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https://hackage.haskell.org/package/yesod-0.10.1.2 | yesod: Creation of type-safe, RESTful web applications. Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts yesod : Creation of type-safe, RESTful web applications. [ library , mit , web , yesod ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] A RESTful web framework with strong compile-time guarantees of correctness. It also affords space efficient code, highly concurrent loads, and portability to many deployment backends (via the wai package), from CGI to stand-alone serving. Yesod also focuses on developer productivity. Yesod integrates well with tools for all your basic web development (wai, persistent, and shakespeare/hamlet) The Yesod documentation site http://www.yesodweb.com/ has much more information, including on the supporting packages mentioned above. Modules [ Index ] Yesod Flags Automatic Flags Name Description Default ghc7 Enabled threaded Build with support for multithreaded execution Enabled Use -f <flag> to enable a flag, or -f -<flag> to disable that flag. More info Downloads yesod-0.10.1.2.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers GregWeber , MichaelSnoyman , psibi , MaxGabriel , parsonsmatt , jgt For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 0.0.0 , 0.0.0.1 , 0.0.0.2 , 0.2.0 , 0.3.0 , 0.3.1 , 0.3.1.1 , 0.4.0 , 0.4.0.1 , 0.4.0.2 , 0.4.0.3 , 0.4.1 , 0.5.0 , 0.5.0.1 , 0.5.0.2 , 0.5.0.3 , 0.5.1 , 0.5.2 , 0.5.3 , 0.5.4 , 0.5.4.1 , 0.5.4.2 , 0.6.0 , 0.6.0.1 , 0.6.0.2 , 0.6.1 , 0.6.1.1 , 0.6.1.2 , 0.6.2 , 0.6.3 , 0.6.4 , 0.6.5 , 0.6.6 , 0.6.7 , 0.7.0 , 0.7.1 , 0.7.2 , 0.7.3 , 0.8.0 , 0.8.1 , 0.8.2 , 0.8.2.1 , 0.9.1 , 0.9.1.1 , 0.9.2 , 0.9.2.1 , 0.9.2.2 , 0.9.3 , 0.9.3.1 , 0.9.3.2 , 0.9.3.3 , 0.9.3.4 , 0.9.4 , 0.9.4.1 , 0.10.1 , 0.10.1.1 , 0.10.1.2 , 0.10.1.3 , 0.10.1.4 , 0.10.2 , 1.0.0 , 1.0.0.1 , 1.0.0.2 , 1.0.1 , 1.0.1.1 , 1.0.1.2 , 1.0.1.3 , 1.0.1.4 , 1.0.1.5 , 1.0.1.6 , 1.1.0 , 1.1.0.1 , 1.1.0.2 , 1.1.0.3 , 1.1.1 , 1.1.1.2 , 1.1.2 , 1.1.3 , 1.1.3.1 , 1.1.4 , 1.1.4.1 , 1.1.5 , 1.1.6 , 1.1.7 , 1.1.7.1 , 1.1.7.2 , 1.1.8 , 1.1.8.1 , 1.1.8.2 , 1.1.9 , 1.1.9.1 , 1.1.9.2 , 1.1.9.3 , 1.1.9.4 , 1.2.0 , 1.2.0.1 , 1.2.1 , 1.2.1.1 , 1.2.2 , 1.2.2.1 , 1.2.3 , 1.2.4 , 1.2.5 , 1.2.5.1 , 1.2.5.2 , 1.2.5.3 , 1.2.6 , 1.2.6.1 , 1.4.0 , 1.4.1 , 1.4.1.1 , 1.4.1.2 , 1.4.1.3 , 1.4.1.4 , 1.4.1.5 , 1.4.2 , 1.4.2.1 , 1.4.3 , 1.4.3.1 , 1.4.4 , 1.4.5 , 1.6.0 , 1.6.0.1 , 1.6.0.2 , 1.6.1.0 , 1.6.1.1 , 1.6.1.2 , 1.6.2 , 1.6.2.1 Dependencies attoparsec (>=0.10) , base (>=4 && <5) , blaze-builder (>=0.2.1.4 && <0.4) , blaze-html (>=0.4.1.3 && <0.5) , bytestring (>=0.9.1.4 && <0.10) , Cabal , containers (>=0.2 && <0.5) , directory (>=1.0 && <1.2) , fast-logger (>=0.0.2 && <0.1) , filepath (>=1.1) , hamlet (>=0.10 && <0.11) , http-types (>=0.6.1 && <0.7) , monad-control (>=0.3 && <0.4) , parsec (>=2.1 && <4) , process , shakespeare-css (>=0.10 && <0.11) , shakespeare-js (>=0.11 && <0.12) , shakespeare-text (>=0.10 && <0.11) , template-haskell , text (>=0.11 && <0.12) , time (>=1.1.4) , transformers (>=0.2.2 && <0.3) , unix-compat (>=0.2 && <0.4) , wai (>=1.1 && <1.2) , wai-extra (>=1.1 && <1.3) , wai-logger (>=0.1.2) , warp (>=1.1 && <1.2) , yesod-auth (>=0.8.1 && <0.9) , yesod-core (>=0.10.1 && <0.11) , yesod-form (>=0.4.1 && <0.5) , yesod-json (>=0.3.1 && <0.4) , yesod-persistent (>=0.3.1 && <0.4) [ details ] License BSD-3-Clause Author Michael Snoyman <michael@snoyman.com> Maintainer Michael Snoyman <michael@snoyman.com> Uploaded by GregWeber at 2012-03-01T18:23:44Z Stability Stable --> Category Web , Yesod Home page http://www.yesodweb.com/ Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/yesodweb/yesod Distributions Arch: 1.6.2.1 , Debian: 1.6.1.0 , Fedora: 1.6.2.1 , FreeBSD: 1.4.1.5 , LTSHaskell: 1.6.2.1 , NixOS: 1.6.2.1 , Stackage: 1.6.2.1 , openSUSE: 1.6.2.1 Reverse Dependencies 50 direct, 25 indirect [ details ] Executables yesod Downloads 165521 total (302 in the last 30 days) Rating 2.0 (votes: 8) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs uploaded by user Build status unknown [ no reports yet ] Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/da/about | Om Scrive - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Scrive + e-Boks: Send og underskriv via Danmarks mest pålidelige digitale postkasse. Danmark English Global Sverige Suomi Nederland France Norge United Kingdom Deutschland Help Centre Salg +45 89 88 96 60 Kontakt Log Ind Primary navigation Produkter Løsninger Ressourcer Firma Priser Help Centre Kontakt Køb nu Prøv Gratis Søg Åbn menu Hjem / Om Scrive Vi transformerer virksomheder ved at tage hånd om tillidsfulde relationer Vi skaber bedre kunderejser og hjælper dig med samme. Kontakt os Gratis prøvetid Vores historie I 2010 udrullede to universitetsvenner en e-signeringstjeneste, så spoken-word artister fra udlandet kunne underskrive eksterne talent-aftaler for deres optræden i Sverige. Vores grundlæggere så hurtigt, at alle virksomheder har brug for underskrevne aftaler, og i dag er en tredjedel af alle britiske bilsalg underskrevet med Scrive. Hvordan kom vi hertil? Kort sagt, ved at være kundeorienteret: vi lytter, vi forstår, vi reagerer. I erkendelsen af, at signering af en aftale kun er en lille brøkdel af en meget større forretningsproces, fungerer vi som en guide til din digitale transformationsrejse. PRØV GRATIS Kundeorienteret. Hvem er ikke det? Hos Scrive udvider vi definitionen af “kunde” til at omfatte både interne og eksterne aktører: abonnenter på vores tjenester, partnere, medarbejdere, kolleger – alle dem som vi interagerer med. Dette kundesyn skaber en kultur af integritet og inklusion og danner grundlaget for vores kerneværdier: Vi bekymrer os faktisk om vores kunder, både interne og eksterne Vi udfordrer vores kunder, deres markedsopfattelser og best practices Vi forpligter os til at få dig lige præcis derhen du vil Vi samarbejder for at bygge bedre og stærkere kunderejser ARBEJD FOR SCRIVE Hvorfor Scrive? Scrive leverer løsninger til e-signaturer og e-ID-løsninger til små og mellemstore virksomheder samt til store virksomheder. Scrive tilbyder en sikker og hurtig måde at underskrive og administrere elektroniske dokumenter på. Hvorfor Scrive Scrive Farvergade 2, 4. 1463 København K Kontakt formular Footer navigation Produkter eSign Online eSign GO eSign API eSign Forms Forms Builder eID Hub ID Check Løsninger Brancher Casestudier Integrationer Priser Priser eSign Online Priser eSign API Priser eSign GO Priser ID Check Priser eID Hub Priser eSign Forms Priser Forms Builder Ressourcer Viden Trust Centre Help Centre Udfordringer vi løser PDF Digital Signaturer vs Elektroniske Signaturer – den komplette danske guide Digitalisation Eksterne ressourcer Verificere et dokument API-dokumentation Systemstatus Scrive brand guidelines Firma Om Scrive Partners Karriere Kontakt os Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive Kontakt os Bliv klogere på, hvordan Scrive kan hjælpe dig med at bygge bedre kundeoplevelser. Kontakt Om Scrive Scrive blev grundlagt i 2010 og blev hurtigt Nordens førende e-sign leverandør. I dag har virksomheder fra hele verden tillid til, at Scrive kan hjælpe dem med at automatisere deres onboarding- og aftaleprocesser, med løsninger drevet af elektronisk signatur og identifikation. Som en betroede digitaliseringspartner, vejleder Scrive alle størrelser af virksomheder fra højt regulerede brancher, med deres digitale transformationsrejser: der fremmer kundeoplevelse, sikkerhed, compliance og datakvalitet. Scrive har hovedkvarter i Stockholm, støttes af Vitruvian Partners og har over 200 medarbejdere. Certifikater Scrive er ISO 27001:2022-certificeret. Certificeringen dækker alle aktiver, der er en del af Scrives SaaS-produkter: e-signaturplatformen (Scrive eSign Online, Scrive GO og Scrive eSign API) og Scrive eID Hub, som alle er i overensstemmelse med erklæringen om anvendelighed. Certificeringerne for vores datacentre kan findes på følgende sider for AWS . Vi er leverandør på en SKI-rammeaftale og kan levere e-signering, elektroniske identifikation og digitaliseringsløsninger på konkurrencedygtige vilkår til det offentlige. Som SKI-leverandør lever vi op til en række kriterier inden for kvalitet, miljø og samfundsansvar. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/xml-1.3.13/docs/Text-XML-Light-Lexer.html | Text.XML.Light.Lexer Source Contents Index xml-1.3.13: A simple XML library. Safe Haskell None Text.XML.Light.Lexer Synopsis class XmlSource s where uncons :: s -> Maybe ( Char , s) linenumber :: XmlSource s => Integer -> s -> LString data Scanner s = Scanner ( Maybe ( Char , s)) (s -> Maybe ( Char , s)) customScanner :: (s -> Maybe ( Char , s)) -> s -> Scanner s type LChar = ( Line , Char ) type LString = [ LChar ] data Token = TokStart Line QName [ Attr ] Bool | TokEnd Line QName | TokCRef String | TokText CData tokens :: XmlSource source => source -> [ Token ] tokens' :: LString -> [ Token ] special :: LChar -> LString -> [ Token ] qualName :: LString -> ( QName , LString ) tag :: LString -> [ Token ] attribs :: LString -> ([ Attr ], Bool , [ Token ]) attrib :: LString -> ( Attr , LString ) attr_val :: LString -> ( String , LString ) dropSpace :: LString -> LString string :: LString -> ( String , LString ) break' :: (a -> Bool ) -> [(b, a)] -> ([a], [(b, a)]) breakn :: (a -> Bool ) -> [(b, a)] -> ([a], [(b, a)]) decode_attr :: String -> String data Txt = TxtBit String | CRefBit String decode_text :: [ Char ] -> [ Txt ] cref_to_char :: [ Char ] -> Maybe Char num_esc :: String -> Maybe Char cvt_char :: Int -> Maybe Char Documentation class XmlSource s where Source Methods uncons :: s -> Maybe ( Char , s) Source Instances XmlSource String XmlSource ByteString XmlSource ByteString XmlSource Text XmlSource Text XmlSource ( Scanner s) linenumber :: XmlSource s => Integer -> s -> LString Source data Scanner s Source This type may be used to provide a custom scanning function for extracting characters. Constructors Scanner ( Maybe ( Char , s)) (s -> Maybe ( Char , s)) Instances XmlSource ( Scanner s) customScanner :: (s -> Maybe ( Char , s)) -> s -> Scanner s Source This type may be used to provide a custom scanning function for extracting characters. type LChar = ( Line , Char ) Source type LString = [ LChar ] Source data Token Source Constructors TokStart Line QName [ Attr ] Bool TokEnd Line QName TokCRef String TokText CData Instances Show Token tokens :: XmlSource source => source -> [ Token ] Source tokens' :: LString -> [ Token ] Source special :: LChar -> LString -> [ Token ] Source qualName :: LString -> ( QName , LString ) Source tag :: LString -> [ Token ] Source attribs :: LString -> ([ Attr ], Bool , [ Token ]) Source attrib :: LString -> ( Attr , LString ) Source attr_val :: LString -> ( String , LString ) Source dropSpace :: LString -> LString Source string :: LString -> ( String , LString ) Source Match the value for an attribute. For malformed XML we do our best to guess the programmer's intention. break' :: (a -> Bool ) -> [(b, a)] -> ([a], [(b, a)]) Source breakn :: (a -> Bool ) -> [(b, a)] -> ([a], [(b, a)]) Source decode_attr :: String -> String Source data Txt Source Constructors TxtBit String CRefBit String Instances Show Txt decode_text :: [ Char ] -> [ Txt ] Source cref_to_char :: [ Char ] -> Maybe Char Source num_esc :: String -> Maybe Char Source cvt_char :: Int -> Maybe Char Source Produced by Haddock version 2.13.2 | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/enumerator | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged enumerator 33 packages have this tag. [Merge tag] (trustees only) Related tags: library (32), bsd3 (20), deprecated (15), mit (10), control (7), data (7), parsing (7), text (7), web (4), xml (4), network (3), codec (2), compression (2), gpl (2), ... Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers ChannelT 11 0.0 1 Generalized stream processors ( bsd3 , control , enumerator , iteratee , library , pipes , proxies ) 2018-01-28 0.0.0.7 pthariensflame attoparsec-enumerator (deprecated) 47 0.0 23 Pass input from an enumerator to an Attoparsec parser. ( deprecated , enumerator , library , mit , parsing , text ) 2015-05-16 0.3.4 JohnMillikin attoparsec-text-enumerator 5 0.0 2 (deprecated) ( enumerator , library , mit , parsing , text ) 2012-01-30 0.2.0.1 FelipeLessa blaze-builder-enumerator 33 0.0 13 Enumeratees for the incremental conversion of builders to bytestrings. ( bsd3 , data , enumerator , library ) 2015-04-01 0.2.1.0 MichaelSnoyman , SimonHengel , SimonMeier , ThomasSutton coroutine-enumerator (deprecated) 6 0.0 1 Bridge between the monad-coroutine and enumerator packages. ( concurrency , deprecated , enumerator , library ) 2011-12-31 0.1.1 MarioBlazevic enumerator (deprecated) 112 0.0 98 Reliable, high-performance processing with left-fold enumerators ( data , deprecated , enumerator , library , mit ) 2013-10-13 0.4.20 JohnMillikin enumerator-fd 8 0.0 1 Enumerator instances for monads-fd classes ( enumerator , library , mit ) 2011-11-21 0.1.0.2 JohnMillikin enumerator-tf 5 0.0 1 Enumerator instances for monads-tf classes ( enumerator , library , mit ) 2011-12-30 0.1.1 JohnMillikin expat-enumerator (deprecated) 8 0.0 1 Enumerator-based API for Expat ( deprecated , enumerator , library , mit , parsing , text , xml ) 2010-12-05 0.1.0.3 JohnMillikin filesystem-enumerator (deprecated) 5 0.0 1 Enumerator-based API for manipulating the filesystem. ( deprecated , enumerator , library , mit , system ) 2012-04-09 0.1.1 JohnMillikin folds 35 2.0 5 Beautiful Folding ( bsd3 , comonads , data , enumerator , library ) 2022-05-18 0.7.8 EdwardKmett , EricMertens , ryanglscott http-enumerator (deprecated in favor of http-conduit ) 211 0.0 23 HTTP client package with enumerator interface and HTTPS support. (deprecated) ( bsd3 , deprecated , enumerator , library , web ) 2012-04-22 0.7.3.3 MichaelSnoyman iterIO 5 0.0 4 Iteratee-based IO with pipe operators ( bsd3 , data , enumerator , library , system ) 2012-04-19 0.2.2 AmitLevy , DavidMazieres , DanielBGiffin iterio-server 10 0.0 2 Library for building servers with IterIO ( bsd3 , enumerator , library , network ) 2012-04-19 0.3 AmitLevy json-enumerator (deprecated in favor of aeson ) 14 0.0 3 Pure-Haskell utilities for dealing with JSON with the enumerator package. (deprecated) ( bsd3 , deprecated , enumerator , json , library ) 2012-01-19 0.0.1.2 MichaelSnoyman libxml-enumerator (deprecated) 21 0.0 1 Enumerator-based API for libXML's SAX interface ( deprecated , enumerator , library , mit , parsing , text , xml ) 2011-04-06 0.5 JohnMillikin lzma-enumerator 11 0.0 1 Enumerator interface for lzma/xz compression. ( bsd3 , codec , compression , enumerator , library ) 2012-04-18 0.1.3 NathanHowell machines 95 2.5 34 Networked stream transducers ( bsd3 , control , enumerator , library ) 2025-03-03 0.7.4 EdwardKmett , EricMertens , ryanglscott machines-attoparsec 3 0.0 0 Parse machines streams with attoparsec parsers. ( bsd3 , control , data , enumerator , library , parsing , text ) 2019-01-31 0 davean machines-encoding 2 0.0 0 Transcode encodings with machines. ( bsd3 , control , data , enumerator , library , text ) 2019-01-31 0 davean netstring-enumerator (deprecated) 6 0.0 1 Enumerator-based netstring parsing ( deprecated , enumerator , gpl , library , network , parsing ) 2012-10-20 0.1.1 JohnMillikin network-enumerator (deprecated) 26 0.0 6 Enumerators for network sockets ( data , deprecated , enumerator , library , mit ) 2012-11-25 0.1.5 JohnMillikin pcap-enumerator (deprecated) 12 0.0 1 Convert a pcap into an enumerator. ( bsd3 , deprecated , enumerator , library , network ) 2014-09-08 0.5 KatsutoshiItoh pipes-conduit 4 0.0 1 Conduit adapters ( bsd3 , control , enumerator , library ) 2012-03-10 0.0.1 PaoloCapriotti pipes-core (deprecated in favor of pipes ) 3 0.0 7 Compositional pipelines ( bsd3 , control , deprecated , enumerator , library ) 2012-04-09 0.1.0 PaoloCapriotti pipes-extra 9 0.0 1 Various basic utilities for Pipes. ( bsd3 , control , enumerator , library ) 2012-06-09 0.2.0 PaoloCapriotti servant-conduit 10 0.0 3 Servant Stream support for conduit. ( bsd3 , enumerator , library , servant , web ) 2024-08-30 0.16.1 AlpMestanogullari , DavidJohnson , GaelDeest , phadej , MatthiasFischmann , maksbotan , hecate , arianvp , janus servant-machines 12 0.0 1 Servant Stream support for machines ( bsd3 , enumerator , library , servant , web ) 2024-08-30 0.16.1 AlpMestanogullari , DavidJohnson , GaelDeest , phadej , MatthiasFischmann , maksbotan , hecate , arianvp , janus twitter-enumerator (deprecated in favor of twitter-conduit ) 16 0.0 1 Twitter API package with enumerator interface and Streaming API support. ( bsd3 , deprecated , enumerator , library , web ) 2012-03-17 0.0.3 TakahiroHimura xml-enumerator (deprecated in favor of xml-conduit ) 93 0.0 11 Pure-Haskell utilities for dealing with XML with the enumerator package. (deprecated) ( bsd3 , deprecated , enumerator , library , xml ) 2012-01-02 0.4.4.1 MichaelSnoyman xml-enumerator-combinators 3 0.0 1 Parser combinators for xml-enumerator and compatible XML parsers. ( bsd3 , enumerator , library , xml ) 2011-04-06 0.1 AristidBreitkreuz yajl-enumerator (deprecated) 22 0.0 1 Enumerator-based interface to YAJL, an event-based JSON implementation ( deprecated , enumerator , gpl , json , library , parsing , text ) 2012-10-28 0.4.1 JohnMillikin zlib-enum 29 0.0 8 Enumerator interface for zlib compression ( codec , compression , enumerator , mit ) 2014-05-20 0.2.3.1 MalteSommerkorn | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/FpMLv53 | FpMLv53: A binding for the Financial Products Markup Language (v5.3) Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts FpMLv53 : A binding for the Financial Products Markup Language (v5.3) [ financial , library , xml ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] FpML, the Financial Products Markup Language, is the business exchange standard for electronic dealing and processing of financial derivatives instruments. It establishes a protocol for sharing information on, and dealing in, swaps, derivatives, and structured products. It is based on XML, the standard meta-language for describing data shared between applications. All categories of over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives will eventually be incorporated into the standard. This package is an automatically-generated binding to version 5.3 of the FpML standard. The object-oriented typing discipline of the original XSD definition of FpML has been translated into Haskell's algebraic types. Type classes for parsing from, and outputting to, XML documents are instantiated for all types. Modules [ Index ] Data FpML V53 Data.FpML.V53.Asset Data.FpML.V53.CD Data.FpML.V53.Com Data.FpML.V53.Doc Data.FpML.V53.Enum Data.FpML.V53.Eqd Events Data.FpML.V53.Events.Business Data.FpML.V53.FX Data.FpML.V53.Generic Data.FpML.V53.IRD Data.FpML.V53.Main Data.FpML.V53.Mktenv Data.FpML.V53.Msg Notification Data.FpML.V53.Notification.CreditEvent Option Data.FpML.V53.Option.Bond Processes Data.FpML.V53.Processes.Recordkeeping Reporting Data.FpML.V53.Reporting.Valuation Data.FpML.V53.Riskdef Data.FpML.V53.Shared Data.FpML.V53.Shared.EQ Data.FpML.V53.Shared.Option Data.FpML.V53.Standard Swaps Data.FpML.V53.Swaps.Correlation Data.FpML.V53.Swaps.Dividend Data.FpML.V53.Swaps.Return Data.FpML.V53.Swaps.Variance Data.FpML.V53.Valuation Xmldsig Core Data.Xmldsig.Core.Schema Downloads FpMLv53-0.1.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers MalcolmWallace For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 0.1 Dependencies base (<=6) , HaXml (>=1.23.3) [ details ] License LicenseRef-LGPL Copyright (c) 2012, Malcolm Wallace Author Malcolm Wallace <Malcolm.Wallace@me.com> Maintainer author Uploaded by MalcolmWallace at 2012-06-19T10:52:57Z Stability Unknown --> Category Financial , XML Home page http://www.fpml.org/ Source repo head: darcs get http://code.haskell.org/~malcolm/fpml-5.3 Distributions NixOS: 0.1 Reverse Dependencies 1 direct, 0 indirect [ details ] Downloads 1596 total (2 in the last 30 days) Rating (no votes yet) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs uploaded by user Build status unknown [ no reports yet ] Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/xml-1.3.13/docs/Text-XML-Light-Cursor.html | Text.XML.Light.Cursor Source Contents Index xml-1.3.13: A simple XML library. Portability portable Stability provisional Maintainer Iavor S. Diatchki <diatchki@galois.com> Safe Haskell Safe-Inferred Text.XML.Light.Cursor Contents Conversions Moving around Searching Node classification Updates Inserting content Removing content Description XML cursors for working XML content withing the context of an XML document. This implementation is based on the general tree zipper written by Krasimir Angelov and Iavor S. Diatchki. Synopsis data Tag = Tag { tagName :: QName tagAttribs :: [ Attr ] tagLine :: Maybe Line } getTag :: Element -> Tag setTag :: Tag -> Element -> Element fromTag :: Tag -> [ Content ] -> Element data Cursor = Cur { current :: Content lefts :: [ Content ] rights :: [ Content ] parents :: Path } type Path = [([ Content ], Tag , [ Content ])] fromContent :: Content -> Cursor fromElement :: Element -> Cursor fromForest :: [ Content ] -> Maybe Cursor toForest :: Cursor -> [ Content ] toTree :: Cursor -> Content parent :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor root :: Cursor -> Cursor getChild :: Int -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor firstChild :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor lastChild :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor left :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor right :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor nextDF :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor findChild :: ( Cursor -> Bool ) -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor findLeft :: ( Cursor -> Bool ) -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor findRight :: ( Cursor -> Bool ) -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor findRec :: ( Cursor -> Bool ) -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor isRoot :: Cursor -> Bool isFirst :: Cursor -> Bool isLast :: Cursor -> Bool isLeaf :: Cursor -> Bool isChild :: Cursor -> Bool hasChildren :: Cursor -> Bool getNodeIndex :: Cursor -> Int setContent :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor modifyContent :: ( Content -> Content ) -> Cursor -> Cursor modifyContentM :: Monad m => ( Content -> m Content ) -> Cursor -> m Cursor insertLeft :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor insertRight :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor insertGoLeft :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor insertGoRight :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor removeLeft :: Cursor -> Maybe ( Content , Cursor ) removeRight :: Cursor -> Maybe ( Content , Cursor ) removeGoLeft :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor removeGoRight :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor removeGoUp :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Documentation data Tag Source Constructors Tag Fields tagName :: QName tagAttribs :: [ Attr ] tagLine :: Maybe Line Instances Show Tag getTag :: Element -> Tag Source setTag :: Tag -> Element -> Element Source fromTag :: Tag -> [ Content ] -> Element Source data Cursor Source The position of a piece of content in an XML document. Constructors Cur Fields current :: Content The currently selected content. lefts :: [ Content ] Siblings on the left, closest first. rights :: [ Content ] Siblings on the right, closest first. parents :: Path The contexts of the parent elements of this location. Instances Show Cursor type Path = [([ Content ], Tag , [ Content ])] Source Conversions fromContent :: Content -> Cursor Source A cursor for the given content. fromElement :: Element -> Cursor Source A cursor for the given element. fromForest :: [ Content ] -> Maybe Cursor Source The location of the first tree in a forest. toForest :: Cursor -> [ Content ] Source Computes the forest containing this location. toTree :: Cursor -> Content Source Computes the tree containing this location. Moving around parent :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source The parent of the given location. root :: Cursor -> Cursor Source The top-most parent of the given location. getChild :: Int -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source The child with the given index (starting from 0). firstChild :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source The first child of the given location. lastChild :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source The last child of the given location. left :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source The left sibling of the given location. right :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source The right sibling of the given location. nextDF :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source The next position in a left-to-right depth-first traversal of a document: either the first child, right sibling, or the right sibling of a parent that has one. Searching findChild :: ( Cursor -> Bool ) -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source The first child that satisfies a predicate. findLeft :: ( Cursor -> Bool ) -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source Find the next left sibling that satisfies a predicate. findRight :: ( Cursor -> Bool ) -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source Find the next right sibling that satisfies a predicate. findRec :: ( Cursor -> Bool ) -> Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source Perform a depth first search for a descendant that satisfies the given predicate. Node classification isRoot :: Cursor -> Bool Source Are we at the top of the document? isFirst :: Cursor -> Bool Source Are we at the left end of the the document? isLast :: Cursor -> Bool Source Are we at the right end of the document? isLeaf :: Cursor -> Bool Source Are we at the bottom of the document? isChild :: Cursor -> Bool Source Do we have a parent? hasChildren :: Cursor -> Bool Source Do we have children? getNodeIndex :: Cursor -> Int Source Get the node index inside the sequence of children Updates setContent :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor Source Change the current content. modifyContent :: ( Content -> Content ) -> Cursor -> Cursor Source Modify the current content. modifyContentM :: Monad m => ( Content -> m Content ) -> Cursor -> m Cursor Source Modify the current content, allowing for an effect. Inserting content insertLeft :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor Source Insert content to the left of the current position. insertRight :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor Source Insert content to the right of the current position. insertGoLeft :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor Source Insert content to the left of the current position. The new content becomes the current position. insertGoRight :: Content -> Cursor -> Cursor Source Insert content to the right of the current position. The new content becomes the current position. Removing content removeLeft :: Cursor -> Maybe ( Content , Cursor ) Source Remove the content on the left of the current position, if any. removeRight :: Cursor -> Maybe ( Content , Cursor ) Source Remove the content on the right of the current position, if any. removeGoLeft :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source Remove the current element. The new position is the one on the left. removeGoRight :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source Remove the current element. The new position is the one on the right. removeGoUp :: Cursor -> Maybe Cursor Source Remove the current element. The new position is the parent of the old position. Produced by Haddock version 2.13.2 | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/yesod-0.9.3.4 | yesod: Creation of type-safe, RESTful web applications. Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts yesod : Creation of type-safe, RESTful web applications. [ library , mit , web , yesod ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] A RESTful web framework with strong compile-time guarantees of correctness. It also affords space efficient code, highly concurrent loads, and portability to many deployment backends (via the wai package), from CGI to stand-alone serving. Yesod also focuses on developer productivity. Yesod integrates well with tools for all your basic web development (wai, persistent, and shakespeare/hamlet) The Yesod documentation site http://www.yesodweb.com/ has much more information, including on the supporting packages mentioned above. Modules [ Index ] Yesod Flags Automatic Flags Name Description Default ghc7 Enabled threaded Build with support for multithreaded execution Enabled Use -f <flag> to enable a flag, or -f -<flag> to disable that flag. More info Downloads yesod-0.9.3.4.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers GregWeber , MichaelSnoyman , psibi , MaxGabriel , parsonsmatt , jgt For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 0.0.0 , 0.0.0.1 , 0.0.0.2 , 0.2.0 , 0.3.0 , 0.3.1 , 0.3.1.1 , 0.4.0 , 0.4.0.1 , 0.4.0.2 , 0.4.0.3 , 0.4.1 , 0.5.0 , 0.5.0.1 , 0.5.0.2 , 0.5.0.3 , 0.5.1 , 0.5.2 , 0.5.3 , 0.5.4 , 0.5.4.1 , 0.5.4.2 , 0.6.0 , 0.6.0.1 , 0.6.0.2 , 0.6.1 , 0.6.1.1 , 0.6.1.2 , 0.6.2 , 0.6.3 , 0.6.4 , 0.6.5 , 0.6.6 , 0.6.7 , 0.7.0 , 0.7.1 , 0.7.2 , 0.7.3 , 0.8.0 , 0.8.1 , 0.8.2 , 0.8.2.1 , 0.9.1 , 0.9.1.1 , 0.9.2 , 0.9.2.1 , 0.9.2.2 , 0.9.3 , 0.9.3.1 , 0.9.3.2 , 0.9.3.3 , 0.9.3.4 , 0.9.4 , 0.9.4.1 , 0.10.1 , 0.10.1.1 , 0.10.1.2 , 0.10.1.3 , 0.10.1.4 , 0.10.2 , 1.0.0 , 1.0.0.1 , 1.0.0.2 , 1.0.1 , 1.0.1.1 , 1.0.1.2 , 1.0.1.3 , 1.0.1.4 , 1.0.1.5 , 1.0.1.6 , 1.1.0 , 1.1.0.1 , 1.1.0.2 , 1.1.0.3 , 1.1.1 , 1.1.1.2 , 1.1.2 , 1.1.3 , 1.1.3.1 , 1.1.4 , 1.1.4.1 , 1.1.5 , 1.1.6 , 1.1.7 , 1.1.7.1 , 1.1.7.2 , 1.1.8 , 1.1.8.1 , 1.1.8.2 , 1.1.9 , 1.1.9.1 , 1.1.9.2 , 1.1.9.3 , 1.1.9.4 , 1.2.0 , 1.2.0.1 , 1.2.1 , 1.2.1.1 , 1.2.2 , 1.2.2.1 , 1.2.3 , 1.2.4 , 1.2.5 , 1.2.5.1 , 1.2.5.2 , 1.2.5.3 , 1.2.6 , 1.2.6.1 , 1.4.0 , 1.4.1 , 1.4.1.1 , 1.4.1.2 , 1.4.1.3 , 1.4.1.4 , 1.4.1.5 , 1.4.2 , 1.4.2.1 , 1.4.3 , 1.4.3.1 , 1.4.4 , 1.4.5 , 1.6.0 , 1.6.0.1 , 1.6.0.2 , 1.6.1.0 , 1.6.1.1 , 1.6.1.2 , 1.6.2 , 1.6.2.1 Dependencies attoparsec (>=0.10) , base (>=4 && <5) , blaze-builder (>=0.2.1.4 && <0.4) , blaze-html (>=0.4.1.3 && <0.5) , bytestring (>=0.9.1.4 && <0.10) , Cabal (>=1.8 && <1.13) , containers (>=0.2 && <0.5) , directory (>=1.0 && <1.2) , filepath (>=1.1 && <1.3) , hamlet (>=0.10 && <0.11) , http-types (>=0.6.1 && <0.7) , monad-control (>=0.2 && <0.4) , parsec (>=2.1 && <4) , process , shakespeare-css (>=0.10 && <0.11) , shakespeare-js (>=0.10 && <0.11) , shakespeare-text (>=0.10 && <0.11) , template-haskell , text (>=0.11 && <0.12) , time (>=1.1.4) , transformers (>=0.2.2 && <0.3) , unix-compat (>=0.2 && <0.4) , wai (>=0.4 && <0.5) , wai-extra (>=0.4.1 && <0.5) , warp (>=0.4 && <0.5) , yesod-auth (>=0.7 && <0.8) , yesod-core (>=0.9.3.4 && <0.10) , yesod-form (>=0.3 && <0.4) , yesod-json (>=0.2.2 && <0.3) , yesod-persistent (>=0.2 && <0.3) [ details ] License BSD-3-Clause Author Michael Snoyman <michael@snoyman.com> Maintainer Michael Snoyman <michael@snoyman.com> Uploaded by MichaelSnoyman at 2011-12-05T11:38:43Z Stability Stable --> Category Web , Yesod Home page http://www.yesodweb.com/ Source repo head: git clone git://github.com/yesodweb/yesod.git Distributions Arch: 1.6.2.1 , Debian: 1.6.1.0 , Fedora: 1.6.2.1 , FreeBSD: 1.4.1.5 , LTSHaskell: 1.6.2.1 , NixOS: 1.6.2.1 , Stackage: 1.6.2.1 , openSUSE: 1.6.2.1 Reverse Dependencies 50 direct, 25 indirect [ details ] Executables yesod Downloads 165521 total (302 in the last 30 days) Rating 2.0 (votes: 8) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs uploaded by user Build status unknown [ no reports yet ] Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/uk/solutions/cases/avanza | Avanza: Improved onboarding flow - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Collect data and signatures in a single digital flow. United Kingdom France English Global Sverige Danmark Norge Nederland Suomi Deutschland Help Centre Sales +44 20 3318 4726 Contact sales Log in Primary navigation Products Solutions Resources Company Pricing Help Centre Contact sales Buy now Try for free Search Open menu Home / Solutions / Customer Cases / Avanza: Improved onboarding flow Avanza: Improved onboarding flow After signing, new customers are automatically logged into their accounts, making them twice as likely to deposit funds. 120% Increase In signed document conversion rate when signing remotely and electronically 20% Increase In total deposits in the first year of rolling out Scrive eSign 72% Decrease In total average onboarding time while volume of accounts quadrupled You need to accept marketing cookies to see the video. Update your consent "When the document is signed online, we automatically log the customer into their new account...They are more than twice as likely to transfer money to us.” Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Customers of an online bank would naturally expect to be able to conduct their business online, wouldn’t they? Of course they would, and Avanza’s customers had no reason to expect otherwise—with one glaring exception. “We had a problem,” explains Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer for Avanza Bank. “When a new customer signed up on our web site, we had to send them a paper document, and they had to sign it and send it back to us.” In terms of customer experience, this was an unfortunate way to begin the relationship, to say the very least. Not to mention the unnecessary administrative burden it placed on Avanza. “It could take days, or weeks, even months,” says Lindahl. “We wanted to shorten that. And we wanted to do it by signing the document online.” But Avanza’s legal team would only accept e-signing on the condition that the solution met two crucial security requirements: e-identification to authenticate the signing party PKI-based data integrity technology to protect the signed document Avanza challenges Customer experience Customers of an online bank expect the convenience of a digital onboarding process Lost opportunity Weeks of delay before customers can transfer funds into their new account Expense Admin burden of processing signed paper forms, including data errors Avanza saw Scrive as the partner who could deliver all this “We never had a faster accept by Legal on a project,” according to Avanza Solution Architect Henrik Littecke. “They loved Scrive!” By integrating the Scrive eSign service into their onboarding workflow, Avanza gave their new customers a quick and easy way to start using their new account. And in doing so, eased their own admin headaches: no paper, no waiting. To sign the onboarding documents online, customers authenticate themselves using their Swedish BankID, a standard feature of the Scrive signing interface. And the integrity of each signed document is ensured for the lifetime of the document, which is secure and searchable in the Scrive E-archive. “We had a problem. When a new customer signed up on our website, we had to send them a paper document, and they had to sign it and send it back to us.” Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Featured Scrive solution eSign GO Many systems, one solution. eSign GO is a revolutionary system-agnostic solution that gets you where you need to be in one quick leap. Explore eSign Go Let’s talk Request a meeting so you can tell us what you’re trying to solve, and we can look at how Scrive can streamline your business processes and bring value to your organisation. First name * Last name * Email * Phone number This field is required Country code This field is required * Select Phone This field is required * Company name * Number of employees * Select number of employees Message Country * Select country I accept the Privacy Notice . Book demo Related cases Qred: Digitalising Power of Attorney and simplifying internal document management Finance Read the full case Hypoteket: Revolutionising the mortgage market Finance Read the full case BetterBoard: New e-sign solution for the executive boardroom Finance Read the full case Electronic signature E-signing made easy with Scrive’s electronic signature solution. Whether you’re a small startup or a big corporation, Scrive has electronic signature solutions to suit your needs. Explore Electronic signature Footer navigation Products eSign Online eSign GO eSign API eID Hub eSign Forms Forms Builder Solutions Industries Customer cases Integrations Pricing Pricing eSign Online Pricing eSign API Pricing eSign GO Resources Knowledge Hub Trust Centre Help Centre Challenges we solve Digitalisation Company About Partners Career Brand guidelines Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive What are you interested in? This field is required * Electronic signatures - Automate workflows Identification - Enhance security and verification Web forms - Streamline data collection API - Explore integration possibilites I want to know more about Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/nl/nu-kopen | Nu kopen - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Geavanceerde webformulieren: gegevens op maat maken, verzamelen en beveiligen Nederland Sverige English Global Norge Deutschland Danmark Suomi France United Kingdom Help Centre Sales +31 20 808 5903 Neem contact Log in Primary navigation Producten Oplossingen Middelen Bedrijf Prijzen Help Centre Neem contact Nu kopen Gratis proberen Zoek Menu openen Home / Nu kopen Nu kopen Kies het tariefplan dat bij je past en ga direct aan de slag! Vul eerst onderstaand bestelformulier in. We sturen je een offerte ter ondertekening en maken vervolgens je account aan. Bestel eSign Online Vergelijk prijzen en functies of bel ons rechtstreeks op +31 20 808 5903 als u vragen hebt. Ik ga akkoord met de privacyverklaring van Scrive. Versturen Waarom Scrive? Scrive biedt e-onderteken- en eID-oplossingen voor kleine en middelgrote bedrijven, en voor marktleidende organisaties. Scrive biedt een veilige en snelle manier om elektronische documenten te ondertekenen en beheren. Waarom Scrive Scrive Apollolaan 151 1077 AR Amsterdam Contactformulier Footer navigation Producten eSign Online eSign GO eSign API eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Oplossingen Industrieën Klantenervaringen Integratie Prijzen Prijzen eSign Online Prijzen eSign GO Prijzen eSign API Prijzen ID Check Prijzen eID Hub Prijzen eSign Forms Prijzen Forms Builder Middelen Kennis Help Centre Trust Centre Uitdagingen die wij oplossen Externe middelen System system Een document verifiëren API documentation Scrive brand guidelines Bedrijf Over ons Partners Carriere Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive Betalingsopties (Stap 1 van 4) Hoe wil je betalen? Factuur / Bankoverschrijving Kredietkaart | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
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https://hackage.haskell.org/package/happy | happy: Happy is a parser generator for Haskell Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts happy : Happy is a parser generator for Haskell [ bsd2 , development , program ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] Happy is a parser generator for Haskell. Given a grammar specification in BNF, Happy generates Haskell code to parse the grammar. Happy works in a similar way to the yacc tool for C. [ Skip to Readme ] Downloads happy-2.1.7.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers AndreasAbel , IavorDiatchki , JohnEricson , SimonMarlow , int_index , sgraf812 For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates 1.19.9 , 1.19.10 , 1.19.11 , 1.19.12 , 1.20.1 , 2.0 , 2.0.1 , 2.0.2 , 2.1 , 2.1.1 , 2.1.2 , 2.1.3 , 2.1.4 , 2.1.5 , 2.1.6 , 2.1.7 Versions [ RSS ] 1.16 , 1.17 , 1.18 , 1.18.1 , 1.18.2 , 1.18.4 , 1.18.5 , 1.18.6 , 1.18.7 , 1.18.8 , 1.18.9 , 1.18.10 , 1.18.11 , 1.19.0 , 1.19.1 , 1.19.2 , 1.19.3 , 1.19.4 , 1.19.5 , 1.19.6 , 1.19.7 , 1.19.8 , 1.19.9 , 1.19.10 , 1.19.11 , 1.19.12 , 1.20.0 , 1.20.1 , 1.20.1.1 , 1.21.0 , 2.0 , 2.0.1 , 2.0.2 , 2.1 , 2.1.1 , 2.1.2 , 2.1.3 , 2.1.4 , 2.1.5 , 2.1.6 , 2.1.7 ( info ) Change log ChangeLog.md Dependencies array , base (>=4.9 && <5) , containers (>=0.4.2) , happy-lib (==2.1.7) , mtl (>=2.2.1) [ details ] Tested with ghc ==9.12.2, ghc ==9.10.2, ghc ==9.8.4, ghc ==9.6.7, ghc ==9.4.8, ghc ==9.2.8, ghc ==9.0.2, ghc ==8.10.7, ghc ==8.8.4, ghc ==8.6.5, ghc ==8.4.4, ghc ==8.2.2, ghc ==8.0.2 License BSD-2-Clause Copyright (c) Andy Gill, Simon Marlow Author Andy Gill and Simon Marlow Maintainer https://github.com/haskell/happy Uploaded by sgraf812 at 2025-08-16T18:37:13Z Stability stable --> Category Development Home page https://www.haskell.org/happy/ Bug tracker https://github.com/haskell/happy/issues Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/haskell/happy.git Distributions Arch: 2.1.6 , Debian: 1.19.12 , Fedora: 2.0.2 , FreeBSD: 1.19.5 , LTSHaskell: 2.1.7 , NixOS: 2.1.7 , Stackage: 2.1.7 , openSUSE: 2.1.7 Reverse Dependencies 1 direct, 0 indirect [ details ] Executables happy Downloads 199443 total (102 in the last 30 days) Rating 1.25 (votes: 1) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs not available [ build log ] All reported builds failed as of 2025-08-16 [ all 2 reports ] Readme for happy-2.1.7 [ back to package description ] Happy Happy is a parser generator for Haskell 98 (and later). Happy Parsing! Documentation Documentation is hosted on Read the Docs : Online (HTML) PDF Downloadable HTML For basic information of the sort typically found in a read-me, see the following sections of the docs: Introduction Obtaining Happy Contributing Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/reactivate-a-subscription/ | Reactivate a subscription | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Reactivate a subscription We’re rolling out an improved billing experience to make it easier to manage your cloud subscriptions. This means your subscriptions could be managed on either the original or the improved experience. Read more about the key differences The following screenshots indicate how the interface of the two billing experiences differs. Original billing experience Improved billing experience In the original billing experience, the first option on the left is Overview . In the improved billing experience, Subscriptions is the first option on the left. Improved billing experience Who can do this? Billing admins Your app’s data is retained for 15 days (for free subscriptions) or 60 days (for paid subscriptions) after cancellation. If you reactive your subscription within this data retention period, your app's data and preferences will be restored. At the end of the data retention period, your app’s data will be permanently deleted and can’t be recovered. Read our Data Storage FAQs for more information. There are a few ways you can reactivate a canceled or deactivated subscription: either by going to admin.atlassian.com/billing , by starting a new trial on your existing site, or by contacting us . To reactivate a subscription: Go to admin.atlassian.com/billing . Select your billing account if you have more than one. On the Subscriptions page, select the Inactive tab. Find the subscription you’re looking for and select Reactivate . Review your subscription details and select Continue . Review your billing details. If they weren’t added before, you can add them now. If you select or add a new payment method, all subscriptions billed together in the same billing profile will be moved over to the new payment method. Select Confirm . Your reactivated subscription will appear on admin.atlassian.com/billing under Subscriptions > Active . If you run into any issues when reactivating your subscription, contact us . To reactivate a subscription by starting a trial: Go to admin.atlassian.com . Select your organization if you have more than one. Select Apps > Atlassian apps . From the Atlassian Apps screen, select the app you want to add. Select Add to an existing site , and select an existing site for the app. Select Add . You can also do this by logging in to www.atlassian.com , finding the app you want to reactivate, and starting a trial while selecting an existing site. Using these instructions, you can also reactivate your canceled subscription back to a Free plan if you are within the Free plan user limit. Reactivate an add-on subscription Add-on subscriptions are managed within an existing Atlassian app subscription. Our support team can help you reactivate an add-on. To reactivate an add-on subscription: Go to admin.atlassian.com/billing . Select your billing account if you have more than one. On the Subscriptions page, select the Inactive tab. Find the add-on subscription you’re looking for and select Reactivate . Follow the prompts to contact our Support team. 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https://hackage.haskell.org/package/pango-0.13.12.0/reports/2 | Hackage: Build #2 for pango-0.13.12.0 Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Build #2 for pango-0.13.12.0 [ all reports ] Package pango-0.13.12.0 Install PlanningFailed Docs NotTried Tests NotTried Time submitted 2025-03-20 10:31:12.297845977 UTC Compiler ghc-9.6.3 OS linux Arch x86_64 Dependencies Flags none Code Coverage No Code Coverage was submitted for this report. Build log [ view raw ] Resolving dependencies... Error: cabal: Could not resolve dependencies: [__0] next goal: pango (user goal) [__0] rejecting: pango-0.13.12.0 (conflict: pkg-config package pango>=1.0, not found in the pkg-config database) [__0] rejecting: pango-0.13.11.0, pango-0.13.10.0, pango-0.13.8.2, pango-0.13.8.1, pango-0.13.8.0, pango-0.13.6.1, pango-0.13.6.0, pango-0.13.5.0, pango-0.13.4.0, pango-0.13.3.1, pango-0.13.3.0, pango-0.13.2.0, pango-0.13.1.1, pango-0.13.1.0, pango-0.13.0.5, pango-0.13.0.4, pango-0.13.0.3, pango-0.13.0.2, pango-0.13.0.1, pango-0.13.0.0, pango-0.12.5.3, pango-0.12.5.0, pango-0.12.4, pango-0.12.3, pango-0.12.2, pango-0.12.1, pango-0.12.0, pango-0.11.2, pango-0.11.1, pango-0.11.0 (constraint from user target requires ==0.13.12.0) [__0] fail (backjumping, conflict set: pango) After searching the rest of the dependency tree exhaustively, these were the goals I've had most trouble fulfilling: pango Test log No test log was submitted for this report. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/products/id-check | ID Check - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation From paper to AI: why HR must lead the digital leap English Global United Kingdom Sverige Danmark Deutschland Nederland France Norge Suomi Help Centre Contact Scrive Contact sales Log in Primary navigation Products Pricing Solutions Resources Company Pricing Help Centre Contact sales Buy now Try for free Search Open menu Home / Products / ID Check Fast, easy, secure ID verification Empower your support and sales agents to get instant proof of identity before proceeding with sensitive information sharing and secure transactions. Contact us No integration, multi-channel ID Check is a simple, powerful, stand-alone tool you can use alongside any system, in all your channels: phone chat in-person any channel that lets you share a link Simplify your business process Support Expand and streamline your support function Enable your support agents to do more, securely and efficiently. Do away with cumbersome control questions while reducing fraud risk. Financing Accelerate in-store financing Complete financing on the spot with quick, secure ID verification. Shorten processing times with a simple, digital process. How it works step-by-step Step 1 Agent initiates the verification through ID Check Step 2 Share the link with the customer by phone or email – identifies with eID Step 3 Instant success/fail result is returned along with personal information Why ID Check Customer satisfaction Seamless digital experience across all touchpoints Efficiency Eliminate cumbersome security questions and other manual verification methods Plug and play solution No integration, no development cost to implement into your business environment Security Prevent fraud, unauthorised access and identity theft Compliance Meet regulatory requirements like GDPR Trust Drive customer confidence with your commitment to secure handling of personal data Safer and better support for NetOnNets customers and staff Scrive’s ID Check has significantly impacted NetOnNet customer support by increasing efficiency, reducing ID verification time by 67%. It has enhanced security, making both customers and employees feel more secure, and improved customer satisfaction with positive reception to the added security measures. Read the full story Want to know more? Contact Scrive to learn more about ID Check Contact sales Pricing for ID Check Find out more about our different price plans and features included Pricing Electronic signature E-signing made easy with Scrive’s electronic signature solution. Whether you’re a small startup or a big corporation, Scrive has electronic signature solutions to suit your needs. Explore Electronic signature Footer navigation Products eSign Online eSign GO eSign API Scrive QES eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Solutions Industries Customer cases Integrations Pricing Pricing eSign Online Pricing eSign GO Pricing eSign API Pricing ID Check Pricing eID Hub Pricing eSign Forms Pricing Forms Builder Resources Knowledge Hub Trust Centre Help Centre Subscribe to newsletter Challenges we solve Digital signature vs. Electronic Signature Digitalisation Video guides Switch to Scrive More System status Verify a document API Documentation Engineering blog Scrive brand guidelines Company About Partners Career Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/user/hgrano | Huw Grano | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Home Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Huw Grano hgrano is part of the following groups: Maintainers for HaXPath : candidates Package uploaders Click here to manage this account | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.FreeBSD.org/about/ | About FreeBSD | The FreeBSD Project Donate to FreeBSD Home About Introduction Features Privacy Policy Projects Ports Get FreeBSD Release Information Release Engineering Documentation FAQ Handbook Porter's Handbook Developer's Handbook Committer's Guide Manual Pages Presentations and Papers Documentation Project Primer All Books and Articles Community Mailing Lists Forums User Groups Events FreeBSD Journal Developers Project Ideas Git Repository GitHub Mirror Code Review (Phabricator) Wiki Continuous Integration Service Support Vendors Security Information Bug Reports Submitting Bug Reports Web Resources Foundation Monetary Donations Hardware Donations About Features Applications Administration News Events Press Artwork Donations Legal Notices Privacy Policy About FreeBSD What is FreeBSD? FreeBSD is an operating system for a variety of platforms which focuses on features, speed, and stability. It is derived from BSD, the version of UNIX® developed at the University of California, Berkeley. It is developed and maintained by a large community . Cutting edge features FreeBSD offers advanced networking, performance, security and compatibility features today which are still missing in other operating systems, even some of the best commercial ones. Powerful Internet solutions FreeBSD makes an ideal Internet or Intranet server. It provides robust network services under the heaviest loads and uses memory efficiently to maintain good response times for thousands of simultaneous user processes. Advanced Embedded Platform FreeBSD brings advanced network operating system features to appliance and embedded platforms, from higher-end Intel-based appliances to ARM, PowerPC, and MIPS hardware platforms. From mail and web appliances to routers, time servers, and wireless access points, vendors around the world rely on FreeBSD’s integrated build and cross-build environments and advanced features as the foundation for their embedded products. And the Berkeley open source license lets them decide how many of their local changes they want to contribute back. Run a huge number of applications With over 36000 ported libraries and applications , FreeBSD supports applications for desktop, server, appliance, and embedded environments. Easy to install FreeBSD can be installed from a variety of media including CD-ROM, DVD, or directly over the network using FTP or NFS. All you need are these directions . FreeBSD is free While you might expect an operating system with these features to sell for a high price, FreeBSD is available free of charge and comes with the source code. If you would like to purchase or download a copy to try out, more information is available . Contributing to FreeBSD It is easy to contribute to FreeBSD. All you need to do is find a part of FreeBSD which you think could be improved and make those changes (carefully and cleanly) and submit that back to the Project by means of a bug report or a committer, if you know one. This could be anything from documentation to artwork to source code. See the Contributing to FreeBSD article for more information. Even if you are not a programmer, there are other ways to contribute to FreeBSD. The FreeBSD Foundation is a non-profit organization for which direct contributions are fully tax deductible. Please visit the Contact Us page for more information. Last modified on : December 21, 2025 by Alexander Ziaee Legal Notices | © 1995-2026 The FreeBSD Project All rights reserved. The mark FreeBSD is a registered trademark of The FreeBSD Foundation and is used by The FreeBSD Project with the permission of The FreeBSD Foundation . Contact | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/fdp-primer/ | FreeBSD Documentation Project Primer for New Contributors | FreeBSD Documentation Portal About About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Code of Conduct Get FreeBSD Get FreeBSD Release Information Release Engineering Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal FreeBSD Handbook Porter's Handbook Documentation Project Handbook Manual pages Presentations and papers Wiki Books Articles Community Community Get involved Forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Support ♥ Donate Preface Shell Prompts Typographic Conventions Notes, Tips, Important Information, Warnings, and Examples Acknowledgments Chapter 1. Overview 1.1. Documentation in the FreeBSD Ecosystem 1.2. Quick Start 1.3. The FreeBSD Documentation Set Chapter 2. Tools 2.1. Required Tools 2.2. Optional Tools Chapter 3. The Working Copy 3.1. Documentation and Manual Pages 3.2. Choosing a Directory 3.3. Checking Out a Copy 3.4. Updating a Working Copy 3.5. Reverting Changes 3.6. Making a Diff 3.7. Git References Chapter 4. Documentation Directory Structure 4.1. The Top Level, doc/ 4.2. The Directories 4.3. Document-Specific Information 4.4. The Books: books/ 4.5. The Articles: articles/ 4.6. Managing Contributor Lists Chapter 5. The FreeBSD Documentation Build Process 5.1. Rendering AsciiDoc into Output 5.2. The FreeBSD Documentation Build Toolset 5.3. Understanding the Makefile in the Documentation Tree Chapter 6. Asciidoctor Primer 6.1. Overview 6.2. Headings 6.3. Paragraphs 6.4. Lists 6.5. Links 6.6. Images and Icons 6.7. Conclusion Chapter 7. Rosetta Stone 7.1. Comparison between Docbook and AsciiDoc Chapter 8. Translations 8.1. What do i18n and l10n mean? 8.2. Is there a mailing list for translators? 8.3. Are more translators needed? 8.4. What languages do I need to know? 8.5. What software do I need to know? 8.6. How do I find out who else might be translating to the same language? 8.7. No one else is translating to my language. What do I do? 8.8. I have translated some documentation, where do I send it? 8.9. I am the only person working on translating to this language, how do I submit my translation? 8.10. Can I include language or country specific text in my translation? Chapter 9. PO Translations 9.1. Introduction 9.2. Quick Start 9.3. Creating New Translations 9.4. Translating 9.5. Tips for Translators 9.6. Building a Translated Document 9.7. Submitting the New Translation Chapter 10. Weblate Translations 10.1. Introduction 10.2. How to Become a FreeBSD Translator 10.3. Introduce Yourself 10.4. Login to Weblate 10.5. Find a Language Team to Join In 10.6. Translating Online on Weblate 10.7. Translating Offline 10.8. Translation based on Automatic Suggestions 10.9. Proofreading and Weblate Quality Checks 10.10. Building the Translated Document 10.11. Submitting Translations 10.12. FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) Chapter 11. Manual Pages 11.1. Introduction 11.2. Sections 11.3. Markup 11.4. Sample Manual Page Structures 11.5. Testing 11.6. Example Manual Pages to Use as Templates 11.7. Resources Chapter 12. Writing Style 12.1. Tips 12.1.1. Be Clear 12.1.2. Be Complete 12.1.3. Be Concise 12.2. Guidelines 12.3. Style Guide 12.3.1. One sentence per line 12.3.2. Acronyms 12.4. Special Character List 12.5. Linting with Vale 12.5.1. Current Vale Rules 12.5.2. Using Vale Chapter 13. Editor Configuration 13.1. Vim 13.2. Emacs 13.3. nano Chapter 14. Trademarks 14.1. Trademark Symbols 14.2. Trademark Citing Chapter 15. See Also 15.1. The FreeBSD Documentation Project 15.2. Hugo 15.3. AsciiDoctor 15.4. HTML Appendix A. Examples A.1. AsciiDoctor book A.2. AsciiDoctor article Book menu FreeBSD Documentation Project Primer for New Contributors Copyright © 1998-2023 The FreeBSD Documentation Project trademarks FreeBSD is a registered trademark of the FreeBSD Foundation. Git and the Git logo are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Software Freedom Conservancy, Inc., corporate home of the Git Project, in the United States and/or other countries. Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this document, and the FreeBSD Project was aware of the trademark claim, the designations have been followed by the “™” or the “®” symbol. Table of Contents [ Split HTML / Single HTML ] Abstract Thank you for becoming a part of the FreeBSD Documentation Project. Your contribution is extremely valuable, and we appreciate it. This primer covers details needed to start contributing to the FreeBSD Documentation Project, or FDP, including tools, software, and the philosophy behind the Documentation Project. This is a work in progress. Corrections and additions are always welcome. Last modified on : February 18, 2025 by Fernando Apesteguía Home Next Table of Contents Resources Download PDF Edit this page English System Light Dark High contrast About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Get FreeBSD Code of Conduct Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal Manual pages Presentations and papers Previous versions 4.4BSD Documents Wiki Community Get involved Community forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Legal Donations Licensing Privacy Policy Legal notices © 1994-2026 The FreeBSD Project. All rights reserved Made with ♥ by the FreeBSD Community | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.FreeBSD.org | The FreeBSD Project Donate to FreeBSD Home About Introduction Features Privacy Policy Projects Ports Get FreeBSD Release Information Release Engineering Documentation FAQ Handbook Porter's Handbook Developer's Handbook Committer's Guide Manual Pages Presentations and Papers Documentation Project Primer All Books and Articles Community Mailing Lists Forums User Groups Events FreeBSD Journal Developers Project Ideas Git Repository GitHub Mirror Code Review (Phabricator) Wiki Continuous Integration Service Support Vendors Security Information Bug Reports Submitting Bug Reports Web Resources Foundation Monetary Donations Hardware Donations The FreeBSD Project FreeBSD is an operating system used to power modern servers, desktops, and embedded platforms. A large community has continually developed it for more than thirty years. Its advanced networking, security, and storage features have made FreeBSD the platform of choice for many of the busiest web sites and most pervasive embedded networking and storage devices. » Learn More » Get the FreeBSD Journal . New to FreeBSD? . . Download FreeBSD . Supported Releases Production: 15.0 Production: 14.3 Legacy: 13.5 Upcoming: 14.4 Support Lifecycle en ru zh-tw Shortcuts Mailing Lists Reporting Problems FAQ Handbook Ports LATEST NEWS 2025-12-16 New committer: Johan Söllvander (src) 2025-12-15 New committer: John Hall (src) 2025-12-03 New committer: Timothy Pearson (src) 2025-12-02 FreeBSD 15.0-RELEASE Available 2025-11-30 July-September 2025 Status Report 2025-11-26 FreeBSD 15.0-RC4 Available More . UPCOMING EVENTS 2026-01-31 - 2026-02-01 FOSDEM 2026 (Brussels, Belgium) 2026-03-19 - 2026-03-22 AsiaBSDCon 2026 (Taipei, Taiwan) More . PRESS 2025-12 The Register takes a look at FreeBSD 15 2025-11 FreeBSD Officially Supported in OCI Runtime Specification v1.3 2025-10 An introduction to OCI Containers on FreeBSD 2025-10 FreeBSD Vendor Summit, Nov 6-7 2025-09 Insights from the 2025 FreeBSD Community Survey More . SECURITY ADVISORIES 2025-12-16 FreeBSD-SA-25:12.rtsold 2025-12-16 FreeBSD-SA-25:11.ipfw 2025-11-26 FreeBSD-SA-25:10.unbound 2025-10-22 FreeBSD-SA-25:09.netinet More ERRATA NOTICES 2025-12-16 FreeBSD-EN-25:20.vmm 2025-12-16 FreeBSD-EN-25:19.zfs More Legal Notices | © 1995-2026 The FreeBSD Project All rights reserved. The mark FreeBSD is a registered trademark of The FreeBSD Foundation and is used by The FreeBSD Project with the permission of The FreeBSD Foundation . Contact | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/user-interfaces | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged user-interfaces 96 packages have this tag. [Merge tag] (trustees only) Related tags: library (92), bsd3 (60), gui (23), text (15), program (14), mit (13), frp (12), reactivity (12), bsd2 (10), web (10), reactive (9), html (8), javascript (8), user-interface (8), deprecated (7), reflex (4), system (4), console (3), gpl (3), graphics (3), ui (3), apache (2), concurrency (2), control (2), effect (2), monad (2), xml (2), command-line (1), ... Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers GtkGLTV 3 0.0 1 OpenGL support for Gtk-based GUIs for Tangible Values ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2011-12-28 0.2.0 ConalElliott GtkTV 33 0.0 2 Gtk-based GUIs for Tangible Values ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2011-12-28 0.2.0 ConalElliott GuiTV 6 0.0 1 GUIs for Tangible Values ( bsd3 , interfaces , library , user-interfaces ) 2008-02-19 0.4 ConalElliott HCL 29 2.0 1 High-level library for building command line interfaces. ( bsd3 , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2024-11-29 1.9 JustinBailey , jlamothe Hashell 3 0.0 1 Simple shell written in Haskell ( program , user-interfaces ) 2009-01-18 1.0 GwernBranwen Shellac 16 0.0 5 A framework for creating shell envinronments ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2016-06-03 0.9.9 RobertDockins Shellac-compatline 7 0.0 1 "compatline" backend module for Shellac ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2016-06-03 0.9.9 RobertDockins Shellac-editline 8 0.0 2 Editline backend module for Shellac ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2016-06-03 0.9.9 RobertDockins Shellac-haskeline 12 0.0 1 Haskeline backend module for Shellac ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2016-06-04 0.2.1 JudahJacobson , RobertDockins Shellac-readline 7 0.0 2 Readline backend module for Shellac ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2016-06-03 0.9.9 RobertDockins WXDiffCtrl 3 0.0 1 WXDiffCtrl ( bsd3 , gui , library , user-interfaces ) 2010-01-11 0.0.1 JeremyODonoghue Win32-console 3 0.0 1 Binding to the Win32 console API ( bsd3 , console , library , user-interfaces ) 2016-09-12 0.1.0.0 siracusa ansi-pretty 8 0.0 1 AnsiPretty for ansi-wl-pprint ( bsd3 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2019-11-20 0.1.2.2 phadej ansi-terminal 216 2.5 231 Simple ANSI terminal support ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-12-26 1.1.5 MaxBolingbroke , OliverCharles , RomanCheplyaka , mpilgrem ansi-terminal-types 9 0.0 2 Types and functions used to represent SGR aspects ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-07-18 1.1.3 OliverCharles , RomanCheplyaka , mpilgrem ansi-wl-pprint (deprecated in favor of prettyprinter ) 109 2.5 120 The Wadler/Leijen Pretty Printer for colored ANSI terminal output ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2023-05-18 1.0.2 EdwardKmett , MaxBolingbroke , phadej , quchen binding-core 7 0.0 3 Data Binding ( bsd3 , gui , library , user-interfaces ) 2013-06-09 0.2.2 GideonSireling binding-gtk 5 0.0 1 Data Binding in Gtk2Hs ( bsd3 , gui , library , user-interfaces ) 2013-06-09 0.2.1 GideonSireling binding-wx 6 0.0 1 Data Binding in WxHaskell ( bsd3 , gui , library , user-interfaces ) 2013-06-09 0.2.1 GideonSireling brick-calendar 8 0.0 0 Calendar widget for the Brick TUI library ( console , library , mit , program , tui , user-interfaces ) 2025-04-23 0.2.0.0 ldgrp byline 43 0.0 1 Library for creating command-line interfaces (colors, menus, etc.) ( bsd2 , library , system , user-interfaces ) 2025-02-17 1.1.3 PeterJones climb 24 0.0 0 Building blocks for a GHCi-like REPL with colon-commands ( bsd3 , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2024-12-17 0.5.1 ejconlon colorful-monoids 29 0.0 2 Styled console text output using ANSI escape sequences. ( library , mit , monad , text , user-interfaces ) 2020-06-17 0.2.1.3 minad concurrent-output 195 2.5 7 Ungarble output from several threads or commands ( bsd2 , concurrency , library , user-interfaces ) 2024-04-29 1.10.21 JoeyHess concurrentoutput (deprecated in favor of concurrent-output ) 11 0.0 2 Ungarble output from several threads ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , user-interfaces ) 2011-06-08 0.2.0.2 JoachimBreitner console-style (deprecated in favor of colorful-monoids ) 16 0.0 2 Styled console text output using ANSI escape sequences. ( deprecated , library , mit , monad , text , user-interfaces ) 2016-12-03 0.0.2.1 minad crystalfontz 2 0.0 1 Control Crystalfontz LCD displays. ( bsd3 , hardware , library , system , user-interfaces ) 2010-09-21 0.1 KeeganMcAllister editline 6 0.0 5 Bindings to the editline library (libedit). ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2012-11-26 0.2.1.1 JudahJacobson fenfire 3 0.0 1 Graph-based notetaking system ( program , user-interfaces ) 2007-02-13 0.1 BenjaFallenstein fltkhs 302 2.0 3 FLTK bindings ( graphics , gui , library , mit , program , ui , user-interfaces ) 2020-02-21 0.8.0.3 deech fltkhs-themes 30 0.0 1 A set of themed widgets that provides drop in replacements to the ones in FLTKHS. ( bsd3 , graphics , gui , library , ui , user-interfaces ) 2020-02-21 0.2.0.3 deech formlets (deprecated in favor of digestive-functors ) 62 0.0 6 Formlets implemented in Haskell ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , text , user-interfaces , web , xml ) 2010-12-22 0.8 ChrisEidhof , DougBeardsley formlets-hsp (deprecated in favor of digestive-functors-hsp ) 7 0.0 2 HSP support for Formlets ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , text , user-interfaces , web , xml ) 2010-10-18 2.3.1 JeremyShaw grapefruit-examples 21 0.0 1 Examples using the Grapefruit library ( bsd3 , frp , gui , library , reactivity , user-interfaces ) 2017-04-06 0.1.0.7 WolfgangJeltsch grapefruit-ui 27 0.0 3 Declarative user interface programming ( bsd3 , frp , gui , library , reactivity , user-interfaces ) 2017-04-06 0.1.0.7 WolfgangJeltsch grapefruit-ui-gtk 16 0.0 1 GTK+-based backend for declarative user interface programming ( bsd3 , frp , gui , library , reactivity , user-interfaces ) 2017-04-06 0.1.0.7 WolfgangJeltsch haskeline 184 2.0 86 A command-line interface for user input, written in Haskell. ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-10-05 0.8.4.1 BenGamari , JudahJacobson , LennartAugustsson , TroelsHenriksen haskeline-class 12 0.0 2 Class interface for working with Haskeline ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2011-08-13 0.6.2 AntoineLatter hs-fltk 3 0.0 1 Binding to GUI library FLTK ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2008-03-09 0.2.5 GwernBranwen hscurses-fish-ex 5 0.0 1 hscurses swimming fish example ( console , development , education , help , program , user-interfaces ) 2018-01-08 1.3.2 DinoMorelli lambdacat 5 0.0 1 Webkit Browser ( bsd3 , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2011-01-08 0.1.1 AndreasBaldeau linenoise 18 0.0 1 A lightweight readline-replacement library for Haskell ( bsd3 , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2024-12-17 0.4.2 ejconlon load-font 8 0.0 1 A cross platform library for loading bundled fonts into your application ( bsd3 , font , graphics , gui , library , ui , user-interfaces ) 2020-02-21 0.1.0.3 deech midair 9 2.0 1 Hot-swappable FRP ( concurrency , control , frp , gpl , interaction , library , music , reactive , reactivity , user-interfaces ) 2018-11-10 0.2.0.1 TomMurphy monad-parallel-progressbar 4 0.0 1 Parallel execution of monadic computations with a progress bar ( control , library , mit , monads , system , user-interfaces ) 2015-04-05 0.1.0.1 mnacamura nanocurses 4 0.0 1 Simple Curses binding ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2008-05-18 1.5.2 GwernBranwen ncurses 47 0.0 5 Modernised bindings to GNU ncurses ( foreign , gpl , library , user-interfaces ) 2016-08-29 0.2.16 tjtrabue phooey 24 0.0 3 Functional user interfaces ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2011-09-10 2.0.0.1 ConalElliott , RussellOConnor polysemy-readline 5 2.0 0 Readline effect for polysemy. ( bsd2 , effect , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2025-10-04 0.3.0.0 lehmacdj prettyprinter 76 2.5 228 A modern, easy to use, well-documented, extensible pretty-printer. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2021-09-11 1.7.1 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-ansi-terminal 22 1.75 53 ANSI terminal backend for the »prettyprinter« package. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2021-09-11 1.1.3 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-combinators 9 0.0 3 Some useful combinators for the prettyprinter package ( apache , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2024-05-12 0.1.3 SergeyVinokurov prettyprinter-compat-annotated-wl-pprint 12 0.0 1 Drop-in compatibility package to migrate from »annotated-wl-pprint« to »prettyprinter«. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2020-12-27 1.1 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-compat-ansi-wl-pprint 17 0.0 5 Drop-in compatibility package to migrate from »ansi-wl-pprint« to »prettyprinter«. