includes
source in assembler.
Author: Matthias Gutt
Path: util/AntiCicloVir-2.3a.lha
==========
ARTM 2.04 Display and control system activity
Amiga Real Time Monitor. Displays and controls system activity such
as tasks, windows, libraries, devices, resources, ports, residents,
interrupts, vectors, memory, mounts, assigns, locks, fonts, hardware,
res_cmds, a little SystemMonitor and display the last Alert.
Author: F. J. Mertens
Dietmar Jansen
Path: util/ARTM-2.04.lha
==========
AutoScroll 1.0 allows use of OS2.0 AUTOSCROLL & NEWLOOK
1. This little proggy allows you to use OS2.0 AUTOSCROLL and
NEWLOOK, which are probably not used by OS1.3 dedicated
programs.
2. AUTOSCROLL flag lets you drag active screen by mouse
movements only (eg. drag screen down, then move pointer to the
bottom of screen and move it down). NOWLOOK flag makes screen's
titlebar and menus to be drawn OS2.0+ style (white background,
underline, 3D gadgets) instead of disgusting 1.3 look.
Author: Marcin Orlowski
Path: util/AutoScroll-1.0.lha
==========
AXDiff 1.0 Graphical comparison & merge utility
AXDiff is a graphical file comparison and merge utility. It allows
you to see files side by side with differences between the files
highlighted. You may move within the files looking at the differences
within context of the rest of the file. A merged file can be created
which contains the lines which do not differ between files along with
user-selected lines from the sections which differ. You can select
either no part, either part, or both parts of the sections which
differ to be written to the merged file. Selectable fonts, sizes, and
other options too.
Author: Jim Lawrie
Path: util/AXDiff-1.0.lha
==========
BReq 1.16 Gadgets for OS selection during startup
This program started out as a simple program to solve a simple
problem - choose to boot into AmigaOS or NetBSD on a machine
that had both options available at startup time BEFORE going
through all of the Startup-Sequence. This was originally done
using Nico Francois' excellent ReqTools package. After requests
came asking for timeout I decided that using Intuition directly
was best so the original version was completely scrapped and
what is now here came to be. I added a timeout and default
feature allowing BReq to go through a default option after a
certain amount of time had passed. Realizing that the timeout
might be quite long I added a blanker (quite simple once I got
the idea of IDCMP) and it was quite silly of me not to make
both buttons (or gadgets rather) alterable - so now both gads
can be altered on the command line.
Author: Eric R. Augustine
Path: util/BReq-1.16.lha
==========
Brik 2.0 Compute & use CRC lists to verify files
A general purpose program that calculates both text and binary cyclic
redundancy codes (CRCs). Text mode CRCs calculated by brik are
portable across systems for files that are in the usual text format on
each system. Binary mode CRCs are portable for files that are moved
from system to system without any change. Brik can be used to verify
and update an embedded checksum header in files. It runs under
MS-DOS, UNIX system V, BSD UNIX, VAX/VMS, and AmigaDOS.
Author: Rahul Dhesi
Path: util/brik-2.0.lha
==========
bsplit 1.0 Split files into pieces by byte count
Split binary files into managable pieces as specified by a byte count.
Similar to the UNIX "split" program, which works with lines, not
bytes.
Author: P. Knoppers
Path: util/bsplit-1.0.lha
==========
CacheFont 1.1 Vastly increase speed of font requsters
CacheFont is a small patch that will dramatically increase the speed of
font requesters. It cuts the access time of a font requester containing
about 100 fonts from 14 seconds (without CacheFont) to half a second (with
CacheFont).
It has been tested extensively on many utilities and many computers
without any problems.
Version 1.1 fixes a bug with Tagged Font Lists. It should now work with
most (if not *all*) software.
Author: Adam Dawes
Path: util/CacheFont-1.1.lha
==========
CFX 5.540 Examines/finds files using criteria
Crunched File eXaminer allows the user to examine and find files using
several different search criteria. CFX knows a huge amount of the current
Amiga filetypes, including a vast number of "cruncher" types. CFX can also
give in-depth disassemblies of crunched files, including most address
crunched files, relocator crunched files, and some major archive crunched
types.
Author: Bob Rye and Marcus Mroczkowski
Path: util/CFX-5.540.lha
==========
chksum 1.0 SVR4 "sum" compatible checksum program
Produces a checksum of a byte stream that should be the same as the
standard SVR4 "sum" program. Note that the "sum" documentation is
misleading, the checksum is NOT simply a 16-bit checksum of all the
bytes.
Author: Fred Fish
Path: util/chksum-1.0.lha
==========
Csh 5.39 Replacement for the shell, like UN*X csh
Replacement for the Amiga shell, similar to UN*X csh. Main features
include over 100 built in commands, 70 functions, new system variables,
file name completion, freely programmable command line editing, file
classes, auto cd, lazy cd, intuition menus for the shell window, automatic
RX-ing, local variables, $( ), statement blocks, high speed, plus much
more.
