Larry Gilbert
L2G
Involved Projects and Packages
X.Org X Window System fonts
X.Org X11 Protocol headers
X.Org X11 developmental X transport library
This project's goal is a repository for Fedora versions 6 through 11 providing updates to the very latest time zone and locale information available.
Current versions of all upstream data:
* tzdata: 2010b
* CLDR: 1.17.1
DateTime is a class for the representation of date/time combinations, and is part of the Perl DateTime project. For details on this project please
see http://datetime.perl.org/. The DateTime site has a FAQ which may help answer many "how do I do X?" questions. The FAQ is at http://datetime.perl.org/?FAQ.
These Perl modules are included:
* DateTime
* DateTime::Duration
* DateTime::Infinite
* DateTime::Helpers
* DateTime::LeapSecond
* DateTime::Locale and family
* DateTime::TimeZone and family
LONG DESCRIPTION
GOES
HERE
DateTime::Incomplete is a class for representing partial dates and times.
DateTime::Set is a module for datetime sets. It can be used to handle two different types of sets.
pytz brings the Olson tz database into Python. This library allows accurate
and cross platform timezone calculations using Python 2.3 or higher. It
also solves the issue of ambiguous times at the end of daylight savings,
which you can read more about in the Python Library Reference
(datetime.tzinfo).
Amost all (over 540) of the Olson timezones are supported.
This package contains data files with rules for various timezones around
the world.
This is an experimental, stripped-down openSUSE build expressly for running OpenStreetMap's Tiles@Home software.
This package will be submitted to openSUSE:Factory soon. All changes for the Factory package should get tested here first.
This module serves as an easy, clean alternative to Exporter. Unlike
Exporter, it is not subclassed, but it simply exports a custom import()
into your namespace.
This module allows you to run a subprocess and redirect stdin, stdout,
and/or stderr to files and perl data structures. It aims to satisfy 99%
of the need for using system, qx, and open3 with a simple, extremely
Perlish API.
This module provides methods for obtaining information about the currently
running perl interpreter. It originally began life as code in the
Module::Build project, but has been externalized here for general use.
The intent of this module is to provide a series of basic tests for 80% of
the testing you will need to do for scripts in the script (or bin as is
also commonly used) paths of your Perl distribution.
Author:
-------
Adam Kennedy
This module serves as an easy, clean alternative to Exporter. Unlike
Exporter, it is not subclassed, but it simply exports a custom import()
into your namespace.
This module allows you to run a subprocess and redirect stdin, stdout,
and/or stderr to files and perl data structures. It aims to satisfy 99%
of the need for using system, qx, and open3 with a simple, extremely
Perlish API.
This module provides methods for obtaining information about the currently
running perl interpreter. It originally began life as code in the
Module::Build project, but has been externalized here for general use.
The intent of this module is to provide a series of basic tests for 80% of
the testing you will need to do for scripts in the script (or bin as is
also commonly used) paths of your Perl distribution.
Author:
-------
Adam Kennedy
This module serves as an easy, clean alternative to Exporter. Unlike
Exporter, it is not subclassed, but it simply exports a custom import()
into your namespace.
This module allows you to run a subprocess and redirect stdin, stdout,
and/or stderr to files and perl data structures. It aims to satisfy 99%
of the need for using system, qx, and open3 with a simple, extremely
Perlish API.
This module provides methods for obtaining information about the currently
running perl interpreter. It originally began life as code in the
Module::Build project, but has been externalized here for general use.
The intent of this module is to provide a series of basic tests for 80% of
the testing you will need to do for scripts in the script (or bin as is
also commonly used) paths of your Perl distribution.
Author:
-------
Adam Kennedy