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2025-12-04 1.1 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-compat-wl-pprint 7 0.0 1 Drop-in compatibility package to migrate from »wl-pprint« to »prettyprinter«. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2021-09-11 1.0.1 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-configurable 3 0.0 0 Configurable pretty-printing ( apache , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2024-11-20 1.0.0.0 effectfully prettyprinter-convert-ansi-wl-pprint 11 0.0 0 Converter from »ansi-wl-pprint« documents to »prettyprinter«-based ones. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2021-09-11 1.1.2 quchen , sjakobi progress 4 0.0 2 Simple progress tracking & projection library ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2009-09-10 1.0 MariusEriksen proplang 3 0.0 1 A library for functional GUI development ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2007-08-15 0.1 NeilMitchell readline-in-other-words 8 0.0 0 Readline effect for in-other-words. ( bsd2 , command-line , effect , haskeline , in-other-words , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2021-11-05 0.1.0.2 lehmacdj reflex-dom 41 2.5 9 Functional Reactive Web Apps with Reflex ( bsd3 , frp , gui , html , javascript , library , reactive , reactivity , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2025-04-05 0.6.3.4 JohnEricson , RyanTrinkle , abrar , 3noch , alexfmpe , maralorn , ymeister reflex-dom-core 66 2.0 11 Functional Reactive Web Apps with Reflex ( bsd3 , frp , gui , html , javascript , library , reactive , reactivity , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2025-05-15 0.8.1.4 JohnEricson , RyanTrinkle , abrar , 3noch , alexfmpe , maralorn , ymeister reflex-dom-ionic 7 0.0 0 Compatible highlevel Wigdets for some Ionic Input Components ( bsd3 , frp , gui , html , javascript , library , reactive , reactivity , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2022-04-18 0.2.0.0 ChristophBauer reflex-dom-retractable 16 2.0 0 Routing and retractable back button for reflex-dom ( frp , gui , html , javascript , library , mit , reactive , reactivity , reflex , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2020-11-26 0.1.7.0 NCrashed reflex-dom-th 21 0.0 0 reflex-dom-th transpiles HTML templates to haskell code for reflex-dom ( bsd3 , frp , gui , html , javascript , library , reactive , reactivity , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2022-10-01 0.3.4 ChristophBauer reflex-external-ref 10 0.0 2 External reference with reactivity support ( frp , gui , html , javascript , library , mit , reactive , reactivity , reflex , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2024-03-16 1.1.0.0 NCrashed reflex-localize 16 0.0 1 Localization library for reflex ( frp , gui , html , javascript , library , mit , reactive , reactivity , reflex , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2024-03-16 1.2.0.0 NCrashed reflex-localize-dom 9 0.0 0 Helper widgets for reflex-localize ( frp , gui , html , javascript , library , mit , reactive , reactivity , reflex , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2024-03-16 1.1.0.0 NCrashed repline 57 2.25 5 Haskeline wrapper for GHCi-like REPL interfaces. ( library , mit , user-interfaces ) 2025-05-16 0.4.3.0 sdiehl , adamwespiser safe-coloured-text 21 0.0 11 Safely output coloured text ( library , mit , user-interfaces ) 2024-06-23 0.3.0.2 Norfair safe-coloured-text-layout 11 0.0 3 Safely layout output coloured text ( library , mit , user-interfaces ) 2024-08-03 0.2.0.1 Norfair safe-coloured-text-terminfo 7 0.0 4 Safely output coloured text ( library , mit , user-interfaces ) 2024-06-23 0.3.0.0 Norfair settings 21 0.0 1 Runtime-editable program settings. ( data , library , public-domain , user-interfaces ) 2016-01-27 0.3.0.0 akrasner show-prettyprint 29 2.0 1 Robust prettyprinter for output of auto-generated Show instances ( bsd3 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2019-07-08 0.3.0.1 quchen , sjakobi sneakyterm 1 0.0 1 Tiny, declarative wrapper around ncurses ( gpl , library , user-interfaces ) 2015-08-10 0.1 pimiddy stylized 4 0.0 1 Ways to output stylized text on ANSI consoles. ( library , user-interfaces ) 2010-01-05 0.1.3 LucaMolari termbox 21 0.0 2 termbox ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-04-10 2.0.0.2 mitchellwrosen termbox-banana 25 0.0 0 termbox + reactive-banana ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-04-10 2.0.0.1 mitchellwrosen termbox-bindings-c 7 0.0 1 termbox bindings ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-12-03 0.1.0.3 mitchellwrosen termbox-bindings-hs 9 0.0 1 termbox bindings ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-04-10 1.0.0.1 mitchellwrosen termbox-tea 8 0.0 0 termbox + The Elm Architecture ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-04-10 1.0.0.1 mitchellwrosen terminal-progress-bar 43 2.25 8 A progress bar in the terminal ( bsd3 , library , system , user-interfaces ) 2023-06-10 0.4.2 RoelVanDijk terminfo 119 0.0 24 Haskell bindings to the terminfo library. ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-01-28 0.4.1.7 BenGamari , JudahJacobson , wz1000 tinytools 12 2.0 1 tinytools is a monospace unicode diagram editor ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2023-12-26 0.1.0.7 pdlla , minimaple vty 426 2.5 72 A simple terminal UI library ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2025-10-02 6.5 JonathanDaugherty vty-examples (deprecated in favor of vty-crossplatform ) 11 0.0 1 Examples programs using the vty library. ( bsd3 , deprecated , program , user-interfaces ) 2016-05-11 5.5.0 CoreyOConnor , JonathanDaugherty vty-ui (deprecated in favor of brick ) 48 0.0 5 An interactive terminal user interface library for Vty ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , user-interfaces ) 2015-04-11 1.9 JonathanDaugherty vty-ui-extras 5 0.0 1 Extra vty-ui functionality not included in the core library ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2012-01-07 0.1 JonathanDaugherty vty-unix 5 0.0 2 Unix backend for Vty ( bsd3 , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2023-11-15 0.2.0.0 JonathanDaugherty wizards 11 2.0 2 High level, generic library for interrogative user interfaces ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2018-11-16 1.0.3 LiamOConnorDavis , SimonMichael wx 72 2.0 17 wxHaskell ( gui , library , user-interfaces ) 2017-04-28 0.92.3.0 AtzeDijkstra , DanielFischer , EricKow , HenkJanVanTuyl , JeremyODonoghue , KidoTakahiro , fgaz , GeorgeThomas wxc 36 0.0 2 wxHaskell C++ wrapper ( gui , library , user-interfaces ) 2017-04-28 0.92.3.0 AtzeDijkstra , HenkJanVanTuyl , JeremyODonoghue , fgaz , GeorgeThomas wxcore 163 0.0 17 wxHaskell core ( gui , library , user-interfaces ) 2017-04-28 0.92.3.0 AtzeDijkstra , DanielFischer , EricKow , HenkJanVanTuyl , JeremyODonoghue , KidoTakahiro , fgaz , GeorgeThomas wxdirect 70 0.0 3 helper tool for building wxHaskell ( bsd3 , gui , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2017-04-28 0.92.3.0 AtzeDijkstra , DanielFischer , EricKow , HenkJanVanTuyl , JeremyODonoghue , KidoTakahiro , fgaz , GeorgeThomas xtc 7 0.0 2 eXtended & Typed Controls for wxHaskell. ( bsd3 , gui , library , user-interfaces ) 2012-06-10 1.0.1 AlanZimmerman , EricKow zipedit 9 0.0 1 Create simple list editor interfaces ( bsd3 , library , user-interfaces ) 2008-06-26 0.2.3 BrentYorgey | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/fast-logger-3.1.1/docs/System-Log-FastLogger-LoggerSet.html#t:LoggerSet | System.Log.FastLogger.LoggerSet fast-logger-3.1.1: A fast logging system Source Contents Index Safe Haskell Safe-Inferred Language Haskell2010 System.Log.FastLogger.LoggerSet Contents Creating a logger set Renewing and removing a logger set Writing a log message Flushing buffered log messages Misc Synopsis data LoggerSet newFileLoggerSet :: BufSize -> FilePath -> IO LoggerSet newFileLoggerSetN :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> FilePath -> IO LoggerSet newStdoutLoggerSet :: BufSize -> IO LoggerSet newStdoutLoggerSetN :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> IO LoggerSet newStderrLoggerSet :: BufSize -> IO LoggerSet newStderrLoggerSetN :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> IO LoggerSet newLoggerSet :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> Maybe FilePath -> IO LoggerSet newFDLoggerSet :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> Maybe FilePath -> FD -> IO LoggerSet renewLoggerSet :: LoggerSet -> IO () rmLoggerSet :: LoggerSet -> IO () pushLogStr :: LoggerSet -> LogStr -> IO () pushLogStrLn :: LoggerSet -> LogStr -> IO () flushLogStr :: LoggerSet -> IO () replaceLoggerSet :: LoggerSet -> FilePath -> ( LoggerSet , Maybe FilePath ) Creating a logger set data LoggerSet Source # A set of loggers. The number of loggers is the capabilities of GHC RTS. You can specify it with "+RTS -N<x>". A buffer is prepared for each capability. newFileLoggerSet :: BufSize -> FilePath -> IO LoggerSet Source # Creating a new LoggerSet using a file. Uses numCapabilties many buffers, which will result in log output that is not ordered by time (see newFileLoggerSetN ). newFileLoggerSetN :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> FilePath -> IO LoggerSet Source # Creating a new LoggerSet using a file, using only the given number of capabilites. Giving mn = Just 1 scales less well on multi-core machines, but provides time-ordered output. newStdoutLoggerSet :: BufSize -> IO LoggerSet Source # Creating a new LoggerSet using stdout. newStdoutLoggerSetN :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> IO LoggerSet Source # Creating a new LoggerSet using stdout, with the given number of buffers (see newFileLoggerSetN ). newStderrLoggerSet :: BufSize -> IO LoggerSet Source # Creating a new LoggerSet using stderr. newStderrLoggerSetN :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> IO LoggerSet Source # Creating a new LoggerSet using stderr, with the given number of buffers (see newFileLoggerSetN ). newLoggerSet :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> Maybe FilePath -> IO LoggerSet Source # Deprecated: Use newFileLoggerSet etc instead Creating a new LoggerSet . If Nothing is specified to the second argument, stdout is used. Please note that the minimum BufSize is 1. newFDLoggerSet :: BufSize -> Maybe Int -> Maybe FilePath -> FD -> IO LoggerSet Source # Creating a new LoggerSet using a FD. Renewing and removing a logger set renewLoggerSet :: LoggerSet -> IO () Source # Renewing the internal file information in LoggerSet . This does nothing for stdout and stderr. rmLoggerSet :: LoggerSet -> IO () Source # Flushing the buffers, closing the internal file information and freeing the buffers. Writing a log message pushLogStr :: LoggerSet -> LogStr -> IO () Source # Writing a log message to the corresponding buffer. If the buffer becomes full, the log messages in the buffer are written to its corresponding file, stdout, or stderr. pushLogStrLn :: LoggerSet -> LogStr -> IO () Source # Same as pushLogStr but also appends a newline. Flushing buffered log messages flushLogStr :: LoggerSet -> IO () Source # Flushing log messages in buffers. This function must be called explicitly when the program is being terminated. Note: Since version 2.1.6, this function does not need to be explicitly called, as every push includes an auto-debounced flush courtesy of the auto-update package. Since version 2.2.2, this function can be used to force flushing outside of the debounced flush calls. Misc replaceLoggerSet :: LoggerSet -> FilePath -> ( LoggerSet , Maybe FilePath ) Source # Replacing the file path in LoggerSet and returning a new LoggerSet and the old file path. Produced by Haddock version 2.24.0 | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/xml-1.3.13/docs/Text-XML-Light.html | Text.XML.Light Source Contents Index xml-1.3.13: A simple XML library. Portability portability Stability provisional Maintainer Iavor S. Diatchki <diatchki@galois.com> Safe Haskell None Text.XML.Light Description A lightweight XML parsing, filtering and generating library. This module reexports functions from: Text.XML.Light.Types Text.XML.Light.Proc Text.XML.Light.Input Text.XML.Light.Output Synopsis add_attr :: Attr -> Element -> Element add_attrs :: [ Attr ] -> Element -> Element unqual :: String -> QName class Node t where node :: QName -> t -> Element unode :: Node t => String -> t -> Element module Text.XML.Light.Types module Text.XML.Light.Proc module Text.XML.Light.Input module Text.XML.Light.Output Documentation add_attr :: Attr -> Element -> Element Source Add an attribute to an element. add_attrs :: [ Attr ] -> Element -> Element Source Add some attributes to an element. unqual :: String -> QName Source Create an unqualified name. class Node t where Source A smart element constructor which uses the type of its argument to determine what sort of element to make. Methods node :: QName -> t -> Element Source Instances Node () Node CData Node Attr Node Element Node Content Node [ Char ] Node [ CData ] Node [ Attr ] Node [ Element ] Node [ Content ] Node ([ Attr ], [ CData ]) Node ([ Attr ], [ Element ]) Node ([ Attr ], [ Content ]) Node ([ Attr ], String ) Node ([ Attr ], CData ) Node ([ Attr ], Element ) Node ([ Attr ], Content ) Node ( Attr , String ) Node ( Attr , CData ) Node ( Attr , Element ) Node ( Attr , Content ) unode :: Node t => String -> t -> Element Source Create node with unqualified name module Text.XML.Light.Types module Text.XML.Light.Proc module Text.XML.Light.Input module Text.XML.Light.Output Produced by Haddock version 2.13.2 | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/fi/tietoja-scrive | Tietoja Scrive - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Suomi English Global Sverige Danmark Nederland France Norge United Kingdom Deutschland Help Centre +358 45 4909684 Ota yhteytta Kirjaudu sisään Primary navigation Tuotteet Ratkaisut Resurssit Yritys Hinnat Help Centre Ota yhteyttä Osta nyt Kokeile ilmaiseksi Etsi Avaa valikko Koti / Tietoja Scrive Liiketoiminnan uudistaminen luottamussuhteita edistämällä Luomme parempia asiakaspolkuja. Yhdessä pääsemme perille. Ota yhteyttä Kokeile ilmaiseksi Tietoja Scrive Digitalisaatiota jo vuodesta 2010 johtaneen Scriven pilvipohjainen alusta tarjoaa sopimuksen elinkaaren automaatiota sähköisten allekirjoitus- ja tunnistusratkaisujen avulla. Yritykset kaikkialla maailmassa luottavat Scriveen perehdyttäessään ja allekirjoittaessaan sopimuksia asiakkaiden, kumppanien ja työntekijöiden kanssa, mikä parantaa asiakaskokemusta, suojausta, sääntöjenmukaisuutta ja datan laatua. Tukholmassa pääkonttoriaan pitävän Scriven tukena toimii Vitruvian Partners. Scrivellä on yli 200 työntekijää. Tarinamme Vuonna 2010 kaksi yliopistossa ystävystynyttä opiskelijaa julkaisi sähköisen allekirjoituspalvelun, jotta ulkomailta tulevat spoken word -esiintyjät voisivat allekirjoittaa esiintymissopimuksia etänä Ruotsissa pidettäviä esiintymisiään varten. Perustajamme havaitsivat nopeasti kaikkien yritysten tarvitsevan sopimusten allekirjoittamista. Nyt kolmannes kaikista autokaupoista Isossa-Britanniassa allekirjoitetaan Scrivella. Miten tähän päästiin? Lyhyesti sanottuna asiakaskeskeisyydellä: kuuntelemalla, ymmärtämällä ja vastaamalla. Tunnistamme sopimusten allekirjoittamisen olevan vain yksi osa paljon laajempaa liiketoimintaprosessia, jossa toimimme oppaana digitaalisella muutospolulla. Asiakaskeskeinen. Kukapa ei olisi? Meillä Scrive kuitenkin laajennetaan käsitys asiakkaasta sisältämään sekä sisäiset että ulkoiset toimijat: palveluidemme tilaajat, kumppanit, työntekijät, työtoverit – kaikki, joiden kanssa toimimme. Tämä näkemys asiakkuudesta luo eheyden ja osallistavuuden kulttuurin, joka muodostaa pohjan ydinarvoillemme: Välitämme asiakkaistamme, sekä sisäisistä että ulkoisista Haastamme asiakkaitamme, markkinanäkemyksiä ja parhaita käytäntöjä Olemme sitoutuneet viemään sinut haluamaasi päämäärään Yhteistyöllä luomme parempia asiakaspolkuja Työ Scrive Certifications Sertifikaatit Scrive on ISO 27001:2022 -sertifioitu. Sertifikaatti kattaa soveltuvuuslausunnon (Statement of Applicability) mukaan kaikki Scriven SaaS-tuotteet ja niiden osat: e-allekirjoitusalustan (Scrive eSign Online, Scrive GO ja Scrive eSign API) ja Scrive eID Hubin. Datakeskustemme sertifikaatit ovat nähtävissä seuraavilla sivuilla, joiden aiheena ovat AWS Ota yhteyttä Lue lisää siitä, miten Scrive voi auttaa luomaan parempia asiakaspolkuja. Ota yhteyttä Miksi Scrive? Scrive tarjoaa sähköisiä allekirjoituksia ja e-ID-ratkaisuja pienille ja keskisuurille yrityksille ja yritysorganisaatioille. Scrive tarjoaa turvallisen ja nopean tavan allekirjoittaa ja hallita sähköisiä asiakirjoja. Miksi Scrive Footer navigation Tuotteet eSign Online eSign API eSign GO eID Hub eSign Forms Forms Builder Ratkaisut Toimialat Tapausesimerkit Integraatiot Hinnat eSign Online eSign API eSign GO Resurssit Trust Centre Tieto Help Centre Käyttötapaukset Digitaalinen vs. sähköinen allekirjoitus Digitalisaatio Ulkoiset resurssit Vahvista dokumentin aitous Järjestelmän tila API-dokumentaatio Scrive brand guidelines Yritys Tietoja Scrive Partners Ura Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/yesod-0.0.0.2/src/ | Directory listing for yesod-0.0.0.2 source tarball | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Home Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Directory listing for yesod-0.0.0.2 source tarball yesod-0.0.0.2/ LICENSE Setup.lhs Yesod.hs runtests.hs yesod.cabal CLI/ yesod.hs skel/ App.hs LICENSE settings.yaml webapp.cabal static/ style.css templates/ homepage.st layout.st Data/ Object/ Html.hs Web/ Mime.hs Yesod/ Definitions.hs Form.hs Handler.hs Request.hs Resource.hs Response.hs Template.hs Yesod.hs Helpers/ AtomFeed.hs Auth.hs Sitemap.hs Static.hs examples/ fact.lhs hellotemplate.lhs helloworld.lhs i18n.hs pretty-yaml.hs tweedle.lhs | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/no/kontakt-salg | Kontakt Scrive-teamet - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Scrive inngår avtale med Svea Bank Norge Danmark English Global Sverige France Deutschland Nederland Suomi United Kingdom Help Centre Salg +47 23 507 090 Kontakt salg Logg in Primary navigation Produkter Løsninger Ressurser Virksomhet Priser Help Centre Kontakt salg Kjøp nå Prøv Gratis Søk Åpne menyen Hjem / Kontakt salg Kontakt Scrive-teamet Vi svarer gjerne på dine spørsmål. Ring oss på +47 23 50 70 90 eller fyll ut skjemaet, så kontakter vi deg så snart som mulig. For alle andre støttespørsmål, vennligst besøk vår Help center Fornavn * Etternavn * E-post * Phone number Dette feltet er obligatorisk Country code Dette feltet er obligatorisk * +47 Telefon Dette feltet er obligatorisk * Firma * Antall ansatte * Antall ansatte Er du en eksisterende kunde? Dette feltet er obligatorisk * Ja Nei Hva gjelder henvendelsen? * Jeg aksepterer Privacy Notice Kontakt meg Hvorfor Scrive? Scrive tilbyr e-signaturer og e-ID-løsninger for små og mellomstore bedrifter samt bedriftsorganisasjoner. Scrive tilbyr en sikker og rask måte å signere og håndtere elektroniske dokumenter på. Hvorfor Scrive? Scrive / Rebel Universitetsgate 2 0164 Oslo Kontakt skjema Footer navigation Produkter eSign Online eSign Go eSign API eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Løsninger Industrier Casestudier Integrasjoner Priser Priser eSign Online Priser eSign GO Priser eSign API Priser ID Check Priser eID Hub Priser eSign Forms Priser Forms Builder Ressurser Kunnskap Trust Centre Help Centre Digital vs. Elektronisk Signatur Digitalisering Bytt til Scrive Eksterne ressurser System status Verifisere et dokument API-dokumentasjon Scrive brand guidelines Virksomhet Om Scrive Partner Karriere Kontakt oss Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/uk/products/digital-identity | Secure log-in solutions and identity services Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Collect data and signatures in a single digital flow. United Kingdom English Global Sverige Danmark Norge Deutschland Nederland France Suomi Help Centre Sales +44 20 3318 4726 Contact sales Log in Primary navigation Products Solutions Resources Company Pricing Help Centre Contact sales Buy now Try for free Search Open menu Home / Products / Digital identity and identification Electronic signature E-signing made easy with Scrive’s electronic signature solution. Whether you’re a small startup or a big corporation, Scrive has electronic signature solutions to suit your needs. Explore Electronic signature Footer navigation Products eSign Online eSign GO eSign API eID Hub eSign Forms Forms Builder Solutions Industries Customer cases Integrations Pricing Pricing eSign Online Pricing eSign API Pricing eSign GO Resources Knowledge Hub Trust Centre Help Centre Challenges we solve Digitalisation Company About Partners Career Brand guidelines Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive Digital identity and identification How do you conduct business safely in an online world? Scrive’s identity platform equips you with the tools you need to: Prevent fraud and money laundering (AML) Authenticate transactions of all kinds Secure your systems against unauthorised access Know who you’re doing business with (KYC) Protect critical data (GDPR) Enhance support and finance operations Unlock your business potential Open up growth and expansion possibilities for your business and rest easy by having a quick, secure means of verifying the identity of your customers, users, employees, partners–everyone you do business with. Wherever they are on the globe. To expand, protect, and streamline your operations, Scrive offers you a fast and flexible digital identity journey to match your requirements and roadmap: Benefit from a range of digital identity methods, from electronic identification (eIDs) to identity verification services (IDV). See all supported ID services. Choose the best way to implement our services into your operations: API (eID Hub) or stand-alone identity portal (ID Check) . Contact us What does your business need? Scrive is an identity platform provider that understands the needs of both new and established businesses seeking to digitalise their operations. Onboarding, fast and secure Streamline new customer acquisition, increase conversion rates, drive security and compliance, reduce manual tasks and drive back office efficiency. Simplified compliance 100% digital ID verification processes to achieve compliance in regulatory domains such as KYC, KYB and AML. Enhanced support and finance operations Empower your support and sales agents to get instant proof of identity before proceeding with sensitive information sharing and secure transactions. Log-in solutions Drive security, confidence and brand loyalty by giving your customers, employees, users and partners a low-friction way to securely access your systems and services. Choose your identity solution API eID Hub is an API that gives you a single point of access to Scrive’s entire suite of digital identity services. Pay only for the services you use, add more as your business grows. Explore eID Hub No integration Get started instantly with ID Check, a platform-agnostic, stand-alone tool you can use alongside any system, in all your channels. Explore ID Check “Scrive makes my job so much easier! Having the ability to scale to a growing number of countries with one integration rather than having to work on a new integration for weeks or months for each eID is what makes me crazy about your product.” Paulo Unia, Senior Engineering Manager, Pleo FAQ for Digital Identity What is an eID? An eID (electronic identity) is like a digital version of a passport or other official identity document. It provides a means for individuals to verify their identity in a digital environment. How do you obtain an eID? An eID may be issued by either a public or private organisation (typically a government or a bank), and its authenticity is based on an initial in-person ID check using a physical identity document. What information is stored with an eID? Personal data can be stored with an eID and securely shared with service providers. What data is shared can be restricted to the requirements of a given transaction (e.g., e-commerce transaction, healthcare, tax declaration). What is identity document verification (IDV)? An IDV service is an alternative to using an eID and is based on sharing a physical identity document in a digital environment. Depending on the risk factors of a given transaction, an IDV check can involve a combination of methods, including uploading a photo of your physical ID document for analysis, submitting a selfie for further verification and a “liveness check” performed in a video conference with a live agent. Are eIDs legally recognised? The Electronic Identification and Trust Services (eIDAS) Regulation provides the legal framework for the use of digital identity services in the EU. Contact us for more information Contact us First name * Last name * Email * Company name * Number of employees * Message * Country * Contact us Are you an existing customer? This field is required * Yes No I accept the Privacy Notice Phone number This field is required Country code This field is required * Select Phone This field is required * Number of employees Select country | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/da/produkter/digital-identitet-og-identifikation | Sikre login-løsninger og identitetstjenester Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Scrive + e-Boks: Send og underskriv via Danmarks mest pålidelige digitale postkasse. Danmark United Kingdom English Global Sverige Norge Deutschland Nederland France Suomi Help Centre Salg +45 89 88 96 60 Kontakt Log Ind Primary navigation Produkter Løsninger Ressourcer Firma Priser Help Centre Kontakt Køb nu Prøv Gratis Søg Åbn menu Hjem / Produkter / Digital identitet og identifikation Forebyggelse af bedrageri og hvidvaskning af penge (AML) Autentificering af transaktioner Sikring af dine systemer mod uautoriseret adgang Indhentning af viden om, hvem du handler med (KYC) Beskyttelse af kritiske data (GDPR) Forbedring af support og økonomidrift Vælg din identitetsløsning API eID Hub er en API, der giver dig adgang til alle Scrives digitale identitetstjenester. Betal kun for de tjenester, du bruger, og tilføj flere, efterhånden som din virksomhed vokser. Udforsk eID Hub Ingen integration Kom i gang med det samme med ID Check, et platform-agnostisk og selvstændigt værktøj, som du kan bruge sammen med ethvert system, i alle dine kanaler. Udforsk ID Check Kontakt os for mere information Fornavn * Efternavn * E-post * Firma * Antal af ansatte * Hvad vil du fortælle os? * Jeg accepterer Privacy Notice Kontakt mig Hvorfor Scrive? Scrive leverer løsninger til e-signaturer og e-ID-løsninger til små og mellemstore virksomheder samt til store virksomheder. Scrive tilbyder en sikker og hurtig måde at underskrive og administrere elektroniske dokumenter på. Hvorfor Scrive Scrive Farvergade 2, 4. 1463 København K Kontakt formular Footer navigation Produkter eSign Online eSign GO eSign API eSign Forms Forms Builder eID Hub ID Check Løsninger Brancher Casestudier Integrationer Priser Priser eSign Online Priser eSign API Priser eSign GO Priser ID Check Priser eID Hub Priser eSign Forms Priser Forms Builder Ressourcer Viden Trust Centre Help Centre Udfordringer vi løser PDF Digital Signaturer vs Elektroniske Signaturer – den komplette danske guide Digitalisation Eksterne ressourcer Verificere et dokument API-dokumentation Systemstatus Scrive brand guidelines Firma Om Scrive Partners Karriere Kontakt os Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive Digital identitet og identifikation Hvordan sikrer du din forretningsdrift i et online miljø? Scrives identitetsplatform udstyrer dig med de værktøjer, som du har brug for: Frigør dit forretningspotentiale Åbne vækst- og udvidelsesmuligheder for din virksomhed og føle dig tryg ved at have en hurtig og sikker måde at verificere identiteten på dine kunder, brugere, medarbejdere, partnere – kort sagt alle, du handler med. Hvor end de er på kloden. For at udvide, beskytte og strømline dine tjenester, tilbyder Scrive dig en hurtig og fleksibel digital identitetsrejse, der matcher dine krav og forretningsplan. Drag fordel af en række digitale identitetsmetoder, fra elektronisk identifikation (eID’er) til identitetsverifikationstjenester (IDV). Se alle vores understøttede ID-tjenester og vælg din foretrukne måde at implementere vores løsninger på: ved API ( eID Hub ) eller selvstændig identitetsportal ( ID Check ). Kontakt os Hvad har din virksomhed brug for? Scrives identitetsplatform er udviklet til nye og etablerede virksomheder, som gerne vil digitalisere deres aktiviteter. Onboarding, hurtigt og sikkert Strømlin nye kundeerhvervelser og opnå forøget konverteringsrater, sikkerhed og compliance – samtidig med at du reducerer manuelle opgaver og øger backoffice-effektiviteten. Compliance gjort enkelt 100% digitale ID-verifikationsprocesser for at opnå overholdelse af regulatoriske domæner såsom KYC, KYB og AML. Forbedret support og økonomidrift Giv dine kundeservice- og salgsmedarbejdere mulighed for at indhente en øjeblikkelig ID-verificering, før der deles følsomme oplysninger via sikre transaktioner. Login-løsninger Skab sikkerhed, tillid og brandloyalitet ved at give dine kunder, medarbejdere og brugere en nem måde at få sikker adgang til dine systemer og tjenester på. “Scrive gør mit job så meget nemmere! At have muligheden for at skalere til et voksende antal lande med én integration, i stedet for at skulle arbejde på en ny integration i uge- eller månedsvis for hvert eID, er dét, der gør mig vild med deres produkt." Paulo Unia, Director of Engineering, Pleo FAQ om digital identitet Hvad er et eID? Et eID (elektronisk identitet) er som en digital version af et pas eller et andet officielt identitetsdokument. Det giver enkeltpersoner mulighed for at bekræfte deres identitet i et digitalt miljø. Hvordan får man et eID? Et eID kan udstedes af enten en offentlig eller privat organisation (typisk en regering eller en bank), og dets ægthed er baseret på en indledende personlig ID-kontrol ved hjælp af et fysisk identitetsdokument. Hvilke oplysninger gemmes med et eID? Personoplysninger kan gemmes med et eID og deles sikkert med tjenesteudbydere. Hvilke data der deles, kan begrænses til kravene for en given transaktion (f.eks. e-handelstransaktion, sundhedspleje, skatteangivelse). Hvad er identitetsdokumentverifikation (IDV)? En IDV-tjeneste er et alternativ til et eID, og er baseret på deling af et fysisk identitetsdokument i et digitalt miljø. Alt afhængigt af risikofaktorerne for en given transaktion, kan et IDV-tjek involvere en kombination af metoder, såsom upload et foto af dit fysiske ID-dokument til analyse, indsendelse af en selfie til yderligere verifikation samt et “livligheds-tjek” udført i en videokonference med en levende agent. Er eID'er lovligt anerkendt? Forordningen om elektroniske identifikations- og tillidstjenester (eIDAS) udgør den juridiske ramme for brugen af digitale identitetstjenester i EU. Er du en eksisterende kunde? Dette felt er obligatorisk * Ja Nej Phone number Dette felt er obligatorisk Country code Dette felt er obligatorisk * +45 Telefon Dette felt er obligatorisk * Antal af ansatte | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
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https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/faq/ | Frequently Asked Questions for FreeBSD | FreeBSD Documentation Portal About About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Code of Conduct Get FreeBSD Get FreeBSD Release Information Release Engineering Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal FreeBSD Handbook Porter's Handbook Documentation Project Handbook Manual pages Presentations and papers Wiki Books Articles Community Community Get involved Forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Support ♥ Donate Frequently Asked Questions for FreeBSD Copyright © 1995-2023 The FreeBSD Documentation Project trademarks FreeBSD is a registered trademark of the FreeBSD Foundation. IEEE, POSIX, and 802 are registered trademarks of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. in the United States. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. Microsoft, IntelliMouse, MS-DOS, Outlook, Windows, Windows Media and Windows NT are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. NetBSD is a registered trademark of the NetBSD Foundation. Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this document, and the FreeBSD Project was aware of the trademark claim, the designations have been followed by the “™” or the “®” symbol. Table of Contents 1. Introduction 2. Installing FreeBSD 3. Hardware 4. Documentation and Support 5. Community Questions 6. Miscellaneous Questions 7. Acknowledgments Abstract This is the Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for FreeBSD. Every effort has been made to make this FAQ as informative as possible. 1. Introduction Welcome to the world of FreeBSD! In this section, we provide a comprehensive overview of what FreeBSD is, its origins, goals, use cases, and the community behind it. Discover the reasons behind its name, learn how to contribute to this project, and explore the rich ecosystem of FreeBSD within the context of open-source operating systems. 1.1. What is FreeBSD? FreeBSD is a versatile and open-source UNIX®-like operating system known for its exceptional stability, security, and performance. Developed by a dedicated community of volunteers, it’s based on the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) UNIX operating system. FreeBSD offers a powerful and customizable environment suitable for a wide range of applications, from servers and embedded systems to desktops and networking equipment. Its commitment to open source principles ensures a transparent and collaborative development process, making FreeBSD a trusted choice for those seeking a reliable and highly adaptable operating system. 1.2. Why is it called FreeBSD? The name "FreeBSD" stems from its roots in the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) UNIX operating system, renowned for its contributions to the world of open-source software. The "Free" in FreeBSD signifies its commitment to the principles of free and open-source software, which grant users the freedom to study, modify, and distribute the code. It is worth pointing out that the word "free" is being used in two ways here: one meaning "at no cost" and the other meaning "do whatever you like". 1.3. What is the goal of the FreeBSD Project? The FreeBSD Project has a clear and unwavering goal: to provide a high-quality, open-source UNIX-like operating system that excels in terms of performance, security, and stability. It aims to offer a versatile platform suitable for a wide range of computing needs, from servers and workstations to embedded systems and beyond. FreeBSD is developed with a strong commitment to open source principles, fostering a collaborative environment where contributions from a global community of developers help shape and refine the operating system. This dedication to quality, freedom, and reliability is what sets FreeBSD apart and drives its ongoing success as an open-source project. 1.4. What uses cases is FreeBSD good for? FreeBSD is a versatile operating system that excels in various use cases. It is particularly well-suited for server environments, where its stability and performance make it a popular choice for web hosting, databases, and networking applications. FreeBSD’s robust security features also position it as a strong candidate for firewall and security appliance deployments. Beyond servers, FreeBSD can be tailored to function in specialized environments, including embedded systems and game console devices. Its adaptability, reliability, and open-source nature make FreeBSD a compelling choice for a wide range of computing needs. 1.5. Who is responsible for FreeBSD? FreeBSD is a community-driven open-source project with a decentralized structure. Its development and maintenance are carried out by a global community of dedicated volunteers, developers, and organizations who collaborate to enhance and expand the operating system. The key decisions concerning the FreeBSD project, such as the overall direction of the project or who is allowed to add code to the source tree, are made by an elected Core Team of nine people. This collaborative and community-driven approach has been fundamental to FreeBSD’s success and longevity as a reliable and robust UNIX-like operating system. 1.6. How can I contribute to FreeBSD? What can I do to help? We accept all types of contributions: documentation, code, and even art. See the article on Contributing to FreeBSD for specific advice on how to do this. And thanks for the thought! 1.7. Does the FreeBSD license have any restrictions? FreeBSD is distributed under the BSD License , which is known for its permissive nature. This license places very few restrictions on how you can use FreeBSD: Do not claim that you wrote this. Do not sue us if it breaks. Do not remove or modify the license. The license means you are free to modify, distribute, and even sell FreeBSD without being required to release your modifications as open source . However, there are some minimal conditions, such as retaining the original copyright notice and disclaimers when distributing FreeBSD. Overall, the BSD License provides a high degree of freedom and flexibility, making FreeBSD an attractive choice for a wide range of applications and projects. Code in our source tree which falls under the GNU General Public License (GPL) or GNU Library General Public License (LGPL) comes with slightly more strings attached though, at least on the side of enforced access rather than the usual opposite. 1.8. Can FreeBSD replace my current operating system? For many users and administrators, yes. But this question is not quite that cut-and-dried. FreeBSD is a powerful and versatile operating system that can replace or coexist with many other operating systems, depending on users and administrators specific needs. However, whether FreeBSD can replace your current operating system depends on factors such as your hardware, software requirements, and familiarity with FreeBSD. While it offers a robust and feature-rich alternative, it’s essential to evaluate your specific use case and compatibility requirements before making the switch. If an application is only available on one operating system, that operating system cannot just be replaced. Users migrating to FreeBSD from another UNIX-like environment will find FreeBSD to be similar. Non-UNIX users, like Windows® users, should expect to invest some additional time learning the UNIX way of doing things. 1.9. Can FreeBSD run popular open source software? Yes, FreeBSD is well-suited for running popular open source software. Its compatibility with a wide range of applications and libraries makes it a favorable choice for those looking to deploy and use open source software packages. FreeBSD provides a robust and stable environment that supports various programming languages, databases, web servers, and other software commonly used in the open source community. Its ports and packages system simplifies the installation and management of such software, ensuring that users can easily access and run their favorite open source tools and applications on FreeBSD with minimal hassle. 1.10. How can I install software in FreeBSD? FreeBSD offers multiple methods for software installation. One of the most common methods involves using the built-in pkg(8) package manager, which simplifies the process by fetching and installing pre-built binary packages. Another approach is to compile and install software from source code using the ports(7) collection, providing a flexible and customizable way to install software. FreeBSD’s documentation offer detailed guidance on both methods, ensuring that users can easily expand their system’s capabilities with the software they need. 1.11. What are the differences between FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and other open source BSD operating systems? FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD and DragonFly BSD are all part of the open source BSD family, sharing common UNIX-like foundations, but each has its own distinct focus and priorities. These differences reflect the unique goals of each project, and while they share similarities, their specific strengths and emphases cater to different use cases and preferences within the BSD ecosystem. 1.12. Is FreeBSD a Linux® distribution? No, FreeBSD is not a Linux distribution. While both FreeBSD and Linux are UNIX-like operating systems and share many similarities, they have distinct kernels. Linux uses the Linux kernel, whereas FreeBSD uses the FreeBSD kernel, which is based on the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) UNIX operating system. FreeBSD and Linux each have their own unique development communities, release cycles, and system architectures, making them separate and independent operating systems. FreeBSD provides its own set of advantages, including a different licensing model, system design, and userland utilities compared to Linux distributions. 1.13. Is it possible to run Linux programs on FreeBSD? Yes, FreeBSD provides a compatibility layer known as linuxulator ( linux(4) ), allowing many Linux programs to function on FreeBSD. This feature facilitates the execution of a broad spectrum of Linux binaries without the necessity of a dedicated Linux environment. Nevertheless, it’s important to note that numerous widely used open-source software have native FreeBSD versions available through the ports and packages system. 2. Installing FreeBSD The process of installing FreeBSD is the initial step toward harnessing the power of this robust open-source operating system. This section provides essential information on where to obtain FreeBSD, detailed installation instructions, and insights into concepts like FreeBSD-CURRENT and FreeBSD-STABLE. It also delves into the release and snapshot schedules, post-installation configuration tools, package search methods, and addresses common questions regarding package updates. 2.1. Where can I get FreeBSD? FreeBSD is freely available for download from the official FreeBSD website . Additionally, FreeBSD may also be available through various mirror sites, ensuring accessibility to users worldwide. The official website is the primary and most reliable source for obtaining the latest FreeBSD releases and updates, making it the ideal starting point for a FreeBSD journey. 2.2. Where are the instructions for installing FreeBSD? Installation instructions can be found at the Installing FreeBSD Chapter of the Handbook . 2.3. What is the FreeBSD-CURRENT concept? FreeBSD-CURRENT represents the development branch of the FreeBSD operating system. It is the most cutting-edge version of FreeBSD, where active development takes place. While it incorporates the latest features, improvements, and experimental changes, it may not always be as stable as the FreeBSD-STABLE or release versions. FreeBSD-CURRENT serves as a platform for developers and enthusiasts who want to contribute to the future of FreeBSD and stay on the leading edge of its development, even though it may occasionally undergo significant changes and is not recommended for production systems . 2.4. What is the FreeBSD-STABLE concept? The FreeBSD-STABLE branch is a more stable development branch compared to CURRENT. It contains code that is undergoing further testing and refinement before being merged into the RELEASE branch. STABLE is a good choice for those who want to track FreeBSD’s development but prefer a more stable environment than CURRENT. 2.5. When are FreeBSD releases made of? The Release Engineering Team < re@FreeBSD.org > releases a new major version of FreeBSD about every 18 months and a new minor version about every 8 months, on average. Release dates are announced well in advance, so that the people working on the system know when their projects need to be finished and tested. A testing period precedes each release, to ensure that the addition of new features does not compromise the stability of the release. 2.6. When are FreeBSD snapshots made? FreeBSD snapshots are typically generated at regular intervals for all actively developed branches. These snapshots capture a moment in time of the FreeBSD source code and associated binary packages. The frequency of these snapshots may vary but is often done on a weekly or bi-weekly basis. These snapshots provide users with an opportunity to access the latest developments and changes in FreeBSD, helping them stay up-to-date with the project’s progress. 2.7. Is there a tool to perform post-installation configuration tasks? Yes. bsdconfig(8) provides a nice interface to configure FreeBSD post-installation. 2.8. How can I search for software to install in FreeBSD? Searching for software to install in FreeBSD is made easy through the pkg(8) package manager and the pkg search command. Users can utilize this command to search for available packages using keywords, package names, or descriptions. This feature helps users quickly locate the software they need within the extensive FreeBSD ports and packages collection, simplifying the process of adding new applications and tools to their FreeBSD systems. 2.9. Why am I not getting the latest packages in my FreeBSD system? The availability of the latest packages in FreeBSD can be influenced by various factors, including the package repository’s update frequency and the specific version of FreeBSD being used. It should also be added that there are two branches for the FreeBSD ports. The most updated is called latest and the most stable is called quarterly . To use the latest packages it will be necessary to configure the latest branch. Information on how to configure branches can be found in the Ports chapter of the Handbook . 3. Hardware The Hardware section explores FreeBSD’s compatibility with various hardware configurations. It covers a range of topics, including supported architectures, maximum RAM capacity, processor scalability, graphics card compatibility, Wi-Fi card support, and the inclusion of 10 Gigabit Ethernet network card support. Whether planning to deploy FreeBSD on servers, workstations, or specialized hardware, this section provides insights into FreeBSD’s capabilities and limitations, offering information about hardware choices and configurations. 3.1. What architectures does FreeBSD support? FreeBSD boasts a versatile range of supported architectures, making it a flexible choice for a variety of hardware environments. Its compatibility extends to architectures such as amd64 , arm64 , riscv and more. A complete list of supported architectures can be found on the platforms page . 3.2. How much RAM does FreeBSD support? FreeBSD as an operating system generally supports as much physical memory (RAM) as the platform it is running on does. Keep in mind that different platforms have different limits for memory. For example, amd64 platforms support up to 4TB of physical memory. 3.3. How many processors does FreeBSD support? FreeBSD’s processor support varies across different architectures. On amd64 and arm64 systems, FreeBSD can efficiently harness the power of up to 1024 processors. For powerpc-based systems, FreeBSD supports up to 256 processors, while on risc-v systems, it can effectively utilize up to 16 processors. 3.4. What graphics cards does FreeBSD support? Popular graphics vendors like Intel®, AMD® or NVIDIA® are well-supported. A list of supported graphics cards from Intel and AMD can be found in the FreeBSD Wiki. 3.5. What Wi-Fi cards does FreeBSD support? This is a rapidly changing area as of 2025, so it’s worth checking the Hardware Compatibility List for your chosen release . The list of PCIe Wi-Fi devices that are known to work well on FreeBSD: Intel chipset devices covered by iwlwifi(4) (high-speed as of FreeBSD 14.3) Realtek RTL8188CE Mini PCIe The list of USB Wi-Fi devices that are known to work well on FreeBSD: RT5370 USB dongles (supports hostap mode) TP-Link TL-WDN3200 (RT5592, if_run(4) ) TP-Link TL-WN725N v2 (RTL8188EU, rtwn(4) ) TP-Link Archer T4U (RTL8812AU, rtwn(4) ) D-Link DWA-131 (RTL8192CU, rtwn(4) ) D-Link DWA-171 rev A1 (RTL8821AU, rtwn(4) ) ASUS USB-N10 NANO (RTL8188CUS, rtwn(4) ) 3.6. Does FreeBSD support 10 Gigabit Ethernet network cards? FreeBSD provides robust support for 10 Gigabit Ethernet network cards, making it a viable choice for high-speed networking environments. The FreeBSD kernel includes drivers for a wide range of 10 Gigabit Ethernet adapters from various manufacturers, ensuring seamless integration and optimal network performance. More information can be obtained at the FreeBSD Wiki . 4. Documentation and Support This section provides valuable resources for those seeking to deepen their knowledge of FreeBSD. It covers a range of topics, including recommended books for learning FreeBSD, avenues for commercial training and support, insights into understanding FreeBSD’s internals, and where to find assistance within the FreeBSD community. 4.1. What good books are there about FreeBSD? FreeBSD enthusiasts and learners can explore a variety of informative books dedicated to the operating system. These books cover topics ranging from FreeBSD basics to advanced system administration and development. Some notable titles include "Absolute FreeBSD: The Complete Guide To FreeBSD" by Michael W. Lucas, and the "FreeBSD Mastery series" also by Michael W. Lucas, among others. These resources offer valuable insights and knowledge to help users of all levels master FreeBSD and maximize its potential. Apart from the books, The FreeBSD Project produces a wide range of documentation, available online in the Documentation Portal . 4.2. Where can I get commercial FreeBSD training and support? For those seeking professional training and support for FreeBSD, several commercial providers offer tailored services. The FreeBSD project maintains a list of companies from which support can be requested. 4.3. How can I learn more about FreeBSD’s internals? To delve deeper into the inner workings of FreeBSD, interested individuals can explore resources like "The Design And Implementation Of The FreeBSD Operating System". The FreeBSD Architecture Handbook . is another valuable resource that provides detailed information about FreeBSD’s architecture, system organization, and design principles Additionally, reviewing the FreeBSD source code, available through the FreeBSD source repository, provides valuable insights into the operating system’s core components. 4.4. How can I get help in a FreeBSD system? Getting assistance within a FreeBSD system is straightforward. FreeBSD offers a wealth of built-in documentation, accessible through the man(1) command, which provides comprehensive information about various commands and system components. Additionally, the FreeBSD Handbook , available both online and locally on the system, serves as a valuable resource for in-depth guidance. If specific issues arise, seeking help from the FreeBSD community via mailing lists, forums, or IRC can provide timely solutions and insights from experienced FreeBSD users and developers. 5. Community Questions Explore this section to discover ways to engage with the FreeBSD community. Learn about FreeBSD IRC channels for real-time discussions, web-based forums for sharing insights, and access to FreeBSD mailing lists and news groups for in-depth discussions and news updates. 5.1. Are there FreeBSD IRC (Internet Relay Chat) channels? Yes, most major IRC networks host a FreeBSD chat channel and the FreeBSD wiki holds an up to date list of IRC channels . Each of these channels are distinct and are not connected to each other. Since their chat styles differ, try each to find one suited to your chat style. 5.2. Are there any web based forums to discuss FreeBSD? The official FreeBSD forums are located at the FreeBSD Forums homepage . 5.3. Where do I find info on the FreeBSD mailing lists? The public mailing lists can be found at the FreeBSD mailing lists . 6. Miscellaneous Questions Explore a variety of intriguing and practical queries about FreeBSD, covering topics from shell choices to system quirks and even the FreeBSD pet’s name. 6.1. Why is /bin/sh so minimal? Why does FreeBSD not use bash or another shell? Many people need to write shell scripts which will be portable across many systems. That is why POSIX® specifies the shell and utility commands in great detail. Most scripts are written in Bourne shell ( sh(1) ), and because several important programming interfaces are specified to use the Bourne shell to interpret commands. As the Bourne shell is so often and widely used, it is important for it to be quick to start, be deterministic in its behavior, and have a small memory footprint. The existing implementation is our best effort at meeting as many of these requirements simultaneously as we can. To keep /bin/sh small, we have not provided many of the convenience features that other shells have. That is why other more featureful shells like bash , scsh , tcsh(1) , and zsh are available. 6.2. How do I use my delete key in sh and csh? For the Bourne Shell, add the following lines to ~/.shrc : bind ^[[3~ ed-delete-next-char # for xterm For the C Shell, add the following lines to ~/.cshrc : bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm 6.3. I have forgotten the root password! What do I do? Do not panic! Restart the system, type boot -s at the Boot: prompt to enter single-user mode. At the question about the shell to use, hit Enter which will display a # prompt. Enter mount -urw / to remount the root file system read/write, then run mount -a to remount all the file systems. Run passwd root to change the root password then run exit(1) to continue booting. If you are still prompted to give the root password when entering the single-user mode, it means that the console has been marked as insecure in /etc/ttys . In this case, it will be required to boot from a FreeBSD installation disk, choose the Live CD or Shell at the beginning of the install process and issue the commands mentioned above. Mount the specific partition in this case and then chroot to it. For example, replace mount -urw / with mount /dev/ada0p1 /mnt; chroot /mnt for a system on ada0p1 . If the root partition cannot be mounted from single-user mode, it is possible that the partitions are encrypted and it is impossible to mount them without the access keys. For more information see the section about encrypted disks in the FreeBSD Handbook . 6.4. I made a mistake in rc.conf, or another startup file, and now I cannot edit it because the file system is read-only. What should I do? Restart the system using boot -s at the loader prompt to enter single-user mode. When prompted for a shell pathname, press Enter and run mount -urw / to re-mount the root file system in read/write mode. You may also need to run mount -a -t ufs to mount the file system where your favorite editor is defined. If that editor is on a network file system, either configure the network manually before mounting the network file systems, or use an editor which resides on a local file system, such as ed(1) . In order to use a full screen editor such as vi(1) or emacs(1) , run export TERM=xterm so that these editors can load the correct data from the termcap(5) database. After performing these steps, edit /etc/rc.conf to fix the syntax error. The error message displayed immediately after the kernel boot messages should indicate the number of the line in the file which is at fault. 6.5. How much free memory is available? There are a couple of kinds of "free memory". The most common is the amount of memory immediately available without reclaiming memory already in use. That is the size of the free pages queue plus some other reserved pages. This amount is exported by the vm.stats.vm.v_free_count sysctl(8) , shown, for instance, by top(1) . Another kind of "free memory" is the total amount of virtual memory available to userland processes, which depends on the sum of swap space and usable memory. Other kinds of "free memory" descriptions are also possible, but it is relatively useless to define these, but rather it is important to make sure that the paging rate is kept low, and to avoid running out of swap space. 6.6. My time is wrong, how can I change the timezone? Use tzsetup(8) . 6.7. FreeBSD uses a lot of swap space even when the computer has free memory left. Why? FreeBSD will proactively move entirely idle, unused pages of main memory into swap in order to make more main memory available for active use. This heavy use of swap is balanced by using the extra free memory for caching. Note that while FreeBSD is proactive in this regard, it does not arbitrarily decide to swap pages when the system is truly idle. Thus, the system will not be all paged out after leaving it idle overnight. 6.8. Why does top show very little free memory even when I have very few programs running? The simple answer is that free memory is wasted memory. Any memory that programs do not actively allocate is used within the FreeBSD kernel as disk cache. The values shown by top(1) labeled as Inact and Laundry are cached data at different aging levels. This cached data means the system does not have to access a slow disk again for data it has accessed recently, thus increasing overall performance. In general, a low value shown for Free memory in top(1) is good, provided it is not very low. 6.9. What is the cute little red guy’s name? He does not have one, and is just called "the BSD daemon". If you insist upon using a name, call him "beastie". Note that "beastie" is pronounced "BSD". More about the BSD daemon is available on his home page . 6.10. Can I use the BSD daemon image? Perhaps. The BSD daemon is copyrighted by Marshall Kirk McKusick. Check his Statement on the Use of the BSD Daemon Figure for detailed usage terms. In summary, the image can be used in a tasteful manner, for personal use, so long as appropriate credit is given. Before using the logo commercially, contact Kirk McKusick < mckusick@FreeBSD.org > for permission. More details are available on the BSD Daemon’s home page . 6.11. Why should I care what color the bikeshed is? The really, really short answer is that you should not. The somewhat longer answer is that just because you are capable of building a bikeshed does not mean you should stop others from building one just because you do not like the color they plan to paint it. This is a metaphor indicating that you need not argue about every little feature just because you know enough to do so. Some people have commented that the amount of noise generated by a change is inversely proportional to the complexity of the change. The longer and complete answer is that after a very long argument about whether sleep(1) should take fractional second arguments, Poul-Henning Kamp < phk@FreeBSD.org > posted a long message entitled A bike shed (any color will do) on greener grass… . 7. Acknowledgments This FAQ has undergone countless revisions and improvements by a diverse group of contributors over the past decades. Last modified on : May 22, 2025 by Ed Maste Home Table of Contents 1. Introduction 2. Installing FreeBSD 3. Hardware 4. Documentation and Support 5. Community Questions 6. Miscellaneous Questions 7. Acknowledgments Resources Download PDF Edit this page English System Light Dark High contrast About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Get FreeBSD Code of Conduct Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal Manual pages Presentations and papers Previous versions 4.4BSD Documents Wiki Community Get involved Community forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Legal Donations Licensing Privacy Policy Legal notices © 1994-2026 The FreeBSD Project. All rights reserved Made with ♥ by the FreeBSD Community | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
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https://www.scrive.com/no/losninger/casestudier/avanza | Avanza: Forbedret onboarding-flyt - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Scrive inngår avtale med Svea Bank Norge France English Global Sverige Danmark Nederland Suomi Deutschland United Kingdom Help Centre Salg +47 23 507 090 Kontakt salg Logg in Primary navigation Produkter Løsninger Ressurser Virksomhet Priser Help Centre Kontakt salg Kjøp nå Prøv Gratis Søk Åpne menyen Hjem / Løsninger / Casestudier / Avanza: Forbedret onboarding-flyt Avanza: Forbedret onboarding-flyt Ved å integrere Scrive e-Sign-tjenesten i onboardingprosessen, ga Avanza de nye kundene sine en rask og enkel måte å begynne å ta sine nye kontoer i bruk på. 120% Økning I konverteringsgraden av undertegnede dokumenter som signeres elektronisk på avstand 20% Økning I det samlede antall innbetalinger det første året Scrives eSign ble iverksatt 72% Reduksjon Av den samlede gjennomsnittlige onboarding-tiden, samtidig som antallet kontoer firedoblet seg. 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Og ved å gjøre det fikk de også lettet sitt eget administrative byrde: ingen papirer, ingen venting. Når kundene undertegner onboarding-dokumentene sine på nettet, verifiserer de seg selv ved hjelp av BankID , noe som er en standardfunksjon i Scrives signeringsgrensesnitt. Hvert signerte dokuments integritet er sikret i hele dokumentets levetid, og det er sikret og søkbart i Scrives E-arkiv . "Vi hadde et problem. Når en ny kunde registrerte seg på nettstedet vårt, måtte vi sende dem et papirdokument som de måtte signere og sende tilbake til oss." Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Utvalgt Scrive-løsning eSign GO Many systems, one solution. eSign GO is a revolutionary system-agnostic solution that gets you where you need to be in one quick leap. Utforske eSign Go La oss ta en prat Be om et møte slik at du kan fortelle oss hva du prøver å løse, og vi kan se på hvordan Scrive kan effektivisere forretningsprosessene dine og gi verdi til organisasjonen din. 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https://hackage.haskell.org/package/classy-prelude | classy-prelude: A typeclass-based Prelude. Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts classy-prelude : A typeclass-based Prelude. [ control , library , mit , prelude ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] See docs and README at http://www.stackage.org/package/classy-prelude [ Skip to Readme ] Modules [ Index ] [ Quick Jump ] ClassyPrelude Downloads classy-prelude-1.5.0.3.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers GregWeber , MichaelSnoyman For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 0.1.0.0 , 0.2.0.0 , 0.2.0.1 , 0.3.0 , 0.3.1 , 0.4.0 , 0.4.0.1 , 0.4.1 , 0.4.2 , 0.4.3 , 0.4.4 , 0.5.0 , 0.5.1 , 0.5.2 , 0.5.3 , 0.5.4 , 0.5.6 , 0.5.7 , 0.5.8 , 0.5.9 , 0.5.10 , 0.6.0 , 0.6.0.1 , 0.7.0 , 0.8.0 , 0.8.0.1 , 0.8.1 , 0.8.1.1 , 0.8.2 , 0.8.3 , 0.8.3.1 , 0.9.0 , 0.9.1 , 0.9.2 , 0.9.3 , 0.9.4 , 0.9.5 , 0.10.0 , 0.10.1 , 0.10.2 , 0.10.3 , 0.10.4 , 0.10.5 , 0.11.0 , 0.11.1 , 0.11.1.1 , 0.12.0 , 0.12.0.1 , 0.12.1 , 0.12.1.1 , 0.12.3 , 0.12.4 , 0.12.5 , 0.12.5.1 , 0.12.6 , 0.12.7 , 0.12.8 , 1.0.0 , 1.0.0.1 , 1.0.0.2 , 1.0.1 , 1.0.2 , 1.2.0 , 1.2.0.1 , 1.3.0 , 1.3.1 , 1.4.0 , 1.5.0 , 1.5.0.1 , 1.5.0.2 , 1.5.0.3 Change log ChangeLog.md Dependencies async , base (>=4.13 && <5) , basic-prelude (>=0.7) , bifunctors , bytestring , chunked-data (>=0.3) , containers (>=0.4.2) , deepseq , dlist (>=0.7) , ghc-prim , hashable , mono-traversable (>=1.0) , mono-traversable-instances , mtl , mutable-containers (>=0.3 && <0.4) , primitive , say , stm , stm-chans (>=3) , text , time (>=1.5) , transformers , unliftio (>=0.2.1.0) , unordered-containers , vector , vector-instances [ details ] License MIT Author Michael Snoyman Maintainer michael@snoyman.com Uploaded by MichaelSnoyman at 2023-08-01T13:03:05Z Stability Unknown --> Category Control , Prelude Home page https://github.com/snoyberg/mono-traversable#readme Bug tracker https://github.com/snoyberg/mono-traversable/issues Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/snoyberg/mono-traversable Distributions Arch: 1.5.0.3 , Debian: 1.5.0 , FreeBSD: 0.12.1.1 , LTSHaskell: 1.5.0.3 , NixOS: 1.5.0.3 , Stackage: 1.5.0.3 Reverse Dependencies 60 direct, 165 indirect [ details ] Downloads 84493 total (300 in the last 30 days) Rating (no votes yet) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs available [ build log ] Last success reported on 2023-08-01 [ all 1 reports ] Readme for classy-prelude-1.5.0.3 [ back to package description ] classy-prelude A better Prelude. Haskell's Prelude needs to maintain backwards compatibility and has many aspects that no longer represents best practice. The goals of classy-prelude are: remove all partial functions modernize data structures generally use Text instead of String encourage the use of appropriate data structures such as Vectors or HashMaps instead of always using lists and associated lists reduce import lists and the need for qualified imports classy-prelude should only be used by application developers . Library authors should consider using mono-traversable , which classy-prelude builds upon. It is worth noting that classy-prelude largely front-ran changes that the community made to the base Prelude in GHC 7.10 . mono-traversable Most of this functionality is provided by mono-traversable . Please read the README over there. classy-prelude gets rid of the o prefix from mono-traversable functions. Text Lots of things use Text instead of String . Note that show returns a String . To get back Text , use tshow . other functionality exceptions package system-filepath convenience functions whenM, unlessM hashNub and ordNub (efficient nub implementations). Using classy-prelude use the NoImplicitPrelude extension (you can place this in your cabal file) and import ClassyPrelude use base-noprelude in your project and define a Prelude module that re-exports ClassyPrelude . Appendix The mono-traversable README. The transition to the modern design of classy-prelude . These blog posts contain some out-dated information but might be helpful So many preludes! (January 2013) ClassyPrelude: The good, the bad, and the ugly (August 2012) Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