Author: Andreas M. Kirchwitz
Urban Dominik Mueller
C Borreo
Steve Drew
Matt Dillon
Path: util/Csh-5.39.lha
==========
CX 1.1 replacement of the "Exchange" program
CX is a replacement of the original "Exchange" program from the
Workbench. I wrote it, because I need a program with the ability
of removing all commodities in the system. And I always wanted to
write a commodity.
One of my goals was to be compatible in the using to the original
program, but also offer new methods of executing actions. You can
select all buttons and gadgets by pressing a key on your keyboard,
use the cursor keys to move around in the list of commodities and
other things.
I hope, that this version is mostly bug free.
Author: Fin Schuppenhauer
Path: util/CX-1.1.lha
==========
CXHandler 2.9 CXHandler is an Exchange clone
CXHandler is an Exchange clone.
The program is controlable via keys and is font sensitiv.
Author: Martin Stengle
Path: util/CXHandler-2.9.lha
==========
Degrader 1.30 Tries to get badly written progs to work
Degrades your machine to try and get badly written programs
to work. Allows you to block memory, add non-autoconfig
memory at reset, turn audio filter on or off, intercept
privilege violation errors, switch off cache/burst modes and
can slow down a fast machine. Also can swap the boot drive
and force 50Hz or 60Hz. Will do things straight away, after
one reset or after every reset.
Author: Chris Hames
Path: util/Degrader-1.30.lha
==========
DisplayMode 1.22 Screenmode preferences clone
Screenmode preferences clone, controlable via keys and is font sensitive.
Author: Martin Stengle
Path: util/DisplayMode-1.22.lha
==========
DMS 1.11 A popular disk archiver
DISK-Masher is a utility that allows users to compress and archive
entire floppy disks. Offers four different types of compression,
extended virus checking of boot blocks, and data encryption. Requires
at least 512K of memory.
Author: SDS Software
Path: util/dms-1.11.lha
==========
Event 1.14 Tool to remember everything you want.
With this software you have a good tool to remember everything you want.
Features:
---------
* requiers only 12 kB memory
* the event´s are storend in a data file
* multitasking friendly
* "gliding" event´s
* loading only the Event´s from the current day
Author: Klaus Muckenhuber
Path: util/Event-1.14.lha
==========
fifolib 37.4 A general fifo library implementation
FIFO: is like PIPE: but is based on fifo.library rather than its own
implementation. Fifo.library is a general fifo library implementation
that supports named fifos, writing to a fifo from a hardware
exception, multiple readers on a fifo with each getting the same data
stream, efficient reading, and automatic or manual flow control.
Programs that require non-blocking IO can access one side of a FIFO:
connection via the fifo.library instead of the FIFO: device.
Author: Matt Dillon
Path: util/FifoLib-37.4.lha
==========
FindTask 1.01 Finds program by its own task's name,
This little program (OS2.0+) is dedicated to all of you using AmigaDOS
commands in all-kind scripts. This prog lets you find any program
actually being executing, by its own task's name, e.g.:
FINDTASK TASK='DeliTracker v1.30'
looks for Delitracker v1.30. If the task is not exists WARN
(RC=ERRORCODE = 5) will be returned, in other case OK code (0) will
be set.
Author: Marcin Orlowski
Path: util/FindTask-1.01.lha
==========
Flush 1.2 Flushes unused libs, devices, and fonts
Flushes unused libraries, devices and fonts from RAM. Options include
flush all, flush one type, report but don't flush, report which got
flushed, and amount of memory regained. Runs from CLI, under AmigaDOS
2.04 or later.
Author: Gary Duncan
Path: util/Flush-1.2.lha
==========
FontPrefs 2.14 Font preferences clone
Alternative to the standard font preferences program.
Font Sensitive.
Author: Martin Stengle
Path: util/FontPrefs-2.14.lha
==========
GClock 1.0 A Clock
A device for informing you of the exact quantum of your existance.... Yeah,
yeah, it's a clock.
Author: James W Savage
Path: util/GClock-1.0.lha
==========
GED 1.1 programmer's editor
GoldED is a text editor for programmers. Suggested hardware:
OS3.1, 68030, 2MB RAM, HD. Features: fast scrolling, folding,
project management, DICE-C compiler frontend, ARexx port (380+
commands), asynchronous printing, flexible GUI: any mode, any
font, user defined menus, user-defined gadgets, preview mode,
keymap editor. OS3.1 support (AppWindows, MenuHelp, HotKey),
localized, ASCII character selection table, character set remap
(e.g MS-DOS to Amiga), APC (automatic phrase completion),
AutoCase (automatic case correction), smart indention after
user-defined keywords, QuickFunc scanner (displays a table of all
functions defined in your source code; language-independant),
includes & AutoDocs reference function, file hunter, global
search across file boundaries, macro recording, formatter,
QuickStarter, AutoBackup facility, XPK-support, clipboard
support, online spell checker, icon dock based on Stefan Becker's
ToolManager. Additional tools: PCL (Laser/DeskJet) printing
utility HiSpeed, Recover (recovers text buffers after reboot),
compiler frontend GUIMake and more. English, German & French
documentation provided as AmigaGuide files. v1.0, commercial
demo, binary only. Authors: Dietmar Eilert (GoldED), Rico
Krasowski (GUIMake) and others.
