SciPy (pronounced "Sigh Pie") is open-source software for mathematics, science, and engineering. It is also the name of a very popular conference on scientific programming with Python. The SciPy library depends on NumPy, which provides convenient and fast N-dimensional array manipulation. The SciPy library is built to work with NumPy arrays, and provides many user-friendly and efficient numerical routines such as routines for numerical integration and optimization. Together, they run on all popular operating systems, are quick to install, and are free of charge. NumPy and SciPy are easy to use, but powerful enough to be depended upon by some of the world's leading scientists and engineers. If you need to manipulate numbers on a computer and display or publish the results, give SciPy a try!
SLiP is a quick, alternative syntax for creating and editing XML data by hand and if you know Python, it should also be familiar. not my cup of tea but has a nice comparison of other lightweight xml notations
Disco is an oss implementation of the Map-Reduce framework for distributed computing. Disco supports parallel computations over large data sets on unreliable cluster of computers. The Disco core is written in Erlang. Users of Disco typically write jobs in Python, which makes it possible to express even complex algorithms or data processing tasks often only in tens of lines of code. This means that you can quickly write scripts to process massive amounts of data. Disco was started at Nokia Research Center as a lightweight framework for rapid scripting of distributed data processing tasks. This far Disco has been succesfully used, for instance, in parsing and reformatting data, data clustering, probabilistic modelling, data mining, full-text indexing, and log analysis with hundreds of gigabytes of real-world data. Linux is the only supported platform but you can run Disco in the Amazon's Elastic Computing Cloud.
Collection of practical examples of the Python programming language. These might be useful if you want to see some of the features without actually learning the language itself.
Based in part on over 3,000 newsgroup articles written by Python veteran Fredrik Lundh since 1995, this book provides brief descriptions and sample scripts for all standard modules in the Python 2.0 library.
"I could write a spelling corrector that achieves 80 or 90% accuracy at a rate of at least 10 words per second." and did, a guide on how it works is included also.
Draw Freely, Open Source vector graphics editor, with capabilities similar to Illustrator, Freehand, CorelDraw, or Xara X using the W3C standard Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) file format. Supported SVG features include shapes, paths, text, etc
a free source code editor which supports several programming languages running under the MS Windows environment. based on Scintilla edit component (a very powerful editor component)
provides free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries. The emphasis is on libraries which work well with the C++ Standard Library. The libraries are intended to be widely useful, and are in regular use by thousands of programmers across a broad spectr
a program that examines source code and reports possible security weaknesses (``flaws'') sorted by risk level. It's very useful for quickly finding and removing at least some potential security problems before a program is widely released to the public.
a modern alternative to object middleware such as CORBA™ or COM/DCOM/COM+. Ice is easy to learn, yet provides a powerful network infrastructure for demanding technical applications.
oh-my-zsh - A community-driven framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes 40+ optional plugins (rails, git, OSX, hub, capistrano, brew, ant, macports, etc), over 80 terminal themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.
R. Rehurek, und P. Sojka. Proceedings of the LREC 2010 Workshop on New Challenges for NLP Frameworks, Seite 45--50. Valletta, Malta, ELRA, (22.05.2010)http://is.muni.cz/publication/884893/en.
C. Bolz, A. Cuni, M. Fijalkowski, und A. Rigo. Proceedings of the 4th Workshop on the Implementation, Compilation, Optimization of Object-Oriented Languages and Programming Systems, Seite 18--25. ACM, (2009)
C. Yeung, N. Gibbins, und N. Shadbolt. Proceedings of the International Workshop on Emergent Semantics and Ontology Evolution (ESOE2007) at ISWC/ASWC2007, Busan, South Korea, November, (2007)
S. Bird. Proceedings of the COLING/ACL on Interactive presentation sessions, Seite 69--72. Stroudsburg, PA, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2006)
A. Rigo, und S. Pedroni. OOPSLA'06: Companion to the 21st ACM SIGPLAN conference on Object-oriented programming systems, languages, and applications, Seite 944--953. ACM, (2006)
M. Tatu. ACL 2005, 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, Proceedings of the Conference, 25-30 June 2005, University of Michigan, USA, The Association for Computational Linguistics, (2005)