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https://hackage.haskell.org/package/yesod-0.8.2 | yesod: Creation of type-safe, RESTful web applications. Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts yesod : Creation of type-safe, RESTful web applications. [ library , mit , web , yesod ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] Yesod is a framework designed to foster creation of RESTful web application that have strong compile-time guarantees of correctness. It also affords space efficient code and portability to many deployment backends, from CGI to stand-alone serving. The Yesod documentation site http://docs.yesodweb.com/ has much more information, tutorials and information on some of the supporting packages, like Hamlet and web-routes-quasi. Modules [ Last Documentation ] Yesod Flags Automatic Flags Name Description Default ghc7 Enabled Use -f <flag> to enable a flag, or -f -<flag> to disable that flag. More info Downloads yesod-0.8.2.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers GregWeber , MichaelSnoyman , psibi , MaxGabriel , parsonsmatt , jgt For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 0.0.0 , 0.0.0.1 , 0.0.0.2 , 0.2.0 , 0.3.0 , 0.3.1 , 0.3.1.1 , 0.4.0 , 0.4.0.1 , 0.4.0.2 , 0.4.0.3 , 0.4.1 , 0.5.0 , 0.5.0.1 , 0.5.0.2 , 0.5.0.3 , 0.5.1 , 0.5.2 , 0.5.3 , 0.5.4 , 0.5.4.1 , 0.5.4.2 , 0.6.0 , 0.6.0.1 , 0.6.0.2 , 0.6.1 , 0.6.1.1 , 0.6.1.2 , 0.6.2 , 0.6.3 , 0.6.4 , 0.6.5 , 0.6.6 , 0.6.7 , 0.7.0 , 0.7.1 , 0.7.2 , 0.7.3 , 0.8.0 , 0.8.1 , 0.8.2 , 0.8.2.1 , 0.9.1 , 0.9.1.1 , 0.9.2 , 0.9.2.1 , 0.9.2.2 , 0.9.3 , 0.9.3.1 , 0.9.3.2 , 0.9.3.3 , 0.9.3.4 , 0.9.4 , 0.9.4.1 , 0.10.1 , 0.10.1.1 , 0.10.1.2 , 0.10.1.3 , 0.10.1.4 , 0.10.2 , 1.0.0 , 1.0.0.1 , 1.0.0.2 , 1.0.1 , 1.0.1.1 , 1.0.1.2 , 1.0.1.3 , 1.0.1.4 , 1.0.1.5 , 1.0.1.6 , 1.1.0 , 1.1.0.1 , 1.1.0.2 , 1.1.0.3 , 1.1.1 , 1.1.1.2 , 1.1.2 , 1.1.3 , 1.1.3.1 , 1.1.4 , 1.1.4.1 , 1.1.5 , 1.1.6 , 1.1.7 , 1.1.7.1 , 1.1.7.2 , 1.1.8 , 1.1.8.1 , 1.1.8.2 , 1.1.9 , 1.1.9.1 , 1.1.9.2 , 1.1.9.3 , 1.1.9.4 , 1.2.0 , 1.2.0.1 , 1.2.1 , 1.2.1.1 , 1.2.2 , 1.2.2.1 , 1.2.3 , 1.2.4 , 1.2.5 , 1.2.5.1 , 1.2.5.2 , 1.2.5.3 , 1.2.6 , 1.2.6.1 , 1.4.0 , 1.4.1 , 1.4.1.1 , 1.4.1.2 , 1.4.1.3 , 1.4.1.4 , 1.4.1.5 , 1.4.2 , 1.4.2.1 , 1.4.3 , 1.4.3.1 , 1.4.4 , 1.4.5 , 1.6.0 , 1.6.0.1 , 1.6.0.2 , 1.6.1.0 , 1.6.1.1 , 1.6.1.2 , 1.6.2 , 1.6.2.1 Dependencies attoparsec-text (>=0.8.5 && <0.9) , base (>=4 && <5) , blaze-builder (>=0.2 && <0.4) , bytestring (>=0.9 && <0.10) , Cabal (>=1.8 && <1.11) , containers (>=0.2 && <0.5) , directory (>=1.0 && <1.2) , hamlet (>=0.8.1 && <0.9) , hjsmin (>=0.0.13 && <0.1) , http-types (>=0.6.1 && <0.7) , mime-mail (>=0.3 && <0.4) , monad-control (>=0.2 && <0.3) , parsec (>=2.1 && <4) , process , template-haskell , text (>=0.11 && <0.12) , time (>=1.1.4 && <1.3) , transformers (>=0.2 && <0.3) , unix-compat (>=0.2 && <0.3) , wai (>=0.4 && <0.5) , wai-extra (>=0.4 && <0.5) , warp (>=0.4 && <0.5) , yesod-auth (>=0.4 && <0.6) , yesod-core (>=0.8.1 && <0.9) , yesod-form (>=0.1 && <0.2) , yesod-json (>=0.1 && <0.2) , yesod-persistent (>=0.1 && <0.2) , yesod-static (>=0.1 && <0.2) [ details ] License BSD-3-Clause Author Michael Snoyman <michael@snoyman.com> Maintainer Michael Snoyman <michael@snoyman.com> Uploaded by MichaelSnoyman at 2011-06-07T06:54:16Z Stability Stable --> Category Web , Yesod Home page http://www.yesodweb.com/ Source repo head: git clone git://github.com/snoyberg/yesod.git Distributions Arch: 1.6.2.1 , Debian: 1.6.1.0 , Fedora: 1.6.2.1 , FreeBSD: 1.4.1.5 , LTSHaskell: 1.6.2.1 , NixOS: 1.6.2.1 , Stackage: 1.6.2.1 , openSUSE: 1.6.2.1 Reverse Dependencies 50 direct, 25 indirect [ details ] Executables yesod Downloads 165521 total (302 in the last 30 days) Rating 2.0 (votes: 8) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs not available [ build log ] All reported builds failed as of 2016-12-27 [ all 7 reports ] Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/fadno-1.1.9.1/docs/Fadno-Notation.html | Fadno.Notation fadno-1.1.9.1: Minimal library for music generation and notation Quick Jump Source Contents Index Safe Haskell Safe-Inferred Language Haskell2010 Fadno.Notation Synopsis data Quanta = Q2 | Q4 | Q8 | Q16 | Q32 | Q64 qToInt :: Quanta -> Int qFromInt :: Integral i => i -> Maybe Quanta data TimeSignature = TimeSignature { _tsLength :: Int _tsUnit :: Quanta } tsUnit :: Lens' TimeSignature Quanta tsLength :: Lens' TimeSignature Int class HasTimeSignature a where timeSignature :: Lens' a ( Maybe TimeSignature ) (/:) :: Int -> Quanta -> TimeSignature data PPQ = PQ4 | PQ8 | PQ16 | PQ32 | PQ64 | PQ128 | PQ256 ppqDiv :: Integral a => PPQ -> a tsToRatio :: TimeSignature -> Rational tsFromRatio :: Rational -> Maybe TimeSignature tsFromRatio' :: TimeSignature -> Rational -> Maybe TimeSignature ratioPPQ :: forall a. Integral a => PPQ -> Iso' a Rational adaptHas :: Lens' a ( Maybe a) adaptHasLens :: Lens' s a -> Lens' s ( Maybe a) adaptHasNot :: Lens' s ( Maybe a) data Tie = TStart | TStop | TBoth class HasTie a where tie :: Lens' a ( Maybe Tie ) data Slur = SStart | SStop class HasSlur a where slur :: Lens' a ( Maybe Slur ) data Articulation = Staccato | Accent | Tenuto | DetachedLegato | Staccatissimo | Spiccato | Scoop | Plop | Doit | Falloff | BreathMark | Caesura | Stress | Unstress | SoftAccent | OtherArticulation String class HasArticulation a where articulation :: Lens' a ( Maybe Articulation ) newtype RehearsalMark = RehearsalMark { _rehearsalText :: String } rehearsalText :: Iso' RehearsalMark String class HasRehearsalMark a where rehearsalMark :: Lens' a ( Maybe RehearsalMark ) newtype Direction = Direction { _directionText :: String } directionText :: Iso' Direction String class HasDirection a where direction :: Lens' a ( Maybe Direction ) data Barline = Double | Final class HasBarline a where barline :: Lens' a ( Maybe Barline ) data Repeats = RStart | REnd | RBoth class HasRepeats a where repeats :: Lens' a ( Maybe Repeats ) data Clef = TrebleClef | BassClef | AltoClef | PercClef class HasClef a where clef :: Lens' a ( Maybe Clef ) data Beam = BeamBegin | BeamContinue | BeamEnd | BeamForwardHook | BeamBackwardHook class HasBeams a where beams :: Lens' a [ Beam ] class HasVoice a where voice :: Lens' a ( Maybe String ) newtype Part a = Part { _partIdx :: a } partIdx :: forall a a. Iso ( Part a) ( Part a) a a class HasPart a b | a -> b where part :: Lens' a ( Maybe ( Part b)) mshow :: Show a => Getter s ( Maybe a) -> String -> s -> String mshows :: s -> String -> [s -> String ] -> String type Note' p d = Noted ( Note p d) data Noted n = Noted { _nNote :: n _nTie :: Maybe Tie _nSlur :: Maybe Slur _nArticulation :: Maybe Articulation _nBeams :: [ Beam ] _nVoice :: Maybe String } nVoice :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe String ) nTie :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Tie ) nSlur :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Slur ) nNote :: forall n n. Lens ( Noted n) ( Noted n) n n nBeams :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) [ Beam ] nArticulation :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Articulation ) note' :: Note p d -> Note' p d noted :: n -> Noted n testNote :: Note' [ Int ] Int data Bar n = Bar { _bNotes :: Seq n _bRehearsalMark :: Maybe RehearsalMark _bDirection :: Maybe Direction _bBarline :: Maybe Barline _bRepeats :: Maybe Repeats _bTimeSignature :: Maybe TimeSignature _bClef :: Maybe Clef } bTimeSignature :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe TimeSignature ) bRepeats :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Repeats ) bRehearsalMark :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe RehearsalMark ) bNotes :: forall n n. Lens ( Bar n) ( Bar n) ( Seq n) ( Seq n) bDirection :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Direction ) bClef :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Clef ) bBarline :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Barline ) bar :: [n] -> Bar n testBar :: Bar ( Note [ Int ] Int ) Documentation data Quanta Source # Constructors Q2 Q4 Q8 Q16 Q32 Q64 Instances Instances details Bounded Quanta Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods minBound :: Quanta # maxBound :: Quanta # Enum Quanta Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods succ :: Quanta -> Quanta # pred :: Quanta -> Quanta # toEnum :: Int -> Quanta # fromEnum :: Quanta -> Int # enumFrom :: Quanta -> [ Quanta ] # enumFromThen :: Quanta -> Quanta -> [ Quanta ] # enumFromTo :: Quanta -> Quanta -> [ Quanta ] # enumFromThenTo :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Quanta -> [ Quanta ] # Show Quanta Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Quanta -> ShowS # show :: Quanta -> String # showList :: [ Quanta ] -> ShowS # Eq Quanta Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Bool # (/=) :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Bool # Ord Quanta Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Ordering # (<) :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Bool # (<=) :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Bool # (>) :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Bool # (>=) :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Bool # max :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Quanta # min :: Quanta -> Quanta -> Quanta # qToInt :: Quanta -> Int Source # qFromInt :: Integral i => i -> Maybe Quanta Source # data TimeSignature Source # Constructors TimeSignature Fields _tsLength :: Int _tsUnit :: Quanta Instances Instances details Show TimeSignature Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> TimeSignature -> ShowS # show :: TimeSignature -> String # showList :: [ TimeSignature ] -> ShowS # Eq TimeSignature Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: TimeSignature -> TimeSignature -> Bool # (/=) :: TimeSignature -> TimeSignature -> Bool # Ord TimeSignature Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: TimeSignature -> TimeSignature -> Ordering # (<) :: TimeSignature -> TimeSignature -> Bool # (<=) :: TimeSignature -> TimeSignature -> Bool # (>) :: TimeSignature -> TimeSignature -> Bool # (>=) :: TimeSignature -> TimeSignature -> Bool # max :: TimeSignature -> TimeSignature -> TimeSignature # min :: TimeSignature -> TimeSignature -> TimeSignature # tsUnit :: Lens' TimeSignature Quanta Source # tsLength :: Lens' TimeSignature Int Source # class HasTimeSignature a where Source # Methods timeSignature :: Lens' a ( Maybe TimeSignature ) Source # Instances Instances details HasTimeSignature ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods timeSignature :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe TimeSignature ) Source # (/:) :: Int -> Quanta -> TimeSignature Source # data PPQ Source # Constructors PQ4 PQ8 PQ16 PQ32 PQ64 PQ128 PQ256 Instances Instances details Bounded PPQ Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods minBound :: PPQ # maxBound :: PPQ # Enum PPQ Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods succ :: PPQ -> PPQ # pred :: PPQ -> PPQ # toEnum :: Int -> PPQ # fromEnum :: PPQ -> Int # enumFrom :: PPQ -> [ PPQ ] # enumFromThen :: PPQ -> PPQ -> [ PPQ ] # enumFromTo :: PPQ -> PPQ -> [ PPQ ] # enumFromThenTo :: PPQ -> PPQ -> PPQ -> [ PPQ ] # Show PPQ Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> PPQ -> ShowS # show :: PPQ -> String # showList :: [ PPQ ] -> ShowS # Eq PPQ Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: PPQ -> PPQ -> Bool # (/=) :: PPQ -> PPQ -> Bool # Ord PPQ Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: PPQ -> PPQ -> Ordering # (<) :: PPQ -> PPQ -> Bool # (<=) :: PPQ -> PPQ -> Bool # (>) :: PPQ -> PPQ -> Bool # (>=) :: PPQ -> PPQ -> Bool # max :: PPQ -> PPQ -> PPQ # min :: PPQ -> PPQ -> PPQ # ppqDiv :: Integral a => PPQ -> a Source # tsToRatio :: TimeSignature -> Rational Source # tsFromRatio :: Rational -> Maybe TimeSignature Source # tsFromRatio' :: TimeSignature -> Rational -> Maybe TimeSignature Source # ratioPPQ :: forall a. Integral a => PPQ -> Iso' a Rational Source # Duration iso, from Integral to Rational, given PPQ adaptHas :: Lens' a ( Maybe a) Source # Adapt a type to its HasXXX "Maybe Lens'" adaptHasLens :: Lens' s a -> Lens' s ( Maybe a) Source # Adapt a non-Maybe lens to the HasXXX "Maybe Lens'" adaptHasNot :: Lens' s ( Maybe a) Source # Adapt a type that does NOT support the HasXXX feature. data Tie Source # Tied notes. Constructors TStart TStop TBoth Instances Instances details Bounded Tie Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods minBound :: Tie # maxBound :: Tie # Enum Tie Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods succ :: Tie -> Tie # pred :: Tie -> Tie # toEnum :: Int -> Tie # fromEnum :: Tie -> Int # enumFrom :: Tie -> [ Tie ] # enumFromThen :: Tie -> Tie -> [ Tie ] # enumFromTo :: Tie -> Tie -> [ Tie ] # enumFromThenTo :: Tie -> Tie -> Tie -> [ Tie ] # Show Tie Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Tie -> ShowS # show :: Tie -> String # showList :: [ Tie ] -> ShowS # HasTie Tie Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods tie :: Lens' Tie ( Maybe Tie ) Source # Eq Tie Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Tie -> Tie -> Bool # (/=) :: Tie -> Tie -> Bool # Ord Tie Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Tie -> Tie -> Ordering # (<) :: Tie -> Tie -> Bool # (<=) :: Tie -> Tie -> Bool # (>) :: Tie -> Tie -> Bool # (>=) :: Tie -> Tie -> Bool # max :: Tie -> Tie -> Tie # min :: Tie -> Tie -> Tie # class HasTie a where Source # Methods tie :: Lens' a ( Maybe Tie ) Source # Instances Instances details HasTie Tie Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods tie :: Lens' Tie ( Maybe Tie ) Source # HasTie ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods tie :: Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Tie ) Source # HasTie ( Note p d) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods tie :: Lens' ( Note p d) ( Maybe Tie ) Source # data Slur Source # Slurred notes. Constructors SStart SStop Instances Instances details Bounded Slur Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods minBound :: Slur # maxBound :: Slur # Enum Slur Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods succ :: Slur -> Slur # pred :: Slur -> Slur # toEnum :: Int -> Slur # fromEnum :: Slur -> Int # enumFrom :: Slur -> [ Slur ] # enumFromThen :: Slur -> Slur -> [ Slur ] # enumFromTo :: Slur -> Slur -> [ Slur ] # enumFromThenTo :: Slur -> Slur -> Slur -> [ Slur ] # Show Slur Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Slur -> ShowS # show :: Slur -> String # showList :: [ Slur ] -> ShowS # HasSlur Slur Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods slur :: Lens' Slur ( Maybe Slur ) Source # Eq Slur Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Slur -> Slur -> Bool # (/=) :: Slur -> Slur -> Bool # Ord Slur Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Slur -> Slur -> Ordering # (<) :: Slur -> Slur -> Bool # (<=) :: Slur -> Slur -> Bool # (>) :: Slur -> Slur -> Bool # (>=) :: Slur -> Slur -> Bool # max :: Slur -> Slur -> Slur # min :: Slur -> Slur -> Slur # class HasSlur a where Source # Methods slur :: Lens' a ( Maybe Slur ) Source # Instances Instances details HasSlur Slur Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods slur :: Lens' Slur ( Maybe Slur ) Source # HasSlur ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods slur :: Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Slur ) Source # data Articulation Source # Note articulations. Constructors Staccato Accent Tenuto StrongAccent TODO implement after fixing fadno-xml #7 DetachedLegato Staccatissimo Spiccato Scoop Plop Doit Falloff BreathMark Caesura Stress Unstress SoftAccent OtherArticulation String Instances Instances details Show Articulation Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Articulation -> ShowS # show :: Articulation -> String # showList :: [ Articulation ] -> ShowS # HasArticulation Articulation Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods articulation :: Lens' Articulation ( Maybe Articulation ) Source # Eq Articulation Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Articulation -> Articulation -> Bool # (/=) :: Articulation -> Articulation -> Bool # Ord Articulation Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Articulation -> Articulation -> Ordering # (<) :: Articulation -> Articulation -> Bool # (<=) :: Articulation -> Articulation -> Bool # (>) :: Articulation -> Articulation -> Bool # (>=) :: Articulation -> Articulation -> Bool # max :: Articulation -> Articulation -> Articulation # min :: Articulation -> Articulation -> Articulation # class HasArticulation a where Source # Methods articulation :: Lens' a ( Maybe Articulation ) Source # Instances Instances details HasArticulation Articulation Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods articulation :: Lens' Articulation ( Maybe Articulation ) Source # HasArticulation ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods articulation :: Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Articulation ) Source # newtype RehearsalMark Source # Bar rehearsal mark. Constructors RehearsalMark Fields _rehearsalText :: String Instances Instances details IsString RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods fromString :: String -> RehearsalMark # Monoid RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods mempty :: RehearsalMark # mappend :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark # mconcat :: [ RehearsalMark ] -> RehearsalMark # Semigroup RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (<>) :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark # sconcat :: NonEmpty RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark # stimes :: Integral b => b -> RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark # Generic RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Associated Types type Rep RehearsalMark :: Type -> Type # Methods from :: RehearsalMark -> Rep RehearsalMark x # to :: Rep RehearsalMark x -> RehearsalMark # Show RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> RehearsalMark -> ShowS # show :: RehearsalMark -> String # showList :: [ RehearsalMark ] -> ShowS # Default RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods def :: RehearsalMark # HasRehearsalMark RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods rehearsalMark :: Lens' RehearsalMark ( Maybe RehearsalMark ) Source # Eq RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> Bool # (/=) :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> Bool # Ord RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> Ordering # (<) :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> Bool # (<=) :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> Bool # (>) :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> Bool # (>=) :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> Bool # max :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark # min :: RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark -> RehearsalMark # type Rep RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation type Rep RehearsalMark = D1 (' MetaData "RehearsalMark" "Fadno.Notation" "fadno-1.1.9.1-Eru2Yc86rln9jozd2rhNAS" ' True ) ( C1 (' MetaCons "RehearsalMark" ' PrefixI ' True ) ( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_rehearsalText") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 String ))) rehearsalText :: Iso' RehearsalMark String Source # class HasRehearsalMark a where Source # Methods rehearsalMark :: Lens' a ( Maybe RehearsalMark ) Source # Instances Instances details HasRehearsalMark RehearsalMark Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods rehearsalMark :: Lens' RehearsalMark ( Maybe RehearsalMark ) Source # HasRehearsalMark ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods rehearsalMark :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe RehearsalMark ) Source # newtype Direction Source # Musical direction. Constructors Direction Fields _directionText :: String Instances Instances details IsString Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods fromString :: String -> Direction # Monoid Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods mempty :: Direction # mappend :: Direction -> Direction -> Direction # mconcat :: [ Direction ] -> Direction # Semigroup Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (<>) :: Direction -> Direction -> Direction # sconcat :: NonEmpty Direction -> Direction # stimes :: Integral b => b -> Direction -> Direction # Generic Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Associated Types type Rep Direction :: Type -> Type # Methods from :: Direction -> Rep Direction x # to :: Rep Direction x -> Direction # Show Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Direction -> ShowS # show :: Direction -> String # showList :: [ Direction ] -> ShowS # Default Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods def :: Direction # HasDirection Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods direction :: Lens' Direction ( Maybe Direction ) Source # Eq Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Direction -> Direction -> Bool # (/=) :: Direction -> Direction -> Bool # Ord Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Direction -> Direction -> Ordering # (<) :: Direction -> Direction -> Bool # (<=) :: Direction -> Direction -> Bool # (>) :: Direction -> Direction -> Bool # (>=) :: Direction -> Direction -> Bool # max :: Direction -> Direction -> Direction # min :: Direction -> Direction -> Direction # type Rep Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation type Rep Direction = D1 (' MetaData "Direction" "Fadno.Notation" "fadno-1.1.9.1-Eru2Yc86rln9jozd2rhNAS" ' True ) ( C1 (' MetaCons "Direction" ' PrefixI ' True ) ( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_directionText") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 String ))) directionText :: Iso' Direction String Source # class HasDirection a where Source # Methods direction :: Lens' a ( Maybe Direction ) Source # Instances Instances details HasDirection Direction Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods direction :: Lens' Direction ( Maybe Direction ) Source # HasDirection ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods direction :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Direction ) Source # data Barline Source # Barline. Constructors Double Final Instances Instances details Generic Barline Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Associated Types type Rep Barline :: Type -> Type # Methods from :: Barline -> Rep Barline x # to :: Rep Barline x -> Barline # Show Barline Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Barline -> ShowS # show :: Barline -> String # showList :: [ Barline ] -> ShowS # HasBarline Barline Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods barline :: Lens' Barline ( Maybe Barline ) Source # Eq Barline Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Barline -> Barline -> Bool # (/=) :: Barline -> Barline -> Bool # Ord Barline Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Barline -> Barline -> Ordering # (<) :: Barline -> Barline -> Bool # (<=) :: Barline -> Barline -> Bool # (>) :: Barline -> Barline -> Bool # (>=) :: Barline -> Barline -> Bool # max :: Barline -> Barline -> Barline # min :: Barline -> Barline -> Barline # type Rep Barline Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation type Rep Barline = D1 (' MetaData "Barline" "Fadno.Notation" "fadno-1.1.9.1-Eru2Yc86rln9jozd2rhNAS" ' False ) ( C1 (' MetaCons "Double" ' PrefixI ' False ) ( U1 :: Type -> Type ) :+: C1 (' MetaCons "Final" ' PrefixI ' False ) ( U1 :: Type -> Type )) class HasBarline a where Source # Methods barline :: Lens' a ( Maybe Barline ) Source # Instances Instances details HasBarline Barline Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods barline :: Lens' Barline ( Maybe Barline ) Source # HasBarline ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods barline :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Barline ) Source # data Repeats Source # Constructors RStart REnd RBoth Instances Instances details Generic Repeats Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Associated Types type Rep Repeats :: Type -> Type # Methods from :: Repeats -> Rep Repeats x # to :: Rep Repeats x -> Repeats # Show Repeats Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Repeats -> ShowS # show :: Repeats -> String # showList :: [ Repeats ] -> ShowS # HasRepeats Repeats Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods repeats :: Lens' Repeats ( Maybe Repeats ) Source # Eq Repeats Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Repeats -> Repeats -> Bool # (/=) :: Repeats -> Repeats -> Bool # Ord Repeats Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Repeats -> Repeats -> Ordering # (<) :: Repeats -> Repeats -> Bool # (<=) :: Repeats -> Repeats -> Bool # (>) :: Repeats -> Repeats -> Bool # (>=) :: Repeats -> Repeats -> Bool # max :: Repeats -> Repeats -> Repeats # min :: Repeats -> Repeats -> Repeats # type Rep Repeats Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation type Rep Repeats = D1 (' MetaData "Repeats" "Fadno.Notation" "fadno-1.1.9.1-Eru2Yc86rln9jozd2rhNAS" ' False ) ( C1 (' MetaCons "RStart" ' PrefixI ' False ) ( U1 :: Type -> Type ) :+: ( C1 (' MetaCons "REnd" ' PrefixI ' False ) ( U1 :: Type -> Type ) :+: C1 (' MetaCons "RBoth" ' PrefixI ' False ) ( U1 :: Type -> Type ))) class HasRepeats a where Source # Methods repeats :: Lens' a ( Maybe Repeats ) Source # Instances Instances details HasRepeats Repeats Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods repeats :: Lens' Repeats ( Maybe Repeats ) Source # HasRepeats ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods repeats :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Repeats ) Source # data Clef Source # Constructors TrebleClef BassClef AltoClef PercClef Instances Instances details Generic Clef Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Associated Types type Rep Clef :: Type -> Type # Methods from :: Clef -> Rep Clef x # to :: Rep Clef x -> Clef # Show Clef Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Clef -> ShowS # show :: Clef -> String # showList :: [ Clef ] -> ShowS # HasClef Clef Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods clef :: Lens' Clef ( Maybe Clef ) Source # Eq Clef Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Clef -> Clef -> Bool # (/=) :: Clef -> Clef -> Bool # Ord Clef Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Clef -> Clef -> Ordering # (<) :: Clef -> Clef -> Bool # (<=) :: Clef -> Clef -> Bool # (>) :: Clef -> Clef -> Bool # (>=) :: Clef -> Clef -> Bool # max :: Clef -> Clef -> Clef # min :: Clef -> Clef -> Clef # type Rep Clef Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation type Rep Clef = D1 (' MetaData "Clef" "Fadno.Notation" "fadno-1.1.9.1-Eru2Yc86rln9jozd2rhNAS" ' False ) (( C1 (' MetaCons "TrebleClef" ' PrefixI ' False ) ( U1 :: Type -> Type ) :+: C1 (' MetaCons "BassClef" ' PrefixI ' False ) ( U1 :: Type -> Type )) :+: ( C1 (' MetaCons "AltoClef" ' PrefixI ' False ) ( U1 :: Type -> Type ) :+: C1 (' MetaCons "PercClef" ' PrefixI ' False ) ( U1 :: Type -> Type ))) class HasClef a where Source # Methods clef :: Lens' a ( Maybe Clef ) Source # Instances Instances details HasClef Clef Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods clef :: Lens' Clef ( Maybe Clef ) Source # HasClef ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods clef :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Clef ) Source # data Beam Source # Adapts musicxml Beams where beams are labeled "1" for eighth beam etc, where instead it is a list implying the first element is eighth etc. Constructors BeamBegin BeamContinue BeamEnd BeamForwardHook BeamBackwardHook Instances Instances details Bounded Beam Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods minBound :: Beam # maxBound :: Beam # Enum Beam Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods succ :: Beam -> Beam # pred :: Beam -> Beam # toEnum :: Int -> Beam # fromEnum :: Beam -> Int # enumFrom :: Beam -> [ Beam ] # enumFromThen :: Beam -> Beam -> [ Beam ] # enumFromTo :: Beam -> Beam -> [ Beam ] # enumFromThenTo :: Beam -> Beam -> Beam -> [ Beam ] # Show Beam Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Beam -> ShowS # show :: Beam -> String # showList :: [ Beam ] -> ShowS # Eq Beam Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Beam -> Beam -> Bool # (/=) :: Beam -> Beam -> Bool # Ord Beam Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Beam -> Beam -> Ordering # (<) :: Beam -> Beam -> Bool # (<=) :: Beam -> Beam -> Bool # (>) :: Beam -> Beam -> Bool # (>=) :: Beam -> Beam -> Bool # max :: Beam -> Beam -> Beam # min :: Beam -> Beam -> Beam # HasBeams [ Beam ] Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods beams :: Lens' [ Beam ] [ Beam ] Source # class HasBeams a where Source # Methods beams :: Lens' a [ Beam ] Source # Instances Instances details HasBeams ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods beams :: Lens' ( Noted n) [ Beam ] Source # HasBeams [ Beam ] Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods beams :: Lens' [ Beam ] [ Beam ] Source # class HasVoice a where Source # Methods voice :: Lens' a ( Maybe String ) Source # Instances Instances details HasVoice ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods voice :: Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe String ) Source # newtype Part a Source # Part identifier, prefers Num or IsString values. Constructors Part Fields _partIdx :: a Instances Instances details Foldable Part Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods fold :: Monoid m => Part m -> m # foldMap :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Part a -> m # foldMap' :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Part a -> m # foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Part a -> b # foldr' :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Part a -> b # foldl :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Part a -> b # foldl' :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Part a -> b # foldr1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Part a -> a # foldl1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Part a -> a # toList :: Part a -> [a] # null :: Part a -> Bool # length :: Part a -> Int # elem :: Eq a => a -> Part a -> Bool # maximum :: Ord a => Part a -> a # minimum :: Ord a => Part a -> a # sum :: Num a => Part a -> a # product :: Num a => Part a -> a # Traversable Part Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods traverse :: Applicative f => (a -> f b) -> Part a -> f ( Part b) # sequenceA :: Applicative f => Part (f a) -> f ( Part a) # mapM :: Monad m => (a -> m b) -> Part a -> m ( Part b) # sequence :: Monad m => Part (m a) -> m ( Part a) # Functor Part Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods fmap :: (a -> b) -> Part a -> Part b # (<$) :: a -> Part b -> Part a # IsString a => IsString ( Part a) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods fromString :: String -> Part a # Bounded a => Bounded ( Part a) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods minBound :: Part a # maxBound :: Part a # Generic ( Part a) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Associated Types type Rep ( Part a) :: Type -> Type # Methods from :: Part a -> Rep ( Part a) x # to :: Rep ( Part a) x -> Part a # Num a => Num ( Part a) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (+) :: Part a -> Part a -> Part a # (-) :: Part a -> Part a -> Part a # (*) :: Part a -> Part a -> Part a # negate :: Part a -> Part a # abs :: Part a -> Part a # signum :: Part a -> Part a # fromInteger :: Integer -> Part a # Real a => Real ( Part a) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods toRational :: Part a -> Rational # Show a => Show ( Part a) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Part a -> ShowS # show :: Part a -> String # showList :: [ Part a] -> ShowS # Eq a => Eq ( Part a) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Part a -> Part a -> Bool # (/=) :: Part a -> Part a -> Bool # Ord a => Ord ( Part a) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods compare :: Part a -> Part a -> Ordering # (<) :: Part a -> Part a -> Bool # (<=) :: Part a -> Part a -> Bool # (>) :: Part a -> Part a -> Bool # (>=) :: Part a -> Part a -> Bool # max :: Part a -> Part a -> Part a # min :: Part a -> Part a -> Part a # type Rep ( Part a) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation type Rep ( Part a) = D1 (' MetaData "Part" "Fadno.Notation" "fadno-1.1.9.1-Eru2Yc86rln9jozd2rhNAS" ' True ) ( C1 (' MetaCons "Part" ' PrefixI ' True ) ( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_partIdx") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 a))) partIdx :: forall a a. Iso ( Part a) ( Part a) a a Source # class HasPart a b | a -> b where Source # Methods part :: Lens' a ( Maybe ( Part b)) Source # mshow :: Show a => Getter s ( Maybe a) -> String -> s -> String Source # Lensy show of a Maybe field, given a ReifiedGetter and its name. mshows :: s -> String -> [s -> String ] -> String Source # concatMap show functions with a prelude. type Note' p d = Noted ( Note p d) Source # Note with notations. data Noted n Source # Constructors Noted Fields _nNote :: n _nTie :: Maybe Tie _nSlur :: Maybe Slur _nArticulation :: Maybe Articulation _nBeams :: [ Beam ] _nVoice :: Maybe String Instances Instances details Foldable Noted Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods fold :: Monoid m => Noted m -> m # foldMap :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Noted a -> m # foldMap' :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Noted a -> m # foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Noted a -> b # foldr' :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Noted a -> b # foldl :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Noted a -> b # foldl' :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Noted a -> b # foldr1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Noted a -> a # foldl1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Noted a -> a # toList :: Noted a -> [a] # null :: Noted a -> Bool # length :: Noted a -> Int # elem :: Eq a => a -> Noted a -> Bool # maximum :: Ord a => Noted a -> a # minimum :: Ord a => Noted a -> a # sum :: Num a => Noted a -> a # product :: Num a => Noted a -> a # Traversable Noted Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods traverse :: Applicative f => (a -> f b) -> Noted a -> f ( Noted b) # sequenceA :: Applicative f => Noted (f a) -> f ( Noted a) # mapM :: Monad m => (a -> m b) -> Noted a -> m ( Noted b) # sequence :: Monad m => Noted (m a) -> m ( Noted a) # Functor Noted Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods fmap :: (a -> b) -> Noted a -> Noted b # (<$) :: a -> Noted b -> Noted a # Generic ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Associated Types type Rep ( Noted n) :: Type -> Type # Methods from :: Noted n -> Rep ( Noted n) x # to :: Rep ( Noted n) x -> Noted n # Show n => Show ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Noted n -> ShowS # show :: Noted n -> String # showList :: [ Noted n] -> ShowS # HasArticulation ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods articulation :: Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Articulation ) Source # HasBeams ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods beams :: Lens' ( Noted n) [ Beam ] Source # HasSlur ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods slur :: Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Slur ) Source # HasTie ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods tie :: Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Tie ) Source # HasVoice ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods voice :: Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe String ) Source # Eq n => Eq ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Noted n -> Noted n -> Bool # (/=) :: Noted n -> Noted n -> Bool # HasNote ( Note' p d) p d Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods note :: Lens' ( Note' p d) ( Note p d) Source # fromNote :: HasNote n p d => n -> Note' p d Source # notePitch :: Lens' ( Note' p d) p Source # noteDur :: Lens' ( Note' p d) d Source # type Rep ( Noted n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation type Rep ( Noted n) = D1 (' MetaData "Noted" "Fadno.Notation" "fadno-1.1.9.1-Eru2Yc86rln9jozd2rhNAS" ' False ) ( C1 (' MetaCons "Noted" ' PrefixI ' True ) (( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_nNote") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 n) :*: ( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_nTie") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe Tie )) :*: S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_nSlur") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe Slur )))) :*: ( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_nArticulation") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe Articulation )) :*: ( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_nBeams") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 [ Beam ]) :*: S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_nVoice") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe String )))))) nVoice :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe String ) Source # nTie :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Tie ) Source # nSlur :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Slur ) Source # nNote :: forall n n. Lens ( Noted n) ( Noted n) n n Source # nBeams :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) [ Beam ] Source # nArticulation :: forall n. Lens' ( Noted n) ( Maybe Articulation ) Source # note' :: Note p d -> Note' p d Source # Note smart ctor, used in Show . noted :: n -> Noted n Source # testNote :: Note' [ Int ] Int Source # data Bar n Source # Bar as list of notes, with notations. Constructors Bar Fields _bNotes :: Seq n _bRehearsalMark :: Maybe RehearsalMark _bDirection :: Maybe Direction _bBarline :: Maybe Barline _bRepeats :: Maybe Repeats _bTimeSignature :: Maybe TimeSignature _bClef :: Maybe Clef Instances Instances details Foldable Bar Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods fold :: Monoid m => Bar m -> m # foldMap :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Bar a -> m # foldMap' :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Bar a -> m # foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Bar a -> b # foldr' :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Bar a -> b # foldl :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Bar a -> b # foldl' :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Bar a -> b # foldr1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Bar a -> a # foldl1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Bar a -> a # toList :: Bar a -> [a] # null :: Bar a -> Bool # length :: Bar a -> Int # elem :: Eq a => a -> Bar a -> Bool # maximum :: Ord a => Bar a -> a # minimum :: Ord a => Bar a -> a # sum :: Num a => Bar a -> a # product :: Num a => Bar a -> a # Traversable Bar Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods traverse :: Applicative f => (a -> f b) -> Bar a -> f ( Bar b) # sequenceA :: Applicative f => Bar (f a) -> f ( Bar a) # mapM :: Monad m => (a -> m b) -> Bar a -> m ( Bar b) # sequence :: Monad m => Bar (m a) -> m ( Bar a) # Functor Bar Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods fmap :: (a -> b) -> Bar a -> Bar b # (<$) :: a -> Bar b -> Bar a # Monoid ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods mempty :: Bar n # mappend :: Bar n -> Bar n -> Bar n # mconcat :: [ Bar n] -> Bar n # Semigroup ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (<>) :: Bar n -> Bar n -> Bar n # sconcat :: NonEmpty ( Bar n) -> Bar n # stimes :: Integral b => b -> Bar n -> Bar n # Generic ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Associated Types type Rep ( Bar n) :: Type -> Type # Methods from :: Bar n -> Rep ( Bar n) x # to :: Rep ( Bar n) x -> Bar n # Show n => Show ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods showsPrec :: Int -> Bar n -> ShowS # show :: Bar n -> String # showList :: [ Bar n] -> ShowS # Default ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods def :: Bar n # HasBarline ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods barline :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Barline ) Source # HasClef ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods clef :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Clef ) Source # HasDirection ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods direction :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Direction ) Source # HasRehearsalMark ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods rehearsalMark :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe RehearsalMark ) Source # HasRepeats ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods repeats :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Repeats ) Source # HasTimeSignature ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods timeSignature :: Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe TimeSignature ) Source # Eq n => Eq ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods (==) :: Bar n -> Bar n -> Bool # (/=) :: Bar n -> Bar n -> Bool # Cons ( Bar n) ( Bar n) n n Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods _Cons :: Prism ( Bar n) ( Bar n) (n, Bar n) (n, Bar n) # Snoc ( Bar n) ( Bar n) n n Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation Methods _Snoc :: Prism ( Bar n) ( Bar n) ( Bar n, n) ( Bar n, n) # type Rep ( Bar n) Source # Instance details Defined in Fadno.Notation type Rep ( Bar n) = D1 (' MetaData "Bar" "Fadno.Notation" "fadno-1.1.9.1-Eru2Yc86rln9jozd2rhNAS" ' False ) ( C1 (' MetaCons "Bar" ' PrefixI ' True ) (( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_bNotes") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Seq n)) :*: ( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_bRehearsalMark") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe RehearsalMark )) :*: S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_bDirection") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe Direction )))) :*: (( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_bBarline") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe Barline )) :*: S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_bRepeats") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe Repeats ))) :*: ( S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_bTimeSignature") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe TimeSignature )) :*: S1 (' MetaSel (' Just "_bClef") ' NoSourceUnpackedness ' NoSourceStrictness ' DecidedLazy ) ( Rec0 ( Maybe Clef )))))) bTimeSignature :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe TimeSignature ) Source # bRepeats :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Repeats ) Source # bRehearsalMark :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe RehearsalMark ) Source # bNotes :: forall n n. Lens ( Bar n) ( Bar n) ( Seq n) ( Seq n) Source # bDirection :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Direction ) Source # bClef :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Clef ) Source # bBarline :: forall n. Lens' ( Bar n) ( Maybe Barline ) Source # bar :: [n] -> Bar n Source # Bar smart ctor, used in Show . testBar :: Bar ( Note [ Int ] Int ) Source # Produced by Haddock version 2.29.1 | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/classy-prelude-yesod | classy-prelude-yesod: Provide a classy prelude including common Yesod functionality. Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts classy-prelude-yesod : Provide a classy prelude including common Yesod functionality. [ control , library , mit , yesod ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] See docs and README at http://www.stackage.org/package/classy-prelude-yesod [ Skip to Readme ] Modules [ Last Documentation ] ClassyPrelude ClassyPrelude.Yesod Downloads classy-prelude-yesod-1.5.0.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers GregWeber , MichaelSnoyman For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 0.1.0.0 , 0.2.0.0 , 0.2.1 , 0.2.2 , 0.2.3 , 0.3.0 , 0.6.0 , 0.7.0 , 0.8.0 , 0.8.1 , 0.9.0 , 0.9.0.1 , 0.9.1 , 0.9.2 , 0.9.3 , 0.9.4 , 0.9.5 , 0.10.0 , 0.10.1 , 0.10.2 , 0.10.3 , 0.10.4 , 0.10.5 , 0.11.0 , 0.11.1 , 0.12.0 , 0.12.0.1 , 0.12.3 , 0.12.4 , 0.12.5 , 0.12.6 , 0.12.6.1 , 0.12.7 , 0.12.8 , 1.0.0 , 1.0.1 , 1.0.2 , 1.1.0 , 1.2.0 , 1.3.0 , 1.3.1 , 1.4.0 , 1.5.0 Change log ChangeLog.md Dependencies aeson , base (>=4.9 && <5) , classy-prelude (>=1.5.0 && <1.5.1) , classy-prelude-conduit (>=1.5.0 && <1.5.1) , data-default , http-conduit , http-types , persistent (>=1.1) , yesod (>=1.2) , yesod-newsfeed , yesod-static [ details ] License MIT Author Michael Snoyman Maintainer michael@snoyman.com Uploaded by MichaelSnoyman at 2018-10-08T14:22:36Z Stability Unknown --> Category Control , Yesod Home page https://github.com/snoyberg/mono-traversable#readme Bug tracker https://github.com/snoyberg/mono-traversable/issues Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/snoyberg/mono-traversable Distributions Debian: 1.5.0 , LTSHaskell: 1.5.0 , NixOS: 1.5.0 Reverse Dependencies 8 direct, 0 indirect [ details ] Downloads 38514 total (109 in the last 30 days) Rating (no votes yet) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs not available [ build log ] Last success reported on 2018-10-08 [ all 3 reports ] Readme for classy-prelude-yesod-1.5.0 [ back to package description ] classy-prelude-yesod classy-prelude together with the Yesod web framework. This is an extension of classy-prelude-conduit, adding in commonly used functions and data types from Yesod. Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.atlassian.com/blog/communication/page/2 | Communication Archives - Page 2 of 3 - Work Life by Atlassian - Page 2 Skip to main content Atlassian Work Life Products & news Team Playbook Community More from Atlassian Topics Communication 17 scripts for difficult conversations at work Never heard of restorative conflict resolution? Catch up quick How to avoid “emotional overhead” at work (hint: emojis are 👍 ) 5 tips for employee surveys that actually make a difference More in Communication Distributed Work How to excel at asynchronous communication with your distributed team RTO’d? Take these distributed practices back to the office with you An intentional solution for worker loneliness Atlassian’s distributed work glossary More in Distributed Work Leadership Great managers meet uncertainty with curiosity and confidence Good people management begins with self-understanding How to minimize the impact of manager changes Advice for first-time managers, from leaders who’ve been there More in Leadership Productivity How to implement goal refresh cycles on your team 76 quotes about growth to inspire your next big leap How to make work visible and improve alignment (with or without AI) How to harness the power of professional development goals More in Productivity Strategy How hands-on workshops boost teamwide AI confidence Organize the chaos: 5 key steps in the change management cycle Less noise, more signal: Atlassian’s responsible AI journey continues Find stuff fast: How to end the endless hunt for information More in Strategy Teamwork Better together: 8 essential teamwork skills to master Why 2026 will be the year AI grows up How to make space for AI experimentation on your team Are AI skills the silver lining in a tricky job market? More in Teamwork Collections Earnings Reports “Open company, no bullshit” isn’t just one of our values. It’s a way of life at Atlassian. Here’s what we’re sharing with our investors and stakeholders each quarter. Wellbeing | Well-doing Laying the groundwork for better employee health and happiness. Company Culture Embrace transparency, foster a sense of belonging, form connections – and have fun along the way. Ways of Working How you work is just as important as the work you’re doing. Your Personality at Work Navigating and celebrating the complexities of our individuality. The Flywheel Growth Model There are loads of ways to grow a company – learn about our approach here. Resources View All Resources Podcasts Should your team set aside time for virtual hangs? Does your team need a regular No Meeting Day? Do emojis belong in the workplace? Is it time to ditch the remote daily stand up? More episodes Guides and Research AI Collaboration Index 2025 Atlassian for Atlassian State of Teams 2025 State of Teams 2024 More in guides and research Quizzes QUIZ Have you mastered the fine art of speaking up at work? QUIZ Does your team have a toxic workplace culture? QUIZ What’s your virtual meeting IQ? QUIZ What kind of feedback do you give? More in quizzes About About Work Life Work Life is Atlassian’s flagship publication dedicated to unleashing the potential of every team through real-life advice, inspiring stories, and thoughtful perspectives from leaders around the world. Learn more about Work Life Contributors Shaina Rozen Contributing Writer Genevieve Michaels Contributing Writer Dr. Molly Sands Head of the Teamwork Lab Kelli María Korducki Contributing Writer Kat Boogaard Contributing Writer Sarah Goff-Dupont Contributing Writer Searchform Subscribe Search Primary Menu Search in https://www.atlassian.com/blog/ Search Topics Communication Distributed Work Leadership Productivity Strategy Teamwork Subscribe Culture, tech, teams, and tips, delivered twice a month Subscribe Collections Earnings Reports Wellbeing | Well-doing Company Culture Ways of Working Your Personality at Work The Flywheel Growth Model Subscribe Culture, tech, teams, and tips, delivered twice a month Subscribe Resources Podcasts Guides and Research Quizzes Subscribe Culture, tech, teams, and tips, delivered twice a month Subscribe Search Search in https://www.atlassian.com/blog/ Search Subscribe Culture, tech, teams, and tips, delivered twice a month Subscribe Articles about Communication 17 scripts for difficult conversations at work From negotiating a salary to addressing team conflicts, we’ve got you covered. In Communication Shared understanding: finding the “why” behind the “what” A quarter of knowledge workers are disconnected from their leaders. Here's how to get back on track. By Ingrid Blake In Leadership Subscribe to Work Life Advice, stories, and expertise about work life today. Subscribe How to improve your collaboration skills Collaboration in the workplace is inescapable, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy. Here are four research-backed tips to hone the skill. By Kat Boogaard In Communication Hear us out! Active listening is worth the effort You may only need your ears to hear, but you need your whole brain to listen. By Kat Boogaard In Communication Your pain-free guide to 360-degree feedback There's no "single source of truth" for how you're perceived in the workplace. 360-degree feedback might be the next best thing. By Kat Boogaard In Communication Empathy is the antidote: conflict resolution at work Not all conflict is bad – here are the habits you should harness to avoid the problematic kind. By Daniel Kenitz In Teamwork 3 ways to improve your communication skills at work Whether you realize it or not, you’re communicating all the time – might as well do it right. By Kat Boogaard In Communication Nonverbal communication in the age of the digital workplace Because it's really hard to make eye contact on Zoom. By Lauren Parker , Sam Milbrath In Teamwork Productivity Intrapersonal communication: the most important job skill you’ve never heard of Communication Your quick-start guide to emotional intelligence Communication 5 conflict resolution skills to help you keep the peace Teamwork 9 immediate ways to improve communication in the workplace Communication How to communicate like a leader Communication 5 ways to boost your motivation skills Communication How to improve your negotiation skills Communication Your cringe-free guide to networking Quizzes Do you know your communication style at work? Take our quiz to find out Posts pagination Previous 1 2 3 Next Join over 150,000 working professionals By Atlassian Culture, tech, teams, and tips, delivered twice a month Sign me up! Atlassian.com Terms of Use Privacy Policy Notice at Collection Copyright © 2026 Atlassian Subscribe to Work Life Advice, stories, and expertise about work life today. Email * | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/chunked-data | chunked-data: Typeclasses for dealing with various chunked data representations Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts chunked-data : Typeclasses for dealing with various chunked data representations [ data , library , mit ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] See docs and README at http://www.stackage.org/package/chunked-data [ Skip to Readme ] Modules [ Index ] Data Data.Builder Data.ChunkedZip Data.IOData Downloads chunked-data-0.3.1.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers MichaelSnoyman For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 0.1.0.0 , 0.1.0.1 , 0.2.0 , 0.3.0 , 0.3.1 Change log ChangeLog.md Dependencies base (>=4 && <5) , bytestring (>=0.10.2) , containers , semigroups , text (>=1.2) , transformers , vector [ details ] License MIT Author Michael Snoyman Maintainer michael@snoyman.com Uploaded by MichaelSnoyman at 2018-01-15T18:11:33Z Stability Unknown --> Category Data Home page https://github.com/snoyberg/mono-traversable#readme Bug tracker https://github.com/snoyberg/mono-traversable/issues Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/snoyberg/mono-traversable Distributions Arch: 0.3.1 , Debian: 0.3.1 , Fedora: 0.3.1 , FreeBSD: 0.2.0 , LTSHaskell: 0.3.1 , NixOS: 0.3.1 , Stackage: 0.3.1 Reverse Dependencies 12 direct, 338 indirect [ details ] Downloads 26915 total (16 in the last 30 days) Rating (no votes yet) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs available [ build log ] Last success reported on 2018-01-15 [ all 1 reports ] Readme for chunked-data-0.3.1 [ back to package description ] chunked-data Typeclasses for dealing with various chunked data representations Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/sv/c/kontek-referral | E-signering direkt i Kontek HRM Employee - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Scrive + Kivra – signera säkert och nå mottagaren med 90% öppningsfrekvens Help Centre Kontakta Scrive Kontakta sälj Logga in Primary navigation Produkter Lösningar Resurser Företaget Priser Hjälpcenter Kontakta sälj Köp nu Prova gratis Sök Öppna menyn Hem / Kontek E-signering direkt i Kontek HRM Employee Effektivisera dina HR-processer och skapa en bättre rekryteringsupplevelse med snabb och säker e-signering och autentisering. Företagsnamn * Organisationsnummer * xxxxxx-xxxx Förnamn * Efternamn * Epost * Titel Partner Company Name Partner Reg. No format: No country-code, dashes or empty spaces Jag accepterar Scrives Privacy Notice . Skicka Bättre användarupplevelse Underlättar vardagen för HR, chefer, medarbetare, IT och ekonomi. Skicka, signera och hantera avtal på vilken enhet som helst. Effektivisera avtalsprocesser Effektivisera HR-processerna och minska de administrativa kostnaderna med snabbare dokumentsignering och autentisering. Säkert och kompatibelt Skydda känslig HR-data, inklusive avtal och anställningsregister, från obehörig åtkomst och manipulering. Se hur det fungerar Lär dig mer om Kontek och Scrive. I detta on demand webinar går vi igenom hur du kan effektivisera dina HR processer, skapa ökad säkerhet med eIDs som BankID och lägga till automatiska påminnelser för att snabba på processer. Titta på webinar Fördelar med eSign Vår uppgift är att hjälpa er att arbeta smart och effektivt. Hantera avtalsflöden från en och samma plats och signera dokument och avtal elektroniskt. Skapa en bättre upplevelse för anställda och kandidater. Signera dokument var ni än befinner er, smidigt och säkert. Scrive finns där du och dina kunder arbetar: på mobil, laptop eller surfplatta, vid hemmakontoret eller på distans. Med inbyggd autentisering i vår tjänst så som BankID kan du skapa snabba, trygga och automatiserade processer. Förenklad säkerhet och efterlevnad Scrive är en betrodd tjänst enligt EU:s eIDAS-lagstiftning och tillhandahåller alla nivåer av elektroniska signaturer. Dokument som undertecknats elektroniskt med Scrive överensstämmer med global avtalsrätt och kan användas som bevis i domstolsförfaranden. Scrives lösningar är kompatibla med GDPR och underlättar din egen efterlevnad med åtgärder som uppfyller principerna för dataskydd. Varför Scrive? Scrive tillhandahåller e-signaturer och eID-lösningar för företag och erbjuder ett säkert och snabbt sätt att signera och hantera elektroniska dokument. Scrives expertis och erfarenhet av digitalisering är nyckeln till framgångsrika partnerskap med några av Europas största varumärken. Varför Scrive Scrive Grev Turegatan 11A 114 46 Stockholm Kontakta sälj Footer navigation Produkter eSign Online eSign Go eSign API Scrive QES eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Lösningar Industrier Kundcase Integrationer Priser Pricing eSign Online Priser eSign API Priser eSign GO Priser ID Check Priser eID Hub Priser eSign Forms Priser Forms Builder Resurser Kunskap Trust Centre Hjälpcenter Utmaningar vi löser Digitalisering Signera avtal digitalt med bankid Externa resurser Verifiera ett dokument System status API dokumentation Brand guidelines Företaget Om Scrive Partners Karriär Kontakt Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie Declaration © 2026 Scrive Kontakta oss Fyll i formuläret så kontaktar vi dig Kom igång med e-signering 1 Teckna modulen E-signering i Kontek HRM Employee kostnadsfritt. 2 Teckna ett avtal med Scrive. Fyll i formuläret så hjälper vi dig. 3 Klart! Du har tillgång till e-signering i Kontek HRM Employee. Phone number Detta fält är obligatoriskt Country code Detta fält är obligatoriskt * +46 Telefon Detta fält är obligatoriskt * Country | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.atlassian.com/fr/enterprise/resources | Ressources Enterprise | Atlassian Close Afficher cette page dans votre langue ? Toutes les langues Sélectionner votre langue 中文 Deutsch English Español Français Italiano 한국어 Nederlands 日本語 Português Pусский Polski Contacter le service commercial Présentation Une opération rondement menée Ressources Plus + Moins - Contacter le service commercial Back Contacter le service commercial Boostez la réussite de votre équipe grâce à des ressources professionnelles Découvrez des livres blancs, des infographies, des webinaires et bien plus encore, le tout conçu pour aider votre équipe à s'épanouir Contacter le service commercial Ressources en vedette Explorez les ressources sur les dernières tendances et analyses Leader DevOps du Magic Quadrant™ de Gartner® Découvrez comment la plateforme DevOps unifiée d'Atlassian connecte les équipes d'ingénierie, informatiques et métier pour accélérer les résultats. Obtenir le rapport Les principes du cloud en matière de confiance et de sécurité Découvrez les dernières tendances et bonnes pratiques en matière de sécurité, de conformité et de résilience aux côtés d'un analyste de Forrester et de l'équipe Trust d'Atlassian. Visionner maintenant ITSM optimisé par l'IA dans Jira Service Management Découvrez comment Jira Service Management utilise l'IA pour détecter et résoudre rapidement les tickets ITSM avant qu'ils ne perturbent vos opérations métier. En savoir plus Libérer le potentiel des équipes : présentation de Rovo Découvrez comment Rovo tire profit de l'IA pour trouver rapidement des données, découvrir des informations essentielles et améliorer la productivité de l'équipe. Visionner maintenant Toutes les ressources Filtrer | Réinitialiser Thème Toutes les rubriques AI Rapports d'analyse Automatisation Bonnes pratiques en matière de travail d'équipe Performances et échelle Sécurité et conformité Administration Marketplace Transformation cloud Gestion des changements Produit Tous les produits Jira Confluence Atlassian Guard Plateforme Jira Service Management Secteur Tous les secteurs Enseignement Services financiers Indépendant du secteur Internet et télécommunications Fabrication Immobilier Technologie Équipes Toutes les équipes Administrateur Leadership exécutif Juridique Logiciels/Informatique Témoignages / Filtrer Thème Toutes les rubriques Toutes les rubriques AI Rapports d'analyse Automatisation Bonnes pratiques en matière de travail d'équipe Performances et échelle Sécurité et conformité Administration Marketplace Transformation cloud Gestion des changements Produit Tous les produits Tous les produits Jira Confluence Atlassian Guard Plateforme Jira Service Management Secteur Tous les secteurs Tous les secteurs Enseignement Services financiers Indépendant du secteur Internet et télécommunications Fabrication Immobilier Technologie Équipes Toutes les équipes Toutes les équipes Administrateur Leadership exécutif Juridique Logiciels/Informatique Réinitialiser 0 Résultats × Entreprise Carrières Événements Blogs Relations avec les investisseurs Atlassian Foundation Kit pour la presse Nous contacter Index de l'égalité professionnelle produits Rovo Jira Jira Align Jira Service Management Confluence Loom Trello Bitbucket Voir tous les produits Ressources Support technique Achats et licences Communauté Atlassian Base de connaissances Marketplace Mon compte Créer un ticket de support Apprendre Partenaires Formation et certification Documentation Ressources développeurs Services Enterprise Découvrir toutes les ressources Copyright © 2025 Atlassian Politique de confidentialité Conditions Mentions légales Choisir la langue Deutsch English Español Français Italiano 한국어 Nederlands 日本語 Polski Português русский 中文 | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/pricing/eid-hub | Pricing eID Hub - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation From paper to AI: why HR must lead the digital leap English Global Sverige Danmark Norge Deutschland Nederland France Suomi United Kingdom Help Centre Contact Scrive Contact sales Log in Primary navigation Products Pricing Solutions Resources Company Pricing Help Centre Contact sales Buy now Try for free Search Open menu Home / Pricing / Pricing eID Hub Compare plans and pricing for eID Hub All your eID needs in one place. Select a solution below for information on features and pricing. Submit an enquiry to hear back from us shortly, or contact sales directly at +46 8 446 866 02 eID Hub ID Check Price comparison navigation Customised solution eID Hub Request a quote Access all of Scrive's identity services with a single integration, using either our dedicated REST API or OpenID Connect. Highlighted features Secure logins KYC checks Onboarding Transaction approvals Global eID & IDV access to over 195 countries Identity checks Checkouts eID Hub The fast track for organisations to achieve authentication in all channels. Access all of Scrive’s identity services with a single integration, using either our dedicated REST API or OpenID Connect. Explore eID Hub See how it works Our team is ready to show you how to use our eID Hub Book a demo Questions? Tell us about what you're trying to solve today Contact sales Electronic signature E-signing made easy with Scrive’s electronic signature solution. Whether you’re a small startup or a big corporation, Scrive has electronic signature solutions to suit your needs. Explore Electronic signature Footer navigation Products eSign Online eSign GO eSign API Scrive QES eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Solutions Industries Customer cases Integrations Pricing Pricing eSign Online Pricing eSign GO Pricing eSign API Pricing ID Check Pricing eID Hub Pricing eSign Forms Pricing Forms Builder Resources Knowledge Hub Trust Centre Help Centre Subscribe to newsletter Challenges we solve Digital signature vs. Electronic Signature Digitalisation Video guides Switch to Scrive More System status Verify a document API Documentation Engineering blog Scrive brand guidelines Company About Partners Career Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/da/loesninger/brancher/hr-rekrytering | HR & Recruiting document workflows with Scrive - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Scrive + e-Boks: Send og underskriv via Danmarks mest pålidelige digitale postkasse. Danmark Sverige English Global France Norge Nederland Suomi Deutschland United Kingdom Help Centre Salg +45 89 88 96 60 Kontakt Log Ind Primary navigation Produkter Løsninger Ressourcer Firma Priser Help Centre Kontakt Køb nu Prøv Gratis Søg Åbn menu Hjem / Løsninger / Brancher / HR & Rekrytering Aftaleautomatisering Skriv under hurtigere Forkort dokumentbehandlingstiden og reducér det administrative arbejde Ethvert system Integrér i din platform eller vælg system-agnostiske tilføjelser Kundeoplevelse Styrk dit brand internt og imponér mulige kandidater Modernisering af medarbejderrejsen E-signér dokumenter fra et hvilket som helst system, på kontoret eller på farten. Elektronisk ID-verifikation i enhver løsning. Din partner i digitalisering Det er muligt, at din digitale rejse er kompleks, men den behøver ikke at være kompliceret. Scrives omfattende ekspertise og erfaring kombineret med vores kultur, der er præget af kontinuerlig innovation og kundefokus, er nøglen til vores voksende succes. Vi bringer dig i mål Scrive er med dig hele vejen. Udgangspunktet er en forståelse af, hvor du er i din digitale omstilling. Derfra er Scrives værktøjskasse fleksibel, fra fuld integration til systemagnosticisme for øjeblikkelig, automatisk e-signering. Har du spørgsmål? Fortæl os om, hvad du forsøger at løse i dag Kontakt salg Se vores løsninger i aktion Lad vores team vise dig, hvordan Scrive-løsninger kan automatisere almindelige forretningsprocesser, og hvordan du tilpasser dem til dine behov. Bestil en demo Hvorfor Scrive? Scrive leverer løsninger til e-signaturer og e-ID-løsninger til små og mellemstore virksomheder samt til store virksomheder. Scrive tilbyder en sikker og hurtig måde at underskrive og administrere elektroniske dokumenter på. Hvorfor Scrive Scrive Farvergade 2, 4. 1463 København K Kontakt formular Footer navigation Produkter eSign Online eSign GO eSign API eSign Forms Forms Builder eID Hub ID Check Løsninger Brancher Casestudier Integrationer Priser Priser eSign Online Priser eSign API Priser eSign GO Priser ID Check Priser eID Hub Priser eSign Forms Priser Forms Builder Ressourcer Viden Trust Centre Help Centre Udfordringer vi løser PDF Digital Signaturer vs Elektroniske Signaturer – den komplette danske guide Digitalisation Eksterne ressourcer Verificere et dokument API-dokumentation Systemstatus Scrive brand guidelines Firma Om Scrive Partners Karriere Kontakt os Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive HR og Rekruttering Strømlin og beskyt dine dokument-workflows med Scrives e-signering og godkendelsesløsninger NDAs Fordelstilgang Ansættelseskontrakter Seperationsformaliteter Onboarding Selvbetjeningsdokumenter Vilkårsgodkendelser Medarbejderbedømmelser Related integrations Teamtailor Teamtailor er en rekrutterings- og markedsføringsplatform, der tilbyder en ny måde at markedsføre, administrere og ansætte talenter på effektivt. Over 2000 virksomheder bruger Teamtailor i deres rekruttering, og de blev optaget på Deloitte Sweden Technology Fast 50-listen i 2019. HR Sympa Rygsøjlen i din HCM - en komplet, fuldt tilpasselig HR-løsning med ubegrænsede integrationer. Automatiser rutine HR-opgaver, og få et konsolideret og klart overblik over alle dine personlige data i ét system. HR Læs mere om integration Quinyx Med Quinyx får dine medarbejdere adgang til en brugervenlig app, der forenkler hverdagen og gør dine medarbejdere gladere. Smarte værktøjer til planlægning, automatisk AI bemanding, tidsrapportering, arbejdsstyring direkte på din mobiltelefon. HR-modul integreret med Scrive til formalisering af ansættelseskontrakter. HR Talentech Strømlining af HR gennem automatisering. Talentech kombinerer det bedste fra fire førende innovatorer inden for HR-teknologi i branchen: HR Manager, ReachMee, Talmundo og Webcruiter. Automatisering, HR Flex Applications Flex Applications tilbyder en webbaseret end-to-end-løsning til lønadministration, HR-support, tidsrapportering, rejseudgifter og personaleadministration. HR Kontek Kontek er den specialiserede virksomhed, der kender til løn- og HR-området. Vi fortsætter med at tage smart teknologi til os og tilbyder fuldt webbaserede løsninger til personaleadministration, uanset hvilken branche du arbejder i. HR Læs mere om Kontek SD Worx Europæisk førende inden for HR- og lønadministration. Vi skaber succes i hjertet af din virksomhed, så du og dine medarbejdere kan trives. HR Heartpace HR Et fuldt modulært HR-system, der understøtter og forenkler alt dag-til-dag HR-arbejde og dækker alle HR-behov, samtidig med at du får mulighed for at træffe de rigtige beslutninger baseret på datadrevet indsigt på tværs af alle HR-processer. HR Caspeco Fleksibelt og brugervenligt system til administration og styring af indtægter og udgifter for restauranter, hoteller, stadioner og caféer. Integreret med Scrive til at underskrive ansættelseskontrakter. HR Læs mere om integration Huma Huma er et HR-system, der er let at bruge og let at kunne lide. Du tilbringer ⅓ af dit liv på arbejdet, så få det til at tælle med et moderne og intuitivt HR-system, der problemfrit opfylder alle dine centrale HR-behov. HR Sikker og compliant Scrives sikre løsninger opfylder de relevante krav til elektronisk signatur, databeskyttelse og hvidvaskningsregler. Beskyt dig selv med identitetsbekræftelse, når du rekrutterer langdistancekandidate Alle dokumenter, der underskrives med Scrive eSign, indeholder bevismateriale i verdensklasse. Digital forsegling ved hjælp af blockchain-teknologi sikrer integriteten af dine underskrevne dokumenter for at beskytte mod og opdage forfalskning, nu og i fremtiden. Meget mere end e-signering Vi ved, at e-signering og godkendelse blot er dele af noget meget større – dine forretningsprocesser. Skabeloner Spar tid og kontrollér processerne i overensstemmelse med dine daglige tidsplaner. Tidsfrister og påmindelser Hold signeringsprocesserne på rette spor, mens du tager dig af andre ting. Godkendelse Send dine dokumenter til en eller flere godkendende parter. Auto-arkivering Scrive E-arkiv, Microsoft OneDrive, Google Drive eller Dropbox. Øjeblikkelig dokumentautomatisering Automatiser alle dine kundedokumenter uden integration. Ikke flere PDF’er, der skal downloades, printes, sendes og behandles. Delelige links Kunder udfylder dokumenter online og starter e-signeringsflow fra din hjemmeside. Datapræcision Eliminér dyr, tidskrævende og manuel behandling. Papirfri Byg bro over kløften i kundeoplevelsen og spar administrationstid. Sikkerhed Hver underskrevet formular er beskyttet mod forfalskning ved hjælp af blockchain-teknologi. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://mandoc.bsd.lv/man/roff.7.html | Copyright (c) 2010-2019 Ingo Schwarze Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. --> ROFF(7) ROFF(7) Miscellaneous Information Manual ROFF(7) NAME roff — roff language reference for mandoc DESCRIPTION The roff language is a general purpose text formatting language. Since traditional implementations of the mdoc(7) and man(7) manual formatting languages are based on it, many real-world manuals use small numbers of roff requests and escape sequences intermixed with their mdoc(7) or man(7) code. To properly format such manuals, the mandoc(1) utility supports a subset of roff requests and escapes. Even though this manual page lists all roff requests and escape sequences, it only contains partial information about requests not supported by mandoc(1) and about language features that do not matter for manual pages. For complete roff manuals, consult the SEE ALSO section. Input lines beginning with the control character ‘.’ are parsed for requests and macros. Such lines are called “request lines” or “macro lines”, respectively. Requests change the processing state and manipulate the formatting; some macros also define the document structure and produce formatted output. The single quote ("'") is accepted as an alternative control character, treated by mandoc(1) just like ‘ . ’ Lines not beginning with control characters are called “text lines”. They provide free-form text to be printed; the formatting of the text depends on the respective processing context. LANGUAGE SYNTAX roff documents may contain only graphable 7-bit ASCII characters, the space character, and, in certain circumstances, the tab character. The backslash character ‘\’ indicates the start of an escape sequence, used for example for Comments and Special Characters . For a complete listing of escape sequences, consult the ESCAPE SEQUENCE REFERENCE below. Comments Text following an escaped double-quote ‘\"’, whether in a request, macro, or text line, is ignored to the end of the line. A request line beginning with a control character and comment escape ‘.\"’ is also ignored. Furthermore, request lines with only a control character and optional trailing whitespace are stripped from input. Examples: .\" This is a comment line. .\" The next line is ignored: . .Sh EXAMPLES \" This is a comment, too. example text \" And so is this. Special Characters Special characters are used to encode special glyphs and are rendered differently across output media. They may occur in request, macro, and text lines. Sequences begin with the escape character ‘\’ followed by either an open-parenthesis ‘(’ for two-character sequences; an open-bracket ‘[’ for n-character sequences (terminated at a close-bracket ‘]’); or a single one character sequence. Examples: \(em Two-letter em dash escape. \e One-letter backslash escape. See mandoc_char(7) for a complete list. Font Selection In mdoc(7) and man(7) documents, fonts are usually selected with macros. The \f escape sequence and the ft request can be used to manually change the font, but this is not recommended in mdoc(7) documents. Such manual font changes are overridden by many subsequent macros. The following fonts are supported: B Bold font. BI A font that is both bold and italic. CB Bold constant width font. Same as B in terminal output. CI Italic constant width font. Same as I in terminal output. CR Regular constant width font. Same as R in terminal output. CW An alias for CR . I Italic font. P Return to the previous font. If a macro caused a font change since the last \f eascape sequence or ft request, this returns to the font before the last font change in the macro rather than to the font before the last manual font change. R Roman font. This is the default font. 1 An alias for R . 2 An alias for I . 3 An alias for B . 