Author: Dietmar Eilert
Path: util/GoldED-1.1.lha
==========
History 37.5 List and control shell command history.
This is a 2.04/3.0/3.1 compatible version of the history command. It
allows listing, saving, loading, and execution of the standard
con-handler command line history.
Author: Andy Finkel
Path: util/History-37.5.lha
==========
HyperANSI 1.08 ANSI character & graphics editor
HyperANSI is a program which allows you to easily create ANSI
graphics with minimum effort.
NOTE: Unlike previous releases of HyperANSI, this version has
no "crippled" features, and no longer displays that
annoying delay screen.
Author: Mike D. Nelson
Path: util/HyperANSI-1.08.lha
==========
IFFMaster 1.3 Show IFF structure & chunk contents
IFF Master is a program that allows you to have a view inside the structure
of IFF files. It is not yet another picture viewer or sound sample player,
but it displays the internal entities (chunks) of a file. For example, the
headers of pictures (ILBM) or sound samples (8SVX) are displayed in clear,
so you can directly read the size and depth of the image or the sampling rate.
Current features (V 1.3) include:
- MUI application
- localized GUI (with AmigaOS 2.1 or later)
- Extensive chunk type library (currently 37 form types, 234 known chunks,
60 of these with comprehensive structure description)
- Chunk contents are presented alternatively as structure, text or hexdump
- Bit fields and enumeration types are displayed in clear
- Fixed point values are printed in decimal (e.g. 8SVX.VHDR.Volume)
- Callback hooks for special attributes, e.g. the Mode-ID
inside the CAMG chunk is de-referenced (e.g. "PAL: Hires").
- clipboard support
- chunk contents and partial FORMs can be saved
- AppWindow and AppIcon
Features new for V 1.3:
BUG prefs window: close gadget now functioning
BUG Cycle chain (TAB) now works in all windows
NEW new chunk types: IAND, IANM, DR2D, RGB8, RGBN, SPLT
NEW hex numbers get a user-chosen indicator, construction of hex dumps is
now more than 3 times faster
NEW IFFs can be saved, even nested FORMs, e.g. images inside animations
NEW Implemented some editing capabilities (delete chunks)
NEW Preferences can be saved
Author: Kay Drangmeister
Path: util/IFFMaster-1.3.lha
==========
Installer 1.26 Commodore's Amiga Installer utility
Archive distribution of the Amiga Installer utility direct from
Commodore. Contains V1.24 of the Installer, documen- tation and
examples for developers to use when developing their software. Also
contains various enhancements and fixes detailed in the documentation
enclosed. The documen- tation has also been enhanced and brought up
to date.
Author: Commodore Business Machines
Path: util/Installer-1.26.lha
==========
LastAlert2 2.1 Will show the last alert or guru
Are you tired of always having troubles with finding your pen and paper just
to write down the last guru you got. Now this problem is solved because I
have written a small and quick program that will show the last alert or guru
there have been. If you don't get the point of what this program can be used
to then try to read the rest of this user manual.
Author: Jørgen Da Larsen
Path: util/LastAlert2-2.1.lha
==========
LhA 1.38 A fast LhArc compatible archiver
A very fast archiver that is compatible with MS-DOS LhArc V1.13 and
LHA V2.13, as well as the Amiga LhArc. LhA is very memory efficient,
has been written with stability and reliability in mind, has carefully
optimized compression and decompression routines, is multitasking
reentrant and pure, handles multiple volume archives (registered
version only), and more.
Author: Stefan Boberg
Path: util/LhA-1.38.lha
==========
LHArc 1.30 Archive program using LZHUF compression
An archive program like Arc and Zoo, with a heavy emphasis maximum
compression for minimum archive size, using LZHUF compression.
Author: Paolo Zibetti
Path: util/LHArc-1.30.lha
==========
LHWarp 1.40 Disk packer for .lhw files
A program which will read tracks directly from your floppy disk,
compress them using adaptive huffman encoding, and output them to a
file. The resulting file can be used by lhwarp to reconstruct an
image of the original disk.
Author: Jonathan Forbes
Path: util/LHWarp-1.40.lha
==========
LockColors 1.1a Complete control over Workbench Palette
LockColors uses the OS3.0+ specific ObtainPen() to give you
complete control over your WorkBench palette. Now you can have
correct colors for all your MagicWb-icons independently of your
screendepth. Tested with Enforcer/Mungwall.
NOTE: Your WorkBench must be deeper than 8 colors to use LockColors,
because on screens <=8 colors all the pens are locked by the
system (and all the pens can be altered with the system palette
editor, so LockColors really has no practical use on those screens)
- Version 1.1a fixes an annoying problem when LockColors
has to use its TimeOut feature. After this, all pens
locked by LockColors seemed to be systemlocked.
- LockColors no longer blocks your Workbench from closing.
- Fixed some bugs and added some requested features.
Author: Torgeir Hovden
Path: util/LockColors-1.1a.lha
==========
LockPointer 1.0 Locks pointer on X or Y coordinate
1. I have written program (OS2.04+) because no one modeler of available
rendering programs (mainly REAL 3D, REAL 3Dv2, IMAGINE) has very
useful possibiliy to lock pointer on any (X or Y) axis, like does
DPaint or Brilliance. This program do this insted of it.
2. Running LOCK POINTER via CLI/SHELL you cannot change keys used to lock
the pointer, just only install or remove program. The only way to
modify those keys is using ToolTypes described in program's icon:
LOCK_X - after this tool type you should place key which lock
pointer on X axis.
LOCK_Y - as above but lock on Y axis.
SWITCH - this key pressed together with LMB will switch program
on/off without kicking it out of memory.This little program (OS2.0+) is dedicated to all of you using AmigaDOS
commands in all-kind scripts. This prog lets you find any program
actually being executing, by its own task's name, e.g.:
FINDTASK TASK='DeliTracker v1.30'
looks for Delitracker v1.30. If the task is not exists WARN
(RC=ERRORCODE = 5) will be returned, in other case OK code (0) will
be set.
Author: Marcin Orlowski
Path: util/LockPointer-1.0.lha
==========
MagicA2024 1.0 Patch to remap MagicWB icons for A2024
MagicA2024 is a commodity and patches the private routines of the
icon.library to recolor MagicWB icons to the four A2024 colors. The
bitmap is adjusted on the fly, extra chip memory is needed for the new
image, the blitter is used.
Author: Klaus Melchior
Path: util/MagicA2024-1.0.lha
==========
MagicCXDansk ?.? Danish catalogs for MagicCX 1.0
These are the danish catalogs for MagicCX 1.0. They were made by Flemming
Lindeblad.
Simply unpack the archive to your "LOCALE:" directory. All needed directories
will be generated then, ie. a MagicCX directory in your locale:catalogs/dansk
directory.
Author: Flemming Lindeblad
Path: util/MagicCXDansk.lha
==========
MemMinister 1.1 monitors your memory-usage
MemMinister is a small tool, giving you information about the amount of free
memory at your system. It shows you independant values for chipmemory and
fastmemory, and of course even the total amount of free memory. MemMinister also
offers features like a snap-funktion, monitoring the memory-usage since the time
you snapped the values, and a flush-gadget, offering you an easy way to flush
your memory from all currently not used libraries, fonts, devices and more. It
is small, simple to use and very CPU-economical!
Author: Marcus Ohlstrom
Path: util/MemMinister-1.1.lha
==========
mg 3b Small GNU EMACS style editor with AREXX
A public domain EMACS style editor, that uses the GNU EMACS command
set. Includes AREXX support.
Author: Mike Meyer, et al.
Path: util/mg-3b.lha
==========
MousoMeter 3.12 Measures mouse movement
MousoMeter is a cute little commodity that measures the distance (km)
you "drive" with your Mouse. Counters for daily and total usage. Using
the time MousoMeter has been active, it can also calculate your average
"mouse-speed" in meters/hr. (However, don't let your boss see this!)
MousoMeter also records the number of "Mouse-Clicks". With a
sophisticated program like MousoMeter, it should be easy to get
a government grant to scientifically study Carpal-Tunnel!!
Author: Wolfgang Breyha, Michael Matzl
Path: util/MUIMousoMeter-3.12.lha
==========
PackIt 1.18a CLI frontend for PowerPacker + wildcards
PackIt is a CLI only program to replace the crunch and decrunch commands
that came with PowerPacker (Copyright Nico Francois). PackIt features: 1)
Single command for crunching and decrunching 2) Automatic crunching or
decrunching of data files depending on whether it is allready crunched or
not. 3) Files can be encrypted, and passwords can be entered on the
command line or via a requester. 4) Will not crunch executables, unless
told to do so. Note: PackIt will only crunch the executables as a data
files you will not be able to run them. 5) Automatic replacement of source
file unless a destination is given. 6) Directories can be specified as a
destination, in that case files will be crunched/decrunched into that dir.
7) Allows use of wildcards to crunch/decrunch whole directories. 8)
Automatic adding and removing of .pp suffixes from data files. 9) Icon
files will not be crunched unless you want them to. 10) Default options
can now be stored in ENV:PackIt
Author: Michael J Barsoom
Path: util/PackIt-1.18a.lha
==========
PaletteTool 1.4 3.0/AGA public screen palette tool.
Palette tool that opens and operates on the default public screen. Has
gadtools-based user interface, with keyboard equivalents for many of the
program functions. Features include full 8 bit RGB support, full AmigaDOS
3.0-compliant locked pen "protect" mode as well as standard "free" mode,
and fully integrated "color by name" selection, with a built-in database of
507 colors.
Supports the follow actions: color spread (multi-directional), individual
color copy, individual color exchange, rotation of palette in both
direction, cycling of entire palette in both directions with adjustable
cycle speed, and individual color "show" (flash selected color).
The user interface consists of separately controllable windows for main
functions, color palette (2 sizes), and "color by name" selection.
Features a single-level "undo" capability. Iconifiable, with color cycling
controls also available from the programs iconified state
Features ability of pick a pen/color from anywhere on the current screen
(using the mouse pointer and either the space bar or middle-mouse-button).
This type of color "pick" can also be used with the copy, spread, and
exchange actions. Also features a "panic" restore button (and key
equivalent) so you can restore the palette to where it was at program
start.