4 An alias for BI . Examples: \fBbold\fR Write in bold , then switch to regular font mode. \fIitalic\fP Write in italic , then return to previous font mode. \f(BIbold italic\fP Write in bold italic , then return to previous font mode. Whitespace Whitespace consists of the space character. In text lines, whitespace is preserved within a line. In request and macro lines, whitespace delimits arguments and is discarded. Unescaped trailing spaces are stripped from text line input unless in a literal context. In general, trailing whitespace on any input line is discouraged for reasons of portability. In the rare case that a space character is needed at the end of an input line, it may be forced by ‘\ \&’. Literal space characters can be produced in the output using escape sequences. In macro lines, they can also be included in arguments using quotation; see MACRO SYNTAX for details. Blank text lines, which may include whitespace, are only permitted within literal contexts. If the first character of a text line is a space, that line is printed with a leading newline. Scaling Widths Many requests and macros support scaled widths for their arguments. The syntax for a scaled width is ‘ [+-]?[0-9]*.[0-9]*[:unit:] ’, where a decimal must be preceded or followed by at least one digit. The following scaling units are accepted: c centimetre i inch P pica (1/6 inch) p point (1/72 inch) f scale ‘u’ by 65536 v default vertical span m width of rendered ‘m’ (em) character n width of rendered ‘n’ (en) character u default horizontal span for the terminal M mini-em (1/100 em) Using anything other than ‘m’, ‘n’, or ‘v’ is necessarily non-portable across output media. See COMPATIBILITY . If a scaling unit is not provided, the numerical value is interpreted under the default rules of ‘v’ for vertical spaces and ‘u’ for horizontal ones. Examples: .Bl -tag -width 2i two-inch tagged list indentation in mdoc(7) .HP 2i two-inch tagged list indentation in man(7) .sp 2v two vertical spaces Sentence Spacing Each sentence should terminate at the end of an input line. By doing this, a formatter will be able to apply the proper amount of spacing after the end of sentence (unescaped) period, exclamation mark, or question mark followed by zero or more non-sentence closing delimiters (‘)’, ‘]’, ‘'’, ‘"’). The proper spacing is also intelligently preserved if a sentence ends at the boundary of a macro line. If an input line happens to end with a period, exclamation or question mark that isn't the end of a sentence, append a zero-width space (‘\&’). Examples: Do not end sentences mid-line like this. Instead, end a sentence like this. A macro would end like this: .Xr mandoc 1 . An abbreviation at the end of an input line needs escaping, e.g.\& like this. REQUEST SYNTAX A request or macro line consists of: the control character ‘.’ or ‘'’ at the beginning of the line, optionally an arbitrary amount of whitespace, the name of the request or the macro, which is one word of arbitrary length, terminated by whitespace, and zero or more arguments delimited by whitespace. Thus, the following request lines are all equivalent: .ig end .ig end . ig end MACRO SYNTAX Macros are provided by the mdoc(7) and man(7) languages and can be defined by the de request. When called, they follow the same syntax as requests, except that macro arguments may optionally be quoted by enclosing them in double quote characters (‘"’). Quoted text, even if it contains whitespace or would cause a macro invocation when unquoted, is always considered literal text. Inside quoted text, pairs of double quote characters (‘""’) resolve to single double quote characters. To be recognised as the beginning of a quoted argument, the opening quote character must be preceded by a space character. A quoted argument extends to the next double quote character that is not part of a pair, or to the end of the input line, whichever comes earlier. Leaving out the terminating double quote character at the end of the line is discouraged. For clarity, if more arguments follow on the same input line, it is recommended to follow the terminating double quote character by a space character; in case the next character after the terminating double quote character is anything else, it is regarded as the beginning of the next, unquoted argument. Both in quoted and unquoted arguments, pairs of backslashes (‘\\’) resolve to single backslashes. In unquoted arguments, space characters can alternatively be included by preceding them with a backslash (‘\ ’), but quoting is usually better for clarity. Examples: .Fn strlen "const char *s" Group arguments "const char *s" into one function argument. If unspecified, "const", "char", and "*s" would be considered separate arguments. .Op "Fl a" Consider "Fl a" as literal text instead of a flag macro. REQUEST REFERENCE The mandoc(1) roff parser recognises the following requests. For requests marked as "ignored" or "unsupported", any arguments are ignored, and the number of arguments is not checked. ab [ message ] Abort processing. Currently unsupported. ad [ b | c | l | n | r ] Set line adjustment mode for subsequent text. Currently ignored. af registername format Assign an output format to a number register. Currently ignored. aln newname oldname Create an alias for a number register. Currently unsupported. als newname oldname Create an alias for a request, string, macro, or diversion. am macroname [ endmacro ] Append to a macro definition. The syntax of this request is the same as that of de . am1 macroname [ endmacro ] Append to a macro definition, switching roff compatibility mode off during macro execution (groff extension). The syntax of this request is the same as that of de1 . Since mandoc(1) does not implement roff compatibility mode at all, it handles this request as an alias for am . ami macrostring [ endstring ] Append to a macro definition, specifying the macro name indirectly (groff extension). The syntax of this request is the same as that of dei . ami1 macrostring [ endstring ] Append to a macro definition, specifying the macro name indirectly and switching roff compatibility mode off during macro execution (groff extension). The syntax of this request is the same as that of dei1 . Since mandoc(1) does not implement roff compatibility mode at all, it handles this request as an alias for ami . as stringname [ string ] Append to a user-defined string. The syntax of this request is the same as that of ds . If a user-defined string with the specified name does not yet exist, it is set to the empty string before appending. as1 stringname [ string ] Append to a user-defined string, switching roff compatibility mode off during macro execution (groff extension). The syntax of this request is the same as that of ds1 . Since mandoc(1) does not implement roff compatibility mode at all, it handles this request as an alias for as . asciify divname Fully unformat a diversion. Currently unsupported. backtrace Print a backtrace of the input stack. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. bd font [ curfont ] [ offset ] Artificially embolden by repeated printing with small shifts. Currently ignored. bleedat left top width height Set the BleedBox page parameter for PDF generation. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. blm macroname Set a blank line trap. Currently unsupported. box divname Begin a diversion without including a partially filled line. Currently unsupported. boxa divname Add to a diversion without including a partially filled line. Currently unsupported. bp [ + | - ] pagenumber Begin a new page. Currently ignored. BP source height width position offset flags label Define a frame and place a picture in it. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. br Break the output line. break Break out of the innermost while loop. breakchar char ... Optional line break characters. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. brnl N Break output line after the next N input lines. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. brp Break and spread output line. Currently, this is implemented as an alias for br . brpnl N Break and spread output line after the next N input lines. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. c2 [ char ] Change the no-break control character. Currently unsupported. cc [ char ] Change the control character. If char is not specified, the control character is reset to ‘.’. Trailing characters are ignored. ce [ N ] Center the next N input lines without filling. N defaults to 1. An argument of 0 or less ends centering. Currently, high level macros abort centering. cf filename Output the contents of a file. Ignored because insecure. cflags flags char ... Set character flags. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. ch macroname [ dist ] Change a trap location. Currently ignored. char glyph [ string ] Define or redefine the ASCII character or character escape sequence glyph to be rendered as string , which can be empty. Only partially supported in mandoc(1) ; may interact incorrectly with tr . chop stringname Remove the last character from a macro, string, or diversion. Currently unsupported. class classname char ... Define a character class. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. close streamname Close an open file. Ignored because insecure. CL color text Print text in color. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. color [ 1 | 0 ] Activate or deactivate colors. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. composite from to Define a name component for composite glyph names. This is a groff extension and currently unsupported. continue Immediately start the next iteration of a while loop. Currently unsupported. cp [ 1 | 0 ] Switch roff compatibility mode on or off. Currently ignored. cropat left top width height Set the CropBox page parameter for PDF generation. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. cs font [ width [ emsize ]] Constant character spacing mode. Currently ignored. cu [ N ] Underline next N input lines including whitespace. Currently ignored. da divname Append to a diversion. Currently unsupported. dch macroname [ dist ] Change a trap location in the current diversion. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. de macroname [ endmacro ] Define a roff macro. Its syntax can be either . de macroname definition .. or . de macroname endmacro definition . endmacro Both forms define or redefine the macro macroname to represent the definition , which may consist of one or more input lines, including the newline characters terminating each line, optionally containing calls to roff requests, roff macros or high-level macros like man(7) or mdoc(7) macros, whichever applies to the document in question. Specifying a custom endmacro works in the same way as for ig ; namely, the call to ‘. endmacro ’ first ends the definition , and after that, it is also evaluated as a roff request or roff macro, but not as a high-level macro. The macro can be invoked later using the syntax . macroname [ argument [ argument ... ]] Regarding argument parsing, see MACRO SYNTAX above. The line invoking the macro will be replaced in the input stream by the definition , replacing all occurrences of \\$ N , where N is a digit, by the N th argument . For example, .de ZN \fI\^\\$1\^\fP\\$2 .. .ZN XtFree . produces \fI\^XtFree\^\fP. in the input stream, and thus in the output: XtFree . Each occurrence of \\$* is replaced with all the arguments, joined together with single space characters. The variant \\$@ is similar, except that each argument is individually quoted. Since macros and user-defined strings share a common string table, defining a macro macroname clobbers the user-defined string macroname , and the definition can also be printed using the ‘\*’ string interpolation syntax described below ds , but this is rarely useful because every macro definition contains at least one explicit newline character. In order to prevent endless recursion, both groff and mandoc(1) limit the stack depth for expanding macros and strings to a large, but finite number, and mandoc(1) also limits the length of the expanded input line. Do not rely on the exact values of these limits. de1 macroname [ endmacro ] Define a roff macro that will be executed with roff compatibility mode switched off during macro execution. This is a groff extension. Since mandoc(1) does not implement roff compatibility mode at all, it handles this request as an alias for de . defcolor newname scheme component ... Define a color name. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. dei macrostring [ endstring ] Define a roff macro, specifying the macro name indirectly (groff extension). The syntax of this request is the same as that of de . The effect is the same as: . de \* [ macrostring ] [\*[ endstring ]] dei1 macrostring [ endstring ] Define a roff macro that will be executed with roff compatibility mode switched off during macro execution, specifying the macro name indirectly (groff extension). Since mandoc(1) does not implement roff compatibility mode at all, it handles this request as an alias for dei . device string ...   devicem stringname These two requests only make sense with the groff-specific intermediate output format and are unsupported. di divname Begin a diversion. Currently unsupported. do command [ argument ... ] Execute roff request or macro line with compatibility mode disabled. Currently unsupported. ds stringname [["] string ] Define a user-defined string. The stringname and string arguments are space-separated. If the string begins with a double-quote character, that character will not be part of the string. All remaining characters on the input line form the string , including whitespace and double-quote characters, even trailing ones. The string can be interpolated into subsequent text by using \* [ stringname ] for a stringname of arbitrary length, or \*(NN or \*N if the length of stringname is two or one characters, respectively. Interpolation can be prevented by escaping the leading backslash; that is, an asterisk preceded by an even number of backslashes does not trigger string interpolation. Since user-defined strings and macros share a common string table, defining a string stringname clobbers the macro stringname , and the stringname used for defining a string can also be invoked as a macro, in which case the following input line will be appended to the string , forming a new input line passed to the roff parser. For example, .ds badidea .S .badidea H SYNOPSIS invokes the SH macro when used in a man(7) document. Such abuse is of course strongly discouraged. ds1 stringname [["] string ] Define a user-defined string that will be expanded with roff compatibility mode switched off during string expansion. This is a groff extension. Since mandoc(1) does not implement roff compatibility mode at all, it handles this request as an alias for ds . dwh dist macroname Set a location trap in the current diversion. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. dt [ dist macroname ] Set a trap within a diversion. Currently unsupported. ec [ char ] Enable the escape mechanism and change the escape character. The char argument defaults to the backslash (‘\’). ecr Restore the escape character. Currently unsupported. ecs Save the escape character. Currently unsupported. el body The “else” half of an if/else conditional. Pops a result off the stack of conditional evaluations pushed by ie and uses it as its conditional. If no stack entries are present (e.g., due to no prior ie calls) then false is assumed. The syntax of this request is similar to if except that the conditional is missing. em macroname Set a trap at the end of input. Currently unsupported. EN End an equation block. See EQ . eo Disable the escape mechanism completely. EP End a picture started by BP . This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. EQ Begin an equation block. See eqn(7) for a description of the equation language. errprint message Print a string like an error message. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. ev [ envname ] Switch to another environment. Currently unsupported. evc [ envname ] Copy an environment into the current environment. Currently unsupported. ex Abort processing and exit. Currently unsupported. fallback curfont font ... Select the fallback sequence for a font. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. fam [ familyname ] Change the font family. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. fc [ delimchar [ padchar ]] Define a delimiting and a padding character for fields. Currently unsupported. fchar glyphname [ string ] Define a fallback glyph. Currently unsupported. fcolor colorname Set the fill color for \D objects. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. fdeferlig font string ... Defer ligature building. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. feature + | - name Enable or disable an OpenType feature. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. fi Break the output line and switch to fill mode, which is active by default but can be ended with the nf request. In fill mode, input from subsequent input lines is added to the same output line until the next word no longer fits, at which point the output line is broken. This request is implied by the mdoc(7) Sh macro and by the man(7) SH , SS , and EE macros. fkern font minkern Control the use of kerning tables for a font. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. fl Flush output. Currently ignored. flig font string char ... Define ligatures. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. fp position font [ filename ] Assign font position. Currently ignored. fps mapname ... Mount a font with a special character map. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. fschar font glyphname [ string ] Define a font-specific fallback glyph. This is a groff extension and currently unsupported. fspacewidth font [ afmunits ] Set a font-specific width for the space character. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. fspecial curfont [ font ... ] Conditionally define a special font. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. ft [ font ] Change the font; see Font Selection . The font argument defaults to P . ftr newname [ oldname ] Translate font name. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. fzoom font [ permille ] Zoom font size. Currently ignored. gcolor [ colorname ] Set glyph color. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. hc [ char ] Set the hyphenation character. Currently ignored. hcode char code ... Set hyphenation codes of characters. Currently ignored. hidechar font char ... Hide characters in a font. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. hla language Set hyphenation language. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. hlm [ number ] Set maximum number of consecutive hyphenated lines. Currently ignored. hpf filename Load hyphenation pattern file. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. hpfa filename Load hyphenation pattern file, appending to the current patterns. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. hpfcode code code ... Define mapping values for character codes in hyphenation patterns. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. hw word ... Specify hyphenation points in words. Currently ignored. hy [ mode ] Set automatic hyphenation mode. Currently ignored. hylang language Set hyphenation language. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. hylen nchar Minimum word length for hyphenation. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. hym [ length ] Set hyphenation margin. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. hypp penalty ... Define hyphenation penalties. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. hys [ length ] Set hyphenation space. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. ie condition body The “if” half of an if/else conditional. The result of the conditional is pushed into a stack used by subsequent invocations of el , which may be separated by any intervening input (or not exist at all). Its syntax is equivalent to if . if condition body Begin a conditional. This request can also be written as follows: . if condition \{ body body ... \} . if condition \{\ body ... . \} The condition is a boolean expression. Currently, mandoc(1) supports the following subset of roff conditionals: If ‘!’ is prefixed to condition , it is logically inverted. If the first character of condition is ‘n’ (nroff mode) or ‘o’ (odd page), it evaluates to true, and the body starts with the next character. If the first character of condition is ‘e’ (even page), ‘t’ (troff mode), or ‘v’ (vroff mode), it evaluates to false, and the body starts with the next character. If the first character of condition is ‘c’ (character available), it evaluates to true if the following character is an ASCII character or a valid character escape sequence, or to false otherwise. The body starts with the character following that next character. If the first character of condition is ‘d’, it evaluates to true if the rest of condition is the name of an existing user defined macro or string; otherwise, it evaluates to false. If the first character of condition is ‘r’, it evaluates to true if the rest of condition is the name of an existing number register; otherwise, it evaluates to false. If the condition starts with a parenthesis or with an optionally signed integer number, it is evaluated according to the rules of Numerical expressions explained below. It evaluates to true if the result is positive, or to false if the result is zero or negative. Otherwise, the first character of condition is regarded as a delimiter and it evaluates to true if the string extending from its first to its second occurrence is equal to the string extending from its second to its third occurrence. If condition cannot be parsed, it evaluates to false. If a conditional is false, its children are not processed, but are syntactically interpreted to preserve the integrity of the input document. Thus, .if t .ig will discard the ‘.ig’, which may lead to interesting results, but .if t .if t \{\ will continue to syntactically interpret to the block close of the final conditional. Sub-conditionals, in this case, obviously inherit the truth value of the parent. If the body section is begun by an escaped brace ‘\{’, scope continues until the end of the input line containing the matching closing-brace escape sequence ‘\}’. If the body is not enclosed in braces, scope continues until the end of the line. If the condition is followed by a body on the same line, whether after a brace or not, then requests and macros must begin with a control character. It is generally more intuitive, in this case, to write . if condition \{\ . request . \} than having the request or macro follow as . if condition \{. request The scope of a conditional is always parsed, but only executed if the conditional evaluates to true. Note that the ‘\}’ is converted into a zero-width escape sequence if not passed as a standalone macro ‘.\}’. For example, .Fl a \} b will result in ‘\}’ being considered an argument of the ‘Fl’ macro. ig [ endmacro ] Ignore input. Its syntax can be either . ig ignored text .. or . ig endmacro ignored text . endmacro In the first case, input is ignored until a ‘..’ request is encountered on its own line. In the second case, input is ignored until the specified ‘. endmacro ’ is encountered. Do not use the escape character ‘\’ anywhere in the definition of endmacro ; it would cause very strange behaviour. When the endmacro is a roff request or a roff macro, like in .ig if the subsequent invocation of if will first terminate the ignored text , then be invoked as usual. Otherwise, it only terminates the ignored text , and arguments following it or the ‘..’ request are discarded. in [[ + | - ] width ] Change indentation. See man(7) . Ignored in mdoc(7) . index register stringname substring Find a substring in a string. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. it expression macro Set an input line trap. The named macro will be invoked after processing the number of input text lines specified by the numerical expression . While evaluating the expression , the unit suffixes described below Scaling Widths are ignored. itc expression macro Set an input line trap, not counting lines ending with \c. Currently unsupported. IX class keystring To support the generation of a table of contents, pod2man(1) emits this user-defined macro, usually without defining it. To avoid reporting large numbers of spurious errors, mandoc(1) ignores it. kern [ 1 | 0 ] Switch kerning on or off. Currently ignored. kernafter font char ... afmunits ... Increase kerning after some characters. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. kernbefore font char ... afmunits ... Increase kerning before some characters. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. kernpair font char ... font char ... afmunits Add a kerning pair to the kerning table. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. lc [ glyph ] Define a leader repetition character. Currently unsupported. lc_ctype localename Set the LC_CTYPE locale. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. lds macroname string Define a local string. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. length register string Count the number of input characters in a string. Currently unsupported. letadj lspmin lshmin letss lspmax lshmax Dynamic letter spacing and reshaping. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. lf lineno [ filename ] Change the line number for error messages. Ignored because insecure. lg [ 1 | 0 ] Switch the ligature mechanism on or off. Currently ignored. lhang font char ... afmunits Hang characters at left margin. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. linetabs [ 1 | 0 ] Enable or disable line-tabs mode. This is a groff extension and currently unsupported. ll [[ + | - ] width ] Change the output line length. If the width argument is omitted, the line length is reset to its previous value. The default setting for terminal output is 78n. If a sign is given, the line length is added to or subtracted from; otherwise, it is set to the provided value. Using this request in new manuals is discouraged for several reasons, among others because it overrides the mandoc(1) -O width command line option. lnr register [ + | - ] value [ increment ] Set local number register. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. lnrf register [ + | - ] value [ increment ] Set local floating-point register. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. lpfx string Set a line prefix. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. ls [ factor ] Set line spacing. It takes one integer argument specifying the vertical distance of subsequent output text lines measured in v units. Currently ignored. lsm macroname Set a leading spaces trap. This is a groff extension and currently unsupported. lt [[ + | - ] width ] Set title line length. Currently ignored. mc glyph [ dist ] Print margin character in the right margin. The dist is currently ignored; instead, 1n is used. mediasize media Set the device media size. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. minss width Set minimum word space. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. mk [ register ] Mark vertical position. Currently ignored. mso filename Load a macro file using the search path. Ignored because insecure. na Disable adjusting without changing the adjustment mode. Currently ignored. ne [ height ] Declare the need for the specified minimum vertical space before the next trap or the bottom of the page. Currently ignored. nf Break the output line and switch to no-fill mode. Subsequent input lines are kept together on the same output line even when exceeding the right margin, and line breaks in subsequent input cause output line breaks. This request is implied by the mdoc(7) Bd -unfilled and Bd -literal macros and by the man(7) EX macro. The fi request switches back to the default fill mode. nh Turn off automatic hyphenation mode. Currently ignored. nhychar char ... Define hyphenation-inhibiting characters. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. nm [ start [ inc [ space [ indent ]]]] Print line numbers. Currently unsupported. nn [ number ] Temporarily turn off line numbering. Currently unsupported. nop body Execute the rest of the input line as a request, macro, or text line, skipping the nop request and any space characters immediately following it. This is mostly used to indent text lines inside macro definitions. nr register [ + | - ] expression [ stepsize ] Define or change a register. A register is an arbitrary string value that defines some sort of state, which influences parsing and/or formatting. For the syntax of expression , see Numerical expressions below. If it is prefixed by a sign, the register will be incremented or decremented instead of assigned to. The stepsize is used by the \n+ auto-increment feature. It remains unchanged when omitted while changing an existing register, and it defaults to 0 when defining a new register. The following register is handled specially: nS If set to a positive integer value, certain mdoc(7) macros will behave in the same way as in the SYNOPSIS section. If set to 0, these macros will behave in the same way as outside the SYNOPSIS section, even when called within the SYNOPSIS section itself. Note that starting a new mdoc(7) section with the Sh macro will reset this register. nrf register [ + | - ] expression [ increment ] Define or change a floating-point register. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. nroff Force nroff mode. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. ns Turn on no-space mode. Currently ignored. nx [ filename ] Abort processing of the current input file and process another one. Ignored because insecure. open stream file Open a file for writing. Ignored because insecure. opena stream file Open a file for appending. Ignored because insecure. os Output saved vertical space. Currently ignored. output string Output directly to intermediate output. Not supported. padj [ 1 | 0 ] Globally control paragraph-at-once adjustment. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. papersize media Set the paper size. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. pc [ char ] Change the page number character. Currently ignored. pev Print environments. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. pi command Pipe output to a shell command. Ignored because insecure. PI Low-level request used by BP . This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. pl [[ + | - ] height ] Change page length. Currently ignored. pm Print names and sizes of macros, strings, and diversions to standard error output. Currently ignored. pn [ + | - ] number Change the page number of the next page. Currently ignored. pnr Print all number registers on standard error output. Currently ignored. po [[ + | - ] offset ] Set a horizontal page offset. If no argument is specified, the page offset is reverted to its previous value. If a sign is specified, the new page offset is calculated relative to the current one; otherwise, it is absolute. The argument follows the syntax of Scaling Widths and the default scaling unit is m . ps [[ + | - ]size] Change point size. Currently ignored. psbb filename Retrieve the bounding box of a PostScript file. Currently unsupported. pshape indent length ... Set a special shape for the current paragraph. This is a Heirloom extension and currently unsupported. pso command Include output of a shell command. Ignored because insecure. ptr Print the names and positions of all traps on standard error output. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. pvs [[ + | - ] height ] Change post-vertical spacing. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. rchar glyph ... Remove glyph definitions. Currently unsupported. rd [ prompt [ argument ... ]] Read from standard input. Currently ignored. recursionlimit maxrec maxtail Set the maximum stack depth for recursive macros. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. return [ twice ] Exit the presently executed macro and return to the caller. The argument is currently ignored. rfschar font glyph ... Remove font-specific fallback glyph definitions. Currently unsupported. rhang font char ... afmunits Hang characters at right margin. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. rj [ N ] Justify the next N input lines to the right margin without filling. N defaults to 1. An argument of 0 or less ends right adjustment. rm macroname Remove a request, macro or string. rn oldname newname Rename a request, macro, diversion, or string. In mandoc(1) , user-defined macros, mdoc(7) and man(7) macros, and user-defined strings can be renamed, but renaming of predefined strings and of roff requests is not supported, and diversions are not implemented at all. rnn oldname newname Rename a number register. Currently unsupported. rr register Remove a register. rs End no-space mode. Currently ignored. rt [ dist ] Return to marked vertical position. Currently ignored. schar glyph [ string ] Define global fallback glyph. This is a groff extension and currently unsupported. sentchar char ... Define sentence-ending characters. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. shc [ glyph ] Change the soft hyphen character. Currently ignored. shift [ number ] Shift macro arguments number times, by default once: \\$i becomes what \\$i+number was. Also decrement \n(.$ by number . sizes size ... Define permissible point sizes. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. so filename Include a source file. The file is read and its contents processed as input in place of the so request line. To avoid inadvertent inclusion of unrelated files, mandoc(1) only accepts relative paths not containing the strings "../" and "/..". This request requires man(1) to change to the right directory before calling mandoc(1) , per convention to the root of the manual tree. Typical usage looks like: .so man3/Xcursor.3 As the whole concept is rather fragile, the use of so is discouraged. Use ln(1) instead. sp [ height ] Break the output line and emit vertical space. The argument follows the syntax of Scaling Widths and defaults to one blank line ( 1v ). spacewidth [ 1 | 0 ] Set the space width from the font metrics file. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. special [ font ... ] Define a special font. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. spreadwarn [ width ] Warn about wide spacing between words. Currently ignored. ss wordspace [ sentencespace ] Set space character size. Currently ignored. sty position style Associate style with a font position. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. substring stringname startpos [ endpos ] Replace a user-defined string with a substring. Currently unsupported. sv [ height ] Save vertical space. Currently ignored. sy command Execute shell command. Ignored because insecure. T& Re-start a table layout, retaining the options of the prior table invocation. See TS . ta [ width ... [ T width ... ]] Set tab stops. Each width argument follows the syntax of Scaling Widths . If prefixed by a plus sign, it is relative to the previous tab stop. The arguments after the T marker are used repeatedly as often as needed; for each reuse, they are taken relative to the last previously established tab stop. When ta is called without arguments, all tab stops are cleared. tc [ glyph ] Change tab repetition character. Currently unsupported. TE End a table context. See TS . ti [ + | - ] width Break the output line and indent the next output line by width . If a sign is specified, the temporary indentation is calculated relative to the current indentation; otherwise, it is absolute. The argument follows the syntax of Scaling Widths and the default scaling unit is m . tkf font minps width1 maxps width2 Enable track kerning for a font. Currently ignored. tl ' left ' center ' right ' Print a title line. Currently unsupported. tm string Print to standard error output. Currently ignored. tm1 string Print to standard error output, allowing leading blanks. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. tmc string Print to standard error output without a trailing newline. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. tr glyph glyph ... Output character translation. The first glyph in each pair is replaced by the second one. Character escapes can be used; for example, tr \(xx\(yy replaces all invocations of \(xx with \(yy. track font minps width1 maxps width2 Static letter space tracking. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. transchar char ... Define transparent characters for sentence-ending. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. trf filename Output the contents of a file, disallowing invalid characters. This is a groff extension and ignored because insecure. trimat left top width height Set the TrimBox page parameter for PDF generation. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. trin glyph glyph ... Output character translation, ignored by asciify . Currently unsupported. trnt glyph glyph ... Output character translation, ignored by \!. Currently unsupported. troff Force troff mode. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. TS Begin a table, which formats input in aligned rows and columns. See tbl(7) for a description of the tbl language. uf font Globally set the underline font. Currently ignored. ul [ N ] Underline next N input lines. Currently ignored. unformat divname Unformat spaces and tabs in a diversion. Currently unsupported. unwatch macroname Disable notification for string or macro. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. unwatchn register Disable notification for register. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. vpt [ 1 | 0 ] Enable or disable vertical position traps. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. vs [[ + | - ] height ] Change vertical spacing. Currently ignored. warn flags Set warning level. Currently ignored. warnscale si Set the scaling indicator used in warnings. This is a groff extension and currently ignored. watch macroname Notify on change of string or macro. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. watchlength maxlength On change, report the contents of macros and strings up to the specified length. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. watchn register Notify on change of register. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. wh dist [ macroname ] Set a page location trap. Currently unsupported. while condition body Repeated execution while a condition is true, with syntax similar to if . Currently implemented with two restrictions: cannot nest, and each loop must start and end in the same scope. write ["] string Write to an open file. Ignored because insecure. writec ["] string Write to an open file without appending a newline. Ignored because insecure. writem macroname Write macro or string to an open file. Ignored because insecure. xflag level Set the extension level. This is a Heirloom extension and currently ignored. Numerical expressions The nr , if , and ie requests accept integer numerical expressions as arguments. These are always evaluated using the C int type; integer overflow works the same way as in the C language. Numbers consist of an arbitrary number of digits ‘0’ to ‘9’ prefixed by an optional sign ‘+’ or ‘-’. Each number may be followed by one optional scaling unit described below Scaling Widths . The following equations hold: 1i = 6v = 6P = 10m = 10n = 72p = 1000M = 240u = 240 254c = 100i = 24000u = 24000 1f = 65536u = 65536 The following binary operators are implemented. Unless otherwise stated, they behave as in the C language: + addition - subtraction * multiplication / division % remainder of division < less than > greater than == equal to = equal to, same effect as == (this differs from C) <= less than or equal to >= greater than or equal to <> not equal to (corresponds to C != ; this one is of limited portability, it is supported by Heirloom roff, but not by groff) & logical and (corresponds to C && ) : logical or (corresponds to C || ) <? minimum (not available in C) >? maximum (not available in C) There is no concept of precedence; evaluation proceeds from left to right, except when subexpressions are enclosed in parentheses. Inside parentheses, whitespace is ignored. ESCAPE SEQUENCE REFERENCE The mandoc(1) roff parser recognises the following escape sequences. In mdoc(7) and man(7) documents, using escape sequences is discouraged except for those described in the LANGUAGE SYNTAX section above. A backslash followed by any character not listed here simply prints that character itself. \<newline> A backslash at the end of an input line can be used to continue the logical input line on the next physical input line, joining the text on both lines together as if it were on a single input line. \<space> The escape sequence backslash-space (‘\ ’) is an unpaddable space-sized non-breaking space character; see Whitespace and mandoc_char(7) . \! Embed text up to and including the end of the input line into the current diversion or into intermediate output without interpreting requests, macros, and escapes. Currently unsupported. \" The rest of the input line is treated as Comments . \# Line continuation with comment. Discard the rest of the physical input line and continue the logical input line on the next physical input line, joining the text on both lines together as if it were on a single input line. This is a groff extension. \$ arg Macro argument expansion, see de . \% Hyphenation allowed at this point of the word; ignored by mandoc(1) . \& Non-printing zero-width character, often used for various kinds of escaping; see Whitespace , mandoc_char(7) , and the “MACRO SYNTAX” and “Delimiters” sections in mdoc(7) . \' Acute accent special character; use \(aa instead. \( cc Special Characters with two-letter names, see mandoc_char(7) . \) Zero-width space transparent to end-of-sentence detection; ignored by mandoc(1) . \*[ name ] Interpolate the string with the name . For short names, there are variants \* c and \*( cc . One string is predefined on the roff language level: \*(.T expands to the name of the output device, for example ascii, utf8, ps, pdf, html, or markdown. Macro sets traditionally predefine additional strings which are not portable and differ across implementations. Those supported by mandoc(1) are listed in mandoc_char(7) . Strings can be defined, changed, and deleted with the ds , as , and rm requests. \, Left italic correction (groff extension); ignored by mandoc(1) . \- Special character “mathematical minus sign”; see mandoc_char(7) for details. \/ Right italic correction (groff extension); ignored by mandoc(1) . \: Breaking the line is allowed at this point of the word without inserting a hyphen. \? Embed the text up to the next \? into the current diversion without interpreting requests, macros, and escapes. This is a groff extension and currently unsupported. \[ name ] Special Characters with names of arbitrary length, see mandoc_char(7) . \^ One-twelfth em half-narrow space character, effectively zero-width in mandoc(1) . \_ Underline special character; use \(ul instead. \` Grave accent special character; use \(ga instead. \{ Begin conditional input; see if . \| One-sixth em narrow space character, effectively zero-width in mandoc(1) . \} End conditional input; see if . \~ Paddable non-breaking space character. \0 Digit width space character. \A' string ' Anchor definition; ignored by mandoc(1) . \a Leader character; ignored by mandoc(1) . \B' string ' Interpolate ‘1’ if string conforms to the syntax of Numerical expressions explained above or ‘0’ otherwise. \b' string ' Bracket building function; ignored by mandoc(1) . \C' name ' Special Characters with names of arbitrary length. \c When encountered at the end of an input text line, the next input text line is considered to continue that line, even if there are request or macro lines in between. No whitespace is inserted. \D' | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/de/losungen/branchen/start-ups | Discount for start-ups: enhance efficiency with Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Neue Fallstudie: MediaMarktSaturn - Milliarden Kundeninteraktionen digitalisiert Deutschland English Global Help Center +49 32 221853202 Demo buchen Anmelden Primary navigation Produkte Lösungen Ressourcen Unternehmen Preise Help Center Kontakt Jetzt kaufen Kostenlos testen Suche Menü öffnen Startseite / Lösungen / Branchen / Sonderrabatt für Startups: Effizienz steigern mit Scrive Elektronische Signatur Scrive bietet E-Signatur- und eID-Lösungen für sowohl kleine und mittelständische Firmen als auch für Großunternehmen – eine sichere und schnelle Möglichkeit, elektronische Dokumente zu unterschreiben und zu verwalten. Warum Scrive Scrive GmbH Koppenstraße 93 10243 Berlin +49 32 22 185 3202 Kontaktformular Footer navigation Produkte eSign Online eSign API eSign GO eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Lösungen Branchen Kundenberichte Integrationen Preise Preise eSign Online Preise Scrive eSign API Preise eSign GO Preise ID Check Preise eID Hub Preise eSign Forms Preise Forms Builder Ressourcen Wissensdatenbank Trust Center Help Center Digitalisierung Externe Ressourcen Systemstatus Ein Dokument überprüfen API-Dokumentation Scrive Brand Guidelines Unternehmen Über uns Partner Karriere Kontakt Secondary Navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration Impressum © 2026 Scrive Start-ups: Effizienz steigern mit Scrive Scrive fördert Innovationen durch spezielle Rabatte für Start-ups. Unsere eSign und Identifikationslösungen steigern die Effizienz, optimieren das Vertragsmanagement und gewährleisten sichere Transaktionen. Erfahren Sie, wie Scrive Ihr Wachstum beschleunigen kann. Kostenlos testen Rabatt sichern Erfahren Sie, wie sich Benify mithilfe von Scrive von einem Start-up zu einem Scale-up entwickelt hat: Unterschreiben Sie dort, wo Sie bereits arbeiten Salesforce Nutzen Sie Scrive eSign direkt in Salesforce für ein besseres Kundenerlebnis und weniger verlorene Geschäftsabschlüsse. Verlieren Sie nie wieder einen Vertrag aus den Augen oder fragen sich, ob und wann er unterzeichnet wird. CRM, Sales und Marketing Lesen Sie mehr über die Integration Google Docs add-on Vereinbarungen zu unterzeichnen? "Scrive it" direkt von Ihrem Google-Arbeitsbereich aus. Beginnen Sie mit ein paar Klicks mit der elektronischen Unterzeichnung von Arbeitsabläufen in GDocs und sorgen Sie für eine großartige Kundenerfahrung. Automatisierung, Produktivität, Vertragsmanagement Lesen Sie mehr über die Integration Microsoft Office Add-in Unterschreiben Sie direkt aus Word, Excel und PowerPoint. Starten Sie den elektronischen Unterschriftsprozess mit wenigen Klicks für ein großartiges Kundenerlebnis. Automatisierung, Produktivität, Vertragsmanagement Lesen Sie mehr über die Integration Alle Integrationen anzeigen Scrive war in den letzten Jahren ein zentraler Bestandteil unserer Digitalisierungsreise, die uns auch während der Pandemie enorm wichtig war. Wir haben Prozesse und interne Arbeitsabläufe in Vertrieb, Personalbeschaffung und Partnerverträgen optimiert und so im Zuge unseres rasanten Unternehmenswachstums zahlreiche Hindernisse beseitigt. Ohne Scrive wären wir heute nicht das dynamische Unternehmen, das wir sind. Carl Ström, HR Operations Specialist „Warum sollten Startups mit Scrive zusammenarbeiten? Ehrlich gesagt würde ich diese Frage genauso beantworten, wenn sie lauten würde: „Warum sollte jedes Unternehmen mit Scrive zusammenarbeiten?“ Weil wir das Geschäft einfacher und besser machen und es in der heutigen Zeit keine Entschuldigung für schlechte, nicht optimierte Prozesse gibt.“ Viktor Wrede, Mitgründer und CSO bei Scrive Scrive kann Ihnen helfen bei: Reduzierter Verwaltungsaufwand 80 % kürzere Bearbeitungszeiten, wenn Kunden ihre Verträge ändern müssen. Lesen Sie den Case von Drei Vertragsmanagement Vertragsmanagement mit unserer eSign Plattform Lesen Sie mehr über elektronische Signaturen E-Archiv Ein Ort für alle Ihre Verträge Lesen Sie mehr über unser E-Archiv eIDAS Sicheres Signieren Lesen Sie mehr über eIDAS Integrationen Integrationen für bestehende CRMs Lesen Sie mehr über unsere Integrationen PDF-Vorlagen Inspiration und Hilfestellung durch unsere Musterverträge Lesen Sie mehr in unserem Knowledge-Hub-Artikel Scrive bietet verschiedene Lösungen für Ihre Bedürfnisse Authentifizieren Wenn Sie sich im Rahmen eines Signaturvorgangs authentifizieren möchten, können Sie eID Verifizierung in Ihre eSign Online oder eSign GO Instanz integrieren. Sie können beispielsweise eine Authentifizierungsanforderung beim Signieren einrichten, um sicherzustellen, dass Sie wissen und nachweisen können, wer ein Dokument unterzeichnet hat. Enthält die Vereinbarung vertrauliche Informationen, können Sie sogar einen Schritt zur Authentifizierung vor der Anzeige hinzufügen. eID Wenn Sie Ihren Kunden die Anmeldung per eID ermöglichen möchten, ist unser eID Hub die zentrale Anlaufstelle für alle Ihre eID Anforderungen. Angenommen, Sie möchten Ihren Kunden eine einfache Möglichkeit bieten, sich in Bereiche wie „ Meine Seiten “ einzuloggen. Dies ist eine gängige Funktion für Verbraucherunternehmen wie Telekommunikations- und Immobilienunternehmen, einschließlich Hausverwaltungen usw. In diesem Fall können Sie eID als Single-Sign-On-Lösung zulassen. API Wenn Sie spezifischere oder Nischenanforderungen haben, ist unsere API Ihre beste Wahl. Wenn Sie beispielsweise mehrere Systeme in einem unterbrechungsfreien Ablauf integrieren, entscheiden Sie sich höchstwahrscheinlich für unsere API. Zur Produktübersicht Im Herzen ein Start-up Scrive wurde in Stockholm von zwei Studienfreunden gegründet und sollte ursprünglich die Talentverträge für internationale Künstler in Schweden vereinfachen. Nachdem wir schnell erkannt hatten, dass weltweit ein Bedarf an unkomplizierten und zuverlässigen digitalen Verträgen besteht, weiteten wir unsere Aktivitäten aus. Heute ist ein Drittel aller in Großbritannien verkauften Autos mit Scrive vertraglich gebunden. Unser Wachstum vom Start-up zum Scale-up beruht auf unserem tiefen Engagement, die Bedürfnisse unserer Kunden zu verstehen und zu erfüllen. Dies ist sowohl Grundlage unseres Fortschritts als auch unsere treibende Kraft. Starten Sie stark mit elektronischen Signaturen Erleichtern Sie sich die Arbeit, indem Sie tägliche Aufgaben vereinfachen. Elektronische Signaturen bieten Startups zahlreiche Vorteile und steigern die Effizienz von Anfang an. Durch die Online-Verlagerung Ihrer Dokumenten-Workflows wird die Zusammenarbeit einfacher und Sie können wichtige Transaktionen mit nur wenigen Klicks abschließen. Wir bieten allen Startups einen individuellen Rabatt Wir helfen Ihnen, sich auf das Wesentliche zu konzentrieren. Kontaktieren Sie uns noch heute und wir finden gemeinsam das perfekte Angebot für Ihre individuellen Bedürfnisse! Sie erreichen uns auch telefonisch unter +46 8 446 866 02 . Vorname * Nachname * E-Mail * Unternehmen * Mitarbeiteranzahl * Land * Nachricht * ABSENDEN Sind Sie bereits Kunde? Dieses Feld ist erforderlich * Ja Nein Einwilligung & Datenschutzhinweis Ich möchte Marketingmitteilungen von Scrive per E-Mail erhalten. Ich kann dies jederzeit widerrufen. Ich habe die Datenschutzerklärung zur Kenntnis genommen und kann sie jederzeit hier einsehen.* Phone number Dieses Feld ist erforderlich Country code Dieses Feld ist erforderlich * +49 Telefonnummer Dieses Feld ist erforderlich * Mitarbeiteranzahl* Land auswählen | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://msys2.github.io/docs/installer/#faq | MSYS2 Installer - MSYS2 Skip to content MSYS2 MSYS2 Installer Deutsch (de) Español (es) Français (fr) 日本语 (ja) 한국어 (ko) 中文 (zh) Initializing search GitHub MSYS2 GitHub Getting Started News Package Index Documentation Documentation What is MSYS2? Who Is Using MSYS2? Environments Updating MSYS2 Using MSYS2 in CI Package Mirrors Terminals IDEs and Text Editors MSYS2 Installer MSYS2 Installer Table of contents CLI Usage Examples FAQ What's the difference between the installer and the archives? What is contained in the installer/archives? How can I verify the basic integrity of the downloaded files? How can I verify that the downloaded files were generated by MSYS2 developers? Microsoft Defender SmartScreen prevents me from running the installer What are the installation folder recommendations? Package Management Package Management Package Management Package Naming Repositories and Mirrors Tips and Tricks FAQ Filesystem Paths Symlinks Configuration Locations Just-in-time Debugging ARM64 Support Languages & Tools Languages & Tools Using CMake in MSYS2 Autotools Python Git C/C++ C++ pkg-config pacman Supported Windows Versions and Hardware FAQ Development Development Packaging Packaging Creating a new Package Updating an existing Package Package Guidelines License Metadata PKGBUILD Mirrors MSYS2 Keyring Python Automated Build Process Vulnerability Reporting Accounts and Ownership Other Topics Other Topics Welcome to the MSYS2 wiki Creating Packages TODO LIST Distributing Qt Creator MSYS2 History How does MSYS2 differ from Cygwin? Launchers MSYS2-Introduction Re-installing MSYS2 Porting Setting up SSHd Signing Packages Do you need Sudo? Terminals Get Involved License Privacy Support & Contact Code of Conduct Table of contents CLI Usage Examples FAQ What's the difference between the installer and the archives? What is contained in the installer/archives? How can I verify the basic integrity of the downloaded files? How can I verify that the downloaded files were generated by MSYS2 developers? Microsoft Defender SmartScreen prevents me from running the installer What are the installation folder recommendations? MSYS2 Installer The MSYS2 installer can be used to set up an initial MSYS2 environment. For further updating pacman is used. See the updating guide for more information. The installer comes in four variants: msys2-x86_64-.exe : The GUI installer (see screenshot above) msys2-base-x86_64-*.sfx.exe : Just the files in a self extracting archive (missing Windows integration like shortcuts, uninstall entry, but otherwise works the same) msys2-base-x86_64-*.tar.zst : Same as .sfx.exe but as an ZSTD archive msys2-base-x86_64-*.tar.xz : Same as .sfx.exe but as an XZ archive (deprecated) The installer executables and tarballs are hosted on GitHub as well as on the repo server . We also provide nightly builds . CLI Usage Examples The GUI installer utilizes the Qt Installer Framework which also offers CLI options for automation. Installing the GUI installer via the CLI to C:\msys64 : .\ msys2-x86_64-latest . exe in - -confirm-command - -accept-messages - -root C :/ msys64 Uninstalling an existing installation in C:\msys64 via the CLI: C :\ msys64 \ uninstall . exe pr - -confirm-command Installing the self extracting archive to C:\msys64 : .\ msys2-base-x86_64-latest . sfx . exe -y -oC :\ FAQ What's the difference between the installer and the archives? The installer provides some additional features such as installing shortcuts, registering an uninstaller, a GUI for selecting the installation path and automatically running a login shell at the end to initialize the MSYS2 environment. If you unpack the archives and run a login shell once, you will get a functionally equivalent MSYS2 installation. What is contained in the installer/archives? It contains the base package and all its dependencies. You can list the contained packages using: pactree base -lu | sort How can I verify the basic integrity of the downloaded files? Note The examples below use old releases and checksums as examples. Make sure to adjust the version numbers and checksums to the ones of the release you are verifying. You can download the expected checksum by appending .sha256 to each download URL. You can verify that the downloaded file matches the checksum by computing the checksum either with Powershell: ( Get-FileHash -Algorithm SHA256 -Path .\ msys2-x86_64 - 20230526 . exe ). Hash . toLower () 432dcc8b5cc7d5104a85b52df8b1e77cdf91018e102ac7aa998248637d636229 or with 7-Zip, if you have it installed: Right clicking on msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe Go into the "7-Zip" and then "CRC SHA" sub menu, and finally click on "SHA-256" 7-Zip will pop up a window containing the checksum Compare the result with the content of " https://github.com/msys2/msys2-installer/releases/download/2023-05-26/msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe.sha256 " to verify that your local file matches the checksum. How can I verify that the downloaded files were generated by MSYS2 developers? The installer is signed using the following key: 0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC You can download the signature by appending a .sig to all download URLs. Verification example: $ gpg --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv "0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC" gpg: key 46BD761F7A49B0EC: public key "Christoph Reiter <reiter.christoph@gmail.com>" imported gpg: Total number processed: 1 gpg: imported: 1 $ ls msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe.sig $ gpg --verify msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe.sig gpg: assuming signed data in 'msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe' gpg: Signature made Fr 26 Mai 2023 11:46:54 CEST gpg: using RSA key E0AA0F031DBD80FFBA57B06D5A62D0CAB6264964 gpg: Good signature from "Christoph Reiter <reiter.christoph@gmail.com>" [unknown] gpg: WARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature! gpg: There is no indication that the signature belongs to the owner. Primary key fingerprint: 0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC Subkey fingerprint: E0AA 0F03 1DBD 80FF BA57 B06D 5A62 D0CA B626 4964 For the signature to be valid, gnupg has to print "Good signature" and the primary fingerprint shown has to match 0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC . Microsoft Defender SmartScreen prevents me from running the installer Depending on the age of the installer release and how many people have already used it successfully, Windows will show a SmartScreen warning, preventing you from running the installer. You can skip this warning by first clicking on "More info" and then on "Run anyway". What are the installation folder recommendations? We recommend a short ASCII-only path on a NTFS volume, no accents, no spaces, no symlinks, no subst or network drives. While you are free to choose a different installation path, please be aware that some tools and packages may not work correctly if you deviate from these recommendations. Tools that do not handle spaces or non-ASCII characters in paths may fail due to truncated or mangled paths. Tools which work with long absolute paths might hit the Windows MAX_PATH limit (260 characters) if the base installation path is long. This can be partly worked around by enabling long path support in Windows, but not all tools can handle long paths even then. Please report any issues you encounter with packages or tools due to the installation path. Default permissions of the installation folder The installer does not set any special permissions on the installation folder, which means for the default C:\msys64 path, the permissions are inherited from C: , which by default gives all users read/write access. If you need to restrict access to the installation folder, you have to do this manually after installation, or choose a different installation path with the desired permissions. Made with Material for MkDocs | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/configuration | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged configuration 69 packages have this tag. [Merge tag] (trustees only) Related tags: library (69), bsd3 (28), mit (17), data (15), mpl (13), program (9), deprecated (8), text (8), gpl (3), toml (3), development (2), json (2), language (2), parser (2), system (2), agpl (1), apache (1), application (1), cli (1), cli-tool (1), ... Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers Configger 2 0.0 1 Parse config files ( configuration , library , mit ) 2011-12-26 0.1 NateSoares SConfig (deprecated) 5 2.0 1 A simple config library ( configuration , deprecated , library , mit ) 2014-10-14 fgaz app-settings 47 0.0 1 A library to manage application settings (INI file-like) ( bsd3 , configuration , library ) 2018-10-01 0.2.0.12 EmmanuelTouzery aws-configuration-tools 2 0.0 0 Configuration types, parsers & renderers for AWS services ( apache , cloud , configuration , library ) 2015-05-07 0.1.0.0 JonSterling bini 14 2.0 1 A collection of various methods for reading and writing bini files. ( bsd3 , configuration , data , library ) 2016-01-22 0.1.5 TWeise boots-app 24 0.0 2 Factory for quickly building an application ( application , configuration , health , library , logger , mit , program , random ) 2019-09-03 0.2.0.1 leptonyu cfg 14 2.0 0 Type directed application configuration parsing and accessors ( configuration , library , mit ) 2025-09-28 0.0.2.3 JonathanLorimer conf 5 2.0 1 Parser for Haskell-based configuration files. ( bsd3 , configuration , library , parsing ) 2015-07-17 0.1.1.0 carymrobbins conf-json 11 0.0 1 read, parse json config ( configuration , json , library , public-domain ) 2018-07-20 1.2 procione conferer 57 2.0 13 Configuration management library ( configuration , library , mpl ) 2021-03-01 1.1.0.0 ludat conferer-aeson 7 0.0 2 conferer's source for reading json files ( configuration , library , mpl ) 2021-12-03 1.1.0.2 ludat conferer-dhall 6 0.0 0 Configuration for reading dhall files ( configuration , library , mpl ) 2021-03-01 1.1.0.0 ludat conferer-hedis 13 0.0 0 conferer's FromConfig instances for hedis settings ( configuration , library , mpl ) 2021-03-08 1.1.0.0 ludat conferer-hspec 19 0.0 0 conferer's FromConfig instances for hspec Config ( configuration , library , mpl ) 2021-03-08 1.1.0.0 ludat conferer-provider-dhall (deprecated in favor of conferer-source-dhall ) 5 0.0 0 Configuration for reading dhall files ( bsd3 , configuration , deprecated , library ) 2020-03-11 0.3.0.0 ludat conferer-provider-json (deprecated in favor of conferer-source-json ) 8 0.0 2 conferer's provider for reading json files ( bsd3 , configuration , deprecated , library ) 2020-03-11 0.3.0.0 ludat conferer-provider-yaml (deprecated in favor of conferer-source-yaml ) 7 0.0 0 Configuration for reading yaml files ( bsd3 , configuration , deprecated , library ) 2020-03-11 0.3.0.0 ludat conferer-snap 17 0.0 0 conferer's FromConfig instances for snap Config ( configuration , library , mpl ) 2020-12-30 1.0.0.0 ludat conferer-source-dhall (deprecated in favor of conferer-dhall ) 6 0.0 0 Configuration for reading dhall files ( configuration , deprecated , library , mpl ) 2020-06-20 0.4.0.1 ludat conferer-source-json (deprecated in favor of conferer-aeson ) 4 0.0 2 conferer's source for reading json files ( configuration , deprecated , library , mpl ) 2020-06-20 0.4.0.1 ludat conferer-source-yaml (deprecated in favor of conferer-yaml ) 7 0.0 0 Configuration for reading yaml files ( configuration , deprecated , library , mpl ) 2020-06-20 0.4.0.1 ludat conferer-warp 20 0.0 0 conferer's FromConfig instances for warp settings ( configuration , library , mpl ) 2022-12-23 1.1.0.1 ludat conferer-yaml 6 0.0 0 Configuration for reading yaml files ( configuration , library , mpl ) 2021-03-01 1.1.0.0 ludat config-ini 57 0.0 8 A library for simple INI-based configuration files. ( bsd3 , configuration , library ) 2023-11-05 0.2.7.0 gdritter config-manager 14 0.0 1 Configuration management ( configuration , data , gpl , library ) 2016-08-13 0.3.0.1 guyonvarch config-value-getopt 7 0.0 1 Interface between config-value and System.GetOpt ( configuration , library , mit ) 2019-10-18 0.1.1.1 EricMertens , galoisinc configifier 22 0.0 1 parser for config files, shell variables, command line args. ( agpl , configuration , data , library ) 2016-07-05 0.1.1 MatthiasFischmann configuration-tools 73 2.0 5 Tools for specifying and parsing configurations ( configuration , console , library , mit , program ) 2025-03-05 0.7.1 larsk , fosskers , edmundnoble configurator 30 1.75 50 Configuration management ( bsd3 , configuration , data , library ) 2014-07-02 0.3.0.0 BryanOSullivan configurator-export 5 0.0 1 Pretty printer and exporter for configurations from the "configurator" library. ( bsd3 , configuration , data , library ) 2016-05-08 0.1.0.1 jle configurator-ng 8 1.25 1 The next generation of configuration management ( bsd3 , configuration , data , library ) 2016-10-31 0.0.0.1 LeonSmith configurator-pg 61 2.0 1 Reduced parser for configurator-ng config files ( bsd3 , configuration , data , library ) 2025-10-10 0.2.11 vollmert , steve_chavez , LaurenceIsla , wolfgangwalther conftrack 4 0.0 0 Tracable multi-source config management ( bsd3 , configuration , library ) 2024-07-25 0.0.1 stuebinm descrilo 21 0.0 1 Loads a list of items with fields ( configuration , data , gpl , library , parser ) 2018-11-03 0.1.0.7 mgmillani dojang 1 0.0 0 A cross-platform dotfiles manager ( configuration , gpl , library , program ) 2023-11-25 0.1.0 hongminhee dotenv 175 0.0 6 Loads environment variables from dotenv files ( configuration , library , mit , program ) 2024-02-03 0.12.0.0 jsl , jpvillaisaza , stackbuilders , sestrella , camm , dbalseiro dotenv-micro 6 0.0 0 Tiny dotenv library ( bsd3 , configuration , library ) 2023-07-16 0.1.0.1 ocramz dyre 55 0.0 20 Dynamic reconfiguration in Haskell ( bsd3 , configuration , development , library ) 2023-05-18 0.9.2 WillDonnelly , frasertweedale e9571-config-reader-haskell 8 0.0 0 Automatically read config.json from the current directory ( configuration , library , mit , program ) 2025-11-26 0.1.0.2 e9571 embed-config 4 0.0 0 Reasonable conventions for embedding YAML configuration with Template Haskell ( bsd3 , configuration , library ) 2022-07-25 0.0.0.0 carymrobbins etc 30 0.0 2 Declarative configuration spec for Haskell projects ( configuration , library , mit , system ) 2018-08-29 0.4.1.0 RomanGonzalez expresso 20 0.0 0 A simple expressions language based on row types ( bsd3 , configuration , library , program ) 2020-04-02 0.1.2.3 willtim from-env 11 0.0 0 Provides a generic way to construct values from environment variables. ( configuration , library , mit ) 2023-08-17 0.1.3.0 aloussase global-config 10 0.0 1 Global mutable configuration ( bsd3 , configuration , library ) 2012-05-10 0.3.1 AlexanderDorofeev hsini 33 2.0 3 ini configuration files ( bsd3 , configuration , data , library ) 2023-09-26 0.5.2.2 MagnusTherning htoml 24 0.0 7 Parser for TOML files ( bsd3 , configuration , data , json , language , library , parser , text ) 2016-11-07 1.0.0.3 cies htoml-megaparsec 68 0.0 4 Parser for TOML files ( bsd3 , configuration , data , language , library , text , toml ) 2023-10-24 2.1.0.5 vmchale ini 38 0.0 13 Configuration files in the INI format. ( bsd3 , configuration , data , library ) 2025-12-20 0.5.1 AndreasAbel , ChrisDone , chris_martin , jhrcek ini-qq 3 0.0 1 Quasiquoter for INI ( bsd3 , configuration , data , library ) 2016-07-15 0.1.0.0 kseo json2sg 3 0.0 0 Lossy conversion from JSON to Sugar ( configuration , library , program , text ) 2022-07-29 0.0.1 jxv karabiner-config 2 0.0 0 Karabiner elements configuration generation ( bsd3 , configuration , library ) 2021-08-02 0.0.0.0 carymrobbins keylayouts 5 0.0 0 Tools for macOS .keylayout files ( configuration , library , mit , xml ) 2020-12-20 0.1.0.2 dailectic life-sync 12 2.25 0 Synchronize personal configs across multiple machines. ( cli , cli-tool , configuration , development , library , mpl , program ) 2020-05-21 1.1.1.0 vrom911 load-env 27 0.0 3 Load environment variables from a file. ( bsd3 , configuration , library ) 2019-06-12 0.2.1.0 PatrickBrisbin minimal-configuration 15 0.0 1 Minimal ini like configuration library with a few extras ( configuration , library , system ) 2019-10-28 0.1.4 MariusGhita richenv 10 0.0 0 Rich environment variable setup for Haskell ( configuration , library , mit ) 2025-06-22 0.1.0.3 DavSanchez salak 126 0.0 10 Configuration (re)Loader and Parser. ( configuration , library , mit ) 2020-03-20 0.3.6 leptonyu salak-toml (deprecated) 48 0.0 0 Configuration Loader for toml ( configuration , deprecated , library , mit ) 2019-08-30 0.3.5.3 leptonyu salak-yaml 37 0.0 2 Configuration Loader for yaml ( configuration , library , mit ) 2019-08-29 0.3.5.3 leptonyu sugar 7 0.0 3 A pretty, sweet data language ( configuration , library , text ) 2022-07-30 0.0.1.1 jxv sugar-data 2 0.0 0 Convert sugar to common data types for code generation ( configuration , library , text ) 2022-07-30 0.0.0.0 jxv sugar-json 4 0.0 0 Sugar with JSON ( configuration , library , text ) 2022-07-29 0.0.1.1 jxv tce-conf 8 0.0 1 Very simple config file reading ( bsd3 , configuration , library , program ) 2016-10-10 1.3 DinoMorelli tini 6 0.0 0 Tiny INI file and configuration library with a minimal dependency footprint. ( configuration , library , mit ) 2020-10-05 0.1.0.1 AntonEkblad toml-reader 8 0.0 4 TOML format parser compliant with v1.0.0. ( bsd3 , configuration , library , text , toml ) 2025-04-22 0.3.0.0 brandonchinn178 tomland 99 2.5 17 Bidirectional TOML serialization ( configuration , library , mpl , text , toml ) 2024-06-07 1.3.3.3 tomjaguarpaw , vrom911 typeparams 14 0.0 1 Lens-like interface for type level parameters; allows unboxed unboxed vectors and supercompilation ( bsd3 , configuration , data , dependent-types , library , optimization ) 2015-01-26 0.0.6 MikeIzbicki ucl 6 0.0 0 Datatype and parser for the Universal Configuration Language (UCL) using libucl ( bsd3 , configuration , data , library ) 2022-03-14 0.2.0.1 fgaz yaml-config 31 0.0 1 Configuration management ( configuration , library , mit ) 2016-03-17 0.4.0 FedorGogolev , MaximMitroshin | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/ | Release Information | The FreeBSD Project Donate to FreeBSD Home About Introduction Features Privacy Policy Projects Ports Get FreeBSD Release Information Release Engineering Documentation FAQ Handbook Porter's Handbook Developer's Handbook Committer's Guide Manual Pages Presentations and Papers Documentation Project Primer All Books and Articles Community Mailing Lists Forums User Groups Events FreeBSD Journal Developers Project Ideas Git Repository GitHub Mirror Code Review (Phabricator) Wiki Continuous Integration Service Support Vendors Security Information Bug Reports Submitting Bug Reports Web Resources Foundation Monetary Donations Hardware Donations Get FreeBSD Release Information Production Release: 15.0 Production Release: 14.3 Legacy Release: 13.5 Snapshot Releases Upcoming Release: 14.4 Ported Applications Release Information FreeBSD releases are classified into Production Releases and Legacy Releases . 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Watch webinar (in Swedish) Revolutionise automotive processes with Forms builder In this on-demand webinar we’ll show you how our customers are already using Forms Builder to streamline automotive operations, saving time and money in the process. Watch webinar Turn your real estate PDFs into digital self-service forms Our real estate customers have solved issues ranging from inaccurate financial reporting and delayed or missed payments to legal compliance issues, poor tenant relations and tenant turnover as well as various other operational inefficiencies. Watch webinar How web forms save you time and money This webinar is focused on Forms builder and how web forms in general can help businesses in practically any industry! Watch webinar Ebooks Compliance & customer experience: it’s not a trade-off Learn about agile strategies for regulated businesses to achieve both at scale. Spoiler: it’s not all about better technology. Download ebook EUDI Wallet: a single identification method Learn about how the EU Digital Identity will benefit businesses and the general public in Europe, what opportunities it presents but also what could stand in the way of it coming to fruition. Download ebook Most popular articles Digitalisation Digitalisation is about integrating digital technologies into work processes. Read more about digitalisation in our guide. Read more EUDI Wallet – EU Digital Identity Wallet EUDI Wallet, the European Commission's digital identity project, grants a single EU Digital ID for access to services across Europe. Read more Digital transformation What is digital transformation? Learn the definition of digital transformation (DT), its purposes, and the strategies used to get there (with examples). Read more Digital signature vs. Electronic Signature There definitely is! Electronic and digital signatures are different things. But they can work together to create better, safer agreements. 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https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/public-domain | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged public-domain 312 packages have this tag. [Merge tag] (trustees only) Related tags: library (279), program (57), data (53), control (32), web (31), network (29), deprecated (24), language (24), math (17), text (16), acme (13), development (13), system (13), monads (12), database (9), testing (9), bitcoin (8), failure (8), finance (8), mit (8), ffi (7), graphics (7), numerical (7), xml (7), cryptography (5), irc (5), conduit (4), console (4), time (4), bsd3 (3), frp (3), game (3), monad (3), parsing (3), algorithms (2), codec (2), concurrency (2), data-structures (2), debug (2), dependent-types (2), foreign (2), foreign-binding (2), git (2), hash (2), json (2), natural-language-processing (2), quickcheck (2), regex (2), template-haskell (2), test (2), ai (1), bindings (1), bit-vectors (1), bytestrings (1), code-generation (1), command-line (1), compiler (1), configuration (1), crypto (1), development--- (1), digest (1), distribution (1), factual (1), generics (1), ghc (1), graphs (1), hxt (1), interfaces (1), ... Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers ArrowVHDL 7 0.0 1 A library to generate Netlist code from Arrow descriptions. ( library , public-domain , testing ) 2015-02-21 1.1 frosch03 , brettschneider BiGUL 7 2.25 1 The Bidirectional Generic Update Language ( generics , language , lenses , library , public-domain ) 2016-08-30 1.0.1 joshko , Zirun Cascade 2 0.0 1 Playing with reified categorical composition ( control , library , public-domain ) 2014-11-14 0.1.0.0 NoahEasterly EsounD 4 0.0 1 Type-safe bindings to EsounD (ESD; Enlightened Sound Daemon) ( library , public-domain , sound ) 2011-05-11 0.2 MasatakeDaimon FailureT (deprecated in favor of transformers ) 5 0.0 1 Failure Monad Transformer ( control , deprecated , failure , library , public-domain ) 2013-03-14 15778.1 Frank 6 0.0 1 An experimental programming language with typed algebraic effects ( languages , program , public-domain ) 2012-06-08 0.3 ConorMcBride HaLeX 33 0.0 1 HaLeX enables modelling, manipulation and visualization of regular languages ( data , library , program , public-domain ) 2025-12-23 1.3.0 GwernBranwen , joaoSaraiva HsHyperEstraier 19 0.0 1 HyperEstraier binding for Haskell ( library , public-domain , text ) 2011-07-28 0.4 MasatakeDaimon HsOpenSSL 254 2.0 72 Partial OpenSSL binding for Haskell ( cryptography , library , public-domain ) 2025-01-02 0.11.7.9 AndreasAbel , MasatakeDaimon , VladimirShabanov HsSVN 32 0.0 1 Partial Subversion (SVN) binding for Haskell ( development , library , public-domain , system ) 2013-09-30 0.4.3.3 MasatakeDaimon JustParse 9 0.0 1 A simple and comprehensive Haskell parsing library ( library , public-domain , text ) 2014-06-23 2.1 grantslatton KSP 3 0.0 1 A library with the kerbal space program universe and demo code ( library , public-domain , testing ) 2015-06-07 0.1 frosch03 , brettschneider LTree 4 0.0 1 Tree with only leaves carrying the data. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2011-09-21 0.1 RahulGopinath Lucu 40 0.0 1 HTTP Daemonic Library ( library , network , public-domain ) 2011-09-04 0.7.0.3 MasatakeDaimon MoeDict 12 0.0 1 Utilities working with MoeDict.tw JSON dataset ( library , public-domain , text ) 2016-02-04 0.0.4 AudreyTang Nutri 2 0.0 1 A little library to calculate nutrition values of food items. ( library , public-domain , utils ) 2013-11-27 0.1 frosch03 OpenAFP 24 0.0 1 IBM AFP document format parser and generator ( data , library , public-domain ) 2017-04-04 1.4.3 AudreyTang OpenAFP-Utils 24 0.0 1 Assorted utilities to work with AFP data streams ( data , program , public-domain ) 2013-11-30 1.4.1.3 AudreyTang RFC1751 (deprecated in favor of rfc1751 ) 16 0.0 1 RFC-1751 library for Haskell ( data , deprecated , library , public-domain ) 2018-08-13 1.0.0 jprupp RandomDotOrg 20 0.0 1 Haskell bindings to the RANDOM.ORG Core API ( bsd3 , library , public-domain , web ) 2024-10-12 1.0 AustinSeipp , mpilgrem Semantique 7 0.0 1 Command-line tool for maintaining the Semantique database. ( program , public-domain , system ) 2012-11-02 0.3.0 DavidHimmelstrup TimePiece 13 0.0 1 A simple tile-based digital clock screen saver ( library , program , public-domain , screensaver ) 2014-05-16 0.0.5 AudreyTang TreeT 3 0.0 1 Transformer for Data.Tree ( control , library , monads , public-domain ) 2011-09-17 0.0 RahulGopinath TrendGraph 4 0.0 1 A simple trend Graph script ( graphics , library , public-domain ) 2014-07-01 0.1.0.1 AlperAYDIN Xorshift128Plus 6 0.0 1 Pure haskell implementation of xorshift128plus random number generator. ( library , math , public-domain ) 2015-04-14 0.1.0.1 hkanai ZFS 7 0.0 1 Oleg's Zipper FS ( library , monads , public-domain ) 2014-11-25 0.0.2 GwernBranwen , jkarni acid-state 183 2.5 28 Add ACID guarantees to any serializable Haskell data structure. ( database , library , program , public-domain ) 2025-08-28 0.16.1.4 AdamGundry , AndreasAbel , DavidFox , DavidHimmelstrup , DavidJohnson , JeremyShaw acid-state-tls 9 0.0 1 Add TLS support for Data.Acid.Remote ( database , library , public-domain ) 2014-06-30 0.9.2 JeremyShaw acme-all-monad 2 0.0 1 A monad which is powerful enough to interpret any action ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2015-06-02 0.1.0.0 PhilFreeman acme-cadre 2 0.0 1 car, cdr and more ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2014-09-04 0.1 Jafet acme-cuteboy 2 0.0 0 Maybe gives you a cute boy ( acme , library , program , public-domain ) 2018-01-25 0.1.0.0 chessai acme-everything 20 2.25 0 Install everything. ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2018-11-19 2018.11.18 quchen acme-hq9plus 3 0.0 1 An embedded DSL for the HQ9+ programming language ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2012-06-12 0.1 JoeyAdams acme-inator 2 0.0 1 Evil inventions in the Tri-State area ( acme , library , program , public-domain ) 2012-02-10 0.1.0.0 MarkLentczner acme-miscorder 3 0.0 1 Miscellaneous newtypes for orderings of discutable use. ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2015-02-26 0.1.0.0 LoicArjanen acme-missiles 10 2.0 1 Cause serious international side effects. ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2012-04-15 0.3 JoeyAdams acme-now 7 0.0 1 An interface to the philosophical and metaphysical "now" ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2009-07-16 1.0.0.1 SjurGjoesteinKarevoll acme-one 5 0.0 1 The identity element of package dependencies ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2015-06-21 0.0.2 ion acme-strtok 9 0.0 1 A Haskell port of the C/PHP strtok function ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2014-11-27 0.1.0.3 eberlm acme-year 19 1.75 1 Get the current year ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2024-05-01 2024 JoeyAdams acme-zero 7 2.0 0 The absorbing element of package dependencies ( acme , library , public-domain ) 2015-06-21 0.0.2 ion aligned-foreignptr 2 0.0 1 An aligned ForeignPtr type ( foreign , library , public-domain , system ) 2010-08-01 0.1 BalazsKomuves applicative-splice 4 0.0 1 Write applicative programs in direct style (generalizes idiom brackets). ( control , library , public-domain ) 2016-04-17 0.0.0.0 AkioTakano atmos 10 0.0 3 1976 US Standard Atmosphere Model ( library , public-domain , science ) 2016-08-27 0.4.0.0 GregHorn atom-conduit 56 0.0 3 Streaming parser/renderer for the Atom 1.0 standard (RFC 4287). ( conduit , library , public-domain , xml ) 2025-03-02 0.9.0.2 koral avr-shake 16 0.0 1 AVR Crosspack actions for shake build systems. ( development , library , public-domain ) 2015-08-21 0.0.1.2 JamesCook barrier-monad 4 0.0 1 Implementation of barrier monad, can use custom front/back type ( control , library , public-domain ) 2011-12-01 0.1.0.1 AaronBlack base58-bytestring 20 0.0 12 Implementation of BASE58 transcoding for ByteStrings ( bytestrings , data , library , public-domain ) 2015-01-30 0.1.0 AlekseyUymanov batch-rename 22 0.0 1 Make Linux or MacOS do things like "rename *.mp3 *.mp4" ( program , public-domain , system ) 2016-09-14 0.1.1.0 uppet bff 17 0.0 1 Bidirectionalization for Free! (POPL'09) ( data , library , public-domain ) 2011-03-22 0.3.1.2 DanielSeidel , JanisVoigtlaender , JoachimBreitner bidirectionalization-combined 6 0.0 1 Prototype Implementation of Combining Syntactic and Semantic Bidirectionalization (ICFP'10) ( language , program , public-domain ) 2010-09-27 0.1.0.1 JoachimBreitner bindings-EsounD 6 0.0 2 Low level bindings to EsounD (ESD; Enlightened Sound Daemon) ( ffi , library , public-domain ) 2010-12-30 0.1.0.1 MasatakeDaimon bindings-apr 3 0.0 2 Low level bindings to Apache Portable Runtime (APR) ( ffi , library , public-domain ) 2010-10-06 0.1 MasatakeDaimon bindings-apr-util 3 0.0 1 Low level bindings to Apache Portable Runtime Utility (APR Utility) ( ffi , library , public-domain ) 2010-10-06 0.1 MasatakeDaimon bindings-audiofile 8 0.0 2 Low level bindings to audiofile ( ffi , library , public-domain ) 2010-12-31 0.1.0.2 MasatakeDaimon bindings-librrd 8 0.0 1 Low level bindings to RRDtool ( ffi , library , public-domain ) 2012-07-12 0.2.0.1 MasatakeDaimon , zloyrusskiy bindings-uname 4 0.0 2 Low-level binding to POSIX uname(3) ( ffi , library , public-domain , system ) 2009-06-05 0.1 MasatakeDaimon bindings-yices 15 0.0 2 Bindings to the Yices theorem prover ( ffi , foreign , library , public-domain , theorem-provers ) 2015-08-22 0.3.0.2 PepeIborra bitstream 29 0.0 2 Fast, packed, strict and lazy bit streams with stream fusion ( data , library , public-domain ) 2025-10-28 0.3.0.2 MasatakeDaimon , fffaaa bitvec 74 2.25 20 Space-efficient bit vectors ( bit-vectors , bsd3 , data , library , public-domain ) 2023-08-15 1.1.5.0 JamesCook , Bodigrim bk-tree 5 0.0 2 BK-tree implementation ( data-structures , library , public-domain ) 2012-10-29 0.1.1 FrancescoMazzoli blake2 6 2.0 4 A library providing BLAKE2 ( cryptography , library , public-domain ) 2023-06-27 0.3.0.1 jgalt , chris_martin boomslang 7 0.0 1 Boomshine clone ( game , program , public-domain ) 2012-06-04 0.0.4 BrianLewis cacophony 35 2.0 1 A library implementing the Noise protocol. ( cryptography , library , public-domain ) 2025-01-09 0.11.0 jgalt cereal-enumerator 10 0.0 1 Deserialize things with cereal and enumerator ( library , public-domain , text ) 2011-10-07 0.3.1 PatrickPalka choice 31 0.0 5 A solution to boolean blindness. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2024-06-10 0.2.4.1 MathieuBoespflug classify 23 0.0 1 Library for classification of media files. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2013-11-06 2013.11.6.1 DavidHimmelstrup cndict 177 2.0 1 Chinese/Mandarin <-> English dictionary, Chinese lexer. ( library , natural-language-processing , public-domain ) 2017-12-21 0.10.0 DavidHimmelstrup complex-integrate 4 0.0 1 A simple integration function to integrate a complex-valued complex functions ( library , math , public-domain ) 2012-01-21 1.0.0 MarkSafronov conduit-parse 27 0.0 8 Parsing framework based on conduit. ( conduit , library , public-domain , text ) 2022-05-10 0.2.1.1 koral conf-json 11 0.0 1 read, parse json config ( configuration , json , library , public-domain ) 2018-07-20 1.2 procione conkin 3 0.0 1 Tools for functors from Hask^k to Hask ( control , library , public-domain ) 2017-10-26 1.0.2 NoahEasterly continued-fractions 26 0.0 2 Continued fractions. ( library , math , numerical , public-domain ) 2019-01-29 0.10.0.2 JamesCook , rockbmb control-monad-exception-monadsfd 25 0.0 1 Monads-fd instances for the EMT exceptions monad transformer ( control , failure , library , monads , public-domain ) 2012-05-28 0.10.3 PepeIborra control-monad-exception-monadstf 26 0.0 1 Monads-tf instances for the EMT exceptions monad transformer ( control , failure , library , monads , public-domain ) 2012-05-28 0.10.3 PepeIborra control-monad-exception-mtl 14 0.0 1 MTL instances for the EMT exceptions monad transformer ( control , failure , library , monads , public-domain ) 2012-05-28 0.10.3 PepeIborra control-monad-failure (deprecated) 35 0.0 9 A class for monads which can fail with an error. (deprecated) ( control , deprecated , failure , library , monads , public-domain ) 2012-01-18 0.7.0.1 MichaelSnoyman , PepeIborra control-monad-failure-mtl (deprecated) 13 0.0 1 A class for monads which can fail with an error for mtl 1 (deprecated) ( control , deprecated , failure , library , monads , public-domain ) 2011-11-30 0.7.1 MichaelSnoyman , PepeIborra control-monad-free 29 0.0 3 Free monads and monad transformers ( control , library , monads , public-domain ) 2018-10-06 0.6.2 LukePalmer , PepeIborra control-monad-omega 31 2.0 7 A breadth-first list monad. ( control , library , public-domain ) 2025-11-15 0.3.4 LukePalmer , Bodigrim converge 9 0.0 3 Limit operations for converging sequences ( library , math , numerical , public-domain ) 2011-08-15 0.1.0.1 JamesCook convertible-ascii 4 0.0 1 convertible instances for ascii ( data , failure , library , public-domain ) 2011-12-19 0.1.0.1 MasatakeDaimon couch-hs 20 0.0 1 A CouchDB view server for Haskell. ( database , library , program , public-domain ) 2012-01-23 0.1.6 PeterSagerson crunghc 6 0.0 1 A runghc replacement with transparent caching ( development , program , public-domain ) 2013-12-11 0.1.1.1 AkioTakano dbf 5 0.0 2 Read and write XBase ".dbf" files ( database , library , public-domain ) 2009-07-27 0.0.0.2 JamesCook deepseq-magic 10 0.0 1 Deep evaluation of data structures without NFData ( control , library , public-domain ) 2015-01-20 1.0.0.3 EdwardYang dependent-sum 93 2.25 65 Dependent sum type ( data , dependent-types , library , public-domain ) 2022-12-22 0.7.2.0 BertramFelgenhauer , JamesCook , JohnEricson , RyanTrinkle , abrar , 3noch , alexfmpe , maralorn , DanBornside , ymeister dependent-sum-template 45 0.0 13 Template Haskell code to generate instances of classes in some package ( public-domain , unclassified ) 2025-01-18 0.2.0.2 BertramFelgenhauer , JamesCook , JohnEricson , RyanTrinkle , abrar , 3noch , alexfmpe , maralorn , ymeister dice 12 0.0 3 Simplistic D&D style dice-rolling system. ( game , library , program , public-domain ) 2022-10-28 0.1.1 BertramFelgenhauer , JamesCook , ncfavier dmc 11 0.0 1 cmd for common cases ( command-line , library , public-domain , system ) 2020-02-10 1.2 procione doctest-discover 24 0.0 1 Easy way to run doctests via cabal ( library , program , public-domain , testing ) 2018-07-22 0.2.0.0 karun012 doctest-discover-configurator (deprecated) 4 0.0 1 Easy way to run doctests via cabal (no aeson dependency, uses configurator instead) ( deprecated , library , program , public-domain , testing ) 2014-12-12 0.1.0.6 RickyElrod drClickOn 2 0.0 1 Monadic FRP ( frp , library , public-domain ) 2013-09-20 0.1 AtzeVanDerPloeg dublincore-xml-conduit 7 0.0 1 XML streaming parser/renderer for the Dublin Core standard elements. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2023-08-11 0.1.0.3 koral dvi-processing 12 0.0 1 Read/write DVI and TFM file ( graphics , library , public-domain , typography ) 2014-02-20 0.3.1 AaronBlack , JeanPhilippeBernardy elenco-albero 5 0.0 1 make tree from a list ( library , public-domain , tree ) 2017-07-08 1.0.0 procione erd 16 0.0 1 An entity-relationship diagram generator from a plain text description. ( database , development , program , public-domain ) 2020-02-02 0.2.1.0 burntsushi , mmzx error-continuations 3 0.0 1 Error Continuations ( control , library , public-domain ) 2015-01-05 0.1.0.0 echatav euler-tour-tree 6 0.0 1 Euler tour trees ( data , library , public-domain ) 2018-09-04 0.1.1.0 koral euphoria 4 0.0 1 Dynamic network FRP with events and continuous values ( frp , library , public-domain ) 2016-08-02 0.8.0.0 AkioTakano , LiyangHu , MitsutoshiAoe , asayers event-handlers 3 0.0 2 Event handlers ( control , data , library , public-domain ) 2008-12-15 0.0.0.3 JamesCook event-monad 9 0.0 1 Event-graph simulation monad transformer ( control , library , public-domain ) 2010-01-11 0.0.3 JamesCook executable-path 11 0.0 15 Finding out the full path of the executable. ( library , public-domain , system ) 2017-03-22 0.0.3.1 BalazsKomuves explicit-sharing 41 0.0 1 Explicit Sharing of Monadic Effects ( control , library , monads , public-domain ) 2011-06-30 0.9 SebastianFischer extensible-data 13 0.0 1 Sums/products/lists/trees which can be extended in other modules ( data , library , public-domain ) 2012-02-17 0.1.0.4 AaronBlack fair-predicates 6 0.0 1 Fair Predicates ( data , library , public-domain ) 2009-03-25 0.1.1 SebastianFischer fast-builder 58 0.0 8 Fast ByteString Builder ( data , library , public-domain ) 2025-02-28 0.1.5.0 AkioTakano feed-collect 9 0.0 0 Watch RSS/Atom feeds (and do with them whatever you like). ( library , public-domain , web ) 2016-02-18 0.2.0.2 akrasner filelock 44 2.0 16 Portable interface to file locking (flock / LockFileEx) ( library , public-domain , system ) 2025-08-27 0.1.1.8 AkioTakano , AndreasAbel flexible-defaults 26 0.0 2 Generate default function implementations for complex type classes. ( code-generation , library , public-domain , template-haskell ) 2019-10-27 0.0.3 JamesCook , PeterSimons font-opengl-basic4x6 8 0.0 1 Basic4x6 font for OpenGL ( graphics , library , program , public-domain ) 2012-06-04 0.0.3 BrianLewis for-free 2 0.0 1 Functor, Monad, MonadPlus, etc for free ( control , library , public-domain ) 2012-07-09 0.1 AaronBlack free-theorems 21 0.0 3 Automatic generation of free theorems. ( language , library , public-domain ) 2022-12-21 0.3.2.1 DanielSeidel , JanisVoigtlaender , JoachimBreitner free-theorems-counterexamples 8 0.0 1 Automatically Generating Counterexamples to Naive Free Theorems ( language , library , program , public-domain ) 2013-02-14 0.3.1.0 DanielSeidel , JanisVoigtlaender free-theorems-seq 4 0.0 1 Taming Selective Strictness ( language , library , public-domain ) 2011-03-11 1.0 DanielSeidel , JanisVoigtlaender free-theorems-seq-webui 8 0.0 1 Taming Selective Strictness ( language , program , public-domain ) 2011-03-30 1.0.0.2 DanielSeidel , JanisVoigtlaender free-theorems-webui 17 0.0 1 CGI-based web interface for the free-theorems package. ( language , program , public-domain ) 2013-02-18 0.2.1.1 DanielSeidel , JanisVoigtlaender , MatthiasBartsch freetype-simple 3 0.0 1 Single line text rendering for OpenGL ES ( graphics , library , public-domain ) 2014-11-27 0.1.0.1 capsjac ftp-client 48 2.25 2 Transfer files with FTP and FTPS ( library , public-domain , web ) 2024-05-18 0.5.1.6 miscyb , janus , flipstone ftp-client-conduit 33 2.25 1 Transfer file with FTP and FTPS with Conduit ( library , public-domain , web ) 2019-09-24 0.5.0.5 miscyb ftshell 6 0.0 1 Shell interface to the FreeTheorems library. ( language , program , public-domain , source-tools ) 2010-10-12 0.3.0.1 JanisVoigtlaender , JoachimBreitner , MatthiasBartsch funbot 15 0.0 1 IRC bot for fun, learning, creativity and collaboration. ( irc , network , program , public-domain ) 2016-01-27 0.5 akrasner funbot-client 4 0.0 0 Report events to FunBot over a JSON/HTTP API. ( library , network , public-domain , web ) 2015-09-19 0.1.0.1 akrasner funbot-ext-events 8 0.0 1 Interact with FunBot's external events. ( library , network , public-domain , web ) 2016-01-27 0.3.0.0 akrasner funbot-git-hook 5 0.0 1 Git hook which sends events to FunBot. ( network , program , public-domain , web ) 2015-09-27 0.1 akrasner gamma 14 0.0 9 Gamma function and related functions. ( library , math , numerical , public-domain ) 2019-02-03 0.10.0.0 JamesCook , rockbmb garepinoh 9 0.0 1 reverse prefix notation calculator and calculation library ( console , library , math , program , public-domain , tools ) 2014-01-21 0.9.9.2.1 MekeorMelire ghc-generic-instances 1 0.0 1 Derived instances of GHC.Generic of the GHC AST ( development , library , public-domain ) 2015-01-17 0.1.0.0 AlanZimmerman ghci-history-parser 6 0.0 1 parse output of ghci ":history" command ( debug , development--- , ghc , library , public-domain ) 2016-07-14 0.1.0.2 phlummox gitson (deprecated) 20 0.0 1 A document store library for Git + JSON. ( database , deprecated , git , json , library , public-domain ) 2016-07-21 0.5.2 valpackett gsl-random-fu 2 0.0 1 Instances for using gsl-random with random-fu ( library , math , public-domain ) 2009-05-20 0.0.0.1 JamesCook hable 5 0.0 1 customizable pretty printer library for tables ( console , library , public-domain ) 2016-12-12 0.3.1 MekeorMelire hakyll-filestore 32 0.0 1 FileStore utilities for Hakyll ( library , public-domain , web ) 2025-08-03 0.1.12 aergus hampp 2 0.0 1 Haskell macro preprocessor ( preprocessor , program , public-domain ) 2012-02-12 0.2.1 AaronBlack haskell-fake-user-agent 5 0.0 1 Simple library for retrieving current user agent strings ( library , public-domain , web ) 2016-06-15 0.0.2 grzegorzgolda haskell-google-trends 2 0.0 1 Simple library for accessing Google Trends ( library , public-domain , web ) 2016-06-17 0.0.2 grzegorzgolda haskell-proxy-list 3 0.0 1 Simple library for retrieving proxy servers info from https://proxy-list.org ( library , public-domain , web ) 2016-06-17 0.0.1 grzegorzgolda haskell-token-utils 12 0.0 2 Utilities to tie up tokens to an AST ( development , library , public-domain ) 2014-10-13 0.0.0.6 AlanZimmerman haskoin (deprecated in favor of haskoin-core ) 13 0.0 1 Implementation of the Bitcoin protocol. ( bitcoin , deprecated , finance , library , network , public-domain ) 2014-08-18 0.1.0.2 jprupp haskoin-core 242 2.0 15 Bitcoin & Bitcoin Cash library for Haskell ( bitcoin , finance , library , mit , network , public-domain ) 2025-05-09 1.2.2 jprupp haskoin-crypto (deprecated in favor of haskoin ) 6 0.0 4 Implementation of Bitcoin cryptographic primitives. ( bitcoin , deprecated , finance , library , network , public-domain ) 2013-12-15 0.0.1.1 jprupp haskoin-node 158 0.0 2 P2P library for Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash ( bitcoin , finance , library , mit , network , public-domain ) 2025-05-08 1.1.4 jprupp haskoin-protocol (deprecated in favor of haskoin ) 7 0.0 3 Implementation of the Bitcoin network protocol messages ( bitcoin , deprecated , finance , library , network , public-domain ) 2013-12-18 0.0.1.1 jprupp haskoin-script (deprecated in favor of haskoin ) 2 0.0 2 Implementation of Bitcoin script parsing and evaluation ( bitcoin , deprecated , finance , library , network , public-domain ) 2013-12-18 0.0.1 jprupp haskoin-util (deprecated in favor of haskoin ) 5 0.0 5 Utility functions for the Network.Haskoin project ( bitcoin , deprecated , finance , library , network , public-domain ) 2013-12-14 0.0.1.1 jprupp haskoin-wallet 20 0.0 1 Lightweight CLI wallet for Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash ( bitcoin , finance , library , network , program , public-domain ) 2025-05-09 0.9.4 jprupp heist-aeson 12 0.0 1 Use JSON directly from Heist templates. ( library , public-domain , web ) 2011-05-11 0.5 DavidHimmelstrup helium-overture 3 0.0 1 A backwards-compatible, modern replacement for the Prelude. ( library , public-domain , web ) 2016-08-26 1.0.0 patrick_thomson her-lexer 7 0.0 2 A lexer for Haskell source code. ( language , library , public-domain ) 2012-09-06 0.1.1 TimothyHobbs her-lexer-parsec 6 0.0 1 Parsec frontend to "her-lexer" for Haskell source code. ( language , library , public-domain ) 2012-12-27 0.0.0 TimothyHobbs heredoc 7 2.25 11 multi-line string / here document using QuasiQuotes ( library , public-domain , text ) 2013-05-06 0.2.0.0 JamesFisher hexdump 3 0.0 1 A library for forming hexdumps. ( library , public-domain , text ) 2008-08-26 0.1 TimNewsham heyefi 29 2.0 1 A server for Eye-Fi SD cards. ( network , program , public-domain ) 2017-12-28 2.0.0.2 ryantm hgalib 6 0.0 1 Haskell Genetic Algorithm Library ( ai , library , public-domain ) 2008-10-02 0.2 KevinEllis hit-graph 5 0.0 1 Use graph algorithms to access and manipulate Git repos ( development , git , graphs , library , public-domain ) 2016-04-09 0.1 akrasner hora 38 0.0 1 date time ( library , public-domain , system , time ) 2025-10-01 2.2.1 procione hpack-dhall 28 0.0 0 hpack's dhalling ( bsd3 , development , library , program , public-domain ) 2022-04-27 0.5.7 philderbeast , sellout hslogger-template 27 0.0 6 Automatic generation of hslogger functions ( interfaces , library , public-domain ) 2017-01-24 2.0.4 BrianLewis hsnock 19 0.0 1 Nock 5K interpreter. ( language , library , program , public-domain ) 2013-11-05 0.5.1 mrdomino hspec-multicheck 3 0.0 1 A testing framework for Haskell using Hspec ( library , public-domain , testing ) 2017-08-11 0.1 marcellus hspr-sh 2 0.0 1 Session handler for HSP ( library , network , public-domain ) 2008-02-25 0.3 GwernBranwen hstatsd 3 0.0 3 Quick and dirty statsd interface ( library , public-domain , system ) 2013-02-22 0.1 JamesCook http-link-header 33 0.0 8 HTTP Link header parser/writer ( library , public-domain , web ) 2025-04-15 1.2.3 SShuck , valpackett http-listen (deprecated in favor of warp ) 4 0.0 0 Listen to HTTP requests and handle them in arbitrary ways. ( deprecated , library , network , public-domain , web ) 2015-08-05 0.1.0.0 akrasner hunit-gui 17 0.0 1 A GUI testrunner for HUnit ( library , program , public-domain , testing ) 2010-03-14 0.1.4 KimWallmark hyperpublic 6 0.0 1 A thin wrapper for the Hyperpublic API ( library , public-domain , web ) 2011-10-27 0.1.1 MichaelCraig ihs 12 0.0 1 Interpolated Haskell ( language , program , public-domain ) 2018-12-12 0.1.0.3 minad imm 79 0.0 1 Execute arbitrary actions for each item from RSS/Atom feeds ( library , program , public-domain , web ) 2024-09-22 2.1.3.0 koral indentparser 2 0.0 1 A parser for indentation based structures ( library , public-domain , text ) 2012-01-17 0.1 PiyushKurur indieweb-algorithms 8 0.0 1 A collection of implementations of IndieWeb algorithms. ( library , public-domain , web ) 2022-10-18 0.1.1 valpackett interpolatedstring-perl6 39 2.5 9 QuasiQuoter for Perl6-style multi-line interpolated strings ( data , library , public-domain ) 2019-10-15 1.0.2 AudreyTang irc-fun-bot 19 0.0 0 Library for writing fun IRC bots. ( irc , library , network , public-domain ) 2016-01-27 0.6.0.0 akrasner irc-fun-client 17 0.0 1 Another library for writing IRC clients. ( irc , library , network , public-domain ) 2016-01-27 0.5.0.0 akrasner irc-fun-color 9 0.0 0 Add color and style decorations to IRC messages. ( library , network , public-domain ) 2016-03-15 0.2.1.0 akrasner irc-fun-messages 20 0.0 2 Types and functions for working with the IRC protocol. ( data , irc , library , network , public-domain ) 2016-09-05 0.4 akrasner irc-fun-types 8 0.0 4 Common types for IRC related packages ( data , irc , library , network , public-domain ) 2016-09-05 0.2 akrasner json-rpc 83 2.25 5 Fully-featured JSON-RPC 2.0 library ( library , mit , network , program , public-domain ) 2025-05-09 1.1.2 jprupp json-state 4 0.0 1 Keep program state in JSON files. ( data , database , library , public-domain ) 2016-01-28 0.1.0.1 akrasner ks-test 4 0.0 1 Kolmogorov distribution and Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. ( library , math , numerical , public-domain ) 2010-09-10 0.1 JamesCook language-kort 1 0.0 1 Parser and serializer for the Kort information language. ( language , library , public-domain ) 2015-06-18 0.1.0.0 akrasner language-spelling 21 0.0 1 Various tools to detect/correct mistakes in words ( library , natural-language-processing , public-domain ) 2013-01-20 0.3.2 FrancescoMazzoli level-monad 29 0.0 2 Non-Determinism Monad for Level-Wise Search ( control , library , monads , public-domain ) 2009-06-22 0.4.1 SebastianFischer lhc 20 0.0 1 LHC Haskell Compiler ( compiler , public-domain ) 2010-05-24 0.10 AustinSeipp , DavidHimmelstrup lhs2html 13 0.0 1 Compile lhs in bird style to md, html, hs. ( development , program , public-domain ) 2015-03-22 0.999999 JulianFleischer libravatar 22 0.0 1 Use Libravatar, the decentralized avatar delivery service ( library , network , public-domain , web ) 2017-12-20 0.4.0.2 akrasner link-relations 8 0.0 1 Use web link relation types (RFC 5988) in Haskell ( data , library , public-domain , web ) 2016-01-28 0.1.1.0 akrasner list-zip-def 10 0.0 1 Provides zips with default values. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2018-12-19 0.1.0.3 muesli4 lord 28 0.0 1 A command line interface to online radios. ( library , music , program , public-domain , web ) 2015-01-22 2.20150122 rnons lzma-clib 4 0.0 2 liblzma C library and headers for use by LZMA bindings ( codec , public-domain ) 2015-10-06 5.2.2 HerbertValerioRiedel magicbane 20 0.0 1 A web framework that integrates Servant, RIO, EKG, fast-logger, wai-cli… ( library , public-domain , web ) 2020-11-12 0.5.1 valpackett majority 4 0.0 1 Boyer-Moore Majority Vote Algorithm ( algorithms , library , public-domain ) 2011-07-18 1.1 NisWegmann mathista (deprecated) 1 0.0 1 A small programming language for numerical computing ( deprecated , language , library , program , public-domain ) 2015-10-11 0.0.1 seiya maybe-justify 3 0.0 1 Simple higher order function for Maybe ( data , library , public-domain ) 2015-06-24 0.1.0.0 taksuyu mcpi 17 0.0 1 Connect to MineCraft running on a Raspberry PI. ( library , minecraft , network , public-domain , raspberrypi ) 2014-02-05 0.0.1.2 DouglasBurke microformats2-parser 46 2.0 1 A Microformats 2 parser. ( library , public-domain , web ) 2025-08-28 1.0.2.3 valpackett microformats2-types (deprecated in favor of microformats2-parser , aeson ) 16 0.0 2 Microformats 2 types (with Aeson instances) ( deprecated , library , public-domain , web ) 2015-07-30 0.4.1 valpackett misfortune 20 0.0 3 fortune-mod clone ( console , game , library , mit , program , public-domain ) 2022-08-12 0.1.2.1 JamesCook , ncfavier ml-w 7 0.0 1 Minimal ML language to to demonstrate the W type infererence algorithm. ( language , library , program , public-domain , type-inference ) 2012-04-09 0.1.1 FrancescoMazzoli monad-connect 3 0.0 1 Transformer for TCP connection with TLS and SOCKS support ( control , library , monad , network , public-domain ) 2016-03-16 0.1 akrasner monad-exception (deprecated in favor of layers ) 1 0.0 1 Exstensible monadic exceptions ( control , deprecated , library , public-domain ) 2012-03-01 0.1 ShaneOBrien monad-fork (deprecated in favor of layers ) 1 0.0 2 Type class for monads which support a fork operation. ( control , deprecated , library , public-domain ) 2012-02-21 0.1 ShaneOBrien monad-hash 3 0.0 1 Monad transformer for incremental hashing ( control , cryptography , hash , library , monad , public-domain ) 2016-05-30 0.1.0.2 akrasner monad-loops 22 2.25 132 Monadic loops ( control , library , public-domain ) 2015-06-19 0.4.3 JamesCook monad-loops-stm 5 0.0 2 Monadic loops for STM ( control , library , public-domain ) 2013-06-09 0.4 JamesCook monadloc 17 0.0 6 A class for monads which can keep a monadic call trace ( control , library , monads , public-domain ) 2013-06-06 0.7.1 PepeIborra monadloc-pp 10 0.0 1 A preprocessor for generating monadic call traces ( control , monads , program , public-domain ) 2014-10-17 0.3.1 PepeIborra monoidplus 11 0.0 1 Extra classes/functions about monoids ( data , library , math , public-domain ) 2011-11-12 0.1.0.1 AaronBlack mtl-evil-instances (deprecated in favor of layers ) 2 0.0 3 Instances for the mtl classes for all monad transformers. ( control , deprecated , library , public-domain ) 2012-02-29 0.1 ShaneOBrien mtree 4 0.0 1 Tree with Meta and Content parameters ( data , library , public-domain ) 2011-09-17 0.1 RahulGopinath murmur3 18 0.0 4 Pure Haskell implementation of the MurmurHash3 x86 algorithm ( data , hash , library , mit , murmur , public-domain ) 2025-05-09 1.0.6 jprupp murmurhash3 4 0.0 1 32-bit non-cryptographic hashing ( data , digest , library , public-domain ) 2011-06-22 1.0 NisWegmann mybitcoin-sci 8 0.0 1 Binding to mybitcoin.com's Shopping Cart Interface. ( library , network , public-domain ) 2011-06-04 0.3 DavidHimmelstrup n-ary-functor 6 0.0 1 An n-ary version of Functor ( data , library , public-domain ) 2020-01-25 1.0 gelisam nanomsg 5 0.0 1 nanomsg - scalability protocols library ( library , public-domain , system ) 2013-10-20 0.1.1 DavidHimmelstrup network-multicast 62 0.0 4 Simple multicast library ( library , network , public-domain ) 2019-05-28 0.3.2 AudreyTang , ocramz nfc 7 0.0 1 libnfc bindings ( bindings , library , public-domain ) 2022-07-11 0.1.1 jgalt nqe 32 0.0 2 Concurrency library in the style of Erlang/OTP ( control , library , mit , public-domain ) 2025-05-09 0.6.6 jprupp oneOfN 4 0.0 2 Anonymous coproduct type ( data , library , public-domain ) 2011-08-10 0.1.0.1 JamesCook openweathermap 11 0.0 0 Access data at OpenWeatherMap ( library , public-domain , web ) 2023-01-05 0.3.0 ip1981 opml-conduit 40 0.0 1 Streaming parser/renderer for the OPML 2.0 format. ( conduit , library , public-domain , text , xml ) 2020-08-01 0.9.0.0 koral ordrea 6 0.0 1 Push-pull implementation of discrete-time FRP ( frp , library , public-domain ) 2014-07-22 0.3.0.0 AkioTakano panhandle 9 0.0 0 Pandoc filter to unwrap nested blocks ( library , program , public-domain , text ) 2017-09-21 0.3.0.0 chriswarbo panpipe 3 0.0 0 Pandoc filter to execute code blocks ( library , program , public-domain , text ) 2017-05-17 0.2.0.0 chriswarbo parallel-tree-search 17 0.0 2 Parallel Tree Search ( concurrency , control , library , public-domain ) 2020-10-26 0.4.2 SebastianFischer , nbu parsec-tagsoup 1 0.0 1 Parsec parsers for Tagsoup tag streams ( library , public-domain , xml ) 2011-12-30 0.1 PepeIborra pcre-heavy 25 2.5 17 A regexp (regex) library on top of pcre-light you can actually use. ( library , public-domain , web ) 2025-05-03 1.0.0.4 valpackett persistent-cereal 1 0.0 1 Helper functions for writing Persistent instances ( database , library , public-domain ) 2014-01-14 0.1.0 DaniilFrumin pgdl 88 0.0 1 browse directory listing webpages and download files from them. ( network , program , public-domain ) 2018-01-15 10.10 sifmelcara pipes-cacophony 23 2.0 1 Pipes for Noise-secured network connections. ( cryptography , library , public-domain ) 2017-06-26 0.5.0 jgalt poker-eval 11 0.0 1 Binding to libpoker-eval ( library , math , public-domain ) 2013-03-08 0.3.1 DavidHimmelstrup polymap 4 2.0 1 Polygonal maps ( data , library , public-domain ) 2015-09-24 0.1.1.0 Shockk polynomial 17 2.0 9 Polynomials ( library , math , numerical , public-domain ) 2017-06-14 0.7.3 JamesCook polyseq (deprecated in favor of free-theorems-seq ) 7 0.0 1 Taming Selective Strictness ( deprecated , language , library , program , public-domain ) 2010-10-06 0.1.2.1 DanielSeidel , JanisVoigtlaender pong-server 20 0.0 1 A simple embedded pingable server that runs in the background. ( library , public-domain , utilities ) 2017-04-25 0.0.4.4 RobertFischer prelude-generalize 18 0.0 1 Another kind of alternate Prelude file ( library , prelude , public-domain ) 2012-06-08 0.4 AaronBlack prim-uniq 9 0.0 4 Opaque unique identifiers in primitive state monads ( data , dependent-types , library , public-domain ) 2020-04-15 0.2 BertramFelgenhauer , JamesCook , RyanTrinkle print-debugger 30 0.0 1 Debug print formatting library. ( debug , library , public-domain ) 2016-02-14 1.1.9 johnreedlol project-m36 46 2.0 0 Relational Algebra Engine ( library , mit , program , public-domain , relational-algebra ) 2026-01-07 1.2.0 agentm prolog 23 0.0 2 A Prolog interpreter written in Haskell. ( language , library , public-domain ) 2020-08-25 0.3.2 DanielSeidel , JanisVoigtlaender , MarcelFourne , MatthiasBartsch prolog-graph 10 0.0 1 A command line tool to visualize query resolution in Prolog. ( language , program , public-domain ) 2011-09-21 0.1.0.2 MatthiasBartsch prolog-graph-lib 9 0.0 1 Generating images of resolution trees for Prolog queries. ( language , library , public-domain ) 2019-01-23 0.2.1.1 DanielSeidel , JanisVoigtlaender , MarcelFourne , MatthiasBartsch property-list 37 0.0 3 Apple property list parser ( data , library , parsing , public-domain , xml ) 2015-06-19 0.1.0.5 JamesCook pugs-compat 61 0.0 1 Portable Haskell/POSIX layer for Pugs ( library , public-domain , pugs ) 2015-08-15 0.0.6.20150815 AudreyTang , JeffShaw qm-interpolated-string 30 0.0 1 Implementation of interpolated multiline strings ( data , interpolated , library , public-domain ) 2022-07-17 0.3.1.0 unclechu quickcheck-property-comb 6 0.0 1 Combinators for Quickcheck Property construction and diagnostics ( library , public-domain , testing ) 2013-12-26 0.1.0.2 jfeltz quickcheck-regex 9 0.0 2 Generate regex-constrained strings for QuickCheck ( library , public-domain , quickcheck , regex , test ) 2014-05-20 0.0.3 AudreyTang quickcheck-relaxng 7 0.0 1 Generate RelaxNG-constrained XML documents for QuickCheck ( hxt , library , public-domain , quickcheck , relaxng , test , xml ) 2014-05-21 0.0.2 AudreyTang raketka 17 0.0 1 distributed-process node ( library , network-control , program , public-domain ) 2025-10-10 1.2.0 procione random-fu 58 0.0 44 Random number generation ( math , public-domain ) 2023-04-16 0.3.0.1 BertramFelgenhauer , DominicSteinitz , JamesCook random-source (deprecated) 39 0.0 23 Generic basis for random number generators ( deprecated , library , math , public-domain ) 2023-09-14 0.3.0.13 BertramFelgenhauer , DominicSteinitz , JamesCook randsolid 7 0.0 1 Set the background of your root window to a random colour. ( program , public-domain , system ) 2013-10-25 0.3 JohannesMartinsson razom-text-util 7 0.0 1 Common text/parsing tools for Razom language packages. ( library , public-domain , text ) 2015-06-18 0.1.2.0 akrasner reactive-banana-gi-gtk 21 0.0 1 Simple reactive programming with GTK GObject Introspection ( development , library , public-domain ) 2020-07-06 0.4.1.0 miscyb really-simple-xml-parser 8 0.0 1 A really simple XML parser ( language , library , public-domain ) 2012-07-30 0.4.0.0 KashyapChatamballi redo 2 2.0 1 software build system, make replacement, implementation of djb's redo ( distribution , program , public-domain ) 2013-07-08 0.2.0 ChrisForno regex-do 85 0.0 2 PCRE wrapper ( library , public-domain , regex , search , string ) 2020-02-11 3.2.2 procione reord 3 0.0 2 Ad-hoc Ord instances ( data , library , public-domain ) 2008-10-22 0.0.0.2 JamesCook roots 9 0.0 2 Root-finding algorithms (1-dimensional) ( library , math , numerical , public-domain ) 2012-09-09 0.1.1.2 JamesCook rss 46 0.0 7 A library for generating RSS 2.0 feeds. ( library , public-domain , rss ) 2024-03-16 3000.2.0.8 AndreasAbel , BasVanDijk , BjornBringert , HerbertValerioRiedel rss-conduit 47 0.0 1 Streaming parser/renderer for the RSS standard. ( conduit , library , public-domain , xml ) 2020-11-22 0.6.0.1 koral runtime-arbitrary 4 0.0 1 Runtime generation of Arbitrary values ( language , library , public-domain ) 2016-11-12 0.1.0.6 chriswarbo rvar 18 0.0 11 Random Variables ( library , math , public-domain ) 2023-04-16 0.3.0.2 BertramFelgenhauer , DominicSteinitz , JamesCook rwlock 9 0.0 3 Multiple-read / single-write locks ( concurrency , library , public-domain ) 2013-06-09 0.0.0.3 JamesCook safe-failure-cme 3 0.0 1 control-monad-exception Instances for safe-failure ( failure , library , public-domain ) 2011-12-10 0.1.0 PepeIborra safecopy 185 2.0 63 Binary serialization with version control. ( data , library , parsing , public-domain ) 2025-08-27 0.10.4.3 AdamGundry , AndreasAbel , DavidFox , DavidHimmelstrup , DavidJohnson , JeremyShaw safecopy-migrate (deprecated) 7 0.0 1 Making SafeCopy migrations easier ( data , deprecated , library , public-domain ) 2018-08-19 0.2.0 Artyom safecopy-store 11 0.0 2 Binary serialization with version control. ( data , library , parsing , public-domain ) 2017-12-21 0.9.6 NCrashed secp256k1 (deprecated in favor of secp256k1-haskell ) 155 0.0 2 Bindings for secp256k1 library from Bitcoin Core ( crypto , deprecated , library , public-domain ) 2018-09-02 1.1.2 jprupp secrm 2 0.0 1 Example of writing "secure" file removal in Haskell rather than C. ( program , public-domain , security ) 2010-09-24 0.0 JonSlenk setops 15 0.0 1 Uniform names (and Unicode operators) for set operations on data structures. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2012-05-10 0.1.2 eelis settings 21 0.0 1 Runtime-editable program settings. ( data , library , public-domain , user-interfaces ) 2016-01-27 0.3.0.0 akrasner shadower 9 0.0 1 An automated way to run doctests in files that are changing ( program , public-domain , testing ) 2014-08-09 0.1.0.6 karun012 shakespeare-babel (deprecated) 6 0.0 1 compile es2015 ( deprecated , library , public-domain , web-yesod ) 2016-02-02 0.2.0.0 ncaq shapefile 1 0.0 1 Parser and related tools for ESRI shapefile format ( database , library , public-domain ) 2009-07-27 0.0.0.1 JamesCook she 15 0.0 2 A Haskell preprocessor adding miscellaneous features ( language , library , program , public-domain ) 2011-08-02 0.6 ConorMcBride shplit 10 0.0 1 A Haskell pattern splitter with emacs attachments ( language , program , public-domain ) 2012-02-01 0.3 ConorMcBride simple-money 10 0.0 1 Simple library to handle and interexchange money ( data , library , public-domain ) 2017-01-20 0.2.0.1 nbrk smaoin 16 0.0 3 Utilities for the Smaoin semantic information model. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2015-06-18 0.3.0.0 akrasner spacefill 3 0.0 1 Generators for space-filling curves. ( algorithms , library , public-domain ) 2015-01-10 0.1 knz splines 10 0.0 1 B-Splines, other splines, and NURBS. ( graphics , library , math , numerical , public-domain ) 2013-05-28 0.5.0.1 JamesCook stateref 8 0.0 6 Abstraction for things that work like IORef. ( data , public-domain ) 2009-11-19 0.3 JamesCook stb-image 14 0.0 9 A wrapper around Sean Barrett's JPEG/PNG decoder ( codec , graphics , library , public-domain ) 2012-02-13 0.2.1 BalazsKomuves stb-truetype 9 0.0 4 A wrapper around Sean Barrett's TrueType rasterizer library. ( graphics , library , public-domain ) 2019-04-14 0.1.4 BalazsKomuves string-qq 11 0.0 10 QuasiQuoter for non-interpolated strings, texts and bytestrings. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2024-02-02 0.0.6 AudreyTang sundown 50 0.0 1 Bindings to the sundown markdown library ( foreign-binding , library , public-domain , text ) 2014-01-17 0.6 FrancescoMazzoli surjective 3 0.0 1 An output coverage checker ( language , library , public-domain ) 2018-02-21 0.1.0.0 gelisam sxml 3 0.0 1 A SXML-parser ( library , public-domain , text , xml ) 2017-01-23 0.1.0.0 LoicArjanen testing-type-modifiers 8 0.0 2 Data type modifiers for property based testing ( library , public-domain , testing ) 2015-07-01 0.1.0.1 JonasDuregard text-position 3 0.0 3 Handling positions in text and position-tagging it. ( data , library , public-domain , text ) 2015-04-28 0.1.0.0 akrasner th-extras 21 0.0 8 A grab bag of functions for use with Template Haskell ( library , public-domain , template-haskell ) 2024-04-14 0.0.0.8 ErikDeCastroLopo , JamesCook , JohnEricson , RyanTrinkle , abrar , alexfmpe , maralorn , ymeister th-fold 1 0.0 2 TH fold generator ( development , library , public-domain ) 2008-12-15 0.0.0.1 JamesCook theta-functions 7 0.0 1 Theta-functions implemented as trigonometric series ( library , math , public-domain ) 2012-06-21 1.0.1 MarkSafronov tight-apply 3 0.0 1 Tightly binding infix function application ( data , library , public-domain ) 2015-09-07 0.1.0.0 Shockk time-cache 1 0.0 1 Cache current time and formatted time text ( library , public-domain , system , time ) 2016-03-15 0.1 akrasner time-http 16 0.0 2 Parse and format HTTP/1.1 Date and Time strings ( library , public-domain , time , web ) 2012-01-03 0.5 MasatakeDaimon time-interval 5 0.0 3 Use a time unit class, but hold a concrete time type. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2016-05-30 0.1.1 akrasner time-out 5 0.0 1 Timers, timeouts, alarms, monadic wrappers ( control , library , monad , public-domain , time , timeout ) 2016-05-30 0.2 akrasner time-w3c 7 0.0 1 Parse, format and convert W3C Date and Time ( library , public-domain , web ) 2011-07-28 0.1.0.1 MasatakeDaimon truthful 7 0.0 1 Typeclass for truthfulness of values ( data , library , public-domain ) 2015-09-07 0.1.0.2 Shockk tst 6 0.0 2 BK-tree implementation ( data-structures , library , public-domain ) 2012-10-29 0.1.1 FrancescoMazzoli tuple-generic (deprecated) 23 0.0 1 Generic operations on tuples ( data , deprecated , library , public-domain ) 2015-11-25 0.6.0.0 Artyom uglymemo 6 0.0 6 A simple (but internally ugly) memoization function. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2011-10-04 0.1.0.1 LennartAugustsson uniq-deep 9 0.0 1 uniq-deep ( console , mit , program , public-domain ) 2021-07-05 1.2.1 ncaq upskirt (deprecated in favor of sundown ) 13 0.0 1 Binding to upskirt ( deprecated , foreign-binding , library , public-domain , text ) 2011-07-24 0.0.4 FrancescoMazzoli urxml 4 0.0 1 XML parser-printer supporting Ur/Web syntax extensions ( development , program , public-domain , ur-web ) 2013-10-31 0.2.0.0 SergeyMironov vacuum-opengl 13 0.0 1 Visualize live Haskell data structures using vacuum, graphviz and OpenGL. ( development , library , program , public-domain ) 2010-01-14 0.0.3 BalazsKomuves vcs-web-hook-parse 3 0.0 0 Parse development platform web hook messages. ( library , public-domain , web ) 2016-01-27 0.2.0.0 akrasner vocabulary-kadma 1 0.0 1 Smaoin vocabulary definitions of the base framework. ( data , library , public-domain ) 2015-06-18 0.1.0.0 akrasner wai-cli 10 0.0 3 Command line runner for Wai apps (using Warp) with TLS, CGI, socket activation & graceful shutdown ( library , public-domain , web ) 2021-06-24 0.2.3 valpackett web-output 12 0.0 1 Library to present content to an user via their browser ( library , public-domain , scripting ) 2017-04-03 0.4.0.0 liberalogica webfinger-client 16 2.0 1 WebFinger client library ( library , network , public-domain , web ) 2025-06-16 0.2.2.1 akrasner , JoonkyuPark wedding-announcement 6 0.0 1 a wedding announcement ( factual , program , public-domain ) 2011-08-06 1.1 PetrRockai | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.FreeBSD.org/docs/ | FreeBSD Documentation Portal About About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Code of Conduct Get FreeBSD Get FreeBSD Release Information Release Engineering Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal FreeBSD Handbook Porter's Handbook Documentation Project Handbook Manual pages Presentations and papers Wiki Books Articles Community Community Get involved Forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Support ♥ Donate FreeBSD Documentation FreeBSD is an operating system used to power modern servers, desktops, and embedded platforms. Getting started Learn about FreeBSD basics Download Get FreeBSD FreeBSD Handbook A constantly evolving, comprehensive resource for FreeBSD users FreeBSD Porter's Handbook A complete reference about the FreeBSD ports system FreeBSD FAQ Frequently Asked Questions for FreeBSD Documentation Project Primer A complete guide about how to start contributing to the documentation Books List of FreeBSD books Articles List of FreeBSD articles Manual pages FreeBSD Manual Pages English System Light Dark High contrast About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Get FreeBSD Code of Conduct Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal Manual pages Presentations and papers Previous versions 4.4BSD Documents Wiki Community Get involved Community forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Legal Donations Licensing Privacy Policy Legal notices © 1994-2026 The FreeBSD Project. All rights reserved Made with ♥ by the FreeBSD Community | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
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https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/gpl | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged gpl 966 packages have this tag. 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Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers AlignmentAlgorithms 17 0.0 1 Collection of alignment algorithms ( algorithms , bioinformatics , data-structures , gpl , library , linguistics ) 2017-03-14 0.1.0.0 ChristianHoener AspectAG 52 0.0 5 First-class Attribute Grammars implemented using type-level programming. ( gpl , language , library ) 2024-11-08 0.8.0.0 MarcosViera , jpgarcia BNFC-meta 81 0.0 1 Deriving Parsers and Quasi-Quoters from BNF Grammars ( development , gpl , language , library , parsing , text ) 2020-02-09 0.6.1 JeanPhilippeBernardy , JonasDuregard , ArtemPelenitsyn BPS 9 0.0 0 Translations of classic Truth Maintenance Systems ( gpl , library , program , truth-maintenance ) 2022-09-13 0.1.1.0 jpmrst Baggins 3 0.0 1 Tools for self-assembly ( gpl , library , math ) 2014-06-12 1.0 pmeunier BenchmarkHistory 7 0.0 1 Benchmark functions with history ( benchmarking , gpl , library ) 2015-11-19 0.0.0.2 ChristianHoener BioHMM 54 0.0 1 Libary for Hidden Markov Models in HMMER3 format. ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2017-06-09 1.2.0 FlorianEggenhofer Biobase 14 0.0 6 Base library for bioinformatics ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2011-04-08 0.3.1.1 ChristianHoener BiobaseBlast 13 0.0 4 BLAST-related tools ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2021-06-05 0.3.3.0 ChristianHoener , FlorianEggenhofer BiobaseDotP 4 0.0 2 Vienna / DotBracket / ExtSS parsers ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2011-08-22 0.1.0.0 ChristianHoener BiobaseEnsembl 6 0.0 1 Ensembl related datastructures and functions ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2020-01-09 0.2.0.1 FlorianEggenhofer BiobaseFR3D 15 0.0 2 Importer for FR3D resources ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2012-02-16 0.2.3.0 ChristianHoener BiobaseHTTP 5 0.0 1 Libary to interface with the Bioinformatics HTTP services - Entrez Ensembl ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2019-11-20 1.2.0 FlorianEggenhofer BiobaseHTTPTools 3 0.0 0 Tools to query Bioinformatics HTTP services e.g. Entrez, Ensembl. ( bioinformatics , gpl , program ) 2018-12-13 1.0.0 FlorianEggenhofer BiobaseInfernal 41 0.0 3 Infernal data structures and tools ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2017-03-14 0.8.1.0 ChristianHoener BiobaseMAF 1 0.0 1 Multiple Alignment Format ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2011-07-29 0.5.0.0 ChristianHoener BiobaseTrainingData 13 0.0 2 RNA folding training data ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2011-09-29 0.1.2.3 ChristianHoener BiobaseTurner 31 0.0 4 Import Turner RNA parameters ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2013-04-25 0.3.1.1 ChristianHoener BiobaseVienna 30 0.0 3 Import Vienna energy parameters ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2013-04-22 0.3.0.0 ChristianHoener BlastHTTP 25 0.0 2 Libary to interface with the NCBI blast REST interface ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2021-06-05 1.4.2 FlorianEggenhofer BlogLiterately 146 0.0 2 A tool for posting Haskelly articles to blogs ( gpl , library , program , web ) 2023-02-08 0.8.8.2 BrentYorgey , RobertGreayer CMCompare 10 0.0 1 Infernal covariance model comparison ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2012-11-22 0.0.1.5 ChristianHoener ClustalParser 35 0.0 3 Libary for parsing Clustal tools output ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2019-11-14 1.3.0 FlorianEggenhofer ConcurrentUtils 20 0.0 2 Concurrent utilities ( concurrency , gpl , library ) 2020-05-04 0.5.0.0 JamesCandy DAV 66 0.0 1 RFC 4918 WebDAV support ( gpl , library , program , web ) 2020-01-06 1.3.4 ClintAdams DMuCheck 8 0.0 1 Distributed Mutation Analysis framework for MuCheck ( gpl , program , testing ) 2015-01-06 0.3.0.2 RahulGopinath Dao 5 0.0 1 Dao is meta programming language with its own built-in interpreted language, designed with artificial intelligence applications in mind. ( gpl , library , program , unclassified ) 2014-11-21 0.1.0.2 RaminHonary DiscussionSupportSystem 5 0.0 1 Discussion support system ( gpl , library , system ) 2014-06-01 0.11.0.3 minamiyama1994 DnaProteinAlignment 3 0.0 1 Frameshift-aware alignment of protein sequences with DNA sequences ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2013-12-18 0.0.0.1 ChristianHoener EntrezHTTP (deprecated in favor of BiobaseHTTP ) 15 0.0 1 Libary to interface with the NCBI Entrez REST service. ( bioinformatics , deprecated , gpl , library ) 2017-08-10 1.0.4 FlorianEggenhofer FComp 5 0.0 1 Compose music ( gpl , library , music , program ) 2014-09-25 1.0.2 JosePedroMagalhaes FModExRaw (deprecated) 9 0.0 1 The Haskell FModEx raw API. ( deprecated , gpl , library , sound ) 2013-12-29 0.2.0.0 DimitriSabadie FiniteCategories 41 0.0 1 Finite categories and usual categorical constructions on them. ( data , gpl , library , maths ) 2024-05-31 0.6.5.1 gsabbagh FiniteCategoriesGraphViz 4 0.0 0 Transform objects of the package FiniteCategories into graphs using GraphViz. ( data , gpl , library , maths ) 2023-10-10 0.2.0.0 gsabbagh Flint2 16 0.0 1 Haskell bindings for the flint library for number theory ( gpl , library , math ) 2023-11-17 0.1.0.5 monien Flint2-Examples 9 0.0 0 Examples for the Flint2 library ( gpl , math , program ) 2023-11-17 0.1.0.2 monien FormalGrammars 27 0.0 9 (Context-free) grammars in formal language theory ( bioinformatics , formal-languages , gpl , library ) 2019-10-02 0.4.0.0 ChristianHoener GLMatrix 4 0.0 1 Utilities for working with OpenGL matrices ( gpl , graphics , library ) 2014-03-15 0.1.0.1 fiendfan1 Gene-CluEDO 6 0.0 0 Hox gene clustering ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2017-09-11 0.0.0.2 ChristianHoener GenussFold 5 0.0 0 MCFGs for Genus-1 RNA Pseudoknots ( bioinformatics , formal-languages , gpl , library , program ) 2015-07-16 0.0.0.2 ChristianHoener GoogleSuggest 14 0.0 2 Interface to Google Suggest API ( browser , gpl , library ) 2010-10-01 0.0.4 AndyStewart GoogleTranslate 19 0.0 2 Interface to Google Translate API ( gpl , language , library ) 2010-10-01 0.0.5 AndyStewart GrammarProducts 26 0.0 4 Grammar products and higher-dimensional grammars ( bioinformatics , formal-languages , gpl , library ) 2019-10-02 0.2.0.0 ChristianHoener Graph500 2 0.0 2 Graph500 benchmark-related definitions and data set generator. ( concurrency , gpl , library , program ) 2013-11-05 0.4.0 GraphHammer 3 0.0 1 GraphHammer Haskell graph analyses framework inspired by STINGER. ( concurrency , gpl , library ) 2013-11-05 0.3 GraphHammer-examples 3 0.0 1 Test harness for TriangleCount analysis. ( concurrency , gpl , library , program ) 2013-11-05 0.3 HFrequencyQueue 5 0.0 1 A Queue with a random (weighted) pick function ( data , gpl , library ) 2015-08-28 0.2.0.0 Bellaz HOpenCV 36 0.0 2 A binding for the OpenCV computer vision library ( ai , gpl , graphics , library , program ) 2015-08-08 0.4.0.1 NoamLewis HaMinitel 2 0.0 1 An Haskell library to drive the french Minitel through a serial port ( gpl , library , terminal ) 2014-07-12 0.1.0.0 zigazou Haggressive 10 0.0 1 Aggression analysis for Tweets on Twitter ( gpl , library , web ) 2014-12-01 0.1.0.4 Pold87 HarmTrace 30 0.0 1 Harmony Analysis and Retrieval of Music ( gpl , music , program ) 2017-08-07 2.2.1 BasDeHaas , JosePedroMagalhaes HasCacBDD 24 0.0 2 Haskell bindings for CacBDD ( data , gpl , library ) 2025-10-22 0.3.0.1 m4lvin HasGP 4 0.0 1 A Haskell library for inference using Gaussian processes ( ai , classification , datamining , gpl , library , statistics ) 2011-10-26 0.1 SeanHolden HaskRel 8 0.0 1 HaskRel, Haskell as a DBMS with support for the relational algebra ( database , gpl , library ) 2015-11-25 0.1.0.2 thormick HsYAML 26 1.5 16 Pure Haskell YAML 1.2 processor ( gpl , library , text ) 2025-03-11 0.2.1.5 AndreasAbel , HerbertValerioRiedel , sjakobi , TristanCacqueray HsYAML-aeson 21 2.25 7 JSON to YAML Adapter ( codec , gpl , json , library , text , web , yaml ) 2025-03-11 0.2.0.2 AndreasAbel , HerbertValerioRiedel , sjakobi , TristanCacqueray Hungarian-Munkres 21 0.0 1 A Linear Sum Assignment Problem (LSAP) solver ( algorithms , gpl , library ) 2014-10-08 0.1.5 kaizhang I1M 24 0.0 0 Code for the Haskell course taught at the University of Seville. ( data-structures , education , gpl , library ) 2024-10-09 0.2.2 Jose_A_Alonso ImperativeHaskell 29 2.0 1 A library for writing Imperative style haskell. ( control , development , embedded , gpl , language , library ) 2012-06-07 2.0.0.1 MatthewMirman Irc 1 0.0 1 DSL for IRC bots ( gpl , library , network ) 2015-01-21 0.1.0.2 yunxing JackMiniMix (deprecated in favor of jackminimix ) 1 0.0 1 control JackMiniMix ( deprecated , gpl , library , sound ) 2010-08-22 0.1 RenickBell LDAPv3 11 0.0 0 Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) version 3 ( gpl , library , network ) 2023-09-22 0.1.2.0 HerbertValerioRiedel LazyVault (deprecated) 5 0.0 1 A simple sandboxing tool for Haskell packages. ( deprecated , development , gpl , program ) 2013-02-06 KevinVanRooijen Level0 3 0.0 1 A Snake II clone written using SDL. ( game , gpl , program ) 2012-04-29 1.0 MikeLedger Liquorice 3 0.0 0 Algorithmic Doom map generation ( game , gpl , library ) 2020-03-06 0.0.1 jmtd MBot 22 2.5 1 Haskell interface for controlling the mBot educational robot ( educational , gpl , library ) 2018-07-23 0.2.4.1 cfscholl MC-Fold-DP 6 0.0 1 Folding algorithm based on nucleotide cyclic motifs. ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2012-11-12 0.1.1.0 ChristianHoener MIP-glpk 5 0.0 0 A GLPK backend to the MIP library. ( algorithms , gpl , library , math , optimisation , optimization ) 2026-01-04 0.2.0.1 MasahiroSakai Modulo 8 0.0 1 Modular arithmetic via Numeric-Prelude ( gpl , library , math ) 2013-08-08 0.2.0.1 NikolayMurzin Mondrian 3 0.0 0 Renders backgrounds & borders ( gpl , graphics , library , program ) 2023-07-16 0.1.0.0 alcinnz MorseCode 14 0.0 2 Morse code ( gpl , library , text ) 2010-10-14 0.0.5 AndyStewart MuCheck 24 0.0 5 Automated Mutation Testing ( gpl , library , testing ) 2015-01-06 0.3.0.4 RahulGopinath MuCheck-HUnit 11 0.0 1 Automated Mutation Testing for HUnit tests ( gpl , library , program , testing ) 2015-01-06 0.3.0.4 RahulGopinath MuCheck-Hspec 7 0.0 1 Automated Mutation Testing for Hspec tests ( gpl , library , program , testing ) 2015-01-06 0.3.0.4 RahulGopinath MuCheck-QuickCheck 12 0.0 1 Automated Mutation Testing for QuickCheck tests ( gpl , library , program , testing ) 2015-01-06 0.3.0.4 RahulGopinath MuCheck-SmallCheck 8 0.0 1 Automated Mutation Testing for SmallCheck tests ( gpl , library , program , testing ) 2015-01-06 0.3.0.4 RahulGopinath MusicBrainz 31 0.0 1 interface to MusicBrainz XML2 and JSON web services ( gpl , library , network ) 2018-10-06 0.4.1 ClintAdams MutationOrder 6 0.0 0 Most likely order of mutation events in RNA ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2017-10-24 0.0.1.0 ChristianHoener NameGenerator 6 0.0 1 A name generator written in Haskell ( gpl , library , text ) 2018-09-01 0.0.2 NestedSampling 6 0.0 1 A port of John Skilling's nested sampling C code to Haskell. ( gpl , library , statistics ) 2011-09-22 0.1.4 IssacTrotts NumberTheory 6 0.0 1 A library for number theoretic computations, written in Haskell. ( gpl , library , math ) 2016-02-17 0.1.0.1 cfredric Nussinov78 14 0.0 1 Nussinov78 using the ADPfusion library. ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2012-11-07 0.1.0.0 ChristianHoener PDBtools 6 0.0 1 A library for analysis of 3-D protein coordinates ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2012-06-03 0.0.3 GrantRotskoff Parry 2 0.0 1 A proven synchronization server for high performance computing. ( gpl , library , parry ) 2014-04-01 0.1.0.0 pmeunier ParsecTools 1 0.0 11 Parsec combinators for more complex objects. ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2010-09-22 0.0.2.0 ChristianHoener PastePipe 30 0.0 1 CLI for pasting to lpaste.net ( gpl , library , program , utils ) 2015-04-25 1.8 MateuszKowalczyk , RoganCreswick Phsu 10 0.0 1 Personal Happstack Server Utils ( gpl , program , web ) 2015-08-05 0.1.0.3 utkarshl Plural 4 0.0 1 Pluralize English words ( gpl , language , library ) 2009-08-05 0.0.2 AndyStewart PortFusion 21 0.0 1 high-performance distributed reverse / forward proxy & tunneling for TCP ( gpl , network , program , system ) 2012-08-19 1.2.1 CetinSert Pup-Events 5 0.0 1 A networked event handling framework for hooking into other programs. ( gpl , library , networking , program , pup-events ) 2012-07-15 1.0 DanielWilson Pup-Events-Client 14 0.0 2 A networked event handling framework for hooking into other programs. ( gpl , library , networking , pup-events ) 2012-08-16 1.1.4 DanielWilson Pup-Events-Demo 12 0.0 1 A networked event handling framework for hooking into other programs. ( demo , gpl , networking , program , pup-events ) 2012-08-15 1.3 DanielWilson Pup-Events-PQueue 2 0.0 4 A networked event handling framework for hooking into other programs. ( gpl , library , networking , pup-events ) 2012-07-15 1.0 DanielWilson Pup-Events-Server 24 0.0 2 A networked event handling framework for hooking into other programs. ( gpl , library , networking , pup-events ) 2012-08-15 1.2 DanielWilson QuickCheckVariant 18 0.0 1 Valid and Invalid generator ( gpl , library , testing ) 2021-10-22 1.0.1.0 sanjorgek QuickPlot 5 0.0 1 Quick and easy data visualization with Haskell ( gpl , graphics , library ) 2016-02-15 0.1.0.1 tepf RNAFold 15 0.0 2 RNA secondary structure prediction ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2013-12-06 1.99.3.4 ChristianHoener RNAFoldProgs 9 0.0 1 RNA secondary structure folding ( bioinformatics , gpl , program ) 2010-09-23 0.0.0.3 ChristianHoener RNAdesign 14 0.0 1 Multi-target RNA sequence design ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2014-02-13 0.1.2.2 ChristianHoener RNAdraw 3 0.0 1 Draw RNA secondary structures ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2014-02-03 0.2.0.1 ChristianHoener RNAlien 38 2.0 0 Unsupervized construction of RNA family models ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2019-08-29 1.7.0 FlorianEggenhofer RNAwolf 15 0.0 1 RNA folding with non-canonical basepairs and base-triplets. ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2011-09-29 0.4.0.0 ChristianHoener Referees 4 0.0 1 A utility for computing distributions of material to review among reviewers. ( gpl , library , program , utils ) 2014-11-11 0.0.0 PabloCouto RollingDirectory 2 0.0 1 Limits the size of a directory's contents ( file-manager , gpl , program , tools ) 2012-01-17 0.1 FalcoHirschenberger S3 3 0.0 0 Library for accessing S3 compatible storage services ( gpl , library , network ) 2019-08-18 0.1.0.0 HerbertValerioRiedel ScratchFs 10 0.0 1 Size limited temp filesystem based on fuse ( gpl , program , system ) 2012-11-13 0.1.0.2 FalcoHirschenberger SelectSequencesFromMSA 10 0.0 0 Selects a representative subset of sequences from multiple sequence alignment. ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2018-03-12 1.0.5 FlorianEggenhofer ShellCheck 60 2.25 4 Shell script analysis tool ( gpl , library , program , static-analysis ) 2025-08-04 0.11.0 koala_man , vidarhol Shpadoinkle-isreal 3 0.0 0 Isreal Swan will make a snowman for you! ( gpl , library , web ) 2021-06-02 0.0.0.2 fresheyeball SimpleTableGenerator 3 2.0 1 Simple table generator ( gpl , library , text ) 2017-02-22 0.2.0.0 klntsky Sonnex 9 0.0 1 Sonnex is an alternative to Soundex for french language ( gpl , library , natural-language-processing , text ) 2014-12-01 0.1.0.3 zigazou StatisticalMethods 1 0.0 2 Collection of useful statistical methods. ( gpl , library , statistics ) 2011-08-22 0.0.0.1 ChristianHoener StockholmAlignment 26 2.0 2 Libary for Stockholm aligmnent format ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2019-12-17 1.3.0 FlorianEggenhofer Taxonomy 14 0.0 3 Libary for parsing, processing and vizualization of taxonomy data ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2021-05-30 2.2.0 FlorianEggenhofer TaxonomyTools 6 0.0 1 Tool for parsing, processing, comparing and visualizing taxonomy data ( bioinformatics , gpl , program ) 2017-01-26 1.0.1 FlorianEggenhofer TeX-my-math 18 0.0 2 Render general Haskell math to LaTeX. Or: math typesetting with high signal-to-noise–ratio. ( gpl , library , math , program ) 2023-04-26 0.203.0.0 leftaroundabout ThreadObjects 2 0.0 1 Mutable objects that reside in their own threads. ( concurrency , gpl , library ) 2012-08-10 0.0 TimothyHobbs TigerHash 1 0.0 1 TigerHash with C implementation ( cryptography , gpl , library ) 2010-04-16 0.2 NikolayOrlyuk Titim 9 0.0 1 Game for Lounge Marmelade ( game , gpl , program ) 2015-03-25 0.2.3 Jefffrey TypingTester 19 0.0 1 Command Line Typing speed tester ( game , gpl , program ) 2014-08-18 0.2.0.0 AlanHawkins ViennaRNAParser 34 0.0 3 Libary for parsing ViennaRNA package output ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2017-10-18 1.3.3 FlorianEggenhofer WordAlignment 4 0.0 0 Bigram word pair alignments. ( gpl , library , linguistics , program ) 2017-03-14 0.2.0.0 ChristianHoener XMLParser 18 2.25 1 A library to parse xml ( gpl , library , xml ) 2019-05-22 0.1.0.8 AlanHawkins acme-cutegirl 4 2.0 1 Maybe gives you a cute girl ( acme , gpl , library , program ) 2014-01-27 0.2.0.0 MateuszKowalczyk adaptive-cubature 7 0.0 0 Multidimensional integration ( gpl , library , numerical ) 2023-09-15 0.1.1.0 stla adblock2privoxy 63 2.0 1 Convert adblock config files to privoxy format ( gpl , program , web ) 2025-09-21 2.3.1 zubr , essandess adtrees 1 0.0 0 Modelling, rendering and quantitative analysis on attack defense trees ( gpl , language , library ) 2019-02-23 0.1.0.0 umazalakain aes-gcm 4 0.0 0 AES Galois/Counter Mode (GCM) AEAD Cipher ( cryptography , gpl , library ) 2025-09-22 0.0.0.0 HerbertValerioRiedel aeson-dependent-sum 4 0.0 0 JSON encoding/decoding for dependent-sum ( data , dependent-types , gpl , json , library ) 2022-08-27 0.1.0.1 jack ajhc 26 2.0 1 Haskell compiler that produce binary through C language ( compiler , gpl , library , program ) 2013-12-18 0.8.0.10 KiwamuOkabe alga (deprecated) 13 0.0 0 Algorithmic automation for various DAWs ( deprecated , gpl , language , library , program ) 2016-09-10 0.2.2 mrkkrp amqp-utils 55 0.0 1 AMQP toolset for the command line ( gpl , network , program ) 2025-11-03 0.6.7.3 woffs anansi 58 0.0 3 Simple literate programming preprocessor ( development , gpl , library , program ) 2015-06-05 0.4.8 JohnMillikin anansi-hscolour 8 0.0 1 Colorized looms for Anansi ( development , gpl , library ) 2014-02-14 0.1.2 JohnMillikin anansi-pandoc 11 0.0 1 Looms which use Pandoc to parse and produce a variety of formats. ( development , gpl , library ) 2014-03-18 0.1.3 JohnMillikin android 4 0.0 1 Android methods exposed to Haskell ( gpl , library , system ) 2015-09-29 0.0.2 IvanPerez , keera_studios_ci angle 2 0.0 0 A small, general-purpose programming language. ( compilers-interpreters , gpl , library , program ) 2016-08-19 0.8.1.0 GuiltyDolphin animascii (deprecated) 3 0.0 1 text-file based ASCII animator ( application , deprecated , gpl , program ) 2018-03-16 0.1.1.0 fffaaa ansi-terminal-game 74 2.0 0 cross-platform library for terminal games ( game , gpl , library ) 2024-02-07 1.9.3.0 fffaaa apelsin 17 0.0 1 Server and community browser for the game Tremulous ( gpl , network , program ) 2013-06-26 1.2.3 ChristofferOjeling apigen 2 0.0 0 FFI API generator for several languages ( development , gpl , library , program ) 2023-11-23 0.0.1 iphydf applicative-parsec 2 0.0 1 An applicative parser combinator library ( gpl , language , library ) 2015-04-09 0.1.0.0 KarlVoelker arbtt 122 0.0 1 Automatic Rule-Based Time Tracker ( desktop , gpl , program ) 2023-09-13 0.12.0.3 JoachimBreitner arghwxhaskell 4 0.0 1 An interpreter for the Argh! programming language in wxHaskell. ( gpl , language , program ) 2015-12-03 0.8.2.0 HenkJanVanTuyl , fgaz , GeorgeThomas arguedit 5 0.0 1 A computer assisted argumentation transcription and editing software. ( argumentation , gpl , program ) 2014-07-12 0.1.0.1 hrazel array-forth 15 0.0 2 A simple interpreter for arrayForth, the language used on GreenArrays chips. ( gpl , language , library , program ) 2015-01-17 0.2.1.4 TikhonJelvis ascii-holidays 5 2.5 0 ASCII animations for the holidays! ( gpl , graphics , program ) 2019-12-24 0.1.0.1 TomMurphy ascii-vector-avc 3 0.0 1 Process Ascii Vectors for Advantest 93k ( data , gpl , library , program ) 2014-10-15 0.1.0.0 m aterm 7 0.0 2 serialisation for Haskell values with sharing support ( data , gpl , library , parsing ) 2020-10-06 0.1.0.2 ChristianMaeder atp 1 0.0 0 Interface to automated theorem provers ( formal-methods , gpl , library , logic , math , theorem-provers ) 2021-01-25 0.1.0.0 EK attoparsec-arff 4 0.0 1 An ARFF file parser using Attoparsec ( ai , data , gpl , library , text ) 2012-02-09 0.0 PaulWilson aur 70 2.0 2 Access metadata from the Arch Linux User Repository. ( gpl , library , linux ) 2021-10-21 7.0.7 fosskers aura 69 0.0 0 A secure package manager for Arch Linux and the AUR. ( gpl , library , program , system ) 2024-07-16 3.2.10 fosskers autom 6 0.0 1 Generates and displays patterns from next nearest neighbors cellular automata ( gpl , graphics , library ) 2016-10-22 0.1.0.3 infrared avers 46 2.0 4 Server-side implementation of the Avers storage model ( avers , gpl , library ) 2016-12-28 0.0.17.1 wereHamster awesome-prelude 2 0.0 1 A prelude which I can be happy with. Based on base-prelude. ( gpl , library , prelude ) 2016-02-11 0.1.0.0 kozross aws-spend-summary 20 0.0 0 Extract recent daily AWS costs ( aws , gpl , library , program ) 2025-08-10 0.3.0.1 danielrolls awsspendsummary (deprecated in favor of aws-spend-summary ) 6 0.0 0 Extract recent daily AWS costs ( aws , deprecated , gpl , library , program ) 2024-11-03 0.1.0.1 danielrolls azubi 12 0.0 1 A simple DevOps tool which will never "reach" enterprice level. ( gpl , library , system ) 2017-10-14 0.2.0.3 palo backstop 7 2.0 0 Backstop a target directory by source directories ( development , gpl , library , program ) 2019-11-04 1.3.0.354 mdgabriel balkon 25 0.0 1 Text layout engine built on top of HarfBuzz. ( gpl , library , text ) 2023-07-03 1.3.0.0 alcinnz base-io-access 14 0.0 3 The IO functions included in base delimited into small, composable classes ( gpl , library , system ) 2015-02-11 0.4.0.0 bheklilr bbcode 9 0.0 0 Library for parsing, constructing, and printing BBCode ( gpl , library , text ) 2023-12-31 0.2.0.1 repetitive bbdb 26 0.0 1 Ability to read, write, and modify BBDB files ( database , gpl , library ) 2017-12-14 0.8 HenryLaxen bdcs-api 9 0.0 0 BDCS API Server ( gpl , library , network , program ) 2018-06-22 0.1.3 clumens bein (deprecated) 14 0.0 1 Bein is a provenance and workflow management system for bioinformatics. ( application , deprecated , gpl , program ) 2010-05-28 0.3.3 FrederickRoss benchmark-function 4 0.0 1 Test the time it takes to run a haskell function ( gpl , library , testing ) 2017-01-15 0.1.0.1 AlanHawkins bencodex 3 2.0 1 Bencodex reader/writer for Haskell ( gpl , library , serialization ) 2018-11-05 1.0.0 hongminhee bin 15 0.0 5 Bin: binary natural numbers. ( data , dependent-types , gpl , library , math , singletons ) 2024-06-08 0.1.4 phadej binary-derive 5 0.0 1 Automatic deriving of Binary using GHC.Generics ( data , gpl , library ) 2011-11-05 0.1.0 JaredHance bindings-cctools 4 0.0 2 Bindings to the CCTools WorkQueue C library ( ffi , gpl , library ) 2013-01-02 3.6.1.0.1.0.0.1 BadiAbdulWahid bindings-codec2 6 0.0 1 Very low-level FFI bindings for Codec2 ( bindings , codec , ffi , gpl , library , program ) 2014-10-31 0.1.1.0 RickyElrod bindings-nettle 20 0.0 1 bindings to nettle crypto library ( bindings , gpl , library ) 2015-06-02 0.4 ClintAdams bindings-potrace 3 0.0 1 Low-level bindings to the potrace bitmap tracing library ( gpl , graphics , library ) 2015-06-10 0.1 cchalmers bindings-saga-cmd 9 0.0 1 Wrapping saga_cmd ( gpl , library , math , program ) 2015-06-16 0.1.1.1 michelk bindynamic 8 0.0 1 A variation of Data.Dynamic.Dynamic with a Binary instance ( data , gpl , library ) 2018-03-26 1.0.0.1 lspitzner birch-beer 62 0.0 1 Plot a colorful tree. ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2022-10-06 0.4.2.1 GregorySchwartz bisc 30 0.0 0 A small tool that clears cookies (and more). ( gpl , program , utility ) 2022-01-11 0.4.1.0 rnhmjoj bishbosh 61 0.0 0 Plays chess. ( game , gpl , library , program ) 2021-12-26 0.1.4.0 AlistairWard black-jewel 3 0.0 1 The pirate bay client. ( application , gpl , program ) 2013-05-21 0.0.0.1 DmitryBogatov blindpass 4 2.0 0 Password entry tool ( gpl , library , program , utilities ) 2020-12-11 0.1.0 jlamothe blosum 9 0.0 0 BLOSUM generator ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2016-11-30 0.1.1.4 GregorySchwartz blubber 4 0.0 1 The blubber client; connects to the blubber server. ( game , gpl , program ) 2015-06-30 0.0.1 alexander boilerplate 7 0.0 0 Generate Haskell boilerplate. ( building , gpl , library , program ) 2023-05-22 0.0.3 tseenshe boolean-list 7 0.0 2 convert numbers to binary coded lists ( data , gpl , library ) 2017-10-26 0.1.0.2 AlanHawkins boomange 39 0.0 1 A bookmarks manager with an HTML generator ( gpl , program , web ) 2018-12-08 0.1.3.7 mgmillani bowntz 8 0.0 1 audio-visual pseudo-physical simulation of colliding circles ( demo , gpl , program ) 2019-08-28 2 ClaudeHeilandAllen breve 52 0.0 1 a url shortener ( gpl , program , web ) 2024-06-30 0.5.1.0 rnhmjoj brotli 12 2.0 5 Brotli (RFC7932) compression and decompression ( codec , compression , gpl , library ) 2025-09-01 0.0.0.3 AndreasAbel , HerbertValerioRiedel bureaucromancy 7 0.0 0 Parse webforms & render to interactive hypertext ( gpl , library , program , web ) 2024-01-19 0.1.0.2 alcinnz burst-detection 3 0.0 1 Burst detection algorithms ( gpl , library , math ) 2013-11-08 1.0 butterflies 2 0.0 0 butterfly tilings ( gpl , graphics , library , program ) 2018-11-06 0.3.0.2 ClaudeHeilandAllen byte-count-reader 45 0.0 0 Read strings describing a number of bytes like 2Kb and 0.5 MiB ( gpl , library , text ) 2024-10-20 0.10.1.12 danielrolls c2ats 3 2.0 0 Translate C code into ATS ( gpl , language , library , program ) 2016-09-17 0.1.0.1 KiwamuOkabe c2hs 71 0.0 1 C->Haskell FFI tool that gives some cross-language type safety ( development , gpl , program ) 2021-06-13 0.28.8 DuncanCoutts , IanRoss , deech cabal-plan 56 2.5 1 Library and utility for processing cabal's plan.json file ( development , gpl , library ) 2025-07-29 0.7.6.1 HerbertValerioRiedel , phadej cabal-rpm 204 2.0 1 RPM packaging tool for Haskell Cabal-based packages ( distribution , gpl , program ) 2025-02-23 2.3.0 BryanOSullivan , JensPetersen cabal2spec 89 0.0 1 Convert Cabal files into rpm spec files ( distribution , gpl , library , program ) 2025-07-23 2.8.0 PeterSimons , YaakovNemoy calculator 67 2.0 1 A calculator repl, with variables, functions & Mathematica like dynamic plots. ( gpl , math , program ) 2016-10-10 0.4.1.2 sumitsahrawat caledon 20 2.25 1 a logic programming language based on the calculus of constructions ( gpl , interpreter , language , program ) 2016-07-06 3.2.2.0 MatthewMirman canadian-income-tax 37 0.0 0 Canadian income tax calculation ( gpl , library , productivity , program , tax ) 2025-11-15 2024.1.0.1 MarioBlazevic carettah 39 2.0 1 A presentation tool written with Haskell. ( gpl , graphics , program ) 2016-09-30 0.5.1 KiwamuOkabe carte 3 2.0 1 Carte: A commandline pastebin server. ( gpl , network , program ) 2016-11-10 0.1.0.0 cdetroye cattrap 15 0.0 0 Lays out boxes according to the CSS Box Model. ( gpl , graphics , library , program ) 2024-03-19 0.6.0.0 alcinnz cbf 2 0.0 0 Bindings to read Crystallographic Binary Files (mostly from detectors) ( data , gpl , library , program ) 2026-01-06 0.1.0.0 pimiddy cctools-workqueue 7 0.0 1 High-level interface to CCTools' WorkQueue library ( distributed-computing , gpl , library ) 2013-01-02 3.6.1.0.1.0.0.1 BadiAbdulWahid cereal-derive 4 0.0 1 Automatic deriving of Serialize using GHC.Generics ( data , gpl , library ) 2011-11-06 0.1.1 JaredHance cg 3 0.0 1 Parser for categorial grammars. ( gpl , language , program ) 2015-05-29 0.0.9.0 pepijnkokke cgrep 173 0.0 1 Command line tool ( gpl , program , utils ) 2025-11-09 9.0.0 awgn , NicolaBonelli chain-codes 7 0.0 1 Library decoding chain codes from images ( data , gpl , library ) 2014-03-16 0.3.0.0 MateuszKowalczyk cimple 75 2.0 2 Simple C-like programming language ( data , gpl , library , program ) 2026-01-04 0.0.28 iphydf citeproc-hs-pandoc-filter 1 0.0 1 A Pandoc filter for processing bibliographic references with citeproc-hs ( gpl , program , text ) 2015-03-17 0.1 AndreaRossato clac 13 0.0 1 Simple CLI RPN calculator ( gpl , math , program ) 2015-03-18 0.5.0 alexander classy-parallel 3 0.0 2 Fork of the monad-parallel package using monad-control ( control , gpl , library ) 2012-07-31 0.1.0.0 SamAnklesaria closed-intervals 17 0.0 0 Closed intervals of totally ordered types ( data-mining , gpl , library ) 2023-09-29 0.2.1.0 olf clumpiness 8 0.0 1 Calculate the clumpiness of leaf properties in a tree ( gpl , library , math ) 2019-01-21 0.17.0.2 GregorySchwartz cmv 22 1.5 0 Detailed visualization of CMs, HMMs and their comparisions ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2018-01-28 1.0.8 FlorianEggenhofer collapse-duplication 3 0.0 0 Collapse the duplication output into clones and return their frequencies. ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2018-08-28 0.4.0.1 GregorySchwartz colour-space 26 0.0 1 Instances of the manifold-classes for colour types ( data , gpl , graphics , library , maths ) 2023-07-04 0.2.1.0 leftaroundabout compilation 6 0.0 2 Haskell functionality for quickly assembling simple compilers. ( compilers-interpreters , gpl , language , library ) 2013-08-20 0.0.0.3 AndreiLapets conductive-base 8 0.0 4 a library for live coding and real-time musical applications ( gpl , library , music , sound ) 2012-12-27 0.3 RenickBell conductive-clock 4 0.0 1 a library for displaying musical time in a terminal-based clock ( gpl , library , music , sound ) 2012-12-27 0.2 RenickBell conductive-hsc3 13 0.0 1 a library with examples of using Conductive with hsc3 ( gpl , library , music , sound ) 2012-12-28 0.3.1 RenickBell conductive-song 9 0.0 2 a library of functions which are useful for composing music ( gpl , library , music , sound ) 2012-12-27 0.2 RenickBell config-manager 14 0.0 1 Configuration management ( configuration , data , gpl , library ) 2016-08-13 0.3.0.1 guyonvarch config-select 6 0.0 1 A small program for swapping out dot files. ( gpl , program , system ) 2013-02-07 0.0.1 TimothyHobbs constrained-categories 32 0.0 7 Constrained clones of the category-theory type classes, using ConstraintKinds. ( control , gpl , library ) 2023-05-18 0.4.2.0 leftaroundabout convert-annotation 10 0.0 0 Convert the annotation of a gene to another in a delimited file using a variety of different databases. ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2018-02-07 0.5.1.0 GregorySchwartz convexHullNd 4 0.0 0 Convex hull ( geometry , gpl , library , math ) 2023-11-22 0.1.0.0 stla copr-api 4 0.0 0 Copr API client libary ( gpl , library , network ) 2023-11-25 0.2.0 JensPetersen covariance 22 0.0 1 Well-conditioned estimation of large-dimensional covariance matrices ( gpl , library , math , statistics ) 2022-07-10 0.2.0.1 dschrempf cpuid 20 0.0 3 Binding for the cpuid machine instruction on x86 compatible processors ( foreign-binding , gpl ) 2023-04-21 0.2.3.1 HenningThielemann , MartinGrabmueller cpython 44 2.0 2 Bindings for libpython ( foreign , gpl , library ) 2024-07-08 3.9.0 zsedem cr 8 0.0 1 Code review tool ( control , gpl , network , program , system ) 2012-12-03 1.2 AlexandruScvortov crocodile 8 0.0 1 An offline renderer supporting ray tracing and photon mapping ( gpl , graphics , program ) 2011-09-29 0.1.2 TomHammersley css-simple 9 2.0 0 eDSL for CSS ( gpl , library , web ) 2022-07-26 0.1.0.1 Qyutou csv-sip 1 0.0 0 extracts data from a CSV file ( data , gpl , library ) 2022-04-24 0.1.0 jlamothe ctpl 5 0.0 2 A programming language for text modification. ( gpl , library , program , text ) 2016-04-05 0.1.0.4 implementation cv-combinators 34 0.0 1 Functional Combinators for Computer Vision ( ai , gpl , graphics , library , program ) 2015-08-12 0.2.0.2 NoamLewis cyclotomic 40 0.0 2 A subfield of the complex numbers for exact calculation. ( gpl , library , math ) 2023-03-17 1.1.2 ScottWalck daemonize-doublefork 4 0.0 1 Start background daemons by double-forking ( gpl , library , web ) 2012-08-15 0.1.1 AlexandruScvortov daemons 14 0.0 3 Daemons in Haskell made fun and easy ( control , gpl , library , network , program , system ) 2023-09-29 0.4.0 AlexandruScvortov dao 1 0.0 1 Dao is meta programming language with its own built-in interpreted language, designed with artificial intelligence applications in mind. ( gpl , library , program , unclassified ) 2014-11-21 0.1.0.1 RaminHonary darcs 236 2.5 2 a distributed, interactive, smart revision control system ( development , gpl , library ) 2025-01-09 2.18.5 GaneshSittampalam , bfrk darkplaces-demo 4 0.0 1 Utility and parser for DarkPlaces demo files ( game , gpl , library , program ) 2015-02-12 0.1 slava darkplaces-rcon 1 0.0 1 Darkplaces rcon client library ( game , gpl , library ) 2015-05-23 0.1 slava darkplaces-rcon-util 7 0.0 0 Darplaces rcon utility ( game , gpl , library , program ) 2015-05-24 0.1.1 slava darkplaces-text 7 0.0 2 Parser for darkplaces colorful text ( game , gpl , library ) 2015-05-23 0.2.1 slava data-list-sequences 3 0.0 1 Utilities for working with sequences within lists. ( data , gpl , library ) 2011-08-13 0.1 JonasKramer dataframe 97 0.0 3 A fast, safe, and intuitive DataFrame library. ( data , gpl , library , program ) 2026-01-12 0.4.0.6 mchav dataframe-persistent 5 0.0 0 Persistent database integration for the dataframe library ( data , database , gpl , library ) 2025-12-18 0.2.0.0 junjihashimoto , mchav dbus-client (deprecated in favor of dbus ) 25 0.0 17 Monadic and object-oriented interfaces to DBus ( deprecated , desktop , gpl , library , network ) 2012-06-23 0.4.1 JohnMillikin dbus-core (deprecated in favor of dbus ) 81 0.0 15 Low-level D-Bus protocol implementation ( deprecated , desktop , gpl , library , network ) 2012-06-23 0.9.3 JohnMillikin ddate 1 0.0 1 Discordian Date Types for Haskell ( data , gpl , library ) 2016-06-30 0.1.0.0 hellerve decimal-literals 3 0.0 2 Preprocessing decimal literals more or less as they are (instead of via fractions) ( gpl , library , math ) 2019-02-20 0.1.0.1 leftaroundabout delaunayNd 4 0.0 1 Delaunay tessellation ( geometry , gpl , library , math ) 2023-11-20 0.1.0.2 stla derive-enumerable 5 0.0 1 Generic instances for enumerating complex data types ( data , generics , gpl , library ) 2022-11-18 0.2.0 mgoszcz2 , theunixman derive-prim 7 0.0 0 Derive Prim and PrimUnaligned ( data , development , generics , gpl , library ) 2024-05-12 0.1.0.1 k355l3r5yndr0m3 descrilo 21 0.0 1 Loads a list of items with fields ( configuration , data , gpl , library , parser ) 2018-11-03 0.1.0.7 mgmillani descript-lang 3 0.0 0 Library, interpreter, and CLI for Descript programming language. ( gpl , language , library , program ) 2018-05-20 0.2.0.0 jakobeha dhall-yaml 40 0.0 0 Convert between Dhall and YAML ( compiler , gpl , library , program ) 2023-04-19 1.2.12 GabrielGonzalez , HerbertValerioRiedel , sjakobi dhscanner-ast 42 2.0 2 abstract syntax tree for multiple programming languages ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2026-01-03 1.1.4 OrenHackage dhscanner-bitcode 33 2.0 1 Intermediate language for static code analysis ( gpl , library , sast ) 2025-10-07 1.0.10 OrenHackage dhscanner-kbgen 34 0.0 0 knowledge base predicates for static code analysis ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2025-11-29 1.0.13 OrenHackage dice2tex 3 0.0 1 Convert a Diceware wordlist into a printer-ready LaTeX file. ( gpl , program , text ) 2017-01-14 0.1.0.1 mgmillani dicom 10 0.0 1 A library for reading and writing DICOM files in the Explicit VR Little Endian transfer syntax. ( data , gpl , library , medical ) 2015-12-11 0.3.0.0 PhilFreeman , karchie differential 10 0.0 1 Finds out whether an entity comes from different distributions (statuses). ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2021-02-05 0.2.0.1 GregorySchwartz digestive-functors-aeson 75 0.0 1 Run digestive-functors forms against JSON ( gpl , json , library , web ) 2019-02-16 1.1.27 OliverCharles , nieled dihaa 3 0.0 1 ASCII based Diagram drawing in Haskell (Idea based on ditaa) ( gpl , graphics , program ) 2017-05-06 0.2.1.2 wilde diohsc 83 2.0 0 Gemini client ( browser , gpl , program ) 2024-11-09 0.1.16 mbays diophantine 7 0.0 1 A quadratic diophantine equation solving library. ( gpl , library , math ) 2014-11-24 0.2.1.0 joejev direm 5 0.0 0 Deletes a directory and retains its contents in the parent directory ( gpl , program , tool ) 2019-04-18 0.1.0.0 mgttlinger discokitty 2 0.0 0 DisCoCat implementation. ( gpl , language , library ) 2019-05-13 0.1.0 mroman42 dist-upload 11 0.0 1 Generate/Upload cabal package to Hackage. ( distribution , gpl , library , program ) 2010-11-24 0.0.4 AndyStewart diversity 61 0.0 3 Quantify the diversity of a population ( bioinformatics , gpl , library , program ) 2017-09-01 0.8.1.0 GregorySchwartz dl-fedora 91 0.0 0 Fedora image download tool ( gpl , program , utility ) 2025-12-16 2.2 JensPetersen dnf-repo 31 0.0 0 A dnf wrapper with fine control of enabled repos ( gpl , program , utility ) 2024-06-14 0.6.1 JensPetersen doccheck 1 0.0 1 Checks Haddock comments for pitfalls and version changes. ( documentation , gpl , program ) 2013-08-13 0.1.0.0 MateuszKowalczyk dojang 1 0.0 0 A cross-platform dotfiles manager ( configuration , gpl , library , program ) 2023-11-25 0.1.0 hongminhee dozenal 2 0.0 1 A Haskell library for using Dozenal (Duodecimal - Base 12) numbers. ( gpl , library , math ) 2015-04-11 0.1.0.0 siddhanathan dpkg 11 0.0 1 libdpkg bindings ( debian , gpl , library ) 2012-07-05 0.0.3 ClintAdams drawille 19 0.0 1 A port of asciimoo's drawille to haskell ( gpl , library , system ) 2023-08-31 0.1.3.0 yamadapc dson 15 0.0 1 Haskell Doge Serialized Object Notation Parser ( data , gpl , library ) 2019-05-27 0.3.0.1 lcycon dsp 24 2.0 2 Haskell Digital Signal Processing ( gpl , library , math , sound ) 2022-09-21 0.2.5.2 HenningThielemann dumb-cas 18 0.0 2 A computer “algebra” system that knows nothing about algebra, at the core. ( gpl , library , math ) 2023-01-27 0.2.1.1 leftaroundabout dvdread 3 0.0 1 A monadic interface to libdvdread ( gpl , library , system ) 2011-09-30 0.1 NicolaSquartini dynamic-plot 61 0.0 1 Interactive diagram windows ( gpl , graphics , library ) 2022-04-17 0.4.2.0 leftaroundabout dynamic-state 26 0.0 3 Optionally serializable dynamic state keyed by type ( data , gpl , library , yi ) 2025-02-27 0.3.2 DmitryIvanov , MarcelFourne , MateuszKowalczyk , fread2281 , JaroReinders easyrender 18 0.0 5 User-friendly creation of EPS, PostScript, and PDF files ( gpl , graphics , library ) 2018-11-25 0.1.1.4 PeterSelinger edentv 9 0.0 1 A Tool to Visualize Parallel Functional Program Executions ( development , eden , gpl , profiling , program , trace ) 2015-01-22 4.10.0 MischaDieterle , JostBerthold , horstmeyer edge 51 0.0 1 Top view space combat arcade game ( game , gpl , program ) 2016-09-05 0.9.1.1 ChristopherHoward , infrared eibd-client-simple 16 0.0 1 EIBd Client ( automation , gpl , library ) 2014-11-21 0.0.4 vapourismo elbow 9 0.0 1 Find the elbow point. ( gpl , library , math ) 2020-02-20 0.2.0.0 GregorySchwartz electrum-mnemonic 13 0.0 1 easy to remember mnemonic for a high-entropy value ( gpl , library , natural-language-processing ) 2016-11-22 0.1.3 JoeyHess elynx 50 0.0 0 Validate and (optionally) redo ELynx analyses ( bioinformatics , gpl , program ) 2025-08-11 0.9.0.0 dschrempf elynx-markov 55 0.0 1 Simulate molecular sequences along trees ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2025-08-11 0.9.0.0 dschrempf elynx-nexus 51 0.0 1 Import and export Nexus files ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2025-08-11 0.9.0.0 dschrempf elynx-seq 55 0.0 3 Handle molecular sequences ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2025-08-11 0.9.0.0 dschrempf elynx-tools 52 0.0 5 Tools for ELynx ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2025-08-11 0.9.0.0 dschrempf elynx-tree 60 0.0 4 Handle phylogenetic trees ( bioinformatics , gpl , library ) 2025-08-11 0.9.0.0 dschrempf embroidery 5 0.0 1 support for embroidery formats in haskell ( codec , gpl , library , program ) 2011-07-31 0.1 JimSnavely epanet-haskell 7 0.0 1 Haskell binding for EPANET ( algorithms , gpl , hydraulics , library ) 2013-12-16 2.0.12.4 psibi erebos-tester 21 2.0 0 Test framework with virtual network using Linux namespaces ( gpl , program , testing ) 2025-06-25 0.3.3 RomanSmrz ersatz-viz 4 0.0 0 draw circuit (DAG) for Ersatz.Bit ( gpl , library , unclassified ) 2025-11-06 0 JohannesWaldmann ert 13 0.0 1 Easy Runtime Templates ( gpl , library , program , text ) 2015-04-30 0.0.2.1 kayo exherbo-cabal 20 0.0 0 Exheres generator for cabal packages ( distribution , gpl , library , program ) 2017-02-09 0.2.1.1 NikolayOrlyuk exp-pairs 28 0.0 1 Linear programming over exponent pairs ( gpl , library , math ) 2024-12-11 0.2.1.1 Bodigrim explicit-constraint-lens 2 0.0 1 Fully-flexible polymorphic lenses, without any bizarre profunctors ( data , gpl , library ) 2017-12-30 0.1.0.0 leftaroundabout explicit-determinant 3 0.0 1 explicit computation of determinant of small matrices ( gpl , library , math ) 2014-07-03 0.1.0.0 JohannesWaldmann factory 52 0.0 5 Rational arithmetic in an irrational world. ( gpl , library , math , number-theory , program ) 2021-08-25 0.3.2.3 AlistairWard , LennartAugustsson fast-digits 8 0.0 2 Integer-to-digits conversion. ( data , gpl , library ) 2023-07-29 0.3.2.0 Bodigrim fasta 62 0.0 6 A simple, mindless parser for fasta files. ( data , gpl , library ) 2017-02-13 0.10.4.2 GregorySchwartz faster-megaparsec 13 0.0 0 Speed up Megaparsec parsing when parsing succeeds ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2022-11-11 0.1.2.0 olf fathead-util 3 0.0 1 Utilities for working with DuckDuckHack's FatHead Instant Answers ( development , gpl , library ) 2016-08-17 0.1.0.0 GuiltyDolphin fbrnch 60 0.0 0 Fedora packager tool to build package branches ( distribution , gpl , program ) 2026-01-02 1.8 JensPetersen fec 4 0.0 2 Forward error correction of ByteStrings ( codec , gpl , library , program ) 2023-10-06 0.2.0 AdamLangley , ShaeErisson , jcalderone fedora-dists (deprecated in favor of fedora-releases ) 22 0.0 0 Library for Fedora distribution versions ( deprecated , distribution , gpl , library ) 2022-05-24 2.1.1 JensPetersen fedora-haskell-tools 38 0.0 1 Building and maintenance tools for Fedora Haskell ( distribution , gpl , program ) 2023-11-19 1.1 JensPetersen fedora-img-dl (deprecated in favor of dl-fedora ) 18 0.0 0 Fedora image download tool ( deprecated , gpl , program , utility ) 2019-06-03 0.4 JensPetersen fedora-krb 2 0.0 0 Kerberos for Fedora packagers ( distribution , gpl , library ) 2025-03-05 0.1.0 JensPetersen fedora-releases 9 0.0 0 Library for Fedora release versions ( distribution , gpl , library ) 2025-06-04 0.3.0 JensPetersen fedora-repoquery 29 0.0 0 Fedora release repos package query tool ( gpl , program , utility ) 2025-09-23 0.8 JensPetersen feedback 19 0.0 0 Declarative feedback loop manager ( gpl , library , program , unclassified ) 2025-05-20 0.2.0.0 Norfair fences 7 0.0 1 To be written ( gpl , library , unclassified ) 2014-06-17 0.1.1 HansHoglund filepath-io-access 2 0.0 1 IO Access for filepath ( development , gpl , library ) 2013-12-31 0.1.0.0 bheklilr find-clumpiness 17 0.0 1 Find the clumpiness of labels in a tree ( gpl , library , math , program ) 2019-01-21 0.2.3.2 GregorySchwartz findhttp 6 0.0 0 List http/html files ( gpl , program , utility ) 2022-10-19 0.1.1 JensPetersen finitary 45 2.0 3 A better, more type-safe Enum. ( data , gpl , library ) 2024-08-07 2.2.0.0 koz_ross , sheaf finitary-derive 28 0.0 0 Flexible and easy deriving of type classes for finitary types. ( data , gpl , library ) 2021-02-11 3.0.0.1 koz_ross , sheaf finitary-optics 2 0.0 0 Prisms and Isos between finitary types. ( data , gpl , library ) 2020-06-06 1.0.0.0 koz_ross , sheaf flaccuraterip 31 0.0 1 Verify FLAC files ripped form CD using AccurateRip™ ( gpl , program , sound ) 2020-06-10 0.3.9 NicolaSquartini flat-tex 12 0.0 1 flatten a latex multi-file latex document and remove all comments ( gpl , program , text ) 2025-04-16 0.8.1 JohannesWaldmann flowsim 20 0.0 1 Simulate 454 pyrosequencing ( bioinformatics , gpl , program ) 2013-11-19 0.3.5 KetilMalde fluffy 2 2.0 1 A simple web application as a online practice website for XDU SE 2017 fall SPM. ( gpl , program , web ) 2017-11-27 0.1.0.71 qinka fluffy-parser 1 2.0 1 The parser for fluffy to parsec the question bank in .docx type ( gpl , library , text ) 2017-11-27 0.1.0.50 qinka folgerhs 9 0.0 0 Toolset for Folger Shakespeare Library's XML annotated plays ( gpl , library , program , text ) 2018-01-25 0.3.0.2 umazalakain follower 3 0.0 1 Follow Tweets anonymously ( application , console , gpl , program , web ) 2011-01-23 0.0.1 EmreBasar forth-hll (deprecated) 3 0.0 1 A simple eDSL for generating arrayForth code. ( deprecated , gpl , language , library ) 2013-01-06 0.1.0.0 TikhonJelvis frp-arduino 8 0.0 1 Arduino programming without the hassle of C. ( gpl , language , library ) 2018-03-26 0.1.1.0 RickardLindberg , JeremyWright frpnow-vty 4 0.0 0 Program terminal applications with vty and frpnow! ( control , gpl , library , program ) 2018-03-19 0.2.0.1 JaroReinders funcmp 28 2.0 1 Functional MetaPost is a Haskell frontend to the MetaPost language ( gpl , graphics , library ) 2018-01-29 1.9 PeterSimons fused-effects-logger 3 0.0 0 Logger effect for the `fused-effects` library ( effect , gpl , library ) 2025-12-06 0.0.1.1 drlkf futun 7 0.0 1 Simple IP-over-UDP tunnel using TUNTAP ( gpl , network , program , system ) 2013-05-24 0.1.0.2 JussiMaki gdo 14 0.0 1 recursive atomic build system ( distribution , gpl , program ) 2017-02-23 0.1.5 seppeljordan gearbox 18 0.0 1 zooming rotating fractal gears graphics demo ( demo , gpl , program ) 2018-11-06 1.0.0.6 ClaudeHeilandAllen gemoire 11 0.0 0 yet another static gemlog generator + converter ( gemini , gpl , library ) 2025-02-01 1.0.1 jan_sena geni-util 20 0.0 1 Companion tools for use with the GenI surface realiser ( gpl , library , natural-language-processing , program ) 2017-10-03 0.25.0.1 EricKow geom2d 19 0.0 1 package for geometry in euklidean 2d space ( gpl , library , math ) 2015-11-01 0.2.2 seppeljordan ggtsTC 3 0.0 1 A type checker and runtime system of rCOS/g (impl. of ggts-FCS). ( gpl , program , system--- ) 2014-01-29 0.5 brianchon gist 3 0.0 1 A reliable command-line client for gist.github.com ( gpl , program , web ) 2012-04-22 0.1 SimonMichael git-date 12 0.0 1 Bindings to the date parsing from Git. ( data , gpl , library ) 2018-06-03 0.3.0 StephenWeber git-mediate 26 2.0 1 Tool to help resolving git conflicts ( development , gpl , program ) 2024-09-20 1.1.0 EyalLotem github-backup 80 0.0 1 backs up everything github knows about a repository, to the repository ( gpl , program , utility ) 2020-07-22 1.20200721 JoeyHess github-tools 13 0.0 1 Various Github helper utilities. ( development , gpl , library , program ) 2023-12-20 0.1.2 iphydf glapp (deprecated) 7 0.0 1 An OpenGL micro framework. ( deprecated , gpl , graphics , library , program ) 2014-01-08 0.1.0.1 SchellScivally glicko 17 0.0 1 Glicko-2 implementation in Haskell. ( gpl , library , math ) 20 | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/fr/solutions/les-clients/avanza | Avanza : Amélioration du flux d'accueil - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Ne manquez pas le lancement de notre dernier produit eSign Forms France English Global Sverige Danmark Norge Nederland Suomi Deutschland United Kingdom Help Centre +46 8 446 866 02 Nous contacter Se connecter Primary navigation Produits Solutions Ressources Entreprise Prix Help Centre Nous contacter Achetez maintenant Essai gratuit Recherche Ouvrir le menu Accueil / Solutions / Clients / Avanza : Amélioration du flux d’accueil Avanza : Amélioration du flux d’accueil Après la signature, les nouveaux clients sont automatiquement connectés à leur compte, ce qui les incite deux fois plus à déposer des fonds. 120% D’augmentation Du taux de conversion des documents signés lorsqu’ils sont signés électroniquement et à distance.. 20% D’augmentation Des dépôts au cours de la première année suivant l’introduction de Scrive eSign. 72% De diminution De la durée totale moyenne du processus d’intégration tout en quadruplant le nombre de comptes d’utilisateurs. Vous devez accepter les cookies marketing pour voir la vidéo. Mettez à jour votre consentement "Après avoir signé le document en ligne, les nouveaux clients sont immédiatement connectés à leur compte, et cela les rend deux fois plus susceptibles de déposer des fonds chez nous" Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Bien entendu, les clients d’une banque en ligne s’attendent à pouvoir faire des affaires en ligne, non ? Sans aucun doute. Les clients d’Avanza n’avaient aucune raison de s’attendre à autre chose – à une exception flagrante. “Nous avons eu un problème”, explique Mikael Lindahl, Développeur Commercial chez Avanza Bank. “Chaque fois qu’un nouveau client s’inscrivait sur notre site Web, nous devions lui envoyer un document papier qu’il devait signer et nous renvoyer.” En termes d’expérience client, c’était pour le moins un début malheureux pour la relation. Cela signifiait également un travail administratif inutile pour Avanza. “Cela prenait parfois des jours, des semaines, voire des mois”, explique Lindahl. “Nous voulions raccourcir ce processus en signant le document en ligne.” Cependant, l’équipe d’avocats d’Avanza acceptait les signatures électroniques uniquement si la solution répondait à deux exigences de sécurité essentielles : Identification électronique pour l’authentification du signataire Technologie d’intégrité des données basée sur l’Infrastructure à Clé Publique (PKI) pour protéger le document signé Les défis d'Avanza Expérience client Les clients d’une banque en ligne s’attendent à la commodité d’un processus d’intégration numérique Possibilités perdues Des semaines de retard avant que les clients puissent virer de l’argent sur leur nouveau compte Coûts Les charges administratives liées au traitement des formulaires papier signés, y compris les erreurs de données Avanza a vu dans Scrive le partenaire qui pourrait résoudre tous ces problèmes “Nous n’avons jamais connu une acceptation aussi rapide de notre service juridique pour un projet”, déclare Henrik Littecke, Architecte de Solutions chez Avanza. “Ils aiment Scrive!” En intégrant le service eSign de Scrive à l’historique d’intégration, Avanza a permis à de nouveaux clients de commencer à utiliser leur compte rapidement et facilement. De cette manière, la propre administration pourrait être facilitée: pas de papier, pas d’attente. Pour signer les documents d’intégration en ligne, les clients s’authentifient à l’aide de leur identifiant bancaire suédois, un standard de l’interface de signature Scrive. L’intégrité de chaque document signé est garantie pour toute la vie du document et il est sécurisé et consultable dans les E-archives de Scrive. "Nous avions un problème. Lorsqu'un nouveau client s'inscrivait sur notre site web, nous devions lui envoyer un document papier qu'il devait signer et nous renvoyer" Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Solution Scrive présentée eSign GO Plusieurs systèmes, une seule solution. eSign GO est une solution révolutionnaire qui vous permet d’atteindre vos objectifs en un clin d’œil. Découvrir eSign Go Réservez une démonstration Réservez une démonstration pour voir comment Scrive peut simplifier vos processus commerciaux et apporter de la valeur à votre entreprise. Prénom * Nom de famille * Email * Phone number Ce champ est obligatoire Country code Ce champ est obligatoire * +33 Numéro de téléphone Ce champ est obligatoire * Nom de l'entreprise * Nombre d'employés * Nombre d'employés Sélectionnez le nombre d’employés Message J’accepte la politique de confidentialité . Réservez une Démonstration Cas de clients apparentés Nordnet : Une meilleure onboarding Finance Lire l'étude de cas Pleo : Onboarding des clients Finance Lire l'étude de cas Qred : Numérisation des procurations et simplification de la gestion interne des documents Finance Lire l'étude de cas Pourquoi Scrive? Scrive fournit des solutions de signature électronique et d’identification électronique pour les petites et moyennes sociétés, ainsi que pour les organisations d’entreprise. Pourquoi Scrive Footer navigation Produits eSign Online eSign API eSign GO eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Solutions Les industries Clients Intégrations Prix Prix eSign Online Prix eSign API Prix eSign GO Prix ID Check Prix eID Hub Prix eSign Forms Prix Forms Builder Ressources Centre de connaissances Centre de confiance Help centre Digitalisation La transformation digitale Plus System status Verify a document API documentation Scrive brand guidelines Entreprise À propos de nous Partners Carrière Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie Declaration © 2026 Scrive Qu'est-ce qui vous intéresse ? Ce champ est obligatoire * Signatures électroniques - Automatisez les flux de travail Identification - Renforcez la sécurité et la vérification Formulaires web - Simplifiez la collecte de données API - Explorez les possibilités d'intégration Je veux en savoir plus sur Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://msys2.github.io/docs/installer/#msys2-installer | MSYS2 Installer - MSYS2 Skip to content MSYS2 MSYS2 Installer Deutsch (de) Español (es) Français (fr) 日本语 (ja) 한국어 (ko) 中文 (zh) Initializing search GitHub MSYS2 GitHub Getting Started News Package Index Documentation Documentation What is MSYS2? Who Is Using MSYS2? Environments Updating MSYS2 Using MSYS2 in CI Package Mirrors Terminals IDEs and Text Editors MSYS2 Installer MSYS2 Installer Table of contents CLI Usage Examples FAQ What's the difference between the installer and the archives? What is contained in the installer/archives? How can I verify the basic integrity of the downloaded files? How can I verify that the downloaded files were generated by MSYS2 developers? Microsoft Defender SmartScreen prevents me from running the installer What are the installation folder recommendations? Package Management Package Management Package Management Package Naming Repositories and Mirrors Tips and Tricks FAQ Filesystem Paths Symlinks Configuration Locations Just-in-time Debugging ARM64 Support Languages & Tools Languages & Tools Using CMake in MSYS2 Autotools Python Git C/C++ C++ pkg-config pacman Supported Windows Versions and Hardware FAQ Development Development Packaging Packaging Creating a new Package Updating an existing Package Package Guidelines License Metadata PKGBUILD Mirrors MSYS2 Keyring Python Automated Build Process Vulnerability Reporting Accounts and Ownership Other Topics Other Topics Welcome to the MSYS2 wiki Creating Packages TODO LIST Distributing Qt Creator MSYS2 History How does MSYS2 differ from Cygwin? Launchers MSYS2-Introduction Re-installing MSYS2 Porting Setting up SSHd Signing Packages Do you need Sudo? Terminals Get Involved License Privacy Support & Contact Code of Conduct Table of contents CLI Usage Examples FAQ What's the difference between the installer and the archives? What is contained in the installer/archives? How can I verify the basic integrity of the downloaded files? How can I verify that the downloaded files were generated by MSYS2 developers? Microsoft Defender SmartScreen prevents me from running the installer What are the installation folder recommendations? MSYS2 Installer The MSYS2 installer can be used to set up an initial MSYS2 environment. For further updating pacman is used. See the updating guide for more information. The installer comes in four variants: msys2-x86_64-.exe : The GUI installer (see screenshot above) msys2-base-x86_64-*.sfx.exe : Just the files in a self extracting archive (missing Windows integration like shortcuts, uninstall entry, but otherwise works the same) msys2-base-x86_64-*.tar.zst : Same as .sfx.exe but as an ZSTD archive msys2-base-x86_64-*.tar.xz : Same as .sfx.exe but as an XZ archive (deprecated) The installer executables and tarballs are hosted on GitHub as well as on the repo server . We also provide nightly builds . CLI Usage Examples The GUI installer utilizes the Qt Installer Framework which also offers CLI options for automation. Installing the GUI installer via the CLI to C:\msys64 : .\ msys2-x86_64-latest . exe in - -confirm-command - -accept-messages - -root C :/ msys64 Uninstalling an existing installation in C:\msys64 via the CLI: C :\ msys64 \ uninstall . exe pr - -confirm-command Installing the self extracting archive to C:\msys64 : .\ msys2-base-x86_64-latest . sfx . exe -y -oC :\ FAQ What's the difference between the installer and the archives? The installer provides some additional features such as installing shortcuts, registering an uninstaller, a GUI for selecting the installation path and automatically running a login shell at the end to initialize the MSYS2 environment. If you unpack the archives and run a login shell once, you will get a functionally equivalent MSYS2 installation. What is contained in the installer/archives? It contains the base package and all its dependencies. You can list the contained packages using: pactree base -lu | sort How can I verify the basic integrity of the downloaded files? Note The examples below use old releases and checksums as examples. Make sure to adjust the version numbers and checksums to the ones of the release you are verifying. You can download the expected checksum by appending .sha256 to each download URL. You can verify that the downloaded file matches the checksum by computing the checksum either with Powershell: ( Get-FileHash -Algorithm SHA256 -Path .\ msys2-x86_64 - 20230526 . exe ). Hash . toLower () 432dcc8b5cc7d5104a85b52df8b1e77cdf91018e102ac7aa998248637d636229 or with 7-Zip, if you have it installed: Right clicking on msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe Go into the "7-Zip" and then "CRC SHA" sub menu, and finally click on "SHA-256" 7-Zip will pop up a window containing the checksum Compare the result with the content of " https://github.com/msys2/msys2-installer/releases/download/2023-05-26/msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe.sha256 " to verify that your local file matches the checksum. How can I verify that the downloaded files were generated by MSYS2 developers? The installer is signed using the following key: 0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC You can download the signature by appending a .sig to all download URLs. Verification example: $ gpg --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv "0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC" gpg: key 46BD761F7A49B0EC: public key "Christoph Reiter <reiter.christoph@gmail.com>" imported gpg: Total number processed: 1 gpg: imported: 1 $ ls msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe.sig $ gpg --verify msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe.sig gpg: assuming signed data in 'msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe' gpg: Signature made Fr 26 Mai 2023 11:46:54 CEST gpg: using RSA key E0AA0F031DBD80FFBA57B06D5A62D0CAB6264964 gpg: Good signature from "Christoph Reiter <reiter.christoph@gmail.com>" [unknown] gpg: WARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature! gpg: There is no indication that the signature belongs to the owner. Primary key fingerprint: 0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC Subkey fingerprint: E0AA 0F03 1DBD 80FF BA57 B06D 5A62 D0CA B626 4964 For the signature to be valid, gnupg has to print "Good signature" and the primary fingerprint shown has to match 0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC . Microsoft Defender SmartScreen prevents me from running the installer Depending on the age of the installer release and how many people have already used it successfully, Windows will show a SmartScreen warning, preventing you from running the installer. You can skip this warning by first clicking on "More info" and then on "Run anyway". What are the installation folder recommendations? We recommend a short ASCII-only path on a NTFS volume, no accents, no spaces, no symlinks, no subst or network drives. While you are free to choose a different installation path, please be aware that some tools and packages may not work correctly if you deviate from these recommendations. Tools that do not handle spaces or non-ASCII characters in paths may fail due to truncated or mangled paths. Tools which work with long absolute paths might hit the Windows MAX_PATH limit (260 characters) if the base installation path is long. This can be partly worked around by enabling long path support in Windows, but not all tools can handle long paths even then. Please report any issues you encounter with packages or tools due to the installation path. Default permissions of the installation folder The installer does not set any special permissions on the installation folder, which means for the default C:\msys64 path, the permissions are inherited from C: , which by default gives all users read/write access. If you need to restrict access to the installation folder, you have to do this manually after installation, or choose a different installation path with the desired permissions. Made with Material for MkDocs | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/casa-types | casa-types: Types for Casa Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts casa-types : Types for Casa [ bsd3 , development , library ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] Types for Casa (Content-Addressable Storage Archive). See https://casa.stackage.org/ Modules [ Index ] [ Quick Jump ] Casa Casa.Types Downloads casa-types-0.0.3.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers ChrisDone , MichaelSnoyman , borsboom , mpilgrem For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 0.0.0 , 0.0.1 , 0.0.2 , 0.0.3 Change log ChangeLog.md Dependencies aeson (>=0.5.0.0) , attoparsec (>=0.10.0.0) , base (>=4.8 && <5) , base16-bytestring (>=1.0.0.0) , bytestring (>=0.10.2.0) , hashable (>=1.1.2.0) , path-pieces (>=0.1.0) , persistent (>=1.2.0) , text (>=0.11.1.5) [ details ] License BSD-3-Clause Copyright 2018-2019 FP Complete, 2024-2025 Haskell Foundation Author Chris Done Maintainer Chris Done <chrisdone@fpcomplete.com>, Mike Pilgrem <public@pilgrem.com> Uploaded by mpilgrem at 2025-09-26T22:09:37Z Stability Unknown --> Category Development Home page https://github.com/commercialhaskell/casa#readme Bug tracker https://github.com/commercialhaskell/casa/issues Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/commercialhaskell/casa (casa-types) Distributions Arch: 0.0.3 , Debian: 0.0.1 , Fedora: 0.0.2 , LTSHaskell: 0.0.3 , NixOS: 0.0.3 , Stackage: 0.0.3 Reverse Dependencies 3 direct, 4 indirect [ details ] Downloads 6420 total (22 in the last 30 days) Rating (no votes yet) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs available [ build log ] Last success reported on 2025-09-26 [ all 1 reports ] Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/bzlib-conduit | bzlib-conduit: Streaming compression/decompression via conduits. Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts bzlib-conduit : Streaming compression/decompression via conduits. [ bsd3 , codec , library ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] Please see the README and docs at https://www.stackage.org/package/bzlib-conduit [ Skip to Readme ] Modules [ Index ] [ Quick Jump ] Data Conduit Data.Conduit.BZlib Data.Conduit.BZlib.Internal Flags Manual Flags Name Description Default system-bzip2 Use system bzip2 instead of bundled sources Enabled Use -f <flag> to enable a flag, or -f -<flag> to disable that flag. More info Downloads bzlib-conduit-0.3.0.4.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers HideyukiTanaka , MichaelSnoyman For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 0.1.0.0 , 0.1.0.1 , 0.2.0.0 , 0.2.1.0 , 0.2.1.1 , 0.2.1.2 , 0.2.1.3 , 0.2.1.4 , 0.2.1.5 , 0.3.0 , 0.3.0.1 , 0.3.0.2 , 0.3.0.3 , 0.3.0.4 Change log ChangeLog.md Dependencies base (>=4.9 && <10) , bindings-DSL , bytestring (>=0.9) , bzip2-clib , conduit (>=1.3) , data-default-class , mtl (>=2.0) , resourcet (>=1.2) [ details ] License BSD-3-Clause Copyright (c) 2012, Hideyuki Tanaka Author Hideyuki Tanaka Maintainer Michael Snoyman Uploaded by MichaelSnoyman at 2024-12-13T06:09:55Z Stability Unknown --> Category Codec Home page https://github.com/snoyberg/bzlib-conduit#readme Bug tracker https://github.com/snoyberg/bzlib-conduit/issues Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/snoyberg/bzlib-conduit Distributions LTSHaskell: 0.3.0.4 , NixOS: 0.3.0.4 , Stackage: 0.3.0.4 Reverse Dependencies 5 direct, 13 indirect [ details ] Downloads 17183 total (51 in the last 30 days) Rating (no votes yet) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs uploaded by user Build status unknown [ no reports yet ] Readme for bzlib-conduit-0.3.0.4 [ back to package description ] bzlib-conduit Streaming compression/decompression via conduits. Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/libBF | libBF: A binding to the libBF library. Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts libBF : A binding to the libBF library. [ data , library , mit ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] LibBF is a C library for working with arbitray precision IEEE 754 floating point numbers. Modules [ Index ] [ Quick Jump ] LibBF LibBF.Mutable LibBF.Opts Flags Automatic Flags Name Description Default system-libbf Use system libbf instead Disabled Use -f <flag> to enable a flag, or -f -<flag> to disable that flag. More info Downloads libBF-0.6.8.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers IavorDiatchki , RobertDockins , ryanglscott , galoisinc , sauclovian_g , aschwerdfeger_galois For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates 0.6 , 0.6.1 , 0.6.2 , 0.6.3 Versions [ RSS ] 0.5.0 , 0.5.1 , 0.6 , 0.6.1 , 0.6.2 , 0.6.3 , 0.6.4 , 0.6.5 , 0.6.5.1 , 0.6.6 , 0.6.7 , 0.6.8 ( info ) Change log CHANGELOG.md Dependencies base (>=4.12.0.0 && <5) , deepseq , hashable (>=1.3) [ details ] License MIT Author Iavor Diatchki Maintainer iavor.diatchki@gmail.com Uploaded by ryanglscott at 2024-06-05T22:18:15Z Stability Unknown --> Category Data Bug tracker https://github.com/GaloisInc/libBF-hs/issues Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/GaloisInc/libBF-hs.git Distributions Arch: 0.6.6 , Fedora: 0.6.8 , LTSHaskell: 0.6.8 , NixOS: 0.6.8 , Stackage: 0.6.8 Reverse Dependencies 6 direct, 32 indirect [ details ] Downloads 7688 total (41 in the last 30 days) Rating (no votes yet) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs available [ build log ] Last success reported on 2024-06-05 [ all 1 reports ] Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://docs.freebsd.org/en//books/developers-handbook/ | FreeBSD Developers' Handbook | FreeBSD Documentation Portal About About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Code of Conduct Get FreeBSD Get FreeBSD Release Information Release Engineering Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal FreeBSD Handbook Porter's Handbook Documentation Project Handbook Manual pages Presentations and papers Wiki Books Articles Community Community Get involved Forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Support ♥ Donate Part I. Basics Chapter 1. Introduction 1.1. Developing on FreeBSD 1.2. The BSD Vision 1.3. Architectural Guidelines 1.4. The Layout of /usr/src Chapter 2. Programming Tools 2.1. Synopsis 2.2. Introduction 2.3. Introduction to Programming 2.4. Compiling with cc 2.5. Make 2.6. Debugging 2.7. Using Emacs as a Development Environment 2.8. Further Reading Chapter 3. Secure Programming 3.1. Synopsis 3.2. Secure Design Methodology 3.3. Buffer Overflows 3.4. SetUID issues 3.5. Limiting your program’s environment 3.6. Trust 3.7. Race Conditions Chapter 4. Localization and Internationalization - L10N and I18N 4.1. Programming I18N Compliant Applications 4.2. Localized Messages with POSIX.1 Native Language Support (NLS) Chapter 5. Source Tree Guidelines and Policies 5.1. Style Guidelines 5.2. MAINTAINER on Makefiles 5.3. Contributed Software 5.4. Encumbered Files 5.5. Shared Libraries Chapter 6. Regression and Performance Testing 6.1. Micro Benchmark Checklist 6.2. The FreeBSD Source Tinderbox 6.3. The index.cgi Script 6.4. Official Build Servers 6.5. Official Summary Site Part II. Interprocess Communication Chapter 7. Sockets 7.1. Synopsis 7.2. Networking and Diversity 7.3. Protocols 7.4. The Sockets Model 7.5. Essential Socket Functions 7.6. Helper Functions 7.7. Concurrent Servers Chapter 8. IPv6 Internals 8.1. IPv6/IPsec Implementation Part III. Kernel Chapter 9. Building and Installing a FreeBSD Kernel 9.1. Building the Faster but Brittle Way Chapter 10. Kernel Debugging 10.1. Obtaining a Kernel Crash Dump 10.2. Debugging a Kernel Crash Dump with kgdb 10.3. On-Line Kernel Debugging Using DDB 10.4. On-Line Kernel Debugging Using Remote GDB 10.5. Debugging a Console Driver 10.6. Debugging Deadlocks 10.7. Kernel debugging with Dcons 10.8. Glossary of Kernel Options for Debugging Part IV. Architectures Chapter 11. x86 Assembly Language Programming A.1. Synopsis A.2. The Tools A.3. System Calls A.4. Return Values A.5. Creating Portable Code A.6. Our First Program A.7. Writing UNIX® Filters A.8. Buffered Input and Output A.9. Command Line Arguments A.10. UNIX® Environment A.11. Working with Files A.12. One-Pointed Mind A.13. Using the FPU A.14. Caveats A.15. Acknowledgements Part V. Appendices Bibliography Book menu FreeBSD Developers' Handbook Copyright © 1995-2023 The FreeBSD Documentation Project trademarks FreeBSD is a registered trademark of the FreeBSD Foundation. IBM, AIX, OS/2, PowerPC, PS/2, S/390, and ThinkPad are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both. IEEE, POSIX, and 802 are registered trademarks of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. in the United States. Apple, AirPort, FireWire, iMac, iPhone, iPad, Mac, Macintosh, Mac OS, Quicktime, and TrueType are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. Intel, Celeron, Centrino, Core, EtherExpress, i386, i486, Itanium, Pentium, and Xeon are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. Microsoft, IntelliMouse, MS-DOS, Outlook, Windows, Windows Media and Windows NT are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. Motif, OSF/1, and UNIX are registered trademarks and IT DialTone and The Open Group are trademarks of The Open Group in the United States and other countries. Sun, Sun Microsystems, Java, Java Virtual Machine, JDK, JRE, JSP, JVM, Netra, OpenJDK, Solaris, StarOffice, SunOS and VirtualBox are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this document, and the FreeBSD Project was aware of the trademark claim, the designations have been followed by the “™” or the “®” symbol. Table of Contents [ Split HTML / Single HTML ] Abstract Welcome to the Developers' Handbook. This manual is a work in progress and is the work of many individuals. Many sections do not yet exist and some of those that do exist need to be updated. If you are interested in helping with this project, send email to the FreeBSD documentation project mailing list . The latest version of this document is always available from the FreeBSD World Wide Web server . It may also be downloaded in a variety of formats and compression options from the FreeBSD download server or one of the numerous mirror sites . Last modified on : October 14, 2025 by Vladlen Popolitov Home Next Table of Contents Resources Download PDF Edit this page English System Light Dark High contrast About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Get FreeBSD Code of Conduct Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal Manual pages Presentations and papers Previous versions 4.4BSD Documents Wiki Community Get involved Community forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Legal Donations Licensing Privacy Policy Legal notices © 1994-2026 The FreeBSD Project. All rights reserved Made with ♥ by the FreeBSD Community | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/managing-your-bill-for-rovo/ | Manage your bill for Rovo | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your bill for Rovo As of April 9 2025, Rovo is rolling out at no additional upfront cost to Jira, Confluence, and Jira Service Management subscriptions — starting with Premium and Enterprise, with Standard customers to follow. For a limited time, users have access within the Atlassian Acceptable Use Policy . In future, usage beyond these quotas will incur additional charges based on consumption. More on Rovo usage quotas How will it show up on my bill? For most customers, Rovo will appear as a Free app in your billing administration experience but will not appear on your bill unless you incur additional charges for consumption. For customers who signed up for Rovo prior to April 14, 2025, Rovo will show up on your bill as $0. Was this helpful? Yes No It wasn't accurate It wasn't clear It wasn't relevant Provide feedback about this article Still need help? The Atlassian Community is here for you. Ask the Community Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Show more How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Show more Community Questions, discussions, and articles Accessibility Notice at Collection Privacy Policy Terms of Use Security 2026 Atlassian | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/fi/ratkaisut/tapausesimerkit/avanza | Avanza: Parannettu käyttöönottovirta - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Suomi France English Global Sverige Danmark Norge Nederland Deutschland United Kingdom Help Centre +358 45 4909684 Ota yhteytta Kirjaudu sisään Primary navigation Tuotteet Ratkaisut Resurssit Yritys Hinnat Help Centre Ota yhteyttä Osta nyt Kokeile ilmaiseksi Etsi Avaa valikko Koti / Ratkaisut / Tapausesimerkit / Avanza: Parannettu käyttöönottovirta Avanza: Parannettu käyttöönottovirta Allekirjoittamisen jälkeen uudet asiakkaat kirjautuvat automaattisesti tileilleen, jolloin heidän todennäköisyytensä tallettaa varoja on kaksinkertainen. 120% Kasvu Konversioasteen nousu, kun dokumentti allekirjoitettiin etänä ja sähköisesti 20% Kasvu Talletusten kokonaismäärässä Scriven eSignin käyttöönottovuonna. 72% Lasku Keskimääräisessä onboarding-ajassa, vaikka samaan aikaan tilien määrä nelinkertaistui Sinun on hyväksyttävä markkinointievästeet nähdäksesi videon. Päivitä suostumuksesi "Kun dokumentit allekirjoitetaan verkossa, kirjaamme asiakkaan suoraan heidän uudelle tililleen... He siirtävät rahaa meille kaksinkertaisella todennäköisyydellä." Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Verkossa toimivan pankin asiakkaiden voisi kuvitella haluavan hoitaa asiansa verkossa, eikö totta? Luonnollisesti he haluavat eikä Avanzan asiakkailla ollut syytä olettaa toisin – yhdellä merkittävällä erolla. “Meillä oli yksi merkittävä ongelma”, kertoo Avanza Bankin liiketoiminnan kehityksestä vastaava Mikael Lindahl. “Kun uusi asiakas rekisteröityi sivuillemme, meidän täytyi lähettää hänelle paperinen dokumentti, joka asiakkaan tuli allekirjoittaa ja palauttaa.” Asiakaskokemuksen näkökulmasta ja kevyesti ilmaistuna, tämä oli huono tapa aloittaa asiakassuhde. Lisäksi se toi turhaa hallinnollista työtä Avanzan päässä. “Se saattoi kestää päiviä, viikkoja tai jopa kuukausia”, Lindahl sanoo. “Halusimme lyhentää allekirjoitukseen kuluvaa aikaa ja halusimme saada allekirjoitustapahtuman verkkoon.” Avanzan lakiosasto hyväksyi e-allekirjoituksen ainoastaan niin, että ratkaisun tulee täyttää kaksi kriittistä turvallisuusvaatimusta: Siinä tuli olla verkkotunnistus, jotta allekirjoittaja saadaan tunnistettua. Datan suojauksen tuli olla PKI-pohjaista, jotta dokumentti olisi tarpeeksi turvallinen. Avanzan haasteet Asiakaskokemus Verkossa toimivan pankin asiakkaat odottavat digitaalisen onboardingin tuomaa toimivaa asiakaskokemusta Hukattu mahdollisuus Viikkojen viive ennen kuin asiakkaat pystyivät siirtämään rahoja tileilleen Kulut Hallinnollinen taakka allekirjoitettujen paperien käsittelyssä ja mahdolliset virheet tiedoissa Avanza näki Scriven kumppanina, joka pystyisi ratkaisemaan tämän haasteen “Emme ole koskaan saaneet näin nopeaa hyväksyntää lakiosastoltamme”, toteaa Avanzan järjestelmäarkkitehti Henrik Littecke. “He rakastivat Scrivea!” Integroimalla Scriven eSign-palvelun onboarding-työnkulkuun Avanza mahdollisti uusille asiakkailleen nopean ja helpon tavan aloittaa tilinsä käyttäminen. Tekemällä niin he helpottivat myös omaa hallinnollista taakkaansa. Ei paperia, ei odottelua. Kun asiakkaat allekirjoittavat onboarding-dokumentit, he tunnistautuvat pankkitunnuksilla, mikä on sisäänrakennettu ominaisuus Scriven allekirjoitusrajapinnassa. Jokaisen dokumentin suojaus on varmistettu koko elinkaaren ajan, mikä on turvallinen tapa säilöä ja etsiä dokumentteja Scriven E-arkistossa. "Meillä oli yksi merkittävä ongelma, kun uusi asiakas rekisteröityi sivuillemme, meidän täytyi lähettää hänelle paperinen dokumentti, joka asiakkaan tuli allekirjoittaa ja palauttaa." Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Suositeltava Scrive-ratkaisu eSign GO Monia järjestelmiä, yksi ratkaisu. eSign GO on vallankumouksellinen järjestelmä-agnostinen ratkaisu, joka vie sinut sinne, missä sinun pitääkin olla, yhdellä nopealla harppauksella. Tutustu eSign GO -palveluun Varaa esittely Pyydä tapaamista, jotta voit kertoa meille, mitä yrität ratkaista, ja voimme tarkastella, miten Scrive voi virtaviivaistaa liiketoimintaprosessejasi ja tuoda lisäarvoa organisaatiollesi. Etunimi * Sukunimi * Sähköpostiosoite * Phone number Tämä kenttä on pakollinen Country code Tämä kenttä on pakollinen * +358 Puhelinnumero Tämä kenttä on pakollinen * Yritys * Valitse työntekijöiden määrä * Valitse työntekijöiden määrä Mistä olet kiinnostunut? Tämä kenttä on pakollinen * Sähköiset allekirjoitukset - Automaatiossa työnkulkuja Tunnistaminen - Paranna turvallisuutta ja varmennusta Verkkolomakkeet - Virtaviivaista tietojen keruuta API - Tutki integraatiomahdollisuuksia Haluan tietää enemmän Scrivestä Viesti Hyväksyn Privacy Notice Ottakaa yhteyttä minuun Aiheeseen liittyvä tapaus Nordnet: Parempi onboarding Finance Lue tapaustutkimus Pleo: Asiakkaiden Onboarding Finance Lue tapaustutkimus Qred: Tehokas valtakirjojen ja sisäisten asiakirjojen hallinta Finance Lue tapaustutkimus Miksi Scrive? Scrive tarjoaa sähköisiä allekirjoituksia ja e-ID-ratkaisuja pienille ja keskisuurille yrityksille ja yritysorganisaatioille. Scrive tarjoaa turvallisen ja nopean tavan allekirjoittaa ja hallita sähköisiä asiakirjoja. Miksi Scrive Footer navigation Tuotteet eSign Online eSign API eSign GO eID Hub eSign Forms Forms Builder Ratkaisut Toimialat Tapausesimerkit Integraatiot Hinnat eSign Online eSign API eSign GO Resurssit Trust Centre Tieto Help Centre Käyttötapaukset Digitaalinen vs. sähköinen allekirjoitus Digitalisaatio Ulkoiset resurssit Vahvista dokumentin aitous Järjestelmän tila API-dokumentaatio Scrive brand guidelines Yritys Tietoja Scrive Partners Ura Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/fr/achetez-maintenant | Achetez maintenant - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Ne manquez pas le lancement de notre dernier produit eSign Forms France Sverige English Global Norge Deutschland Danmark Nederland Suomi United Kingdom Help Centre +46 8 446 866 02 Nous contacter Se connecter Primary navigation Produits Solutions Ressources Entreprise Prix Help Centre Nous contacter Achetez maintenant Essai gratuit Recherche Ouvrir le menu Accueil / Achetez maintenant Achetez maintenant Choisissez le plan tarifaire qui vous convient et commencez tout de suite ! Commencez par remplir le formulaire de commande ci-dessous. Nous vous enverrons une proposition à signer, puis nous créerons votre compte. Commandez eSign en ligne Comparez les plans tarifaires et les fonctionnalités ou appelez-nous directement à +46 8 446 866 02 si vous avez des questions. Options de paiement (étape 1 de 4) Comment souhaitez-vous payer ? Facture / Virement bancaire Carte de crédit J'accepte l'avis de confidentialité de Scrive . Soumettre Pourquoi Scrive? Scrive fournit des solutions de signature électronique et d’identification électronique pour les petites et moyennes sociétés, ainsi que pour les organisations d’entreprise. Pourquoi Scrive Footer navigation Produits eSign Online eSign API eSign GO eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Solutions Les industries Clients Intégrations Prix Prix eSign Online Prix eSign API Prix eSign GO Prix ID Check Prix eID Hub Prix eSign Forms Prix Forms Builder Ressources Centre de connaissances Centre de confiance Help centre Digitalisation La transformation digitale Plus System status Verify a document API documentation Scrive brand guidelines Entreprise À propos de nous Partners Carrière Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie Declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/switch-to-scrive | Switch to Scrive - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation From paper to AI: why HR must lead the digital leap English Global Sverige Danmark Nederland Norge Help Centre Contact Scrive Contact sales Log in Primary navigation Products Pricing Solutions Resources Company Pricing Help Centre Contact sales Buy now Try for free Search Open menu Home / Switch to Scrive Switch to Scrive If you're already using another e-signature or eID vendor, it's essential to evaluate whether your current solution unlocks the full potential and meets your business needs and expectations. Try for free Scrive is the leading eSign and eID provider in the Nordics Scrive offers a range of compelling reasons to consider making the switch. This is some of the reasons why companies are switching to Scrive from their current provider. Compare Scrive Scrive vs Docusign DocuSign is a top company for e-signatures. However, its hosting in the US and limited support for European rules make many look for other options. Scrive offers high-compliance e-signing, built for seamless integration into existing workflows. Scrive vs Docusign Scrive vs Pandadoc While PandaDoc delivers broad document workflow features, Scrive stands out with secure, fully compliant e-signing tailored for European standards. With EU-only hosting, eIDAS-aligned signatures and support for BankID and MitID, Scrive is built for trust and simplicity. Scrive vs Pandadoc Scrive vs Adobe Sign Adobe Sign works well with Acrobat and Microsoft 365. However, its setup in the US does not fully meet European trust standards. Scrive, built and based in Europe, offers compliant e-signing and ID verification designed for strict data protection needs. Adobe Sign vs Scrive Support, stability, and clarity Exceptional support Our customer support is quick, local, and sharp, backed by industry-leading expertise. This commitment to service is a key factor in why major customers choose Scrive. No interruptions Last year, Scrive managed over 32M eID transactions and 16M documents signed, maintaining 99.99% uptime , ensuring smooth business operations year-round. Transparent pricing What you see is what you get. Scrive promises clear prices from the start – no hidden fees for support, advice, or transactions. Plan your budget without surprises. Why our customers choose us Dedicated teams with industry expertise Scrive offers dedicated expertise within the BFSI and Automotive sectors, amongst many more industries. This is an important factor to ensure industry knowledge and to build trust. Our teams have extensive experience in helping companies simplify complex processes. Our dedication to customer experience has played a pivotal role in customers choosing Scrive – 41 % of our customers chose Scrive due to this reason. Local actor Scrive is an actor with local support for Nordic eIDs . You will interact with an expert that understands your specific market needs. API and eIDs Customers frequently comment on how easy it is to integrate with Scrive compared to previous experiences. We take pride in making your job as seamless as possible. Scrive provides two fast and easy methods for connecting to our eID Hub – REST API and OpenID Connect. The OpenID Connect offers a standardised approach, streamlining your integration process and reducing development time significantly. Hosting data in US/CLOUD act & schemes II This allows data transfers that accommodate US surveillance laws. Scrive offers EU located and owned hosting. Onboarding & support Our exceptional customer service stands out, providing timely, helpful, and local support. Clients value our responsiveness, particularly in critical situations, which is why we’ve earned a G2 review badge for best support and easiest setup. Our Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT) for the support team from July to December 2023 is at 90.8%, surpassing industry benchmarks: 88.76% for the industry, 89.94% for companies in Sweden, and 89.93% for companies of similar size. Usability and user experience Scrive’s flexibility and customisation accommodate diverse business needs. With a history of solving complex challenges for various clients, our online platform is praised for its user-friendly interface. Integrations Office integrations, including a Word integration, are usually highly appreciated as a majority of clients still draft their agreements in Word. See all integrations Legal compliance and security Scrive prioritises high-security standards and compliance with EU regulations like GDPR, providing legally binding and secure digital transactions. Our evidence package excels beyond what other options offer, including detailed proof of intentions to sign and blockchain sealing for tamper-proof contracts. We ensure long-term data integrity and authenticity without ongoing certificate management, guaranteeing trustworthy contracts over time. Additionally, we support advanced contract sealing methods, enhancing traceability and validation. While Scrive historically sealed documents using Guardtime’s Keyless Signature Infrastructure (KSI), our current standard for all new customers is PAdES (PDF Advanced Electronic Signatures), built on Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) . PAdES is a European standard designed specifically for applying digital signatures to PDF documents. It is built for eIDAS compliance , making it ideal for use across borders and industries where legal assurance and long-term document verification are essential. How Scrive helped Avanza and Nordnet 120% increase in document conversion rate when signing remotely and electronically. 1-5 minutes to close major deals. Occupational pension sales, involving 15-30 documents, previously took 5 days to a month to close. See all customer Cases How switching to Scrive works Our skilled tech-team will guide you through the process and our legal team is prepared to answer any questions that might arise along the way. We take it upon ourselves to make sure that the switch is fast and efficient from every point of view. Contact us Still in doubt? Consider this! Assess your needs: What features do you need? How many users do you need? What is your budget? Think about the future needs of your business. Don’t hesitate to contact us if you have questions. Compare prices: Different companies have different pricing models. Be sure to compare prices and features before making a decision. Many times the pricing shown on a company’s website is vastly different from what you will pay in the end. View Scrive pricing . Free trials: Many companies offer free trials. This is a great way to test the service before you buy it. You can try Scrive for free . Get started Try Scrive eSign FREE for 30 days. No obligation, no credit card required Email * I accept the Terms of Service. I confirm that I have read the Privacy Notice and I'm aware that I may receive marketing communications from Scrive. Start free trial or continue with Related reading Scrive vs DocuSign: which e-signing solution is right for you? DocuSign is a well-known provider of e-signatures. However, many organisations prefer Scrive. Do you know why? Read more Scrive vs PandaDoc: which e-signing solution is right for you? Upptäck skillnaderna mellan Scrive och PandaDoc. Jämför funktioner för att hitta den bästa lösningen för ditt företag. Read more Scrive vs Adobe Sign: which e-signing solution is right for you? Adobe Sign works well with Acrobat and Microsoft 365. However, its setup in the US does not fully meet European trust standards. Read more Electronic signature E-signing made easy with Scrive’s electronic signature solution. Whether you’re a small startup or a big corporation, Scrive has electronic signature solutions to suit your needs. Explore Electronic signature Footer navigation Products eSign Online eSign GO eSign API Scrive QES eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Solutions Industries Customer cases Integrations Pricing Pricing eSign Online Pricing eSign GO Pricing eSign API Pricing ID Check Pricing eID Hub Pricing eSign Forms Pricing Forms Builder Resources Knowledge Hub Trust Centre Help Centre Subscribe to newsletter Challenges we solve Digital signature vs. Electronic Signature Digitalisation Video guides Switch to Scrive More System status Verify a document API Documentation Engineering blog Scrive brand guidelines Company About Partners Career Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/how-pricing-works-for-multi-instance-marketplace-apps/ | How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps There are different instance-based pricing options available for Marketplace apps, which means they are priced flexibly depending on how many instances are purchased across Cloud Enterprise Jira and Confluence apps. Marketplace apps can have single instance or multi-instance billing. The way that Marketplace apps are billed also depends on whether the billing is linked to the Atlassian app it’s installed on. More about billing for Marketplace apps . What’s an app instance? Simply put, it’s a single license of a Marketplace app that’s been installed on a particular Atlassian app or site once. For example, if you’ve purchased a Marketplace app to use for Jira and only ever use the one license, we’d call that a single app instance. Single instance billing When you have a single app instance, you pay for the app license once for your app or site. This means you’re either charged based on the number of users in the Atlassian app that the Marketplace app is installed on, or just the number of users of the Marketplace app. Multi-instance billing If you have a Marketplace app installed on a Cloud Enterprise Jira or Confluence, it'll have multi-instance pricing. This means you’ll be able to use the Marketplace app across multiple instances. You’ll be charged based on the number of unique users of the app across the multiple instances, regardless of the number of Atlassian app instances. This unique user count is based on the user tier selected at the start of the subscription. This means that a Marketplace app can be purchased once for multiple Cloud Enterprise Jira instances across different sites within your Atlassian organization. This provides flexibility in the way that Marketplace apps with multiple instances are billed, and provides a more efficient way for admins to manage their Marketplace app subscriptions. When the number of unique users is calculated, a single user will be counted only once, even if the user has access to multiple app instances. This can mean that you save money on Marketplace apps that are used across multiple instances by the same users, and there will only be a single invoice for that Marketplace app. What Marketplace apps qualify for multi-instance billing? All Marketplace apps will offer multi-instance billing in their pricing. Who can purchase and install apps? To help companies maintain control over their Atlassian environment, most Marketplace apps can only be installed by site or org admins. Keep in mind that multi-instance billing is only applicable for Atlassian apps on Cloud Enterprise plans. End users can shop for Marketplace apps and notify their admins about the apps they’d like to use by selecting Try it free , and then Request this app on any Marketplace app listing. See more about purchasing apps Was this helpful? Yes No It wasn't accurate It wasn't clear It wasn't relevant Provide feedback about this article Still need help? The Atlassian Community is here for you. 