Author: Timothy B. Kreuzer
Path: util/PaletteTool-1.4.lha
==========
PerfMeter 2.2 CPU usage, load and memory meter
PerfMeter is the X's PerformanceMeter-style little meter, which shows
CPU usage, CPU load, chip, fast and public memory, and uptime. The
items can be selected from the Project menu.
Author: Juha Tuominen
Path: util/PerfMeter-2.2.lha
==========
PicBoot 2.3 Displays picture during bootup
Have you removed all output in your 2.0+ startup, and only see a
black screen during boot? Wouldn't it be nice to have a picture
instead? A picture that disappeared when the Workbench screen opened?
If so, PicBoot is certainly a program for you. What it will do is to
read any IFF file containing an ILBM picture - or a GIF file - and show
that picture. As soon as the Workbench screen appears (or you press any
mouse-button), the picture will go away.
Author: Magnus Holmgren
Path: util/picboot-2.3.lha
==========
PopUpScreen 1.02 Pops specified screen to front
This program lets you simply add hotkey to any program
you wish. To do so you will have to use (for now!) FKey
program (or similar one), enter there your hotkey combination,
switch COMMAND to RUN PROGRAM and type into the window as follow:
POPUPSCREEN SCR <ScreenName>
where SCREENNAME is the name of program's screen you want to pop up.
NOTE: ScreenName is CASE SENSITIVE! You can also use part of name
(abbrev.) by typing eg:
SCR=Psych (for screen named: "Psychodelic").
When you are poping screen up its first window will be made active.
If you do not like this use NOACTIVATE flag to disable it. When you
call this program 2nd time your screen will be sent to back and
WorkBench screen will be fronted!
Switch INFO prints out all named screens and its size and depeth.
Switch HELP will (surprise, surprise) help you... :-)
Author: Marcin Orlowski
Path: util/PopUpScreen-1.02.lha
==========
PPrefs 2.0 Screenmode promotion utility
PPrefs is a screenmode promotion utiltity which allows you to promote every
available screenmode of your system (including HAM and EHB modes) to
another mode. You simply select a source and a destination mode and every
program that wants to open a screen with the source mode, instead will open
a screen with the destination mode. If you want that some very special
programs get their very special screenmode or don't get promoted at all,
besides that "mode to mode" promotion, PPrefs supports task/screen specific
promotion, as well..address
Author: Olaf Gschweng
Path: util/PPrefs-2.0.lha
==========
ProxWatch 1.2 Localized Font-Sensitive Watch
o ProxWatch is a small utility for your WBStartup drawer.
o The string used for displaying date and time is totally user definable.
o The window can be opened on your favourite public screen.
o Using a borderless backdrop window the watch text may be visually
attached to the screen title.
Author: Boris Folgmann
Path: util/ProxWatch-1.2.lha
==========
RandomX 1.1 Creates very random numbers
This utility creates a random number within the specified range
(e.g between 1000 and 25312 or 1.001 and 2.321). It uses several
sources to create the random number. This utility can be used in
startup-sequences on amigas without clocks and it will produce a
different number every time.
Author: Andrew Leppard
Path: util/RandomX-1.1.lha
==========
RemindMe 1.0 Events reminder
A simple events reminder. Reads the events from a file and checks if the
user should be notified. Weekly, monthly, yearly and unique events are
possible.
Author: Marcus J. Stratmann
Path: util/RemindMe-1.0.lha
==========
ReNum 2.1 Changes the names of sequences of files
ReNum is a utility that changes the names of sequences of files. ReNum
is aimed at helping animators that wishes to transfer files, say from
Real3d to DPaint. Real3d calls IFF-files generated as an anim something
like this: Pic0, Pic1, ... (from now on called "Dynamic format"), while
DPaint wants multiple IFF-files to build an animation, to be in alpha-
betical order, often meaning you have to rename your pictures to Pic000,
Pic001, and so on ("Fixed format"). This can be very tedious, especially
if you have a hundred or more pictures. No more of that, because that's
exactly what ReNum does! ReNum can also convert files from Fixed to
Dynamic.
ReNum is also capable of changing the names (and not the framenumbers)
or the numbering of a sequence.
Author: Emil Åström
Path: util/ReNum-2.1.lha
==========
ReqChange 3.4 Makes system use Reqtools requesters
ReqChange is a program that patches Intuition, ASL, ARP and REQ to use
the ReqTools requesters instead. It also adds a couple of extra features,
like an AssignWedge, the possibility to send ARexx-commands when a patched
requester appears, and several options to configure how the patches should
behave.
Author: Magnus Holmgren
Path: util/ReqChange-3.4.lha
==========
ReqTools 2.2c Very useful shared requester library
A standard Amiga shared runtime library which makes it a lot quicker
and easier to build standard requesters into your programs. Designed
with CBM's style guidelines in mind, so that the resulting requesters
have the look and feel of AmigaDOS 2.0. Includes a demo and glue/demo
sources.
Author: Nico Francois
Path: util/ReqTools-2.2c.lha
==========
RO 0.81 A MUI-Based FileManager
RO is a new Intuition-controlled, fully user-configurable file manager for
OS 2.04 and newer. RO's mighty features will assist and help you on your
daily work with your Amiga. With RO there is no need to learn those
cryptic shell commands, because you have the complete power of your Amiga
in one hand.
Due to the usage of MUI you are able to configure the look and feel of this
tool as you like it. MUI is the Magic User Interface developed by Stefan
Stuntz which should be installed on every Amiga. It is an object oriented
system to create and maintain graphical user interfaces. Users of MUI
based applications have the ability to customize nearly every pixel of a
programs interface according to their personal taste.
Author: Oliver Rummeyer
Path: util/RO-0.81.lha
==========
RSys 1.3 Very comprehensive system monitor
Very comprehensive system monitor. Provides information on just about
everything you could possibly want information on! (Plus some...)
Documentation in German, but program speaks english. Version 1.3,
includes source.
Author: Rolf Böhme
Path: util/RSys-1.3.lha
==========
RunList 1.2 Commodity lauches commonly used programs
RunList is a commodity to lauch commonly used programs. When activated,
a user defined list of commands is displayed, any one of which can be
activated by clicking on a gadget or by pressing a function key. If
required, RunList can also add an item to the Workbench 'Tools' menu to
activate RunList.
Author: David Kinder
Path: util/RunList-Kinder-1.2.lha
==========
RunList 1.1 Commodity to run programs from a list.
RunList, RunListBig and RunListSmall are small tools helping to run
programs. They are all the same, differ only by size in order to
meet ones need.
Author: Heinz Reinert
Path: util/RunList-Reinert-1.1.lha
==========
Scout 1.3 Tool to monitor computer system.
A tool that allows you to monitor your computer system. It displays
many different things - like tasks, ports, assigns, expansion boards,
resident commands, interrupts, etc. - and you can perform some
certain actions on them.
For example you can freeze tasks, close windows and screens, release
semaphores or remove locks, ports and interrupts.
An implemented ARexx interface makes you these actions available, too.
Author: Andreas Gelhausen
Path: util/Scout-1.3.lha
==========
ScreenFool 2.6 public screen manager utility
ScreenFool is a utility for Amigas with Release 2 or later of the operating
system. It allows you to work with so-called "Public" screens and thereby
enhance your productivity, by allowing Workbench screen (and other)
applications to use a different screen than the regular Workbench.
Author: Chris Lawrence
Path: util/ScreenFool-2.6.lha
==========
ScreenTool 1.04 Switch between screens using hotkeys.
On the MS-DOS´en you have the keyboard shortcut CTRL-TAB to cycle
between the applications, and the CTRL-ESC shortcut to view all
running applications in a requester.
With ScreenTool you have the MS-Windows CTRL-ESC function on your
Amiga. You get a requester with all available screens - so you have a
tool to handle comfortable all open screens.
ScreenTool is not a Commodity, because it is very small - and so it is
fast enough by starting from the disk. By activating with FKey you
can start a lot of tools with the keyboard, without using any
additional RAM.
So ScreenTool will save your CPU and RAM!
Author: Klaus Muckenhuber
Path: util/ScreenTool-1.04.lha
==========
Set_Icon ?.? AppIcon for mass icon manipulation
A WorkBench AppIcon with the following functions:
1. The program creates an appicon on to which you drop your icon,
if there isn't an existing .info file a new one will be created,
otherwise all the information from the old icon will be copied
to the new one (e.g tooltypes, stacksize and so on). You can do
more than one icon at a time using the shift drag method.
2. The program will copy the image from the first icon to all the
others, if any of the files do not have a .info file, one will
be created.
3. The program will copy the Tool Types and (Tool) from the first icon
to all the others, if any of the files do not have a .info file, one
will be created.
4. The program will remove the .info files of the selected files.
Author: Kev Crate
Path: util/Set_Icon.lha
==========
SIP 2.20 System Information Program - Monitor
A quick and reliable System Monitor for OS V2.04+ Users,
which includes a very intuitive GUI.
It looks very similar to one of the first and best programs in this
sector (we do not mention names here), but is FREEWARE, not Shareware.
Author: Andreas R. Kleinert
Path: util/SIP-2.20.lha
==========
SkoEd 1.14 A Programmer's Editor Revisited.
Well, when I got my Amiga I found that there were no editors around that I
really liked. Some were good and did quite a lot but they were not me. So I
wrote SkoEd which is in may ways my personal preference. SkoEd is by no means
the begin and end all of Editors; there are a number of areas which need
improving. It is however at a stage that I feel can be released to the Amiga
community.
FEATURES
Here is a list of what SkoEd can do.
- Remaps keystrokes to commands.
- Customisable.
- Multiple Files.
- Multiple Views of files.
- Clones the WorkBench Screen and WorkBench Screen text font.
- Set own Screen and Font.
- Reads,Writes and Converts IBM format files.
- A FAST Find/Replace.
- Column Blocks.
- Clipboard support.
- AutoSave after time limit expires.
- Folding.
- Match {([])}.
- Count number of braces {} in a file.
- Word Completion. (I like this one :-)
- Zoom/Explode of Views.
- Memory file to remember files previously loaded and cursor location.
- Unlimited Marks to allow you to go instantly to a marked location.
- Undelete n Deletes. (n is setable)
- Iconify.
- Script file bit is handled correctly (and is settable).
- AREXX
- User Configurable Gadget Strip
- And other, less obvious functions.
Here are the areas I wish to improve.
- A full macro language. (although with Arexx do I need this?)
- A full Undo as opposed to Undelete (and Redo).
- Repeat command.
- Allow user to create own menu strips.
Author: David McPaul
Path: util/SkoEd-1.14.lha
==========
SMenu 1.0 Powerful and fast-working screenselector
SMenu is a screenselector with several nice features.
o It is a Commodity.
o It works fast, because the list of screens can be accessed with a
simple mouseclick or a hotkey.
o The configuration is done in a GUI.
o Full keyboard support.
o It is possible to define a hotkey for each screen.
o ARexx support.
Author: Jon Anders Haugum
Path: util/SMenu-1.0.lha
==========
SnoopDos 3.0 System and application monitor
SnoopDos
SnoopDos is a utility that allows you to monitor a variety of system
operations carried out by programs on your Amiga. This includes what
files a program is trying to open, what fonts, libraries, devices and
environment variables it is looking for, and so on.
This is very useful if you are trying to figure out why a certain
application won't work properly. Usually, it's because the application
can't find a certain configuration file, library or device.
This version has many new features not present in version 1.7. Among
the most important are a full GUI, support for many new functions,
support for monitoring programs compiled with GNU C, and a packet
debugger for programmers.
Author: Eddy Carroll
Path: util/SnoopDos-3.0.lha
==========
Sort 1.34 Sorts ASCII-Files, many features
A cli-based text file sort utility. Includes options for:
Ascending/descending sort; Limiting sort to a range of lines;
Case-sensitivity; Delete empty lines; Delete multiple occurences
of same line; Overwrite input file; Sort and write file in reverse
order of input; Join files and sort. Includes both English and
German binaries.
Author: Rüdiger Werner
Path: util/Sort-1.34.lha
==========
StarBlank 3.1 Screen blanker shows moving stars
Screen blanker commodity that shows a moving
star field. Features user definable timeout,
hot keys, and an insty-blank hot key. Based
upon Leo Schwab's "stars" screen hack.
Author: Brian Neal
Path: util/StarBlank-3.1.lha
==========
SuperDark 2.1a A very nice modular screen blanker
A screen blanker with some special features. It is similar to the
AfterDark screen blanker in the PC and Mac worlds. Features include a
lot of different screen effects via "modular" screen blankers, a
screen locker, and more.
Author: Thomas Landspurg
Path: util/SuperDark-2.1a.lha
==========
SysInfo 3.24 Gives comprehensive system information
A brand new release of this popular program. It reports interesting
information about the configuration of your Amiga, including some
speed comparisons with other configurations, versions of the OS
software, and much more. Binary only.
Author: Nic Wilson
Path: util/SysInfo-3.24.lha
==========
TAUI ?.? A Magic User Interface for your lharc.
TAUI is a short program that gives you
a Magic User Interface for your lharc.
TAUI uses MUI (the Magic User Interface),
(c) Stefan Stuntz.
(Though, Stefan, could you tell me why
to install the 2.0 includes to get
the program run under MUI 2.0 ???)
It should work with your lharc, though I
have just tried lha yet. Every archives
action is configured thru Tooltypes, so
you can use any lharc.
Author: Jürgen Schober
Path: util/TAUI.lha
==========
true 1.0 Simple versions of "true" and "false"
Trivially simple versions of "true" and "false" UNIX
like shell commands, for cases where the shell in use
has no equivalent builtin command.
Author: Fred Fish
Path: util/true-1.0.lha
==========
UOut 1.1 Joins and decodes split uuencoded files.
It will take the separate files, join them together (stripping
out all non-uucode data in the process), call your uudecode
program on the resulting file, and then delete the uucode files.
Author: Roland Acton
Path: util/UOut-1.1.lha
==========
UUCode 36.9 Optimized stand-alone uuencode/uudecode.
Encode files for network transmission and decode transferred files. This
standard encoding algorithm converts three 8-Bit groups (bytes) to four
6-Bit groups (sextets) of printable characters, which can then be sent over
networks which don't support eight data bits.
These tools were written because the existing programs did not fit my
personal needs. The others were either inconvenient to use, too slow or too
oversized, so I decided to write optimized versions myself. Both tools are
pure and can be made resident.
Author: Ralph Seichter
Path: util/UUCode-36.9.lha
==========
uuInOut 1.03 A pair of very rapid uuencode/decoders.
A pair of very rapid uuencode/decoders. They beat anything currently
available on aminet by a good margin, especially on decoding. Very fast,
pure, small and 100% assembly. Automatically detects and takes advantage
of 68020+. Requires Workbench 2.04+.
Author: Nicolas Dade
Path: util/uuInOut-1.03.lha
==========
UUxT 3.0b CLI/GUI-based UUEncoder/UUDecoder
UUxT is a full featured UUencode/decoder with the following features:
o File splitting when encoding for easy mailing/posting.
o Batch decoding. (You can decode many files at once, as well as
split files without joining them. UUxT also has wildcard support.)
o Batch encoding. You can encode multiple files into one text file.
o Automatically skips over mail headers and other junk that can end
up inencoded files.
o Ability to LhA compress files for you, and then uuencode the
resulting compressed file, all in one step, thus saving you time.
You can also decode and de-LhA in one step.
UUxT also comes with UUxT-GUI 2.0, a full featured workbench interface for
UUxT. UUxT-GUI 2.0 now supports all of UUxT 3.0's features including
batch encoding, decoding, etc.
Author: Asher Feldman
Path: util/UUxT-3.0b.lha
==========
Vim 3.0 A clone of the UNIX "vi" text editor
Vi IMproved. A clone of the UNIX text editor "vi". Very useful for
editing programs and other plain ASCII text. Full Vi compatibility
(except Q command) and includes most "ex" commands. Extra features
above Vi: Multilevel undo, command line history, improved command line
editing, command typeahead display, command to display yank buffers,
possi- bility to edit binary files, file name stack, support for Manx
QuickFix, shows current file name in window title, on-line help, text
block operations, etc.
Includes a few bug fixes and new features like tag stack, file marks,
jump list, visual (first select area, then operator), use of cursor
keys in insert mode, column mode copy/cut/paste, macro programming by
example, text formatting, termcap support, etc. Also runs under UNIX
and MSDOS.
Author: Bram Moolenaar, et. al.
Path: util/Vim-3.0.lha
==========
VirusZII 1.07 Popular boot and file virus detector
Release II of this popular virus detector that recognizes many boot
and file viruses. The filechecker can also decrunch files for
testing. The memory checker removes all known viruses from memory
without 'Guru Meditation' and checks memory for viruses regularly.
VirusZ has easy to use intuitionized menus including keycuts for both
beginners and experienced users.
Author: Georg Hörmann
Path: util/VirusZII-1.07.lha
==========
VMM 2.1 Virtual memory for Amigas w/68030/68040
VMM implements a virtual memory manager for Amigas with a 68040 or
68030 processor. A nice GUI to enter all parameters and to disable
certain tasks and load files from using virtual memory is also
provided.
V2.1 fixes various bugs in V2.0a. It also includes a write buffer for
pages going out to disk, making VMM a lot faster. Paging to a file
has also been speeded up significantly.
Author: Martin Apel
Path: util/VMM-2.1.lha
==========
VT 2.68 A comprehensive virus utility package.
A very good virus checker, however all the documentation is in
German.
Author: Heiner Schneegold
Path: util/VT-2.68.lha
==========
WBPrint 1.03 Prints text on WB screens title bar
This program lets you print any text (like DOS command ECHO)
on Workbench screen's title bar. WB screen will be fronted
automagically. You can also turn screen flash on. Note: there is
only one screen line for your text, therefore there are no special
chars (like *n) supported (maximal number of letters in on the WB's!
title bar depends on current WB font widch (check the proportional
one!).
Author: Marcin Orlowski
Path: util/WBPrint-1.03.lha
==========
WhatIs 3.5 Can detect file types
WhatIs.library can detect file types and is fully parametrable by an
ascii file. You can describe file types and they will be recognized
by the library. A few tools are also included.
Author: Sylvain Rougier
Pierre Carrette
Path: util/WhatIs-3.5.lha
==========
Xoper 2.4 Monitor and control system activity
Very comprehensive program to monitor and control system activity.
Monitor cpu, memory usage, ports, interrupts, devices. Close windows,
screens, show loaded fonts or last Guru code number. Clean up memory,
flush unused libraries, devices, fonts. etc. and a whole bunch more!
Spawns its own process. A very handy background task to have loaded.
Author: Werner Gunther
Path: util/Xoper-2.4.lha
==========
RAKE 1.1 XPK packer sublibrary
RAKE is an XPK packer sublibrary which implements a highly optimized
form of the popular LZ77 compression algorithm. It uses static huffman
coding for the 'len' and a three-step coding for the 'offset'
information. The major feature of this packer is the highly optimized
algorithm for tracking down redundant data.
Author: Karsten Dageförde
Path: util/xpkRAKE-1.1.lha
==========
Yass 2.3 Yet another Screen Selector Commodity
Yet Another Screen Selector, a commodity with several nice
features such as: Completely controllable via keyboard (of
course you can use your mouse, if you really want to); Shows
Screens and Windows (option); Shows PublicScreenname or
ScreenTitle (option); Ability to change the default Public
screen; Opens window even on non-public screens (option).
Font-sensitive; Resizeable window. Binary only.
Author: Albert Schweizer
Path: util/Yass-2.3.lha
==========
zoo 2.1 Portable archiver with good compression
Zoo is used to create and maintain collections of files in compressed
form. It uses a Lempel-Ziv compression algorithm that gives space
savings in the range of 20% to 80% depending on the type of file data.
Zoo can store and selectively extract multiple generations of the same
file. Data can be recovered from damaged archives by skipping the
damaged portion and locating undamaged data with the help of fiz(1).
Author: Rahul Dhesi, et al.
Path: util/zoo-2.1.lha