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https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/manage-your-subscription-for-teamwork-collection/ | Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections View your bill estimate and the number of billable users To view your bill estimate and the number of unique billable users: Go to admin.atlassian.com . Select your organization if you have more than one. Select Billing . Select the collection subscription from the list. On the Subscription details page, you’ll see the number of unique billable users and the bill estimate. Changing your plan To change your plan for a collection: Go to admin.atlassian.com/billing . Select your billing account if you have more than one. Go to Subscriptions from the side navigation. From the subscriptions list, find the collection you want to change the plan for and select Manage . On the Subscription details page, select Change plan . On the Plan selection page, compare and select the plan you want. After you agree to the Atlassian Customer Agreement and Privacy Policy , select Agree and start trial. To change a plan from monthly to annual, choose the Annual billing option, select the Standard or Premium plan, and then review and confirm your billing. What happens when you change a collection plan? Changing your collection plan applies to all included apps in the collection. This means you can’t update included apps separately — it has to be done together via the collection subscription. Keep in mind that changing from a Premium plan may affect your Rovo usage quota and/or your Atlassian Guard Standard bill. Canceling a collection subscription To cancel a collection subscription: Go to admin.atlassian.com/billing . Select your billing account if you have more than one. Select Subscriptions , find the collection you want to cancel, and select Manage . Select more actions […] > Cancel subscription , then review and confirm your cancellation. More about canceling a collection Ending a collection trial Applies to: Teamwork Collection Service Collection To end a collection trial: Go to admin.atlassian.com/billing . Select your billing account if you have more than one. Select Subscriptions , find the collection you want to end the trial for, and select Manage . Select more actions […] > End trial , then review the details to end your trial. When you end a collection, any new subscription added will get canceled. When ending a Premium subscription, any free inclusions (like Atlassian Guard Standard and Rovo agents) will also get canceled. Was this helpful? Yes No It wasn't accurate It wasn't clear It wasn't relevant Provide feedback about this article Still need help? The Atlassian Community is here for you. 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https://www.scrive.com/products/esign-online | esigning | Upgrade your business with eSign Online | Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation From paper to AI: why HR must lead the digital leap English Global Nederland Sverige Danmark Norge United Kingdom Deutschland France Suomi Help Centre Contact Scrive Contact sales Log in Primary navigation Products Pricing Solutions Resources Company Pricing Help Centre Contact sales Buy now Try for free Search Open menu Home / Products / eSign Online eSign Online E-signing has become the standard in the digital world, and by incorporating electronic signatures into your business and agreement workflows, you can: Try for free Plans and pricing Double your document conversion rates Cut response times from weeks to minutes Kickstart your digital transformation Scrive e-signing steps 1. Upload your document Log in to the Scrive eSign Online portal and upload your document. 2. Add signing parties Enter the contact information of the people who need to receive and sign the agreement. 3. Send for signing The document is sent to the signing parties, and you’ll be notified once the signed agreement is securely stored in your archive. Sign with eID Our eIDs Watch how eSign Online works eSign Online is Scrive’s online portal. Send, sign and manage your agreements wherever you are, on any device. The entire e-signing process is only a few simple steps. You need to accept marketing cookies to see the video. Update your consent Try eSign Test-sign a document online Want to experience Scrive’s e-signing solution? See how easy it is to speed up your agreement workflow with our online test-sign now. Email * I accept the Privacy Notice and to receive marketing communication from Scrive. Test e-sign Pricing for eSign Online Most popular Essential Business Enterprise 19€ 45€ Quote Per user, per month, billed annually Per user, per month, billed annually Customised solution Buy now Buy now Get quote Basic functionality for e-signing agreements without eID/BankID authentication Create more efficient and secure processes with templates and integrations. Option to buy eID/BankID and Forms builder See all features For companies requiring more configurations, dedicated service, SSO and customisable SLA eSign Online: Much more than e-signing Automation wherever possible, better data accuracy, stronger compliance and enhanced employee and customer experience. Scrive eSign Online is a solid first step to digitalisation – a reliable, efficient and secure e-sign solution to expand and grow your business. eSign is full of features to automate and customise your e-sign agreement process, before and after the e-signing, see a selection of features below. View and sign with eIDs Access to eIDs in eSign service. Such as BankID, MitID, Onfido, Swisscom and more. See list of all eIDs Templates Reduce document preparation time and get more control over your processes by creating templates for your daily agreements workflows. Structured data flows Extract critical business data from signed documents and populate your native systems. Archiving options Store and manage your signed documents in Scrive E-archive, or auto-offboard them to your cloud storage of choice: Microsoft OneDrive, Google Drive or Dropbox. Bulk send Need multiple people to sign the same document? Simply upload your mailing list — whether it’s 5 or 500 signers. Branding Add your logo, colours and messaging to brand your e-sign experience. Approvals Send your document to one or more parties for approval Deadlines, reminders and contract expiration notifications Keep the signing process on track while you’re handling other tasks. Scrive QES Scrive’s solution makes qualified electronic signatures (QES) simple and affordable, providing the highest level of security and legal recognition across the EU. Simply sign with BankID or any of the many eIDAS-approved national eIDs throughout the EU. With guaranteed compliance across all relevant regulations, now is the time to future-proof your business. Learn more about Scrive QES Advanced features for Scrive eSign Online Bundled document sending Send multiple documents as a single bundle to simplify complex processes Bundled document signing Enable your signatories to sign multiple documents at once. Speed up your processes and lower cost of eID transactions Signing Groups Set up groups with custom rules to reduce bottlenecks and reflect real world flexibility Read more about advanced features Fill-and-sign forms with Forms builder Simplify form management with Forms Builder and Shareable Links , an add-on package for eSign Online. Forms Builder allows you to create customised forms from scratch using an easy drag-and-drop interface. With Shareable Links, you can transform any PDF into a fill-and-sign form, streamlining the entire process. Create your own digital, automated forms for: Bank authorisations NDAs Consent forms Applications Registrations Service requests Insurance claims Onboarding Know your customer (KYC) “We had a problem. When a new customer signed up on our website, we had to send them a paper document.” Mikael Lindahl Business Developer, Avanza Bank “Scrive delivered a simple and reliable solution that has increased customer satisfaction and customer conversion. With Scrive we have the possibility to easily make changes in legal documents which has reduced time spent for our IT-developers in the onboarding process. All in all, we are very satisfied with the product Scrive delivers." Cristian Lidstrom, Head of sales and communications, MedMera Bank FAQ for e-signing Do you need an eID to sign electronically? This is normally not required. However, an eID might be preferred or even required in certain situations: 1) High contract value/BNPL. E.g., when selling a car, or a phone with a leasing contract, an ID check decreases fraud risk. 2) AML/KYC requirements. E.g., before opening a bank account, it is often legally required that proper identification of the customer has taken place. 3) Advanced electronic signatures. Sometimes you meet statutory requirements to use advanced electronic signatures. There are four requirements for an electronic signature to be recognised as advanced according to the eIDAS Regulation. In simple terms, these include the need to uniquely identify the signatory and make sure that that the signatory had sole control of their signature. It must also be possible to detect if any changes have occurred after the point of signature. Courts have on multiple occasions confirmed that when e-signatures created in Scrive eSign are combined with eIDs, these constitute advanced electronic signatures. What different levels of e-signature are there? There are three levels of electronic signature. The eIDAS Regulation defines three types of electronic signatures: (Basic) Electronic Signature, Advanced Electronic Signature and Qualified Electronic Signature. Read more about electronic signatures What is eIDAS eIDAS stands for electronic Identification, Authentication and trust Services, and is an EU regulation on electronic identification and trust services for electronic transactions that applies as law within the whole of the EU. Read more about eIDAS Are e-signatures legally binding? For 99.99% of all documents, the answer is a solid “yes”. Contract law world wide typically honours any agreement where the parties’ intentions to become bound are clearly stated. A handshake, phone recording, fax, paper signature and e-signature are all valid. Read more about legally binding signatures What’s the difference between electronic signatures and digital signatures? An electronic signature is a method for entering into a legal agreement in a digital environment. Think of it as the digital equivalent of signing your name on a paper document, such as a sales contract. A digital signature is not a signature in the legal sense. Rather, it’s about document integrity, which means that in the event of a dispute, you can prove that: (1) no one has altered the original document, and (2) the document you’re presenting isn’t a forgery. It’s like a fingerprint that is unique to that document Read more about digital vs electronic signatures Related cases A+W Software: Digitalising and streamlining Other, eSign Online Read the full case Academic Work: Actionable insights and shorter sales cycles HR, eSign Online Read the full case Bang & Beenfeldt: Digitising processes in a very old-fashioned industry Construction, eSign Online Read the full case eSign Online price plans Transparent pricing, with plans to suit small businesses up to global organisations Pricing Try for free Try eSign Online for 14 days, no credit card, no obligation Start free trial Questions? Tell us about what you're trying to solve today Contact us Related reading Learn how to sign a pdf online . Read our guide where we will walk you through the process of how to sign a PDF with Scrive eSign Online, making it quick and easy. Electronic signature E-signing made easy with Scrive’s electronic signature solution. Whether you’re a small startup or a big corporation, Scrive has electronic signature solutions to suit your needs. Explore Electronic signature Footer navigation Products eSign Online eSign GO eSign API Scrive QES eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Solutions Industries Customer cases Integrations Pricing Pricing eSign Online Pricing eSign GO Pricing eSign API Pricing ID Check Pricing eID Hub Pricing eSign Forms Pricing Forms Builder Resources Knowledge Hub Trust Centre Help Centre Subscribe to newsletter Challenges we solve Digital signature vs. Electronic Signature Digitalisation Video guides Switch to Scrive More System status Verify a document API Documentation Engineering blog Scrive brand guidelines Company About Partners Career Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/bsd2 | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged bsd2 195 packages have this tag. [Merge tag] (trustees only) Related tags: library (186), data (36), program (35), text (21), network (16), control (13), system (11), web (11), concurrency (10), deprecated (10), user-interfaces (10), development (9), math (9), hardware (8), parsing (6), type-system (5), graphics (4), language (4), sound (4), statistics (4), testing (4), data-structures (3), documentation (3), lenses (3), numeric (3), serialization (3), codec (2), cryptography (2), database (2), database-testing-web (2), distribution (2), effect (2), ffi-tools (2), game (2), generics (2), gui (2), web-scraping (2), adjunctions (1), ai (1), algebra (1), build (1), building (1), command-line (1), comonads (1), compatibility (1), compiler (1), compression (1), constraints (1), crypto (1), email--- (1), ... Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers GOST34112012-Hash 11 0.0 0 Bindings to the GOST R 34.11-2012 hashing implementation ( bsd2 , codec , cryptography , library ) 2025-09-02 0.1.1.3 verrens Mecha 3 1.25 1 mecha are the most complex composite machines known to humanity, lets build them well! ( bsd2 , concurrency , control , data , library , network , system ) 2016-08-11 0.0.0.0 CarterSchonwald Mechs 2 1.25 1 mecha are the most complex composite machines known to humanity, lets build them well! ( bsd2 , concurrency , control , data , library , network , system ) 2016-08-11 0.0.0.0 CarterSchonwald MonadStack 8 0.0 1 Generalizing lift to monad stacks ( bsd2 , control , library ) 2015-07-13 0.1.0.3 bhurt OGDF 7 0.0 0 Haskell binding to OGDF ( bsd2 , graphs , library ) 2023-07-29 1.0.0.1 IanWooKim SecureHash-SHA3 13 2.0 0 simple static linked SHA3 using private symbols and the ref impl ( bsd2 , library , system ) 2019-01-25 0.1.1.0 CarterSchonwald TrivialMonadWithUnitType 5 0.0 0 Trivial monad with Unit type ( bsd2 , development , library ) 2025-11-24 0.1.0.0 AlexisSoutient abnf 16 0.0 1 Parse ABNF and generate parsers for the specified document ( bsd2 , library , text ) 2016-06-20 0.4.1.0 Xandaros addy 5 0.0 0 A full-featured library for parsing, validating, and rendering email addresses ( bsd2 , library , text ) 2020-10-29 0.1.0.1 PeterJones adjunctions 281 2.25 67 Adjunctions and representable functors ( adjunctions , bsd2 , data-structures , library ) 2026-01-10 4.4.4 EdwardKmett , EricMertens , ryanglscott , AaronVargo aeson-match-qq 91 0.0 0 Declarative JSON matchers. ( bsd2 , library , web ) 2025-09-23 1.8.0 MatveyAksenov apis 5 0.0 1 A Template Haskell library for generating type safe API calls ( bsd2 , library , web ) 2014-12-22 0.0.1 FabianBergmark assumpta 2 1.25 0 An SMTP client library ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2020-01-29 0.1.0.0 phlummox assumpta-core 9 0.0 1 Core functionality for an SMTP client ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2020-01-29 0.1.0.2 phlummox atomic-modify-general 1 2.0 0 Generalizations of atomicModifyIORef ( bsd2 , concurrency , library ) 2023-03-10 0.1.0.0 dfeuer attomail 4 0.0 1 Minimal mail delivery agent (MDA) for local mail with maildir support ( bsd2 , email--- , network , program ) 2017-12-11 0.1.0.2 phlummox binary-typed (deprecated) 22 0.0 1 Type-safe binary serialization ( bsd2 , data , deprecated , library , serialization ) 2015-12-19 1.0 quchen bindings-libg15 6 0.0 1 Bindings to libg15 ( bsd2 , library , web ) 2017-08-13 0.2.0.0 Xandaros bogocopy 3 0.0 1 Copy a directory tree, making zero-size sparse copies of big files. ( bsd2 , file-manager , program , system-tools , tools ) 2017-01-05 0.1.0.2 phlummox buffon 2 0.0 1 An implementation of Buffon machines. ( bsd2 , library , math ) 2018-03-26 0.1.0.1 DerekElkins byline 43 0.0 1 Library for creating command-line interfaces (colors, menus, etc.) ( bsd2 , library , system , user-interfaces ) 2025-02-17 1.1.3 PeterJones cabal (deprecated in favor of Cabal ) 3 0.0 1 placeholder for Cabal package, you want the upper case Cabal ( bsd2 , deprecated , development , library ) 2016-08-11 0.0.0.0 CarterSchonwald , DuncanCoutts , HerbertValerioRiedel cabal-plan-bounds 27 0.0 0 Derives cabal bounds from build plans ( bsd2 , distribution , program ) 2024-04-28 0.1.6.1 JoachimBreitner , sellout citeproc 124 0.0 4 Generates citations and bibliography from CSL styles. ( bsd2 , library , text ) 2025-11-30 0.12 JohnMacFarlane clash-ghc 302 2.25 5 Clash: a functional hardware description language - GHC frontend ( bsd2 , hardware , library , program ) 2025-11-06 1.8.4 ChristiaanBaaij , QBayLogic clash-lib 278 0.0 10 Clash: a functional hardware description language - As a library ( bsd2 , hardware , library , program ) 2025-11-06 1.8.4 ChristiaanBaaij , QBayLogic clash-lib-hedgehog 26 0.0 0 Hedgehog Generators for clash-lib ( bsd2 , hardware , library ) 2025-11-06 1.8.4 ChristiaanBaaij , QBayLogic clash-prelude 269 2.5 18 Clash: a functional hardware description language - Prelude library ( bsd2 , hardware , library ) 2025-11-06 1.8.4 ChristiaanBaaij , QBayLogic clash-prelude-hedgehog 25 0.0 0 Hedgehog Generators for clash-prelude ( bsd2 , hardware , library ) 2025-11-06 1.8.4 ChristiaanBaaij , QBayLogic clash-systemverilog (deprecated in favor of clash-lib ) 68 0.0 2 CAES Language for Synchronous Hardware - SystemVerilog backend ( bsd2 , deprecated , hardware , library ) 2017-04-25 0.7.2 ChristiaanBaaij clash-verilog (deprecated in favor of clash-lib ) 41 0.0 2 CAES Language for Synchronous Hardware - Verilog backend ( bsd2 , deprecated , hardware , library ) 2017-04-25 0.7.2 ChristiaanBaaij clash-vhdl (deprecated in favor of clash-lib ) 77 0.0 2 CAES Language for Synchronous Hardware - VHDL backend ( bsd2 , deprecated , hardware , library ) 2017-04-25 0.7.2 ChristiaanBaaij command-qq 14 0.0 3 Quasiquoters for external commands ( bsd2 , library , system ) 2020-01-09 0.3.1.0 MatveyAksenov compiler-warnings 1 0.0 1 Parser for common compiler warning formats ( bsd2 , development , library ) 2016-10-16 0.1.0 DmitryIvanov concurrent-output 195 2.5 7 Ungarble output from several threads or commands ( bsd2 , concurrency , library , user-interfaces ) 2024-04-29 1.10.21 JoeyHess constrained 2 0.0 1 Generalization of standard Functor, Foldable, and Traversable classes ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2019-10-27 0.1 SergeyVinokurov constrained-platform-instances 1 0.0 0 Instances of standard platform types for 'constrained' package. ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2019-10-27 0.1 SergeyVinokurov constraints 145 2.0 161 Constraint manipulation ( bsd2 , constraints , library ) 2026-01-10 0.14.3 CaleGibbard , EdwardKmett , ryanglscott control-block 10 2.0 0 Higher-order functions with their function arguments at the end, for channeling the full power of BlockArguments and LambdaCase . ( bsd2 , control , library ) 2025-06-10 0.0.2 melaniebrown data-filter 1 0.0 1 Utilities for filtering ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2018-05-17 0.1.0.0 boonami dense-linear-algebra 2 0.0 2 Simple and incomplete pure haskell implementation of linear algebra ( bsd2 , library , math , numeric , statistics ) 2018-10-11 0.1.0.0 AlexeyKhudyakov digest 62 0.0 27 CRC32 and Adler32 hashes for bytestrings ( bsd2 , cryptography , library ) 2024-02-10 0.0.2.1 EugeneKirpichov , teo double-conversion 56 0.0 34 Fast conversion between single and double precision floating point and text ( bsd2 , library , text ) 2024-02-11 2.0.5.0 BryanOSullivan , Haskell_Mouse ecma262 3 0.0 3 A ECMA-262 interpreter library ( bsd2 , language , library , program ) 2014-12-12 0.0.0 FabianBergmark edf 3 0.0 0 EDF parsing library ( bsd2 , codec , library ) 2019-12-30 1.0.0.0 cbou editable 5 0.0 1 Interactive editors for Generics ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2014-10-05 1.0.0.2 MaxwellSwadling either-semigroup 2 0.0 0 Either with a stricter Semigroup instance ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2024-03-27 0.0.0 melaniebrown elision 17 0.0 0 Arrows with holes. ( bsd2 , control , library , program ) 2016-02-18 0.1.3.2 jacrough exceptional 54 0.0 1 Essentially the Maybe type with error messages. ( bsd2 , control , library ) 2015-07-22 0.3.0.0 pharpend exigo-schema 12 0.0 0 database schema for exigo marking/assessment tools ( bsd2 , database , library ) 2020-06-27 0.2.0.2 phlummox fadno-braids 26 0.0 2 Braid representations in Haskell ( algebra , bsd2 , data , library , math ) 2024-01-20 0.2 spopejoy fadno-xml 21 0.0 2 XML/XSD combinators/schemas/codegen ( bsd2 , library , music , xml ) 2024-01-20 1.2.1 spopejoy fficxx 44 0.0 12 Automatic C++ binding generation ( bsd2 , ffi-tools , library ) 2023-07-28 0.7.0.1 IanWooKim fficxx-runtime 25 0.0 13 Runtime for fficxx-generated library ( bsd2 , ffi-tools , library ) 2023-07-28 0.7.0.1 IanWooKim fieldwise 2 0.0 1 Provides Fieldwise typeclass for operations of fields of records treated as independent components. ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2014-07-18 0.1.0.0 GracjanPolak file-embed 118 2.5 169 Use Template Haskell to embed file contents directly. ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2024-01-28 0.0.16.0 MichaelSnoyman fits-parse 32 0.0 1 Parse FITS files ( bsd2 , library , program , science ) 2024-07-30 0.4.2 krakrjak fixtime 12 0.0 1 Some fixes to the time package ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2014-11-03 1.5.0.2 pharpend ghc-tcplugins-extra 40 0.0 17 Utilities for writing GHC type-checker plugins ( bsd2 , library , type-system ) 2025-03-04 0.5 ChristiaanBaaij , QBayLogic ghc-typelits-extra 105 0.0 11 Additional type-level operations on GHC.TypeLits.Nat ( bsd2 , library , type-system ) 2025-12-03 0.5.2 ChristiaanBaaij , QBayLogic ghc-typelits-knownnat 68 2.0 37 Derive KnownNat constraints from other KnownNat constraints ( bsd2 , library , type-system ) 2025-10-17 0.8.2 ChristiaanBaaij , QBayLogic ghc-typelits-natnormalise 107 2.5 36 GHC typechecker plugin for types of kind GHC.TypeLits.Nat ( bsd2 , library , type-system ) 2025-12-02 0.9.3 ChristiaanBaaij , QBayLogic ghcflags 14 0.0 5 Dump the ghc flags during compilation ( bsd2 , building , library ) 2023-05-22 1.0.4 tseenshe git-embed (deprecated in favor of githash ) 8 2.0 1 Use TH to embed Git repo information. ( bsd2 , deprecated , git , library ) 2014-12-15 0.1.0 borsboom gotyno-hs 12 0.0 0 A type definition compiler supporting multiple output languages. ( bsd2 , compiler , library , program ) 2021-08-05 1.1.0 gonz grenade 2 2.0 1 Practical Deep Learning in Haskell ( ai , bsd2 , library , machine-learning ) 2017-04-12 0.1.0 ErikDeCastroLopo , huw haddock-api 62 0.0 6 A documentation-generation tool for Haskell libraries ( bsd2 , documentation , library ) 2023-09-22 2.29.1 BenGamari , HerbertValerioRiedel , MateuszKowalczyk , alexbiehl , Helkafen , harpocrates , wz1000 , hecate haddock-library 62 2.0 13 Library exposing some functionality of Haddock. ( bsd2 , documentation , library ) 2022-08-18 1.11.0 BenGamari , HerbertValerioRiedel , MateuszKowalczyk , SimonHengel , alexbiehl , Helkafen , harpocrates , wz1000 , hecate halive 38 0.0 0 A live recompiler ( bsd2 , development , library , program ) 2021-03-26 0.1.8 lukexi happy 102 1.25 1 Happy is a parser generator for Haskell ( bsd2 , development , program ) 2025-08-16 2.1.7 AndreasAbel , IavorDiatchki , JohnEricson , SimonMarlow , int_index , sgraf812 happy-lib 35 0.0 0 Happy is a parser generator for Haskell implemented using this library ( bsd2 , development , library ) 2025-08-17 2.1.7 AndreasAbel , IavorDiatchki , JohnEricson , SimonMarlow , int_index , sgraf812 hashflare 2 0.0 1 A library for working with HashFlare.io contracts and hashrates ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2017-01-20 0.1.0.0 nbrk herb 1 2.0 0 Accessible format for structured data serialization ( bsd2 , library , program , serialization , text ) 2025-01-16 0.1.0.0 exaexa hlwm 8 0.0 1 Bindings to the herbstluftwm window manager ( bsd2 , library , system ) 2016-05-31 0.1.0.2 hpdeifel hspec-expectations-lens 15 0.0 1 Hspec expectations for the lens stuff ( bsd2 , library , testing ) 2015-01-02 0.4.0 MatveyAksenov huffman 11 2.0 1 Pure Haskell implementation of the Huffman encoding algorithm ( bsd2 , compression , data , library ) 2025-09-28 1.0.2 MaximeHenrion hup 9 2.0 0 Upload packages and/or documentation to a hackage server ( bsd2 , distribution , documentation , library , program , web ) 2022-01-05 0.3.0.3 phlummox huttons-razor 10 0.0 1 Quick implemention of Hutton's Razor ( bsd2 , example , program ) 2015-05-27 0.1.1.0 steshaw hyphenation 156 2.0 6 Configurable Knuth-Liang hyphenation ( bsd2 , library , text ) 2025-03-03 0.8.3 EdwardKmett , EricMertens , VladimirShabanov , ryanglscott indexed-traversable 27 0.0 50 FunctorWithIndex, FoldableWithIndex, TraversableWithIndex ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2024-05-16 0.1.4 phadej indexed-traversable-instances 10 0.0 6 More instances of FunctorWithIndex, FoldableWithIndex, TraversableWithIndex ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2024-05-16 0.1.2 phadej invariant 96 0.0 18 Haskell98 invariant functors ( bsd2 , control , data , library ) 2026-01-10 0.6.5 NicolasFrisby , ryanglscott jenga (deprecated) 7 2.0 0 Generate a cabal freeze file from a stack.yaml ( bsd2 , deprecated , development , library , program ) 2017-05-13 0.1.1.0 ErikDeCastroLopo joy-rewrite 5 0.0 0 Transform Joy code using conditional rewrite rules ( bsd2 , language , library ) 2022-06-29 0.2.0 rieckenj json-extra 9 0.0 1 Utility functions to extend Aeson ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2016-11-24 0.2.0.0 TobiasDammers justified-containers 15 2.25 1 Keyed container types with type-checked proofs of key presence. ( bsd2 , data-structures , library ) 2018-02-11 0.3.0.0 mnoonan ldap-client 16 1.75 3 Pure Haskell LDAP Client Library ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2024-06-21 0.4.3 MatveyAksenov , bcj , sambolias ldap-client-og 10 0.0 0 Pure Haskell LDAP Client Library ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2025-11-18 0.5.0 MatveyAksenov lens 626 3.0 1492 Lenses, Folds and Traversals ( bsd2 , data , generics , lenses , library ) 2026-01-10 5.3.6 EdwardKmett , EricMertens , JohnWiegley , ryanglscott lens-indexed-plated 7 0.0 0 Indexed version of Plated. ( bsd2 , data , generics , lenses , library ) 2023-07-08 0.1.0 nicuveo libjenkins 38 0.0 1 Jenkins API interface ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2023-04-25 0.9.0 MatveyAksenov libmodbus 16 0.0 0 Haskell bindings to the C modbus library ( bsd2 , library , system ) 2025-08-22 1.1.4 JoeyHess libretls 1 0.0 0 libtls bindings ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2019-01-01 0.0.0.0 CarterSchonwald lmdb 22 0.0 4 Lightning MDB bindings ( bsd2 , database , library ) 2015-01-23 0.2.5 dmbarbour lowgl 35 0.0 1 Basic gl wrapper and reference ( bsd2 , graphics , library ) 2016-11-07 0.4.0.1 evanrinehart markov-chain-usage-model 2 0.0 1 Computations for Markov chain usage models ( bsd2 , library , testing ) 2019-05-14 0.0.0 stevana math-functions 142 2.25 42 Collection of tools for numeric computations ( bsd2 , library , math , numeric ) 2024-03-30 0.3.4.4 AlexeyKhudyakov , BryanOSullivan matrix-market-attoparsec 35 2.0 3 Parsing and serialization functions for the NIST Matrix Market format ( bsd2 , library , parsers ) 2020-01-19 0.1.1.3 ocramz mdapi 4 0.0 1 Haskell interface to Fedora's mdapi ( bsd2 , fedora , library ) 2015-11-28 1 RickyElrod mech 2 1.25 1 mecha are the most complex composite machines known to humanity, lets build them well! ( bsd2 , concurrency , control , data , library , network , system ) 2016-08-11 0.0.0.0 CarterSchonwald mechs 3 1.25 1 mecha are the most complex composite machines known to humanity, lets build them well! ( bsd2 , concurrency , control , data , library , network , system ) 2016-08-11 0.0.0.0 CarterSchonwald meep 12 0.0 1 A silly container ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2018-08-04 0.1.2.2 DmitryMalikov , MatveyAksenov megaparsec 190 2.75 305 Monadic parser combinators ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2024-11-19 9.7.0 HerbertValerioRiedel , TikhonJelvis , mrkkrp megaparsec-tests 38 0.0 0 Test utilities and the test suite of Megaparsec ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2024-11-19 9.7.0 mrkkrp memorable-bits 5 0.0 0 Generate human memorable strings from binary data. ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2019-03-11 0.1.0.1 lukec mock-httpd 6 0.0 0 A HTTP server for testing HTTP clients ( bsd2 , network , program ) 2020-10-29 1.0.0 PeterJones monad-lgbt 8 0.0 1 Monad transformers for combining local and global state. ( bsd2 , control , library ) 2016-07-23 0.0.2 MichalGajda monad-ste 2 2.25 4 ST monad with efficient explicit errors ( bsd2 , control , library ) 2016-05-04 0.1.0.0 CarterSchonwald monadology 8 0.0 0 The best ideas in monad-related classes and types. ( bsd2 , library , monads ) 2024-12-16 0.4 AshleyYakeley mortred 7 0.0 0 Library for setting up and running scrapers with webdriver. ( bsd2 , library , program , selenium , web-scraping ) 2021-10-24 0.0.2 gonz ms 8 0.0 1 metric spaces ( bsd2 , library , math ) 2015-07-21 0.2.1 RickyElrod mwc-random 164 2.0 123 Fast, high quality pseudo random number generation ( bsd2 , library , math , statistics ) 2025-12-30 0.15.3.0 AlexeyKhudyakov , BryanOSullivan neko-lib 3 0.0 1 Neko VM code generation and disassembly library ( bsd2 , build , library ) 2017-10-06 0.0.1.0 ppenzin nullary 3 0.0 1 A package for working with nullary type classes. ( bsd2 , library , type-system ) 2015-11-04 0.1.0.0 DerekElkins numerical 1 0.0 0 core package for Numerical Haskell project ( bsd2 , library , math ) 2019-01-01 0.0.0.0 CarterSchonwald open-witness 22 0.0 1 open witnesses ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2024-12-16 0.7 AshleyYakeley opendatatable 3 0.0 3 A library for working with Open Data Tables ( bsd2 , library , web ) 2014-12-12 0.0.0 FabianBergmark openid-connect 12 0.0 0 An OpenID Connect library that does all the heavy lifting for you ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2023-02-17 0.2.0 PeterJones pager 6 0.0 2 Open up a pager, like 'less' or 'more' ( bsd2 , data , library , program , system , text ) 2015-05-16 0.1.1.0 pharpend pagure-hook-receiver (deprecated) 3 0.0 1 Receive hooks from pagure and do things with them ( bsd2 , deprecated , library , web ) 2015-06-12 0.1.0.0 RickyElrod parsec 104 2.75 951 Monadic parser combinators ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2025-01-05 3.1.18.0 AntoineLatter , HerbertValerioRiedel , phadej perhaps 4 2.0 1 Perhaps, a monad ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2018-04-24 0 EdwardKmett pg-harness-client (deprecated in favor of tempgres-client ) 12 0.0 1 Client library for pg-harness-server ( bsd2 , database-testing-web , deprecated , library ) 2019-02-15 0.6.0 BardurArantsson pipeclip 9 0.0 1 Open your editor, pipe the output to the system clipboard ( bsd2 , program , system , text ) 2015-05-19 0.1.0.1 pharpend polysemy-optics 8 0.0 0 Optics for Polysemy. ( bsd2 , lenses , library , optics ) 2022-07-05 0.1.0.2 nosewings polysemy-readline 5 2.0 0 Readline effect for polysemy. ( bsd2 , effect , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2025-10-04 0.3.0.0 lehmacdj prettyprinter 76 2.5 228 A modern, easy to use, well-documented, extensible pretty-printer. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2021-09-11 1.7.1 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-ansi-terminal 22 1.75 53 ANSI terminal backend for the »prettyprinter« package. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2021-09-11 1.1.3 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-compat-annotated-wl-pprint 12 0.0 1 Drop-in compatibility package to migrate from »annotated-wl-pprint« to »prettyprinter«. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2020-12-27 1.1 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-compat-ansi-wl-pprint 17 0.0 5 Drop-in compatibility package to migrate from »ansi-wl-pprint« to »prettyprinter«. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2025-12-04 1.1 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-compat-wl-pprint 7 0.0 1 Drop-in compatibility package to migrate from »wl-pprint« to »prettyprinter«. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2021-09-11 1.0.1 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-convert-ansi-wl-pprint 11 0.0 0 Converter from »ansi-wl-pprint« documents to »prettyprinter«-based ones. ( bsd2 , library , text , user-interfaces ) 2021-09-11 1.1.2 quchen , sjakobi prettyprinter-interp 6 0.0 1 Efficient interpolation for Prettyprinter ( bsd2 , data , library , text ) 2023-01-31 0.2.0.0 PeterLebbing primitive-serial 2 0.0 0 Serialisation of primitive types ( bsd2 , library , serialization ) 2023-07-19 0.1 AshleyYakeley propellor 332 2.0 1 property-based host configuration management in haskell ( bsd2 , library , program , utility ) 2025-08-10 5.18 JoeyHess q4c12-twofinger 13 0.0 1 Efficient alternating finger trees ( bsd2 , data-structures , library ) 2018-01-17 0.2 quasicomputational quarantimer 8 0.0 0 Coronavirus quarantine timer web app for your things ( bsd2 , health , program ) 2020-04-22 1.20200422 JoeyHess quickcheck-state-machine-distributed 10 0.0 1 Test monadic programs using state machine based models ( bsd2 , library , testing ) 2018-05-03 0.0.1 stevana quickcheck-unicode 6 0.0 1 Generator and shrink functions for testing Unicode-related software. ( bsd2 , library , testing , text ) 2017-05-21 1.0.1.0 BryanOSullivan readline-in-other-words 8 0.0 0 Readline effect for in-other-words. ( bsd2 , command-line , effect , haskeline , in-other-words , library , program , user-interfaces ) 2021-11-05 0.1.0.2 lehmacdj rec-def 8 0.0 0 Recursively defined values ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2023-08-19 0.2.2 JoachimBreitner recursion-schemes 172 2.75 58 Representing common recursion patterns as higher-order functions ( bsd2 , control , library , recursion ) 2024-06-12 5.2.3 EdwardKmett , EricMertens , gelisam , ryanglscott , luc_tielen reddit 20 0.0 1 Library for interfacing with Reddit's API ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2022-07-11 0.3.0.0 Intolerable reddit-scrape 6 0.0 0 Library for getting links from a sub-reddit ( bsd2 , library , web-scraping ) 2021-10-17 0.0.1 gonz relocant 4 0.0 0 A PostgreSQL migration CLI tool and library ( bsd2 , library , program , unclassified ) 2025-09-23 1.1.0 MatveyAksenov replace-attoparsec 28 0.0 1 Find, replace, split string patterns with Attoparsec parsers (instead of regex) ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2023-05-30 1.5.0.0 JamesBrock , haskell_github_trust replace-megaparsec 74 0.0 5 Find, replace, split string patterns with Megaparsec parsers (instead of regex) ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2023-05-30 1.5.0.1 JamesBrock , haskell_github_trust resin 16 0.0 1 High performance variable binders ( bsd2 , language , library ) 2019-01-01 0.2.0.3 CarterSchonwald restman 3 0.0 0 Web request TUI program. ( bsd2 , library , program , web ) 2026-01-04 0.7.1.1 krakrjak rio-process-pool 5 0.0 0 A library for process pools coupled with asynchronous message queues ( bsd2 , concurrency , library , program ) 2021-06-22 1.0.1 SvenHeyll rsi-break 4 0.0 0 Let your mind know that your hands need a rest! ( bsd2 , graphics , library , program ) 2023-10-26 0.1.0.0 RubenAstudillo sdnv 7 0.0 1 Self-delimiting numeric values encoding library ( bsd2 , library , numeric ) 2017-06-07 0.1.1 sickmind semigroupoids 292 2.5 216 Semigroupoids: Category sans id ( bsd2 , comonads , control , library ) 2026-01-10 6.0.2 EdwardKmett , EricMertens , ryanglscott simpleirc-lens 5 2.0 1 Lenses for simpleirc types ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2015-12-25 0.2.0.0 RickyElrod slab 6 0.0 0 A programmable markup language to generate HTML ( bsd2 , library , program , text ) 2024-07-23 0.0.3.0 VoMinhThu smtpbz 9 0.0 0 Unofficial API client for smtp.bz ( bsd2 , library , web ) 2025-10-10 1.2.0 MatveyAksenov sneathlane-haste 3 0.0 1 A compositional web UI library, which draws to a Canvas element ( bsd2 , gui , library ) 2015-11-13 2 JasonPriestley sop-satisfier 3 0.0 0 Check satisfiability of expressions on natural numbers ( bsd2 , library , solver , symbolic-arithmetic ) 2025-06-07 0.3.4.5 ChristiaanBaaij spritz 1 0.0 1 An implementation of the Spritz RC4-like stream cipher in Haskell ( bsd2 , crypto , library ) 2014-11-19 0.1.0.0 RickyElrod statistics 304 2.25 66 A library of statistical types, data, and functions ( bsd2 , library , math , statistics ) 2026-01-09 0.16.5.0 AlexeyKhudyakov , BryanOSullivan statistics-skinny 3 0.0 0 A library of statistical types, data, and functions ( bsd2 , library , math , statistics ) 2021-01-11 0.15.2.0 vmchale stdcxx 6 0.0 9 Binding to Standard Template Library C++ ( bsd2 , ffi , library ) 2023-07-28 0.7.0.1 IanWooKim tak 3 0.0 0 A library encoding the rules of Tak, and a playtak.com client. ( bsd2 , game , library ) 2016-06-07 0.1.0.0 HenryBucklow tak-ai 4 0.0 1 AI(s) for playing Tak on playtak.com ( bsd2 , game , program ) 2016-06-08 0.1.0.1 HenryBucklow tempgres-client 3 0.0 0 Client library for Tempgres. ( bsd2 , database-testing-web , library ) 2023-10-27 1.0.0 BardurArantsson template-haskell-lift 2 0.0 1 The 'Lift' typeclass. ( bsd2 , development , library ) 2025-10-04 0.1.0.0 teo template-haskell-quasiquoter 1 0.0 0 The 'QuasiQuoter' interface. ( bsd2 , development , library ) 2025-10-04 0.1.0.0 teo text 322 2.75 5867 An efficient packed Unicode text type. ( bsd2 , data , library , text ) 2025-08-01 2.1.3 Bodigrim , lyxia , chessai , topos text-binary 10 0.0 23 Binary instances for text types ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2016-09-29 0.2.1.1 JakubWaszczuk text-utf8 (deprecated in favor of text ) 4 0.0 3 An efficient packed UTF-8 backed Unicode text type. ( bsd2 , data , deprecated , library , text ) 2018-05-14 1.2.3.0 HerbertValerioRiedel , Bodigrim , topos time 174 2.25 2391 A time library ( bsd2 , library , time ) 2025-08-04 1.15 AshleyYakeley , DonaldStewart , IanLynagh tinyMesh 3 0.0 1 TinyMesh - communicating with auto-meshing sensor network ( bsd2 , library , network ) 2014-11-30 0.1.0.0 MichalGajda token-limiter 14 0.0 0 Fast rate limiting using the token bucket algorithm (BSD) ( bsd2 , concurrency , library , program ) 2019-11-04 0.2.0.3 GregoryCollins treersec 3 0.0 1 Structure Editing Combinators ( bsd2 , gui , library ) 2015-11-13 1 JasonPriestley type-rig 1 0.0 1 Classes for the rig (sums and products) of types ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2022-09-12 0.1 AshleyYakeley unicode-collation 54 0.0 4 Haskell implementation of the Unicode Collation Algorithm ( bsd2 , library , text ) 2023-12-20 0.1.3.6 JohnMacFarlane unlift-stm 4 0.0 0 (un)lifted classes and functions for the STM monad ( bsd2 , concurrency , library ) 2021-03-15 0.1.0.0 hololeap unliftio-messagebox 10 0.0 1 Fast and robust message queues for concurrent processes ( bsd2 , concurrency , library , program ) 2021-02-16 2.0.0 SvenHeyll unpacked-containers 5 2.0 0 Unpacked containers via backpack ( bsd2 , language , library , program ) 2018-04-06 0 EdwardKmett unzip-traversable 5 0.0 0 Unzip functions for general Traversable containers ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2025-07-03 0.1.1 dfeuer uu-tc-error-error 8 0.0 1 utilities for parse errors ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2024-11-12 0.3.0.0 rednaZ vimeta 21 0.0 0 Frontend for video metadata tagging tools ( bsd2 , library , program , video ) 2021-06-02 0.3.1 PeterJones vocoder 4 0.0 3 Phase vocoder ( bsd2 , library , sound ) 2021-02-08 0.1.0.0 MarekMaterzok vocoder-audio 1 0.0 0 Phase vocoder for conduit-audio ( bsd2 , library , sound ) 2021-02-08 0.1.0.0 MarekMaterzok vocoder-conduit 5 0.0 1 Phase vocoder for Conduit ( bsd2 , library , sound ) 2021-02-08 0.1.0.0 MarekMaterzok vocoder-dunai 3 0.0 0 Phase vocoder for Dunai and Rhine ( bsd2 , library , sound ) 2021-02-08 0.1.0.0 MarekMaterzok webcloud 1 0.0 0 Turn an optparse-applicative program into a CGI program! ( bsd2 , library , program , web ) 2016-05-09 0.1.0.1 ThomasSutton wherefrom-compat 9 0.0 1 A compatibility layer for GHC's 'wherefrom' function ( bsd2 , compatibility , library ) 2024-05-24 0.2.0.0 teo wide-word 44 0.0 28 Data types for large but fixed width signed and unsigned integers ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2025-09-13 0.1.8.1 ErikDeCastroLopo witness 24 0.0 3 values that witness types ( bsd2 , data , library ) 2024-12-16 0.7 AshleyYakeley wybor 3 0.0 1 Console line fuzzy search ( bsd2 , library , text ) 2014-08-17 0.1.0 MatveyAksenov xhb-atom-cache 9 0.0 2 Atom cache for XHB ( bsd2 , graphics , library ) 2015-02-26 0.1.0.2 jrk xhb-ewmh 8 0.0 1 EWMH utilities for XHB ( bsd2 , graphics , library ) 2015-03-02 0.1.3.1 jrk xss-sanitize 73 0.0 16 sanitize untrusted HTML to prevent XSS attacks ( bsd2 , library , web ) 2023-04-01 0.3.7.2 GregWeber , MichaelSnoyman yql 3 0.0 2 A YQL engine to execute Open Data Tables ( bsd2 , library , program , web ) 2014-12-12 0.0.0 FabianBergmark | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/sv/losningar/kundcase/avanza | Avanza: Förbättrad onboarding - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Scrive + Kivra – signera säkert och nå mottagaren med 90% öppningsfrekvens Sverige France English Global Danmark Norge Nederland Suomi Deutschland United Kingdom Help Centre Kontakta Scrive Kontakta sälj Logga in Primary navigation Produkter Lösningar Resurser Företaget Priser Hjälpcenter Kontakta sälj Köp nu Prova gratis Sök Öppna menyn Hem / Kundcase / Avanza: Förbättrad onboarding Avanza: Förbättrad onboarding När dokumentet signerats online loggar vi automatiskt in kunden till det nya kontot och sannolikheten att de för över pengar till oss mer än dubbleras. 120% Ökning I konverteringsgraden av signerade dokument när man undertecknar elektroniskt på distans 20% Ökning I totala insättningar under första året då Scrive eSign rullades ut 72% Minskning I den total genomsnittliga onboarding-tiden, medan antalet konton fyrfaldigades Du måste acceptera marknadsföringscookies för att se videon. Uppdatera ditt samtycke "När dokumentet signerats online loggar vi automatiskt in kunden till det nya kontot… sannolikheten att de för över pengar till oss mer än dubbleras." Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Kunder till en online-bank förväntar sig troligtvis att kunna göra sina affärer på nätet, inte sant? Så klart de gör, och Avanzas kunder hade ingen anledning att förvänta sig något annat – förutom i ett undantagsfall. “Vi hade ett specifikt problem,” förklarar Mikael Lindahl, Affärsutvecklare på Avanza Bank. “När en ny kund registrerade sig på vår webbsida, var vi tvungna att skicka dem ett pappersdokument för underskrift som de sedan skulle skicka tillbaka till oss.” När det gäller kundupplevelse var detta minst sagt ett olyckligt sätt att inleda relationen. För att inte nämna den onödiga administrativa börda detta innebar för Avanza. “Det kunde ta dagar, eller veckor, även månader,” säger Lindahl. “Vi ville verkligen förkorta den tiden, och vi ville göra det genom att signera dokumenten online.” e-identifiering för att verifiera den undertecknande parten PKI-baserad datasäkerhetsteknik integritetsteknik för att skydda det signerade dokumentet Avanzas utmaningar Kundupplevelse Kunder till en online-bank förväntar sig den bekvämlighet som en digital onboarding-process kan ge Förlorad möjlighet Många veckors fördröjning innan kunder kan överföra pengar till sina nya konton. Kostnad Administrativ börda att processa signerade pappersblanketter, inklusive risk för datafel Scrive var partnern som kunde leverera allt som behövdes “Våra jurister har aldrig godkänt ett projekt snabbare” säger Avanzas lösningsarkitekt Henrik Littecke. “De älskade Scrive!” Genom att integrera Scrives e-signeringstjänst i arbetsflödet för onboarding kunde Avanza erbjuda sina kunder en chans att snabbt och enkelt börja använda sitt nya konto. Därigenom minskade de även sin egen administration: inga papper, ingen väntan. När kunderna signerade onboarding-dokumenten online, verifierade de sig själva med <strong>BankID</strong>, vilket är en standardfunktion i Scrives gränssnitt för signering. Dessutom är integriteten i varje signerat dokument säkerställt under dokumentets livstid. Dokumenten är vidare både <strong>säkra och sökbara i Scrives E-arkiv</strong>. "Vi hade ett specifikt problem, när en ny kund registrerade sig online på vår webbsida, var vi ändå tvungna att skicka dem ett pappersdokument för underskrift som de sedan skulle skicka tillbaka till oss med posten." Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Avanzas lösning eSign GO Digitalisering utan integration. Är dina system ett hinder för din digitala resa? Är det brådskande? Transformera din butik eller ditt kontor snabbt tillsammans med Scrive. Utforska eSign GO Boka en demo Boka ett möte med oss för att se hur Scrive kan hjälpa dig att effektivisera era processer och skapa värde för din organisation Förnamn * Efternamn * Email * Phone number Detta fält är obligatoriskt Country code Detta fält är obligatoriskt * +46 Telefonnummer Detta fält är obligatoriskt * Företagsnamn * Antal anställda Välj antal anställda Meddelande Jag accepterar Privacy Notice Kontakta mig Relaterade kundcase Investerum: Digital innovation inom finansbranschen Bank och finans Läs kundcase Hypoteket: Revolutionerar bolånemarknaden Bank och finans Läs kundcase Qred: Effektiv hantering av fullmakter och interna dokument Bank och finans Läs kundcase Varför Scrive? Scrive tillhandahåller e-signaturer och eID-lösningar för företag och erbjuder ett säkert och snabbt sätt att signera och hantera elektroniska dokument. Scrives expertis och erfarenhet av digitalisering är nyckeln till framgångsrika partnerskap med några av Europas största varumärken. Varför Scrive Scrive Grev Turegatan 11A 114 46 Stockholm Kontakta sälj Footer navigation Produkter eSign Online eSign Go eSign API Scrive QES eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Lösningar Industrier Kundcase Integrationer Priser Pricing eSign Online Priser eSign API Priser eSign GO Priser ID Check Priser eID Hub Priser eSign Forms Priser Forms Builder Resurser Kunskap Trust Centre Hjälpcenter Utmaningar vi löser Digitalisering Signera avtal digitalt med bankid Externa resurser Verifiera ett dokument System status API dokumentation Brand guidelines Företaget Om Scrive Partners Karriär Kontakt Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie Declaration © 2026 Scrive Vad är du intresserad av? Detta fält är obligatoriskt * Esignering - Automatisera arbetsflöden Identifiering - Ökad säkerhet och verifiering Webbformulär - Effektivisera datainsamling API - Utforska integrationsmöjligheter Jag vill veta mer om Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/switch-from-monthly-to-an-annual-subscription/ | Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription We offer monthly and annual subscriptions for all Standard and Premium plans. However, Free plans are only available for monthly subscriptions. To switch from a monthly Free plan to an annual subscription, you have the option to upgrade to either the Standard or Premium annual plan. To learn more about managing your plan, see Manage your bill for Standard and Premium . With an annual subscription, your app will be valid for 12 months from the date of purchase. You also have an option to automatically renew your annual subscriptions. We’re rolling out an improved billing experience to make it easier to manage your cloud subscriptions. This means your subscriptions could be managed on either the original or the improved experience. Read more about the key differences The following screenshots indicate how the interface of the two billing experiences differs. Original billing experience Improved billing experience In the original billing experience, the first option on the left is Overview . In the improved billing experience, Subscriptions is the first option on the left. Improved billing experience Who can do this? Billing admin Organization admin Site admin Switch from monthly to annual To switch from monthly to annual: Go to admin.atlassian.com/billing . Select your billing account if you have more than one. Find the subscription that you want to switch to an annual billing cycle and select Manage. On the Subscription details page, select Change plan . Choose the Annual billing option, select the Standard or Premium plan, and then review and confirm your billing. See supported payment methods on the improved billing system. While switching Jira family of apps to annual, you may not be able to change the plan and user tier in certain cases. You can contact us to request this change. Original billing experience Who can do this Organization admin Site admin Billing contacts Switch from monthly to annual If you want to switch from annual to monthly, contact us to request the change. To switch from monthly to annual: Go to admin.atlassian.com . Select your organization if you have more than one. From Subscriptions and billing, select Manage subscriptions . Under Payment options , select Choose annual payment . Review your billing details to complete payment or save a quote for later. See supported payment methods on the improved billing system. Your annual payment will start from the last day of your current billing cycle and you’ll pay a prorated price for the remainder of your billing period. Was this helpful? Yes No It wasn't accurate It wasn't clear It wasn't relevant Provide feedback about this article Still need help? The Atlassian Community is here for you. Ask the Community Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Show more Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Show more On this page Improved billing experience Switch from monthly to annual Original billing experience Switch from monthly to annual Community Questions, discussions, and articles Accessibility Notice at Collection Privacy Policy Terms of Use Security 2026 Atlassian | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/how-billing-works-for-collections/ | How billing works for Atlassian Collections | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps How billing works for Atlassian Collections Atlassian Collections are a suite of connected Atlassian apps and AI agents that make it easy for your whole organization to work more effectively together. Each collection is designed for a specific kind of teamwork: Collection Plans Included apps Teamwork Collection Free Standard Premium Enterprise Jira Confluence Loom Rovo agents (with Premium and Enterprise) Atlassian Guard Standard (with Premium and Enterprise) Strategy Collection Not applicable Align Focus Talent All Atlassian Platform apps Service Collection Free Standard Premium Enterprise Jira Service Management Customer Service Management Rovo agents (with Premium and Enterprise) If you purchase a collection, you’ll pay one price for the entire collection and won’t need to pay separately for individual apps included in it. For example, if you buy Service Collection on the Standard plan, you’ll have access to Jira Service Management and Customer Service Management included in one price. Premium and Enterprise collections include free access to Rovo agents and Atlassian Guard Standard. How to set up a collection When you purchase a collection subscription, you’ll be prompted to set it up on a new or existing organization. If you add existing apps to a new collection, you won’t have to set them up again. More about managing your collection subscription Strategy Collection is a set of specialized apps that help executives bridge the gap between strategy, planning, and execution. Our team can help you get started. Contact us . Which users are considered billable users? You’ll be billed based on the total number of unique users across all individual apps. Once an organization admin sets up a collection, each user who has access to least one of the included apps will be charged as a unique billable user. When calculating unique billable users, we will only count a user once, even if the user has access to multiple apps in the collection, and regardless of how many apps are on the site. How does billing work for Guard in my collection? Atlassian Guard is set up at the organization level. Premium or Enterprise collections have free access to Atlassian Guard Standard. This means that you won’t be billed for users that have access to the Premium or Enterprise collection plans in your organization. If you want to use Guard Premium, you’ll need to purchase that separately. See more about billing for Guard Standard How are Marketplace apps and add-ons billed within a collection Marketplace apps and add-ons can be used with Atlassian apps within the collection. The way they are billed will depend on their licensing and how they’re linked to the Atlassian app they’re installed on. Keep in mind that moving already-installed Marketplace apps and add-ons to a collection may impact their pricing. More about Marketplace app pricing What will the collection look like on my invoice? Instead of having separate subscriptions listed on your invoice for each app within a collection, there will just be one billable subscription for a collection. For example, if you have a Teamwork Collection subscription, instead of having Jira, Confluence, and Loom shown separately in the invoice, you’ll see Teamwork Collection as one billable line item. For Enterprise subscriptions, you’ll see any included subscriptions as part of your Enterprise plan. Was this helpful? Yes No It wasn't accurate It wasn't clear It wasn't relevant Provide feedback about this article Still need help? The Atlassian Community is here for you. Ask the Community Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Show more Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works Show more On this page How to set up a collection Which users are considered billable users? How does billing work for Guard in my collection? How are Marketplace apps and add-ons billed within a collection What will the collection look like on my invoice? Community Questions, discussions, and articles Accessibility Notice at Collection Privacy Policy Terms of Use Security 2026 Atlassian | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/parsing | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged parsing 277 packages have this tag. [Merge tag] (trustees only) Related tags: library (273), bsd3 (163), data (57), mit (53), text (48), deprecated (24), program (23), gpl (16), xml (12), cli (11), options (11), system (11), enumerator (7), bsd2 (6), time (6), json (5), language (5), network (5), streaming (5), apache (4), mpl (4), pipes (4), agpl (3), array (3), console (3), control (3), database (3), dataflow (3), io-streams (3), list (3), logic (3), natural-language-processing (3), non-determinism (3), public-domain (3), serialization (3), streamly (3), testing (3), codecs (2), concurrency (2), development (2), file (2), filesystem (2), html (2), lgpl (2), logging (2), math (2), postgresql (2), pretty-printer (2), reactivity (2), unicode (2), utility (2), applicative (1), attoparsec (1), attribute-grammars (1), binary (1), bits (1), bytes (1), codec (1), compatibility (1), compilers-interpreters (1), conduit (1), configuration (1), cryptography (1), csv (1), data-mining (1), data-structures (1), diagnostics (1), disassembler (1), ebnf (1), fitness (1), flight (1), foreign (1), formal-methods (1), game-engine (1), geography (1), ghc (1), gps (1), graphs (1), ... Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers BNFC 83 2.25 2 A compiler front-end generator. ( bsd3 , library , parsing , program ) 2025-08-13 2.9.6.1 AndreasAbel , GregoireDetrez , MarkusForsberg , ThomasHallgren BNFC-meta 81 0.0 1 Deriving Parsers and Quasi-Quoters from BNF Grammars ( development , gpl , language , library , parsing , text ) 2020-02-09 0.6.1 JeanPhilippeBernardy , JonasDuregard , ArtemPelenitsyn ConfigFile 37 0.0 18 Configuration file reading & writing ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2014-10-30 1.1.4 JohnGoerzen ConfigFileTH 5 0.0 1 Template haskell for reading ConfigFiles. ( library , parsing , template-haskell ) 2011-12-05 0.2 VilleTirronen EEConfig 2 0.0 1 ExtremlyEasyConfig - Extremly Simple parser for config files ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2008-11-17 1.0 BartoszWojcik Earley 41 2.0 11 Parsing all context-free grammars using Earley's algorithm. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2019-02-24 0.13.0.1 OlleFredriksson , phadej Grempa 17 0.0 1 Embedded grammar DSL and LALR parser generator ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2013-02-07 0.2.2 DavidFox , OlleFredriksson IndentParser (deprecated in favor of indentparser ) 10 0.0 3 Combinators for parsing indentation based syntatic structures ( deprecated , library , parsing ) 2007-10-19 0.2.1 PiyushKurur Kawaii-Parser 11 0.0 0 A simple parsing library and some additional utilities. ( bsd3 , library , monad-transformers , parsing , tokenisation , utilities ) 2025-07-09 3.0.0 Liisi_Kerik LParse 21 0.0 1 A continuation-based parser library ( library , mit , parsing ) 2019-07-13 0.3.1.0 Sacchan LR-demo 1 0.0 0 LALR(1) parsetable generator and interpreter ( bsd3 , library , parsing , program ) 2025-11-05 0.0.20251105 AndreasAbel PArrows 5 0.0 1 Arrow parser combinators similar to Parsec ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2009-01-24 0.1.1 GwernBranwen ParsecTools 1 0.0 11 Parsec combinators for more complex objects. ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2010-09-22 0.0.2.0 ChristianHoener ParserFunction (deprecated in favor of attoparsec ) 22 0.0 1 Parse and evaluate mathematical expressions. ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , math , parsing ) 2014-05-14 0.1.0 EnzoHaussecker RLP 11 0.0 0 RLP serialization as defined in Ethereum Yellow Paper ( data , lgpl , library , parsing ) 2018-12-10 jasagredo RefSerialize 39 0.0 4 Write to and read from ByteStrings maintaining internal memory references ( bsd3 , data , database , library , parsing ) 2017-02-06 0.4.0 AlbertoCorona SVG2Q 3 0.0 1 Code generation tool for Quartz code from a SVG. ( bsd3 , parsing , program ) 2011-01-27 0.3 JanGreve SableCC2Hs 10 0.0 1 Generate a parser (in Haskell) with the SableCC parser generator. ( bsd3 , library , parsing , program ) 2012-06-13 0.0.1.0 MarcFontaine ValveValueKeyvalue 7 1.5 0 A Valve Value-keyvalue parser for Haskell made with Parsec. ( keyvalue , library , mit , parsing , source , valve ) 2021-10-18 1.1.0.0 berna WikimediaParser 1 0.0 1 A parser for wikimedia style article markup. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2009-02-06 0.1 EzekielSmithburg XSaiga 22 2.0 1 An implementation of a polynomial-time top-down parser suitable for NLP ( attribute-grammars , bsd3 , library , memoization , natural-language-processing , parser-combinators , parsing , program , text ) 2020-10-07 1.7.0.0 InBetweenNames aasam 4 2.0 0 Convert distfix precedence grammars to unambiguous context-free grammars. ( apache , library , parsing ) 2022-08-18 0.2.0.0 mobotsar aeson-value-parser 89 0.0 2 API for parsing "aeson" JSON tree into Haskell types ( data , json , library , mit , parsing ) 2023-12-09 0.19.7.2 NikitaVolkov algebraic-graphs-io 35 0.0 0 I/O utilities and datasets for algebraic-graphs ( bsd3 , data-mining , graphs , library , parsing ) 2022-08-26 0.5.0.1 ocramz antlrc 6 0.0 1 Haskell binding to the ANTLR parser generator C runtime library. ( bsd3 , library , parsing , program ) 2011-01-20 0.0.2 MarkWright appar 25 0.0 4 A simple applicative parser ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2019-05-07 0.1.8 KazuYamamoto aterm 7 0.0 2 serialisation for Haskell values with sharing support ( data , gpl , library , parsing ) 2020-10-06 0.1.0.2 ChristianMaeder attoparsec 247 2.75 962 Fast combinator parsing for bytestrings and text ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2022-01-10 0.14.4 BasVanDijk , BenGamari , BryanOSullivan attoparsec-aeson 8 0.0 34 Parsing of aeson's Value with attoparsec ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-05-17 2.2.2.0 phadej attoparsec-conduit (deprecated in favor of conduit-extra ) 35 0.0 34 Consume attoparsec parsers via conduit. (deprecated) ( conduit , data , deprecated , library , mit , parsing ) 2014-04-02 1.1.0 MichaelSnoyman attoparsec-data 52 0.0 6 Parsers for the standard Haskell data types ( library , mit , parsing ) 2023-12-09 1.0.5.4 NikitaVolkov attoparsec-enumerator (deprecated) 47 0.0 23 Pass input from an enumerator to an Attoparsec parser. ( deprecated , enumerator , library , mit , parsing , text ) 2015-05-16 0.3.4 JohnMillikin attoparsec-expr 7 0.0 5 Port of parsec's expression parser to attoparsec. ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2015-05-11 0.1.1.2 AdamBergmark , ErikHesselink , SebastiaanVisser attoparsec-framer 21 0.0 0 Use Attoparsec to parse framed protocol byte streams ( attoparsec , bsd3 , library , network-api , parsing , program ) 2025-06-23 0.1.0.10 adetokunbo attoparsec-iso8601 16 2.0 6 Parsing of ISO 8601 dates, originally from aeson ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-05-17 1.1.1.0 AdamBergmark , phadej , lyxia attoparsec-isotropic 6 0.0 1 right-to-left parser backward compatible with attoparsec ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2025-09-18 0.14.6 DaniilIaitskov attoparsec-parsec 25 0.0 1 An Attoparsec compatibility layer for Parsec ( library , mit , parsing ) 2014-03-21 0.1.3 SimonHengel attoparsec-run 7 0.0 1 Conveniently run Attoparsec parsers ( apache , library , parsing ) 2023-04-10 0.0.2.0 chris_martin , Monoid_Mary attoparsec-text (deprecated in favor of attoparsec ) 31 0.0 12 (deprecated) ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing , text ) 2012-01-30 0.8.5.3 BryanOSullivan , FelipeLessa attoparsec-text-enumerator 5 0.0 2 (deprecated) ( enumerator , library , mit , parsing , text ) 2012-01-30 0.2.0.1 FelipeLessa binary 211 0.0 1147 Binary serialisation for Haskell values using lazy ByteStrings ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2018-08-02 BenGamari , DonaldStewart , IanLynagh , LennartKolmodin binary-bits 17 0.0 10 Bit parsing/writing on top of binary. ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2015-01-09 0.5 LennartKolmodin binary-ext 16 0.0 1 An alternate with strong-typed errors for `Data.Binary.Get` monad from `binary` package. ( data , library , parsing ) 2018-06-01 2.0.4 warlock binary-generic 7 0.0 1 Generic binary serialisation using binary and syb. ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2012-08-07 0.2.1 LarsPetersen binary-generic-combinators 14 0.0 0 Combinators and utilities to make Generic-based deriving of Binary easier and more expressive ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2025-07-19 0.4.4.1 0xd34df00d binary-io 21 2.0 0 Read and write values of types that implement Binary ( bsd3 , data , io , library , parsing ) 2021-11-16 0.6.2 vapourismo binary-orphans 67 0.0 11 Compatibility package for binary; provides instances ( binary , bsd3 , compatibility , data , library , parsing ) 2024-05-17 1.0.5 phadej binary-strict 67 0.0 11 Binary deserialisation using strict ByteStrings ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2020-04-11 0.4.8.6 AdamLangley , DominicSteinitz bit-protocol 12 2.0 1 Encode binary protocols with some odd bit numbers into a bytestring ( bits , bsd3 , bytes , data , library , parsing , protocols ) 2018-07-30 0.2.3.0 k_bx bond-haskell 25 0.0 1 Runtime support for BOND serialization ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2016-11-26 0.1.5.0 blaze boolexpr 6 0.0 2 Boolean expressions with various representations and search queries. ( bsd3 , data-structures , library , parsing , search ) 2023-03-13 0.2 NicolasPouillard boomerang 104 0.0 8 Library for invertible parsing and printing ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2025-08-25 1.4.9.4 DagOdenhall , JeremyShaw bytearray-parsing 2 0.0 1 Parsing of bytearray-based data ( library , mit , parsing ) 2017-11-06 0.1 NikitaVolkov bytestring-substring 2 0.0 0 break bytestrings up into substrings ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2019-04-25 0.1 chessai bytestringparser 8 0.0 1 Combinator parsing with Data.ByteString.Lazy ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2008-01-27 0.3 BryanOSullivan bytestringparser-temporary 12 0.0 2 Combinator parsing with Data.ByteString.Lazy ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2009-09-15 0.4.1 JasonDusek ca-patterns 9 0.0 0 Manipulate patterns in cellular automata, create and parse RLE files ( data , library , mit , parsing , text ) 2022-04-16 0.2.0.0 OwenBechtel caerbannog 34 2.0 1 That rabbit's got a vicious streak a mile wide! ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2022-08-28 1.0.0.2 fozworth cassava-megaparsec 26 0.0 2 Megaparsec parser of CSV files that plays nicely with Cassava ( csv , library , mit , parsing , text , web ) 2024-02-28 2.1.1 jsl , stackbuilders , sestrella , wild_willy cassette 7 0.0 1 Combinators to simultaneously define parsers and pretty printers ( apache , library , parsing , text ) 2025-06-20 0.2.0.1 MathieuBoespflug cereal 71 2.25 463 A binary serialization library ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2022-08-09 0.5.8.3 EricMertens , ThomasDuBuisson , TrevorElliott cereal-ieee754 (deprecated in favor of cereal ) 1 0.0 1 Floating point support for the 'cereal' serialization library ( bsd3 , data , deprecated , library , parsing ) 2011-08-31 0.1 JacobStanley cereal-io-streams 2 0.0 1 io-streams support for the cereal binary serialization library ( bsd3 , data , io-streams , library , parsing ) 2016-07-08 0.0.1.0 MichaelXavier cereal-streams (deprecated in favor of wire-streams ) 2 0.0 1 Use cereal to encode/decode io-streams. ( bsd3 , data , deprecated , io-streams , library , parsing ) 2016-07-09 0.0.1.0 winterland check-cfg-ambiguity 11 0.0 0 Checks context free grammar for ambiguity using brute force up to given limit ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-06-02 0.1.1.0 safinaskar chronos 109 2.0 26 A high-performance time library ( bsd3 , data , development , library , parsing , time ) 2025-07-15 1.1.7.0 andrewthad , chessai , l3c_amartin cmark-patterns 3 0.0 1 Pattern synonyms for cmark ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2017-08-08 0.1.0.0 Artyom codec-libevent (deprecated) 10 0.0 2 Cross-platform structure serialisation ( bsd3 , data , deprecated , library , parsing , program ) 2008-01-27 0.1.2 AdamLangley commander-cli 46 2.0 0 A command line argument/option parser library ( cli , library , mit , options , parsing , program , system ) 2023-01-17 0.11.0.0 sgschlesinger comparse 7 2.0 0 A highly generic parser combinators library. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2022-01-16 0.2.0.0 nasso concrete-relaxng-parser 6 0.0 1 A parser driven by a standard RELAX NG schema with concrete syntax extensions. ( parsing , program , xml ) 2012-08-23 0.1.1 MarioBlazevic conf 5 2.0 1 Parser for Haskell-based configuration files. ( bsd3 , configuration , library , parsing ) 2015-07-17 0.1.1.0 carymrobbins construct 20 0.0 0 Haskell version of the Construct library for easy specification of file formats ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing , serialization ) 2024-12-15 0.3.2 MarioBlazevic cooklang-hs 5 2.0 0 Parser for the Cook markup language ( library , mit , parsing , program ) 2023-12-27 0.1.1 isaacvando cron 55 2.0 6 Cron datatypes and Attoparsec parser ( library , mit , parsing , system , text ) 2024-11-09 0.7.2 MichaelXavier cron-compat (deprecated in favor of cron ) 2 0.0 1 Cron datatypes and Attoparsec parser ( deprecated , library , mit , parsing , system , text ) 2015-06-09 0.2.6 andrewthad crypto-pubkey-openssh 24 0.0 3 OpenSSH keys decoder/encoder ( cryptography , library , mit , parsing ) 2015-01-21 0.2.7 FedorGogolev data-reify 37 0.0 13 Reify a recursive data structure into an explicit graph. ( bsd3 , data , language , library , parsing , reflection ) 2024-10-27 0.6.4 AndyGill , ryanglscott data-stm32 2 0.0 0 ARM SVD and CubeMX XML parser and pretty printer for STM32 family ( bsd3 , library , parsing , program ) 2018-02-21 0.1.0.0 srk data-treify 12 0.0 3 Reify a recursive data structure into an explicit graph. ( bsd3 , data , language , library , parsing , reflection- ) 2014-03-18 0.3.4 ConalElliott derp 11 0.0 2 Derivative Parsing ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2012-03-28 0.1.6 DavidDarais descriptive 54 0.0 1 Self-describing consumers/parsers; forms, cmd-line args, JSON, etc. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2018-08-31 0.9.5 ChrisDone dhscanner-ast 42 2.0 2 abstract syntax tree for multiple programming languages ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2026-01-03 1.1.4 OrenHackage dhscanner-kbgen 34 0.0 0 knowledge base predicates for static code analysis ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2025-11-29 1.0.13 OrenHackage diff-parse 7 0.0 3 A parser for diff file formats ( agpl , library , parsing ) 2015-02-15 0.2.1 mulby , vengefulpickle distributors 15 0.0 0 Unifying Parsers, Printers & Grammars ( bsd3 , library , optics , parsing , profunctors ) 2025-07-08 0.2.0.1 echatav docrecords 1 0.0 1 Vinyl-based records with hierarchical field names, default values and documentation ( cli , data , json , library , mit , options , parsing , records ) 2019-10-09 0.1.0.0 YvesPares dtd-text 19 0.0 2 Parse and render XML DTDs ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing , text , xml ) 2014-01-08 0.1.2.0 YitzGale , M15K ebnf-bff 3 0.0 0 Parser combinators & EBNF, BFFs! ( ebnf , library , metalanguage , mit , parsing , program , text ) 2015-09-20 0.1.1.0 Lokidottir emacs-keys 4 0.0 1 library to parse emacs style keybinding into the modifiers and the chars ( library , parsing ) 2015-07-06 0.0.2.0 cocreature expat-enumerator (deprecated) 8 0.0 1 Enumerator-based API for Expat ( deprecated , enumerator , library , mit , parsing , text , xml ) 2010-12-05 0.1.0.3 JohnMillikin expression-parser 1 0.0 1 Generalization of parsec's expression parser. ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2013-01-27 0.1 SebastiaanVisser extensions 35 0.0 1 Parse Haskell Language Extensions ( ghc , haskell , library , mpl , parsing ) 2025-09-27 0.1.1.0 tomjaguarpaw , vrom911 faster-megaparsec 13 0.0 0 Speed up Megaparsec parsing when parsing succeeds ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2022-11-11 0.1.2.0 olf fastparser (deprecated) 26 2.0 1 A fast, but bare bones, bytestring parser combinators library. ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing ) 2023-06-08 0.6.0 SimonMarechal fez-conf 15 0.0 2 Simple functions for loading config files ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2015-03-28 1.0.3 DinoMorelli fit 6 0.0 1 FIT file decoder ( bsd3 , data , fitness , library , parsing ) 2016-03-04 0.5.2 mgiles fixhs 13 0.0 1 FIX (co)parser ( lgpl , library , parsing , program , protocol , text ) 2012-07-11 0.1.4 ArvinMoezzi flat 24 2.25 5 Principled and efficient bit-oriented binary serialization. ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing , serialization ) 2022-11-07 0.6 PasqualinoAssini flatparse 105 0.0 11 High-performance parsing from strict bytestrings ( library , mit , parsing ) 2025-10-07 0.5.3.1 AndrasKovacs flexible-numeric-parsers 3 0.0 0 Flexible numeric parsers for real-world programming languages. ( library , mit , parsing ) 2021-08-26 0.1.0.0 patrick_thomson flight-igc 5 0.0 1 A parser for IGC files. ( data , library , mpl , parsing ) 2018-09-11 1.0.0 philderbeast flight-kml 6 0.0 1 Parsing of pilot tracklogs dumped as KML. ( data , flight , geography , gps , kml , library , mpl , parsing , xml ) 2018-09-11 1.0.1 philderbeast foscam-filename 9 0.0 2 Foscam File format ( bsd3 , data , file , library , parsing ) 2015-11-19 0.0.4 TonyMorris foscam-sort 7 0.0 1 Foscam File format ( bsd3 , data , file , library , parsing , program ) 2016-11-26 0.0.3 TonyMorris free-foil 10 0.0 0 Efficient Type-Safe Capture-Avoiding Substitution for Free (Scoped Monads) ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-10-27 0.2.0 NickolayKudasov fuzzy-dates 16 1.75 2 Libary for parsing dates in strings in varied formats. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2020-03-07 0.1.1.2 ReedOei fuzzy-parse 5 0.0 0 Tools for processing unstructured text data ( library , mit , parsing , text ) 2020-07-07 0.1.2.0 voidlizard gather 2 0.0 0 An applicative for parsing unordered things, heterogenous sorting ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing , sorting ) 2020-05-12 0.1.0.0 RobertHensing gcodehs 9 0.0 0 GCode processor ( bsd3 , library , parsing , program ) 2020-06-17 0.1.2.0 srk getflag 3 0.0 1 Command-line parser. ( library , mit , parsing ) 2010-05-22 1.0 TroelsHenriksen grammar-combinators 26 0.0 1 A parsing library of context-free grammar combinators. ( library , parsing ) 2013-01-02 0.2.7 DominiqueDevriese grammatical-parsers 51 0.0 3 parsers that combine into grammars ( bsd3 , library , parsing , program , text ) 2025-04-20 0.7.2.1 MarioBlazevic harg 29 2.0 0 Haskell program configuration using higher kinded data ( bsd3 , cli , hkd , library , options , parsing , system ) 2021-03-04 0.5.0.0 alexpeits hascal 25 0.0 1 tiny calculator library and command-line program ( console , library , math , parsing , program , tools , utility , utils ) 2017-02-27 3.0.1 DagOdenhall , MekeorMelire haskell-modbus 12 0.0 1 A cereal-based parser for the Modbus protocol ( bsd3 , data , library , network , parsing ) 2014-04-15 0.3.2 JasonHickner headed-megaparsec 40 0.0 2 More informative parser ( library , megaparsec , mit , parsers , parsing ) 2023-12-11 0.2.1.3 NikitaVolkov hextream 10 0.0 0 Streaming-friendly XML parsers ( library , parsing , xml ) 2021-02-27 0.3.0.0 koral hourglass-fuzzy-parsing 6 2.0 1 A small library for parsing more human friendly date/time formats. ( bsd3 , library , parsing , time ) 2015-07-24 0.1.0.1 TannerDoshier hsemail 85 0.0 7 Parsec parsers for the Internet Message format (e-mail) ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-02-02 2.2.2 GwernBranwen , PeterSimons hsemail-ns 8 0.0 1 Internet Message Parsers ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2017-12-11 1.7.7 JoeFredette , phlummox hslogger-reader 11 0.0 0 Parsing hslogger-produced logs. ( bsd3 , interfaces , library , parsing , program ) 2017-08-14 1.0.3 alex_bates hsmisc (deprecated) 4 0.0 1 A collection of miscellaneous modules ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , logging , monads , parsing ) 2015-06-29 1.2 DinoMorelli hspec-attoparsec 8 0.0 1 Utility functions for testing your attoparsec parsers with hspec ( bsd3 , library , parsing , testing ) 2015-03-21 0.1.0.2 AlpMestanogullari hspec-megaparsec 43 0.0 4 Utility functions for testing Megaparsec parsers with Hspec ( bsd3 , library , parsing , testing ) 2023-10-24 2.2.1 mrkkrp hspec-parsec 1 0.0 0 Hspec expectations for testing Parsec parsers ( bsd3 , library , parsing , testing ) 2019-08-23 0 sjakobi html-entities 48 0.0 16 A codec library for HTML-escaped text and HTML-entities ( codecs , html , library , mit , parsing ) 2024-01-23 1.1.4.7 NikitaVolkov html-tokenizer 40 0.0 1 An "attoparsec"-based HTML tokenizer ( html , library , mit , parsing , xml ) 2018-02-05 0.6.4 NikitaVolkov inchworm 14 0.0 1 Simple parser combinators for lexical analysis. ( library , mit , parsing ) 2019-01-02 1.1.1.2 BenLippmeier incremental-parser 116 0.0 5 Generic parser library capable of providing partial results from partial input. ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2023-12-19 0.5.1 MarioBlazevic indentation 25 0.0 2 Indentation sensitive parsing combinators for Parsec and Trifecta ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2018-10-06 0.3.3 MichaelAdams , OmerAgacan , AlekseyKliger indentation-core 6 0.0 3 Indentation sensitive parsing combinators core library ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2018-10-06 0.0.0.2 AlekseyKliger indentation-parsec 6 0.0 2 Indentation sensitive parsing combinators for Parsec ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2018-10-06 0.0.0.2 AlekseyKliger indentation-trifecta 10 0.0 1 Indentation sensitive parsing combinators for Trifecta ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2018-10-06 0.1.0 AlekseyKliger indents 27 0.0 6 indentation sensitive parser-combinators for parsec ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2019-10-02 0.5.0.1 JasperVanDerJeugt , SamAnklesaria infix 2 0.0 1 Infix expression re-parsing (for HsParser library) ( library , parsing ) 2008-03-05 0.1.1 GwernBranwen input-parsers 42 0.0 5 Extension of the parsers library with more capability and efficiency ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2023-11-25 0.3.0.2 MarioBlazevic iteratee-parsec 13 0.0 1 Package allowing parsec parser initeratee ( data , library , mit , parsing ) 2010-11-28 0.0.6 MaciejPiechotka json-incremental-decoder 6 0.0 1 Incremental JSON parser with early termination and a declarative DSL ( data , json , library , mit , parsing ) 2017-04-07 0.1.2 NikitaVolkov json-pointer 15 0.0 3 JSON Pointer parsing and interpretation utilities ( data , json , library , mit , parsing ) 2019-01-22 0.1.2.2 NikitaVolkov kangaroo 9 0.0 1 Binary parsing with random access. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2010-02-23 0.4.0 StephenTetley lasercutter 2 0.0 0 A high-powered, single-pass tree parser. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2022-09-08 0.1.0.0 isovector lathe 1 0.0 1 Pure incremental byte parser. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-10-25 0.1.0.0 OleksiiDivak lathe-time 2 0.0 0 lathe + time ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-10-25 0.1.0.0 OleksiiDivak lex-applicative (deprecated) 6 0.0 0 See README for more info ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing , text ) 2019-12-25 0.0.0.1 libxml-enumerator (deprecated) 21 0.0 1 Enumerator-based API for libXML's SAX interface ( deprecated , enumerator , library , mit , parsing , text , xml ) 2011-04-06 0.5 JohnMillikin libxml-sax 43 0.0 5 Bindings for the libXML2 SAX interface ( foreign , library , mit , parsing , text , xml ) 2024-11-26 0.7.6 StephenWeber lispparser 17 0.0 1 Simple parser for LISP S-expressions ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2011-01-20 0.3.1 EricKow list-t-attoparsec 22 0.0 1 An "attoparsec" adapter for "list-t" ( library , mit , parsing , streaming ) 2016-10-19 0.4.1 NikitaVolkov little-earley 9 0.0 0 Simple implementation of Earley parsing ( library , mit , parsing ) 2021-05-29 0.2.0.0 lyxia looksee 38 0.0 2 A simple text parser with decent errors ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2025-04-18 0.8.1 ejconlon looksee-trip 11 0.0 0 A simple text parser with decent errors ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-12-18 0.8.0 ejconlon machines-attoparsec 3 0.0 0 Parse machines streams with attoparsec parsers. ( bsd3 , control , data , enumerator , library , parsing , text ) 2019-01-31 0 davean makefile 33 0.0 1 Simple Makefile parser and generator ( library , mit , parsing ) 2025-11-14 1.1.0.2 nmattia megaparsec 190 2.75 305 Monadic parser combinators ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2024-11-19 9.7.0 HerbertValerioRiedel , TikhonJelvis , mrkkrp megaparsec-csv 7 0.0 0 A megaparsec library for CSV files. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2025-12-17 0.1 noahmartinwilliams megaparsec-tests 38 0.0 0 Test utilities and the test suite of Megaparsec ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2024-11-19 9.7.0 mrkkrp megaparsec-time 11 0.0 0 Parsers and utilities for the Megaparsec library. ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2025-07-29 0.2.0.1 haskell_github_trust , drlkf megaparsec-utils 13 0.0 1 Parsers and utilities for the Megaparsec library. ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2025-08-07 0.1.1.3 haskell_github_trust , drlkf mello 9 0.0 0 No-fuss syntax with s-expressions ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-12-18 0.3.0 ejconlon mtlparse 22 0.0 2 parse library using mtl package ( library , parsing ) 2015-01-21 0.1.4.0 YoshikuniJujo multiarg 63 0.0 3 Command lines for options that take multiple arguments ( bsd3 , console , library , parsing ) 2015-09-10 0.30.0.10 OmariNorman netstring-enumerator (deprecated) 6 0.0 1 Enumerator-based netstring parsing ( deprecated , enumerator , gpl , library , network , parsing ) 2012-10-20 0.1.1 JohnMillikin network-attoparsec 36 0.0 3 Utility functions for running a parser against a socket ( library , mit , network , parsing ) 2015-03-15 0.12.2 solatis nextstep-plist 2 0.0 1 NextStep style plist parser and printer ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2012-09-30 0.0.1 JanChristiansen opentheory-parser 24 0.0 3 Stream parsers ( library , mit , parsing ) 2015-10-19 1.160 JoeHurd optima 36 0.0 2 Simple command line interface arguments parser ( cli , library , mit , options , parsing ) 2025-06-04 0.4.0.7 NikitaVolkov optparse-applicative 100 3.0 420 Utilities and combinators for parsing command line options ( bsd3 , cli , library , options , parsing , system ) 2025-06-03 0.19.0.0 PaoloCapriotti , huw optparse-applicative-cmdline-util 10 0.0 0 Utility functions for working with optparse-applicative ( agpl , cli , library , options , parsing , system ) 2024-03-18 0.2.1 TonyZorman optparse-applicative-dex 6 0.0 0 Extra functions for working with optparse-applicative ( cli , console , library , options , parsing ) 2025-09-05 1.0.1 DinoMorelli optparse-applicative-simple 16 0.0 1 Simple command line interface arguments parser ( cli , library , mit , options , parsing ) 2019-07-06 1.1.0.2 NikitaVolkov optparse-enum 3 0.0 0 An enum-text based toolkit for optparse-applicative ( bsd3 , cli , library , options , parsing , system ) 2019-07-21 1.0.0.0 ChrisDornan optstream 5 0.0 0 Command line option parsing library with a twice applicative interface ( bsd3 , cli , library , options , parsing ) 2022-04-14 0.1.1.0 danshved papillon 39 2.0 6 packrat parser ( bsd3 , library , parsing , program ) 2019-10-24 0.1.1.1 YoshikuniJujo parco (deprecated in favor of parser-combinators ) 3 0.0 3 Generalised parser combinators ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing ) 2013-11-27 0.1 TroelsHenriksen parco-attoparsec (deprecated in favor of parser-combinators ) 4 0.0 1 Generalised parser combinators - Attoparsec interface ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing ) 2013-11-27 0.1 TroelsHenriksen parco-parsec (deprecated in favor of parser-combinators ) 4 0.0 1 Generalised parser combinators - Parsec interface ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing ) 2013-11-27 0.1 TroelsHenriksen parse-dimacs 14 0.0 4 DIMACS CNF parser library ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2012-10-01 1.3 DenisBueno parsec 104 2.75 951 Monadic parser combinators ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2025-01-05 3.1.18.0 AntoineLatter , HerbertValerioRiedel , phadej parsec-extra 18 0.0 3 Some miscellaneous basic string parsers. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2016-11-16 0.2.0.0 AriePeterson parsec-numbers 23 0.0 6 Utilities for parsing numbers from strings ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2014-09-05 0.1.0 ChristianMaeder parsec-numeric 3 0.0 2 Parsec combinators for parsing Haskell numeric types. ( library , parsing ) 2017-01-07 0.1.0.0 andrewrademacher parsec-parsers (deprecated in favor of parsers ) 11 0.0 1 Parsing instances for Parsec ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing , text ) 2013-11-05 0.2 DagOdenhall , EdwardKmett parsec-permutation 9 0.0 1 Applicative permutation parser for Parsec intended as a replacement for Text.Parsec.Perm. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2013-03-08 0.1.2.0 SamuelHoffstaetter parsec-trace 5 0.0 1 Add a hierarchical trace to Parsec parsers. ( library , mit , parsing ) 2015-11-04 0.0.0.2 sleepomeno parsec-utils 1 0.0 1 Utility functions and combinators for Text.Parsec ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2012-11-06 0.1.0.0 RemcoNiemeijer parsec1 35 0.0 3 Portable monadic parser combinators ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2021-06-22 1.0.0.8 ChristianMaeder parsec2 7 0.0 3 Monadic parser combinators ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2015-11-17 1.0.1 AntoineLatter parsec3 40 0.0 9 Monadic parser combinators ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2015-02-16 1.0.1.8 ChristianMaeder parsec3-numbers 16 0.0 3 Utilities for parsing numbers from Char sequences ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2014-09-05 0.1.0 ChristianMaeder parsek 26 0.0 4 Parallel Parsing Processes ( gpl , library , parsing ) 2020-10-20 1.0.4.0 JeanPhilippeBernardy parsely 3 0.0 1 ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2007-07-15 0.1 SamuelBronson parser-combinators 62 0.0 80 Lightweight package providing commonly useful parser combinators ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2026-01-05 1.3.1 HerbertValerioRiedel , mrkkrp parser-combinators-tests 13 0.0 0 Test suite of parser-combinators ( bsd3 , parsing ) 2026-01-05 1.3.1 mrkkrp parser-regex 18 2.0 1 Regex based parsers ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2025-04-19 0.3.0.0 meooow parser-unbiased-choice-monad-embedding 22 0.0 0 Parsing library with unbiased choice and support for embedding arbitrary monad ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-06-02 0.0.1.0 safinaskar parsers 118 2.25 85 Parsing combinators ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2024-10-26 0.12.12 EdwardKmett , EricMertens , ryanglscott parsers-megaparsec 8 0.0 2 `parsers` instances for Megaparsec ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2023-04-05 0.1.0.2 qfpl parsimony (deprecated) 10 0.0 2 Monadic parser combinators derived from Parsec ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing ) 2012-02-06 1.3 IavorDiatchki parsix 21 0.0 1 Parser combinators with slicing, error recovery, and syntax highlighting ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2020-03-01 0.2.2.1 OlleFredriksson parsley 24 2.25 1 A fast parser combinator library backed by Typed Template Haskell ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2023-08-20 2.0.0.1 j_mie6 parsley-core 52 2.25 2 A fast parser combinator library backed by Typed Template Haskell ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2023-08-20 2.3.0.0 j_mie6 penn-treebank 5 0.0 1 Tools for manipulating the Penn TreeBank ( bsd3 , library , natural-language-processing , parsing ) 2009-06-20 0.1.0.1 EricKow penntreebank-megaparsec 5 0.0 0 Parser combinators for trees in the Penn Treebank format ( bsd3 , library , natural-language-processing , parsing ) 2020-05-14 0.2.0 twotrees12 permute (deprecated in favor of parser-combinators ) 3 0.0 3 Generalised permutation parser combinator ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing ) 2011-09-22 1.0 TroelsHenriksen persist 42 0.0 5 Minimal serialization library with focus on performance ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2025-07-16 1.0.0.0 minad , KyleButt persist-state 6 0.0 0 Serialization library with state and leb128 encoding ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing ) 2020-06-21 0.2.0.0 minad picoparsec (deprecated in favor of grammatical-parsers , incremental-parser , attoparsec ) 16 2.0 1 Fast combinator parsing for bytestrings and text ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing , text ) 2015-08-13 0.1.2.3 MarioBlazevic pipes-parse 48 2.0 34 Parsing infrastructure for the pipes ecosystem ( bsd3 , control , library , parsing , pipes ) 2021-02-12 3.0.9 GabrielGonzalez polar-configfile 21 0.0 1 Fork of ConfigFile for Polar Game Engine ( bsd3 , game-engine , library , parsing ) 2016-08-07 0.5.0.0 Shockk polyparse 75 0.0 18 A variety of alternative parser combinator libraries. ( library , parsing , text ) 2025-09-14 1.13.1 AndreasAbel , MalcolmWallace , phadej ponder 3 0.0 1 PEG parser combinator ( library , mit , parsing ) 2014-03-06 0.0.1 matt postgresql-binary 234 0.0 11 Encoders and decoders for the PostgreSQL's binary format ( codecs , database , library , mit , parsing , postgresql ) 2026-01-07 0.15.0.1 NikitaVolkov postgresql-syntax 51 0.0 3 PostgreSQL AST parsing and rendering ( database , library , mit , parsing , postgresql ) 2026-01-05 0.4.2 NikitaVolkov pro-source 1 0.0 0 Utilities for tracking source locations ( library , mpl , parsing ) 2022-02-03 0.1.0.0 chris_martin , Monoid_Mary property-list 37 0.0 3 Apple property list parser ( data , library , parsing , public-domain , xml ) 2015-06-19 0.1.0.5 JamesCook ptera 11 0.0 1 A parser generator ( library , parsing ) 2023-09-11 0.4.0.0 mizunashi_mana ptera-core 4 0.0 2 A parser generator ( library , parsing ) 2023-09-11 0.2.0.0 mizunashi_mana ptera-th 18 0.0 0 A parser generator ( library , parsing ) 2023-09-11 0.7.0.0 mizunashi_mana replace-attoparsec 28 0.0 1 Find, replace, split string patterns with Attoparsec parsers (instead of regex) ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2023-05-30 1.5.0.0 JamesBrock , haskell_github_trust replace-megaparsec 74 0.0 5 Find, replace, split string patterns with Megaparsec parsers (instead of regex) ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2023-05-30 1.5.0.1 JamesBrock , haskell_github_trust rere 9 2.0 0 Regular-expressions extended with fixpoints for context-free powers ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2025-09-12 0.2.0.2 ArtemPelenitsyn roman-numerals 37 0.0 4 Parsing and pretty printing of Roman numerals ( bsd3 , library , numerical , parsing ) 2014-11-07 0.5.1.5 RoelVanDijk safecopy 185 2.0 63 Binary serialization with version control. ( data , library , parsing , public-domain ) 2025-08-27 0.10.4.3 AdamGundry , AndreasAbel , DavidFox , DavidHimmelstrup , DavidJohnson , JeremyShaw safecopy-store 11 0.0 2 Binary serialization with version control. ( data , library , parsing , public-domain ) 2017-12-21 0.9.6 NCrashed scanner 13 0.0 6 Fast non-backtracking incremental combinator parsing for bytestrings ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2019-09-18 0.3.1 YurasShumovich scanner-attoparsec 7 0.0 1 Inject attoparsec parser with backtracking into non-backtracking scanner ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2021-04-02 0.2 YurasShumovich sexp 8 0.0 1 S-Expression parsing/printing made fun and easy ( gpl , language , library , parsing , program ) 2013-02-26 0.7 AlexandruScvortov simple-atom 5 0.0 1 Atom (or symbol) datatype for fast comparision and sorting. ( bsd3 , compilers-interpreters , data , library , parsing ) 2011-04-06 0.2 ThomasSchilling simple-parser 55 0.0 0 Simple parser combinators ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2022-12-06 0.12.1 ejconlon snack 9 0.0 0 Strict ByteString Parser Combinator ( library , parsing , text ) 2022-07-16 0.4.0.0 mordae snail 9 0.0 0 A programming language with no semantics ( library , mit , parsing ) 2023-09-01 0.1.2.1 chiroptical streaming-binary 13 0.0 3 Streaming interface to binary. ( bsd3 , library , parsing , streaming ) 2017-05-31 0.3.0.1 MathieuBoespflug streamly 95 2.5 35 Streaming data pipelines with declarative concurrency ( array , bsd3 , concurrency , dataflow , filesystem , library , list , logic , network , non-determinism , parsing , pipes , reactivity , streaming , streamly , time , unicode ) 2025-09-03 0.11.0 harendra , pranaysashank , adithyaov streamly-core 23 2.0 21 Streaming, parsers, arrays, serialization and more ( array , bsd3 , dataflow , library , list , logic , non-determinism , parsing , pipes , streaming , streamly , time ) 2025-09-03 0.3.0 harendra , adithyaov streamly-fsevents 1 0.0 0 File system event notification API ( array , bsd3 , concurrency , dataflow , filesystem , library , list , logic , network , non-determinism , parsing , pipes , reactivity , streaming , streamly , time , unicode ) 2025-09-12 0.1.0 harendra , adithyaov strptime 59 0.0 5 Efficient parsing of LocalTime using a binding to C's strptime, with some extra features (i.e. fractional seconds) ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing , system ) 2012-12-18 1.0.10 EugeneKirpichov substring-parser 12 0.0 1 Match / replace substrings with a parser combinators. ( apache , library , parsing , text ) 2018-07-22 0.4.1.0 igrep subtitleParser 15 0.0 2 A parser for .srt and .sub files ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2013-03-26 0.5 RubenAstudillo supplemented 10 0.0 1 Early termination for monads ( library , mit , parsing ) 2016-06-02 0.5.1 NikitaVolkov svg2q 6 0.0 1 Code generation tool for Quartz code from a SVG. ( bsd3 , parsing , program ) 2011-02-28 0.3.2 JanGreve symantic-cli 21 0.0 1 Symantics for parsing and documenting a CLI ( cli , gpl , library , options , parsing , system ) 2019-10-28 2.4.2.20190806 julm symantic-parser 12 0.0 0 Parser combinators statically optimized and staged via typed meta-programming ( agpl , library , parsing ) 2021-08-31 0.2.1.20210803 julm syntactical 4 0.0 1 Distfix expression parsing library ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2010-07-23 0.1 VoMinhThu tconfig 9 0.0 2 Simple text configuration file parser library. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2013-09-09 0.5.2 AnthonyGrimes , MariusGhita text-iso8601 4 0.0 3 Converting time to and from ISO 8601 text. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-05-17 0.1.1 phadej text-lips 7 0.0 1 Monadic parsing combinator library with attention to locations ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2022-09-17 0.1.0.2 MikhailVorozhtsov time-parsers 21 0.0 2 Parsers for types in `time`. ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2023-03-19 0.2 phadej tlex 9 0.0 3 A lexer generator ( library , parsing ) 2023-11-02 0.5.0.0 mizunashi_mana tlex-core 15 0.0 4 A lexer generator ( library , parsing ) 2023-09-11 0.4.0.0 mizunashi_mana tlex-debug 12 0.0 0 Debug utilities for Tlex ( library , parsing ) 2023-11-02 0.4.1.0 mizunashi_mana tlex-encoding 11 0.0 0 Encoding plugin for Tlex ( library , parsing ) 2023-11-02 0.4.1.0 mizunashi_mana tlex-th 20 0.0 0 TemplateHaskell plugin for Tlex ( library , parsing ) 2023-11-02 0.4.2.0 mizunashi_mana tptp 27 0.0 1 Parser and pretty printer for the TPTP language ( formal-methods , gpl , language , library , parsing , pretty-printer , theorem-provers ) 2021-01-11 0.1.3.0 EK tree-sitter 64 0.0 13 Unstable bindings for the tree-sitter parsing library. ( bsd3 , library , parsing , tree-sitter ) 2022-04-12 0.9.0.3 patrick_thomson , tclem , robrix , dcreager , aymannadeem , joshvera , maxbrunsfeld , rewinfrey , beka trifecta 329 2.5 44 A modern parser combinator library with convenient diagnostics ( bsd3 , diagnostics , library , logging , parsing , pretty-printer , text ) 2024-02-07 2.1.4 EdwardKmett , EricMertens , quchen , ryanglscott unparse-attoparsec 2 0.0 0 An attoparsec roundtrip ( library , mit , parsing , text ) 2018-12-07 0.1.0.0 lyxia utc 12 0.0 1 A pragmatic time and date library. ( data , library , mit , parsing , time ) 2015-06-17 0.2.0.1 LarsPetersen utf (deprecated) 3 0.0 0 UTF-8 ( bsd3 , deprecated , library , parsing , text ) 2019-12-15 0.0.0.0 uu-interleaved 17 0.0 3 An interleaving combinator for use with applicative style implementations. ( applicative , control , library , mit , parsing , text ) 2018-08-06 0.2.0.2 DoaitseSwierstra , JeroenBransen uu-parsinglib 212 0.0 18 Fast, online, error-correcting, monadic, applicative, merging, permuting, interleaving, idiomatic parser combinators. ( library , mit , parsercombinators , parsercombinators-parsing-text , parsing , parsing-text , text , text.parsercombinators , text.parsercombinators-parsing-text ) 2022-04-04 2.9.2 DoaitseSwierstra , JeroenBransen uu-tc 4 0.0 2 Haskell 98 parser combinators for INFOB3TC at Utrecht University ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2015-11-11 2015.1.1 TrevorMcDonell , joaopizani uu-tc-error 20 0.0 0 Haskell 98 parser combintors for INFOB3TC at Utrecht University ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2024-11-18 0.4.0.1 rednaZ uu-tc-error-error 8 0.0 1 utilities for parse errors ( bsd2 , library , parsing ) 2024-11-12 0.3.0.0 rednaZ uulib 55 2.0 17 Haskell Utrecht Tools Library ( bsd3 , library , parsing ) 2024-08-29 0.9.25 ArieMiddelkoop , AtzeDijkstra , DoaitseSwierstra , JeroenBransen , PhilippHausmann vcs-revision 3 0.0 1 Facilities for accessing the version control revision of the current directory. ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing , system ) 2014-05-16 0.0.2 EugeneKirpichov vflow-types 4 0.0 0 types for ingesting vflow data with aeson ( bsd3 , data , library , parsing , text , utility ) 2019-05-21 0.1 chessai weighted-regexp 18 0.0 2 Weighted Regular Expression Matcher ( bsd3 , library , parsing , text ) 2012-02-14 0.3.1.2 SebastianFischer winery 55 0.0 3 A compact, well-typed seralisation format for Haskell values ( bsd3 , codec , data , library , parsing , program , serialization ) 2024-11-23 1.5 FumiakiKinoshita wire-streams 5 0.0 2 Fast binary io-streams adapter. ( bsd3 , data , io-streams , library , parsing ) 2016-09-27 0.1.1.0 winterland xml-parsec 5 0.0 4 Parsing XML with Parsec ( library , parsing ) 2008-11-15 1.0.3 GwernBranwen , StephanFriedrichs xml-query 6 0.0 2 A parser-agnostic declarative API for querying XML-documents ( data , library , mit , parsing , xml ) 2021-06-07 0.9.1.1 NikitaVolkov xml-query-xml-conduit 10 0.0 1 A binding for the "xml-query" and "xml-conduit" libraries ( data , library , mit , parsing , xml ) 2016-04-04 0.3.1 NikitaVolkov xml-query-xml-types 9 0.0 1 An interpreter of "xml-query" queries for the "xml-types" documents ( data , library , mit , parsing , xml ) 2016-04-04 0.4.1 NikitaVolkov yajl-enumerator (deprecated) 22 0.0 1 Enumerator-based interface to YAJL, an event-based JSON implementation ( deprecated , enumerator , gpl , json , library , parsing , text ) 2012-10-28 0.4.1 JohnMillikin yoctoparsec 4 0.0 1 A truly tiny monadic parsing library ( library , mit , parsing ) 2016-02-04 0.1.0.0 mniip zydiskell 10 2.0 0 Haskell language binding for the Zydis library, a x86/x86-64 disassembler. ( disassembler , gpl , library , parsing , system ) 2020-11-22 0.2.0.0 nerded | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/porters-handbook/ | FreeBSD Porter's Handbook | FreeBSD Documentation Portal About About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Code of Conduct Get FreeBSD Get FreeBSD Release Information Release Engineering Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal FreeBSD Handbook Porter's Handbook Documentation Project Handbook Manual pages Presentations and papers Wiki Books Articles Community Community Get involved Forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Support ♥ Donate Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. Making a New Port Chapter 3. Quick Porting 3.1. Writing the Makefile 3.2. Writing the Description Files 3.3. Creating the Checksum File 3.4. Testing the Port 3.5. Checking the Port with portlint 3.6. Submitting the New Port Chapter 4. Slow Porting 4.1. How Things Work 4.2. Getting the Original Sources 4.3. Modifying the Port 4.4. Patching 4.5. Configuring 4.6. Handling User Input Chapter 5. Configuring the Makefile 5.1. The Original Source 5.2. Naming 5.3. Categorization 5.4. The Distribution Files 5.5. MAINTAINER 5.6. COMMENT 5.7. Project website 5.8. Licenses 5.9. PORTSCOUT 5.10. Dependencies 5.11. Slave Ports and MASTERDIR 5.12. Man Pages 5.13. Info Files 5.14. Makefile Options 5.15. Specifying the Working Directory 5.16. Conflict Handling 5.17. Installing Files 5.18. Use BINARY_ALIAS to Rename Commands Instead of Patching the Build Chapter 6. Special Considerations 6.1. Splitting long files 6.2. Staging 6.3. Bundled Libraries 6.4. Shared Libraries 6.5. Ports with Distribution Restrictions or Legal Concerns 6.6. Building Mechanisms 6.7. Using GNU Autotools 6.8. Using GNU gettext 6.9. Using Perl 6.10. Using X11 6.11. Using GNOME 6.12. GNOME Components 6.13. Using Qt 6.14. Using KDE 6.15. Using LXQt 6.16. Using Java 6.17. Web Applications, Apache and PHP 6.18. Using Python 6.19. Using Tcl/Tk 6.20. Using SDL 6.21. Using wxWidgets 6.22. Using Lua 6.23. Using Guile 6.24. Using iconv 6.25. Using Xfce 6.26. Using Budgie 6.27. Using Databases 6.28. Starting and Stopping Services ( rc Scripts) 6.29. Adding Users and Groups 6.30. Ports That Rely on Kernel Sources 6.31. Go Libraries 6.32. Haskell Libraries 6.33. Shell Completion Files Chapter 7. Flavors 7.1. An Introduction to Flavors 7.2. Using FLAVORS 7.3. USES=php and Flavors 7.4. USES=python and Flavors 7.5. USES=lua and Flavors 7.6. USES=guile and Flavors Chapter 8. Advanced pkg-plist Practices 8.1. Changing pkg-plist Based on Make Variables 8.2. Empty Directories 8.3. Configuration Files 8.4. Dynamic Versus Static Package List 8.5. Automated Package List Creation 8.6. Expanding Package List with Keywords Chapter 9. pkg-* 9.1. pkg-message 9.2. pkg-install, pkg-pre-install, and pkg-post-install 9.3. pkg-deinstall, pkg-pre-deinstall, and pkg-post-deinstall 9.4. Changing the Names of pkg-* 9.5. Making Use of SUB_FILES and SUB_LIST Chapter 10. Testing the Port 10.1. Running make describe 10.2. Running make test 10.3. Portclippy / Portfmt 10.4. Portlint 10.5. Port Tools 10.6. PREFIX and DESTDIR 10.7. poudriere 10.8. Debugging ports Chapter 11. Upgrading a Port 11.1. Using Git to Make Patches 11.2. UPDATING and MOVED Chapter 12. Security 12.1. Why Security is So Important 12.2. Fixing Security Vulnerabilities 12.3. Keeping the Community Informed Chapter 13. Dos and Don'ts 13.1. Introduction 13.2. WRKDIR 13.3. WRKDIRPREFIX 13.4. Differentiating Operating Systems and OS Versions 13.5. Writing Something After bsd.port.mk 13.6. Use the exec Statement in Wrapper Scripts 13.7. Do Things Rationally 13.8. Respect Both CC and CXX 13.9. Respect CFLAGS 13.10. Verbose Build Logs 13.11. Feedback 13.12. README.html 13.13. Marking a Port Not Installable with BROKEN , FORBIDDEN , or IGNORE 13.14. Architectural Considerations 13.15. Marking a Port for Removal with DEPRECATED or EXPIRATION_DATE 13.16. Avoid Use of the .error Construct 13.17. Usage of sysctl 13.18. Rerolling Distfiles 13.19. Use POSIX Standards 13.20. Miscellanea Chapter 14. A Sample Makefile Chapter 15. Order of Variables in Port Makefiles 15.1. PORTNAME Block 15.2. PATCHFILES Block 15.3. MAINTAINER Block 15.4. LICENSE Block 15.5. Generic BROKEN / IGNORE / DEPRECATED Messages 15.6. The Dependencies Block 15.7. Flavors 15.8. USES and USE_x 15.9. Standard bsd.port.mk Variables 15.10. Options and Helpers 15.11. The Rest of the Variables 15.12. The Targets Chapter 16. Keeping Up 16.1. FreshPorts 16.2. The Web Interface to the Source Repository 16.3. The FreeBSD Ports Mailing List 16.4. The FreeBSD Port Building Cluster 16.5. Portscout: the FreeBSD Ports Distfile Scanner Chapter 17. Using USES Macros 17.1. An Introduction to USES 17.2. 7z 17.3. ada 17.4. angr 17.5. ansible 17.6. apache 17.7. autoreconf 17.8. azurepy 17.9. blaslapack 17.10. bdb 17.11. bison 17.12. budgie 17.13. cabal 17.14. cargo 17.15. charsetfix 17.16. cl 17.17. cmake 17.18. compiler 17.19. cpe 17.20. cran 17.21. desktop-file-utils 17.22. desthack 17.23. display 17.24. dos2unix 17.25. drupal 17.26. ebur128 17.27. eigen 17.28. electronfix 17.29. elfctl 17.30. elixir 17.31. emacs 17.32. erlang 17.33. fakeroot 17.34. fam 17.35. firebird 17.36. fonts 17.37. fortran 17.38. fpc 17.39. fuse 17.40. gem 17.41. gettext 17.42. gettext-runtime 17.43. gettext-tools 17.44. ghostscript 17.45. gl 17.46. gmake 17.47. gnome 17.48. go 17.49. gperf 17.50. grantlee 17.51. groff 17.52. gssapi 17.53. gstreamer 17.54. guile 17.55. horde 17.56. iconv 17.57. imake 17.58. java 17.59. jpeg 17.60. kde 17.61. kmod 17.62. kodi 17.63. lazarus 17.64. ldap 17.65. lha 17.66. libarchive 17.67. libedit 17.68. libtool 17.69. linux 17.70. llvm 17.71. localbase 17.72. lua 17.73. luajit 17.74. lxqt 17.75. magick 17.76. makeinfo 17.77. makeself 17.78. mate 17.79. meson 17.80. metaport 17.81. minizip 17.82. mlt 17.83. mysql 17.84. mono 17.85. motif 17.86. mpi 17.87. ncurses 17.88. nextcloud 17.89. ninja 17.90. nodejs 17.91. objc 17.92. ocaml 17.93. octave 17.94. openal 17.95. pathfix 17.96. pear 17.97. perl5 17.98. pgsql 17.99. php 17.100. pkgconfig 17.101. pure 17.102. pyqt 17.103. pytest 17.104. python 17.105. qmail 17.106. qmake 17.107. qt 17.108. qt-dist 17.109. readline 17.110. ruby 17.111. samba 17.112. scons 17.113. sdl 17.114. shared-mime-info 17.115. shebangfix 17.116. sqlite 17.117. sbrk 17.118. ssl 17.119. sudo 17.120. tar 17.121. tcl 17.122. terminfo 17.123. tex 17.124. tk 17.125. trigger 17.126. uidfix 17.127. uniquefiles 17.128. vala 17.129. varnish 17.130. waf 17.131. webplugin 17.132. xfce 17.133. xorg 17.134. xorg-cat 17.135. zig 17.136. zip Chapter 18. __FreeBSD_version Values 18.1. FreeBSD 16 Versions 18.2. FreeBSD 15 Versions 18.3. FreeBSD 14 Versions 18.4. FreeBSD 13 Versions 18.5. FreeBSD 12 Versions 18.6. FreeBSD 11 Versions 18.7. FreeBSD 10 Versions 18.8. FreeBSD 9 Versions 18.9. FreeBSD 8 Versions 18.10. FreeBSD 7 Versions 18.11. FreeBSD 6 Versions 18.12. FreeBSD 5 Versions 18.13. FreeBSD 4 Versions 18.14. FreeBSD 3 Versions 18.15. FreeBSD 2.2 Versions 18.16. FreeBSD 2 Before 2.2-RELEASE Versions Book menu FreeBSD Porter's Handbook Copyright © 2000-2023 The FreeBSD Documentation Project trademarks FreeBSD is a registered trademark of the FreeBSD Foundation. Sun, Sun Microsystems, Java, Java Virtual Machine, JDK, JRE, JSP, JVM, Netra, OpenJDK, Solaris, StarOffice, SunOS and VirtualBox are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the United States and other countries. Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this document, and the FreeBSD Project was aware of the trademark claim, the designations have been followed by the “™” or the “®” symbol. Table of Contents [ Split HTML / Single HTML ] Last modified on : February 18, 2025 by Fernando Apesteguía Home Next Table of Contents Resources Download PDF Edit this page English System Light Dark High contrast About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Get FreeBSD Code of Conduct Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal Manual pages Presentations and papers Previous versions 4.4BSD Documents Wiki Community Get involved Community forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Legal Donations Licensing Privacy Policy Legal notices © 1994-2026 The FreeBSD Project. All rights reserved Made with ♥ by the FreeBSD Community | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/how-maximum-quantity-billing-works/ | How maximum quantity billing works | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps How maximum quantity billing works Maximum quantity billing will be introduced in phases, starting on July 14, 2025 . We expect all monthly subscriptions for the below Atlassian apps to be transitioned to maximum quantity billing by October of 2025. We’ll send you an email before your account transitions. Compass Confluence Atlassian Guard Jira Jira Product Discovery Jira Service Management Loom (already using maximum quantity billing) Marketplace Apps Your bill is based on the maximum amount of users you have throughout your billing period. We call this your billed user quantity. If you add more users than your billed user quantity, we'll automatically increase your quantity and add prorated costs to your next bill. How are you billed? The number of users you have at the start of your billing period is called your billed user quantity. If you add more users than your billed user quantity, we’ll automatically increase your quantity to match your team's growth. You’ll be charged a prorated cost for each additional user and these prorated costs will be added to your next invoice. You can make as many changes to your user count as you need throughout your billing period, this includes removing users too. We recommend removing inactive users before you add new ones to avoid any extra prorated costs. However, there won’t be any deductions, refunds or credits from your billed user quantity. You will simply have more seats available to provide to other users until your next billing period. To manage users, see Manage users and user tiers . At the end of each billing period, we’ll use your user count from the last day to determine your billed user quantity for the next month. Billing examples Keep in mind that these are examples only, and your final bill will include any applicable taxes, credits and discounts. Example: Adding more users than your billed user quantity Melissa started a monthly subscription with 10 users. She’s charged USD 18 per user. Her monthly bill estimate is USD 180. Five days into her billing period, she adds 3 new users. Melissa’s billed user quantity gets increased from 10 to 13, to account for her new users. Prorated costs for these new users get added to her next bill. Melissa’s next bill estimate breakdown will be: 13 x users (total billed user quantity next month) = USD 234 3 x users added (prorated costs x 25 days daily) = USD 45 Next bill estimate = USD 279 Melissa’s user count at the end of this month is 13, so her billed user quantity for the next month will start at 13. Example: Removing users from your billed user quantity Armando started a monthly subscription with 10 users. He’s charged USD 18 per user. His monthly bill estimate is USD 180. Five days into his billing period, he removes 3 users. Armando’s billed user quantity does not change since he is charged for the maximum amount of users throughout his billing period. However, he now has 3 spare seats to allocate to new users before the end of his billing period. Armando’s next bill estimate breakdown will be: 10 x users (initial billed user quantity) = USD 180 3 x users removed = USD 0 Next bill estimate = USD 180 Armando’s user count at the end of the month is 7, so his billed user quantity for the next month will start at 7. View your bill estimate and usage To view your bill estimate and usage: Go to admin.atlassian.com . Select your organisation if you have more than one. Select Billing . Find your subscription from the list and select Manage . On the Subscription details page, you’ll see a Billed user tab that tracks your billed user quantity, user updates and next bill estimate. Switching from a monthly to an annual subscription We offer monthly and annual subscriptions. However, Free plans are only available for monthly subscriptions. You can upgrade to switch from a monthly Free plan to an annual subscription. When you switch from a monthly to an annual subscription, your annual payment will start from the last day of your current billing cycle and you’ll pay a prorated price for the remainder of your billing period. Any charges based on usage will be added to your bill. If you want to switch from annual to monthly, contact us to request the change. Was this helpful? Yes No It wasn't accurate It wasn't clear It wasn't relevant Provide feedback about this article Still need help? The Atlassian Community is here for you. Ask the Community Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Show more How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Show more On this page How are you billed? View your bill estimate and usage Switching from a monthly to an annual subscription Community Questions, discussions, and articles Accessibility Notice at Collection Privacy Policy Terms of Use Security 2026 Atlassian | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/de/losungen/kundenberichte/avanza | Avanza: Verbesserter Onboarding-Fluss - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Neue Fallstudie: MediaMarktSaturn - Milliarden Kundeninteraktionen digitalisiert Deutschland France English Global Sverige Danmark Norge Nederland Suomi United Kingdom Help Center +49 32 221853202 Demo buchen Anmelden Primary navigation Produkte Lösungen Ressourcen Unternehmen Preise Help Center Kontakt Jetzt kaufen Kostenlos testen Suche Menü öffnen Startseite / Lösungen / Kundenberichte / Avanza: Verbesserter Onboarding-Fluss Avanza: Verbesserter Onboarding-Fluss Nachdem sie das Dokument online unterzeichnet haben, werden neue Kunden sofort in ihr Konto eingeloggt, wodurch die Wahrscheinlichkeit für eine Einzahlung verdoppelt wird. 120% Zuwachs Konvertierungsrate signierter Dokumente bei elektronischer Fernsignatur 20% Zuwachs der Einzahlungen im ersten Jahr nach der Einführung von Scrive eSign 72% Reduktion der durchschnittlichen Gesamtdauer des Onboarding-Prozesses bei gleichzeitiger Vervierfachung der Anzahl von Nutzerkonten. Um dieses Video sehen zu können, müssen Sie Marketing-Cookies akzeptieren. Aktualisieren Sie Ihre Einwilligung "Nachdem sie das Dokument online unterzeichnet haben, werden neue Kunden sofort in ihr Konto eingeloggt, wodurch die Wahrscheinlichkeit für eine Einzahlung verdoppelt wird.” Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Kunden einer Onlinebank erwarten selbstverständlich, dass sie auch ihre Geschäfte online durchführen können, oder? Zweifellos, auch für die Kunden von Avanza gab es keinen Anlass, etwas anderes zu erwarten – mit einer eklatanten Ausnahme. “Wir hatten ein Problem “, erklärt Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer der Avanza Bank. “Immer wenn sich ein neuer Kunde auf unserer Webseite anmeldete, mussten wir ihnen ein Papierdokument schicken, das sie unterschreiben und an uns zurücksenden mussten.” In Bezug auf das Kundenerlebnis war das, um es gelinde auszudrücken, ein unglücklicher Anfang der Beziehung. Zudem bedeutete dies einen unnötigen Verwaltungsaufwand für Avanza. “Es dauerte manchmal Tage, Wochen oder sogar Monate,” sagt Lindahl. “Wir wollten diesen Prozess verkürzen und zwar mit Online-Signaturen.” Das Anwaltsteam von Avanza wollte elektronische Signaturen jedoch nur unter der Bedingung akzeptieren, dass die Lösung zwei entscheidende Sicherheitsanforderungen erfüllt: E-Identifikation zur Authentifizierung des Unterzeichners PKI-basierte Datenintegritätstechnologie zum Schutz des signierten Dokuments Herausforderungen von Avanza Kundenerlebnis Kunden einer Online-Bank erwarten den Komfort eines digitalen Onboarding-Prozesses Verlorene Möglichkeiten Wochen der Verzögerung, bevor Kunden Geld in ihr neues Konto transferieren konnten Aufwand Verwaltungsaufwand für die Verarbeitung signierter Papierformulare, einschließlich Datenfehler Avanza sah in Scrive den Partner, der all diese Herausforderungen lösen konnte “Wir haben noch nie eine so schnelle Akzeptanz unserer Rechtsabteilung für ein Projekt erlebt,” sagt Avanza Solution Architect Henrik Littecke. “Sie lieben Scrive!” Durch die Integration des Scrive eSign-Dienstes in den Onboarding-Verlauf ermöglichte Avanza neuen Kunden es, schnell und einfach mit der Nutzung ihres Kontos zu beginnen. Auf diese Weise konnten die eigene Administration erleichtert werden: Kein Papier, kein Warten. Um die Onboarding-Dokumente online zu signieren, authentifizieren sich die Kunden selbst unter Verwendung ihrer schwedischen BankID, einer Standardfunktion der Scrive Signierschnittstelle. Die Integrität jedes signierten Dokuments ist für die Lebensdauer des Dokuments gewährleistet und es ist sicher und leicht zu finden im Scrive E-Archiv. “Wir hatten ein Problem. Immer wenn sich ein neuer Kunde auf unserer Webseite anmeldete, mussten wir ihnen ein Papierdokument schicken, das sie unterschreiben und an uns zurückschicken mussten." Mikael Lindahl, Business Developer, Avanza Bank Scrive-Lösung im Angebot eSign GO Viele Systeme, eine Lösung. eSign GO ist eine revolutionäre, systemunabhängige Lösung, die Sie mit einem schnellen Schritt ans Ziel bringt. Erkunden Sie eSign Go Lassen Sie uns reden Fordern Sie ein Treffen an, damit Sie uns Ihr Problem schildern können und wir gemeinsam überlegen können, wie Scrive Ihre Geschäftsprozesse optimieren und einen Mehrwert für Ihr Unternehmen schaffen kann. Vorname * Nachname * E-Mail * Phone number Dieses Feld ist erforderlich Country code Dieses Feld ist erforderlich * +49 Telefonnummer Dieses Feld ist erforderlich * Unternehmen * Mitarbeiteranzahl * Mitarbeiteranzahl Woran sind Sie interessiert? Elektronische Signaturen - Automatisierung von Arbeitsabläufen Identifikation - Verbesserung von Sicherheit und Verifikation Webformulare - Optimierung der Datensammlung API - Erkunden von Integrationsmöglichkeiten Ich möchte mehr über Scrive erfahren Nachricht Einwilligung & Datenschutzhinweis Ich möchte Marketingmitteilungen von Scrive per E-Mail erhalten. Ich kann dies jederzeit widerrufen. Ich habe die Datenschutzerklärung zur Kenntnis genommen und kann sie jederzeit hier einsehen.* Absenden Ähnliche Kundenberichte Hypoteket: Revolutionierung des Hypothekenmarktes Finance Lesen Sie den Case Pleo: Onboarding von Kunden Finance Lesen Sie den Case Qred: Vollmachten digitalisieren und internes Dokumentenmanagement vereinfachen Finance Lesen Sie den Case Elektronische Signatur Scrive bietet E-Signatur- und eID-Lösungen für sowohl kleine und mittelständische Firmen als auch für Großunternehmen – eine sichere und schnelle Möglichkeit, elektronische Dokumente zu unterschreiben und zu verwalten. 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https://aws.amazon.com/id/what-is/data-catalog/ | Apa itu Katalog Data? - Penjelasan Katalog Data - AWS Lewati ke Konten Utama Filter: Semua English Hubungi kami AWS Marketplace Dukungan Akun saya Cari Filter: Semua Masuk ke konsol Buat akun Apa itu Komputasi Cloud? › Hub Konsep Komputasi Cloud › Manajemen & Tata Kelola Dari pemula hingga ahli, kami memiliki kursus pelatihan digital yang sesuai dengan setiap tingkat keahlian. Jelajahi Pembuat Keterampilan AWS” Apa itu Katalog Data? Buat Akun AWS Apa itu katalog data? Apa saja manfaat katalog data? Apa saja kasus penggunaan katalog data? Informasi apa yang terkandung dalam katalog data? Apa saja fitur utama dari katalog data? Apa perbedaan antara tata kelola data dan katalog data? Bagaimana AWS dapat mendukung kebutuhan katalog data Anda? Apa itu katalog data? Katalog data adalah inventaris semua data yang dikumpulkan dan diproses organisasi. Persyaratan peraturan mewajibkan organisasi untuk mengamankan dan melindungi data mereka setiap saat, mulai dari pengumpulan hingga penggunaan. Katalog data mengatur dan mengklasifikasikan data untuk mendukung tata kelola dan penemuan data. Katalog data memfasilitasi efisiensi operasional melalui berbagi konteks, karena setiap orang dapat dengan cepat memahami alasan dan cara kumpulan data tertentu digunakan dalam organisasi. Apa saja manfaat katalog data? Sebagai alat bantu organisasi, katalog data menyederhanakan pencarian data dan mengidentifikasi untuk apa data tersebut digunakan. Berikut ini kami berikan beberapa manfaatnya. Penemuan aset cepat Katalog data menyederhanakan proses mengidentifikasi data yang membantu meningkatkan produktivitas karyawan. Anda kemudian dapat mencari data menggunakan tanda deskriptif untuk menemukan data terkait dengan cepat sembari juga memahami konteks dan tujuan setiap set data. Katalog data menawarkan gambaran mengenai asal data, proses pergerakan data melalui sistem, dan perubahannya. Analis data sering kali dapat melakukan analisis mereka tanpa terlalu bergantung pada IT sehingga menghasilkan wawasan yang lebih cepat. Kualitas data yang ditingkatkan Katalog data memerlukan beberapa bidang yang perlu diselesaikan karyawan saat perusahaan menyerap data baru. Ketika pengguna mengakses katalog, kemampuan mereka untuk membaca tentang asal-usul data, proses transformasi, dan tanggal pengeditan berarti mereka dapat lebih leluasa dalam berinteraksi dengan informasi tersebut. Tingkat kelengkapan yang tinggi membantu meningkatkan kemudahan tata kelola data dan meningkatkan kualitas data. Bisnis juga dapat mengotomatiskan pembuatan metadata katalog data ini untuk menyediakan katalog data yang komprehensif dengan lebih mudah. Peningkatan efisiensi Katalog data meningkatkan konsistensi dalam pemberian nama, definisi, dan metrik, sehingga memastikan bahwa tim yang berbeda dalam suatu organisasi memiliki keselarasan dalam pemahaman dan penggunaan data. Dengan visibilitas ke semua aset data, organisasi dapat mengurangi redundansi data sehingga memastikan bahwa upaya yang dilakukan tidak terduplikasi dan biaya penyimpanan dapat diminimalkan. Peningkatan produktivitas yang dialami oleh para ilmuwan data juga membantu mengurangi biaya secara keseluruhan. Keamanan yang ditingkatkan Peraturan privasi mengharuskan organisasi untuk mengetahui letak data pribadi berada dan siapa yang mengaksesnya. Katalog data dapat membantu memastikan bahwa data sensitif ditangani dengan benar dan akses diberikan dengan tepat. Organisasi dapat melacak dari mana datanya berasal, siapa yang mengaksesnya, dan bagaimana data tersebut digunakan sehingga meningkatkan inisiatif kepatuhan terhadap peraturan. Apa saja kasus penggunaan katalog data? Organisasi dapat menggunakan katalog data untuk menyederhanakan penyimpanan dan manajemen data mereka. Di bawah ini adalah beberapa kasus penggunaan untuk katalog data. Analitik layanan mandiri Katalog data memberikan penjelasan mendetail tentang isi data dan untuk apa data tersebut digunakan oleh bisnis. Katalog data ini juga memungkinkan bisnis untuk membedakan banyak data yang serupa dan mempercepat proses apa pun yang berkaitan dengan pengambilan dan penggunaan data, terutama di lingkungan korporasi. Transparansi yang ditingkatkan ini memungkinkan pengguna untuk dengan cepat menentukan data apa yang mereka lihat dan menemukan semua informasi yang diperlukan di satu lokasi. Anda dapat membuat alur kerja analitik mandiri untuk pengguna data nonteknis, bahkan dengan volume data yang besar dalam penyimpanan. Berbagi pengetahuan Kolaborasi adalah kunci untuk memperoleh wawasan yang dapat ditindaklanjuti dari data. Katalog data mendorong lingkungan kolaboratif dengan memungkinkan pengguna mengomentari, menilai, dan meninjau set data. Dengan berbagi pengalaman dan pengetahuan mereka tentang set data tertentu, pengguna dapat bekerja sama untuk mengurangi risiko dan mempercepat analitik di seluruh organisasi. Analisis silsilah data Memahami asal data dan perjalanan data melalui berbagai sistem sangat penting untuk memecahkan masalah data, melakukan analisis dampak, atau memenuhi standar kepatuhan. Katalog data memberikan visibilitas ke silsilah data sehingga pengguna mendapatkan gambaran yang jelas tentang perjalanan data dari sumber ke tujuan akhirnya. Bisnis dapat membuat dokumen taksonomi internal yang memungkinkan semua karyawan memahami nama yang benar dari semua aset data. Memiliki dokumen atau lembar referensi dalam katalog data meningkatkan koherensi data di seluruh organisasi. Informasi apa yang terkandung dalam katalog data? Katalog data berisi metadata untuk menggambarkan inventaris aset data Anda dan memberikan informasi tambahan tentang data yang terkandung. Dengan bidang metadata, Anda dapat mencari data dengan cepat dan menemukan aset. Katalog data dapat mencakup berbagai metadata, seperti contoh berikut. Metadata bisnis Metadata bisnis adalah informasi apa pun yang berkaitan dengan nilai yang diberikannya kepada bisnis. Metadata bisnis dapat mencakup informasi tentang penggunaan data dalam bisnis, detail kepatuhan terhadap peraturan, dan konteks bisnis yang berguna bagi pengguna lain. Misalnya, metadata bisnis dapat berisi anotasi proyek data, seperti tingkat kerahasiaan data, deskripsi, lokasi, pengguna, departemen, dan banyak lagi. Sebuah organisasi biasanya akan menentukan data bisnis yang mereka butuhkan dan menyertakan beberapa bidang terkait. Metadata teknis Metadata teknis menggambarkan struktur keseluruhan dari set data. Metadata teknis menggambarkan struktur objek data, yang menjelaskan hubungan, koneksi, indeks, baris, kolom, dan bentuk tabel. Metadata ini juga memberikan konteks kepada para profesional data tentang proses yang harus dilalui oleh data, seperti bergerak melalui transformasi atau ke dalam analisis. Pengguna dengan cepat memahami cara organisasi mengatur dan menampilkan informasi. Metadata operasional Metadata operasional menjelaskan asal data dan transformasi, pembaruan, kardinalitas, dan penanda identifikasi proses lainnya. Dengan menggunakan metadata operasional, Anda dapat melihat cara data memasuki organisasi Anda, transformasi apa yang dilaluinya, dan pembaruan status saat ini lainnya. Dengan bidang metadata operasional, Anda dapat melihat kapan terakhir kali pengguna mengedit data dan siapa yang memiliki izin untuk mengedit data. Apa saja fitur utama dari katalog data? Platform katalog data modern menggunakan berbagai fitur utama untuk menyederhanakan penggunaan dan meningkatkan efisiensinya. Otomatisasi Otomatisasi memungkinkan bisnis untuk mengelola katalog data mereka dengan lebih mudah. Kemampuan integrasi memungkinkan katalog untuk secara otomatis menarik metadata dari berbagai sumber. Katalog tetap mutakhir ketika aset data yang baru ditambahkan atau yang sudah ada diperbarui. Beberapa sistem canggih juga memanfaatkan pembelajaran mesin untuk meningkatkan dan menyempurnakan proses kategorisasi data mereka dari waktu ke waktu. Fitur otomatisasi dalam katalog data meningkatkan kelincahan meskipun volume data terus meningkat. Opsi pencarian yang efisien Fitur pencarian katalog data melampaui pencarian kata kunci dasar untuk memberikan saran. Fitur-fitur tersebut juga memasukkan filter sehingga pengguna dapat menemukan data berdasarkan berbagai kriteria. Pengalaman pengguna mirip dengan mesin pencari modern, yang memberikan hasil yang relevan, diberi peringkat, dan cepat diakses. Efisiensi dalam pengambilan data menghemat waktu sekaligus mendorong penemuan dan eksplorasi data. Glosarium universal Glosarium universal menawarkan definisi standar untuk istilah dan metrik di seluruh organisasi. Glosarium ini memastikan semua istilah metadata memiliki satu definisi yang jelas. Ketika pengguna menemukan istilah dalam katalog, mereka dapat merujuk ke glosarium untuk mengetahui maknanya sehingga memastikan pemahaman dan penggunaan yang konsisten di seluruh jajaran. Hal ini sangat penting untuk menjaga integritas data dan mempromosikan komunikasi yang jelas di antara tim yang berbeda. Apa perbedaan antara tata kelola data dan katalog data? Tata kelola data adalah metodologi yang memastikan data berada dalam kondisi yang tepat untuk mendukung inisiatif dan operasi bisnis. Membangun tata kelola yang tepat berarti menyeimbangkan akses dan kontrol data, serta memberikan orang-orang kepercayaan dan keyakinan pada data sekaligus mendorong eksperimen. Hal ini menawarkan kerangka kerja yang dapat diikuti oleh semua orang ketika menggunakan data dan teknologi korporasi. Tata kelola data berguna untuk memastikan kualitas data yang tinggi dan penggunaan yang sesuai dengan batasan peraturan. Katalog data adalah teknologi untuk menerapkan kebijakan tata kelola data. Tata kelola data menentukan kebijakan penggunaan data, sementara katalog data menerapkannya. Katalog ini memungkinkan bisnis untuk terus melacak tata kelola data mereka dengan lebih efektif. Bagaimana AWS dapat mendukung kebutuhan katalog data Anda? AWS Glu e adalah layanan integrasi data tanpa server yang membuatnya lebih mudah untuk menemukan, menyiapkan, memindahkan, dan mengintegrasikan data dari berbagai sumber untuk analisis data, pembelajaran mesin (ML), dan pengembangan aplikasi. Katalog Data AWS Glue adalah repositori pusat untuk menyimpan metadata struktural dan operasional untuk semua aset data Anda. Anda dapat menyimpan definisi tabel dan lokasi fisik dari set data yang diberikan, menambahkan atribut yang relevan dengan bisnis, dan melacak perubahan data dari waktu ke waktu. Katalog Data juga terintegrasi dengan Amazon Athena , Amazon EMR, dan Amazon Red shift Spectrum. Setelah Anda menambahkan definisi tabel ke Katalog Data, Anda dapat memiliki tampilan yang sama atas data Anda di antara layanan-layanan ini. AWS Glue menyediakan berbagai cara untuk mengisi metadata ke dalam Katalog Data. Misalnya, Anda dapat: Atur perayap AWS Glue untuk memindai berbagai penyimpanan data dan secara otomatis menyimpulkan skema, membuat partisi struktur, serta mengisi Katalog Data dengan definisi dan statistik tabel yang sesuai. Jadwalkan perayap untuk dijalankan secara berkala sehingga metadata Anda selalu diperbarui dan sinkron dengan data yang mendasarinya. Tambahkan dan perbarui detail tabel secara manual menggunakan konsol AWS Glue atau dengan memanggil API. Mulailah dengan katalog data di AWS dengan menyiapkan akun gratis hari ini. Langkah Berikutnya dengan AWS Lihat sumber daya terkait produk tambahan Pelajari tentang Layanan Manajemen dan Tata Kelola Daftar untuk akun gratis Dapatkan akses secara instan ke AWS Tingkat Gratis. Daftar Mulai membangun di konsol Mulai membangun di konsol manajemen AWS. Masuk Buat akun AWS Pelajari Apa itu AWS? Apa Itu Komputasi Cloud? Apa Itu AI Agentik? Hub Konsep Komputasi Cloud Keamanan AWS Cloud Apa yang Baru Blog Siaran Pers Sumber Daya Memulai Pelatihan Pusat Kepercayaan AWS Pustaka Solusi AWS Pusat Arsitektur FAQ Produk dan Teknis Laporan Analis Partner AWS Developer Pusat Builder SDK dan Alat .NET di AWS Python di AWS Java di AWS PHP di AWS JavaScript di AWS Bantuan Hubungi Kami Ajukan Tiket Dukungan AWS re:Post Pusat Pengetahuan Gambaran Umum Dukungan AWS Dapatkan Bantuan Ahli Aksesibilitas AWS Legal English Kembali ke atas Amazon merupakan Pemberi Kerja yang Memberikan Kesempatan yang Sama untuk semua orang: Minoritas/Wanita/Difabel/Veteran/Identitas Gender/Orientasi Seksual/Usia. x facebook linkedin instagram twitch youtube podcasts email Privasi Ketentuan situs Preferensi Cookie © 2026, Amazon Web Services, Inc. atau afiliasinya. Hak cipta dilindungi undang-undang. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/handbook/ | FreeBSD Handbook | FreeBSD Documentation Portal About About FreeBSD FreeBSD Foundation Code of Conduct Get FreeBSD Get FreeBSD Release Information Release Engineering Security Advisories Documentation Documentation portal FreeBSD Handbook Porter's Handbook Documentation Project Handbook Manual pages Presentations and papers Wiki Books Articles Community Community Get involved Forum Mailing lists IRC Channels Bug Tracker Support ♥ Donate Preface Intended Audience Fourth Edition Third Edition Second Edition (2004) First Edition (2001) Organization of This Book Conventions used in this book Acknowledgments Part I. Getting Started Chapter 1. Introduction 1.1. Synopsis 1.2. Welcome to FreeBSD! 1.3. About the FreeBSD Project Chapter 2. Installing FreeBSD 2.1. Synopsis 2.2. Minimum Hardware Requirements 2.3. Pre-Installation Tasks 2.4. Starting the Installation 2.5. Using bsdinstall 2.6. Allocating Disk Space 2.7. Fetching Distribution Files 2.8. Network Interfaces, Accounts, Time Zone, Services and Hardening 2.9. Troubleshooting 2.10. Using the Live CD Chapter 3. FreeBSD Basics 3.1. Synopsis 3.2. Virtual Consoles and Terminals 3.3. Users and Basic Account Management 3.4. Permissions 3.5. Directory Structure 3.6. Disk Organization 3.7. Mounting and Unmounting File Systems 3.8. Processes and Daemons 3.9. Shells 3.10. Text Editors 3.11. Devices and Device Nodes 3.12. Manual Pages Chapter 4. Installing Applications: Packages and Ports 4.1. Synopsis 4.2. Overview of Software Installation 4.3. Finding Software 4.4. Using pkg for Binary Package Management 4.5. Using the Ports Collection 4.6. Building Packages with poudriere 4.7. Post-Installation Considerations 4.8. Dealing with Broken Ports Chapter 5. The X Window System 5.1. Synopsis 5.2. Graphics Drivers 5.2.1. Intel® Graphics 5.2.2. AMD® Graphics 5.2.3. NVIDIA® Graphics 5.3. X Window System Overview 5.4. Installing The X.org Server 5.5. X.org Configuration 5.5.1. X.org Configuration Files 5.5.2. Graphics Configuration 5.5.3. Monitor Configuration 5.5.4. Input Configuration 5.6. Using Fonts in the X Window System 5.6.1. TrueType® Fonts 5.6.2. Type1 Fonts 5.6.3. Anti-Aliased Fonts Chapter 6. Wayland 6.1. Synopsis 6.2. Wayland Overview 6.3. The Wayfire Compositor 6.4. The Hikari Compositor 6.5. The Sway Compositor 6.6. Using Xwayland 6.7. Remote Desktop Using VNC 6.8. Wayland Login Manager 6.9. Useful Utilities Chapter 7. Network 7.1. Synopsis 7.2. Setting up the Network 7.3. Wired Networks 7.4. Wireless Networks 7.5. Hostname 7.6. DNS 7.7. Troubleshooting Part II. Common Tasks Chapter 8. Desktop Environments 8.1. Synopsis 8.2. Desktop Environments 8.3. Browsers 8.4. Development tools 8.5. Desktop office productivity 8.6. Document Viewers 8.7. Finance Chapter 9. Multimedia 9.1. Synopsis 9.2. Setting Up the Sound Card 9.3. Audio players 9.4. Video players 9.5. Conferencing and Meetings 9.6. Image Scanners Chapter 10. Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel 10.1. Synopsis 10.2. Why Build a Custom Kernel? 10.3. Finding the System Hardware 10.4. The Configuration File 10.5. Building and Installing a Custom Kernel 10.6. If Something Goes Wrong Chapter 11. Printing 11.1. Quick Start 11.2. Printer Connections 11.3. Common Page Description Languages 11.4. Direct Printing 11.5. LPD (Line Printer Daemon) 11.6. Other Printing Systems Chapter 12. Linux Binary Compatibility 12.1. Synopsis 12.2. Configuring Linux Binary Compatibility 12.3. Linux userlands 12.4. Advanced Topics Chapter 13. WINE 13.1. Synopsis 13.2. WINE Overview & Concepts 13.3. Installing WINE on FreeBSD 13.4. Running a First WINE Program on FreeBSD 13.5. Configuring WINE Installation 13.6. WINE Management GUIs 13.7. WINE in Multi-User FreeBSD Installations 13.8. WINE on FreeBSD FAQ Part III. System Administration Chapter 14. Configuration, Services, Logging and Power Management 14.1. Synopsis 14.2. Configuration Files 14.3. Managing Services in FreeBSD 14.4. Cron and Periodic 14.5. Configuring System Logging 14.6. Power and Resource Management 14.7. Adding Swap Space Chapter 15. The FreeBSD Booting Process 15.1. Synopsis 15.2. FreeBSD Boot Process 15.3. Device Hints 15.4. Shutdown Sequence Chapter 16. Security 16.1. Synopsis 16.2. Introduction 16.3. Securing Accounts 16.4. Intrusion Detection System (IDS) 16.5. Secure levels 16.6. File flags 16.7. OpenSSH 16.8. OpenSSL 16.9. Kerberos 16.10. TCP Wrappers 16.11. Access Control Lists 16.12. Capsicum 16.13. Process Accounting 16.14. Resource Limits 16.15. Monitoring Third Party Security Issues 16.16. FreeBSD Security Advisories Chapter 17. Jails and Containers 17.1. Synopsis 17.2. Jail Types 17.3. Host Configuration 17.4. Classic Jail (Thick Jail) 17.5. Thin Jails 17.6. Jail Management 17.7. Jail Upgrading 17.8. Jail Resource Limits 17.9. Jail Managers and Containers Chapter 18. Mandatory Access Control 18.1. Synopsis 18.2. Key Terms 18.3. Understanding MAC Labels 18.4. Planning the Security Configuration 18.5. Available MAC Policies 18.6. User Lock Down 18.7. Nagios in a MAC Jail 18.8. Troubleshooting the MAC Framework Chapter 19. Security Event Auditing 19.1. Synopsis 19.2. Key Terms 19.3. Audit Configuration 19.4. Working with Audit Trails Chapter 20. Storage 20.1. Synopsis 20.2. Adding Disks 20.3. Resizing and Growing Disks 20.4. USB Storage Devices 20.5. Creating and Using CD Media 20.6. Creating and Using DVD Media 20.7. Creating and Using Floppy Disks 20.8. Backup Basics 20.9. Memory Disks 20.10. File System Snapshots 20.11. Disk Quotas 20.12. Encrypting Disk Partitions 20.13. Encrypting Swap 20.14. Highly Available Storage (HAST) Chapter 21. GEOM: Modular Disk Transformation Framework 21.1. Synopsis 21.2. RAID0 - Striping 21.3. RAID1 - Mirroring 21.4. RAID3 - Byte-level Striping with Dedicated Parity 21.5. Software RAID Devices 21.6. GEOM Gate Network 21.7. Labeling Disk Devices 21.8. UFS Journaling Through GEOM Chapter 22. The Z File System (ZFS) 22.1. What Makes ZFS Different 22.2. Quick Start Guide 22.3. zpool Administration 22.4. zfs Administration 22.5. Delegated Administration 22.6. Advanced Topics 22.7. Further Resources 22.8. ZFS Features and Terminology Chapter 23. Other File Systems 23.1. Synopsis 23.2. Linux® File Systems 23.3. Windows® File Systems 23.4. MacOS® File Systems Chapter 24. Virtualization 24.1. Synopsis 24.2. FreeBSD as a Guest on Parallels Desktop for macOS® 24.3. FreeBSD as a Guest on VMware Fusion for macOS® 24.4. FreeBSD as a Guest on VirtualBox™ 24.5. FreeBSD as a Host with VirtualBox™ 24.6. Virtualization with QEMU on FreeBSD 24.7. FreeBSD as a Host with bhyve 24.8. FreeBSD as a Xen™-Host Chapter 25. Localization - i18n/L10n Usage and Setup 25.1. Synopsis 25.2. Using Localization 25.3. Finding i18n Applications 25.4. Locale Configuration for Specific Languages Chapter 26. Updating and Upgrading FreeBSD 26.1. Synopsis 26.2. FreeBSD Update 26.3. Updating Bootcode 26.4. Updating the Documentation Set 26.5. Tracking a Development Branch 26.6. Updating FreeBSD from Source 26.7. Updating FreeBSD with packages 26.8. Tracking for Multiple Machines 26.9. Building on non-FreeBSD Hosts Chapter 27. DTrace 27.1. Synopsis 27.2. Implementation Differences 27.3. Enabling DTrace Support 27.4. Enabling DTrace in Out-of-Kernel Modules 27.5. Using DTrace Chapter 28. USB Device Mode / USB OTG 28.1. Synopsis 28.2. USB Virtual Serial Ports 28.3. USB Device Mode Network Interfaces 28.4. USB Virtual Storage Device Part IV. Network Communication Chapter 29. Serial Communications 29.1. Synopsis 29.2. Serial Terminology and Hardware 29.3. Terminals 29.4. Dial-in Service 29.5. Dial-out Service 29.6. Setting Up the Serial Console Chapter 30. PPP 30.1. Synopsis 30.2. Configuring PPP 30.3. Troubleshooting PPP Connections 30.4. Using PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE) 30.5. Using PPP over ATM (PPPoA) Chapter 31. Electronic Mail 31.1. Synopsis 31.2. Mail Components 31.3. DragonFly Mail Agent (DMA) 31.4. Sendmail 31.5. Changing the Mail Transfer Agent 31.6. Mail User Agents 31.7. Advanced Topics Chapter 32. Network Servers 32.1. Synopsis 32.2. The inetd Super-Server 32.3. Network File System (NFS) 32.4. Network Information System (NIS) 32.5. Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) 32.6. Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) 32.7. Domain Name System (DNS) 32.8. Zero-configuration Networking (mDNS/DNS-SD) 32.9. Apache HTTP Server 32.10. File Transfer Protocol (FTP) 32.11. File and Print Services for Microsoft® Windows® Clients (Samba) 32.12. Clock Synchronization with NTP 32.13. iSCSI Initiator and Target Configuration Chapter 33. Firewalls 33.1. Synopsis 33.2. Firewall Concepts 33.3. PF 33.4. IPFW 33.5. IPFILTER (IPF) 33.6. Blocklistd Chapter 34. Advanced Networking 34.1. Synopsis 34.2. Gateways and Routes 34.3. Virtual Hosts 34.4. Wireless Advanced Authentication 34.5. Wireless Ad-hoc Mode 34.6. USB Tethering 34.7. Bluetooth 34.8. Bridging 34.9. Link Aggregation and Failover 34.10. Diskless Operation with PXE 34.11. Common Address Redundancy Protocol (CARP) 34.12. VLANs Part V. Appendices Appendix A. Obtaining FreeBSD A.1. Mirrors A.2. Using Git A.3. Disc Copies Appendix B. Bibliography B.1. FreeBSD Bibliography B.2. Security Reference B.3. UNIX® History B.4. Periodicals, Journals, and Magazines Appendix C. Resources on the Internet C.1. Websites C.2. Mailing Lists C.3. Usenet Newsgroups Appendix D. OpenPGP Keys D.1. Officers FreeBSD Glossary Colophon Book menu FreeBSD Handbook Copyright © 1995-2026 The FreeBSD Documentation Project trademarks FreeBSD is a registered trademark of the FreeBSD Foundation. IBM, AIX, OS/2, PowerPC, PS/2, S/390, and ThinkPad are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both. 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Where those designations appear in this document, and the FreeBSD Project was aware of the trademark claim, the designations have been followed by the “™” or the “®” symbol. Table of Contents [ Split HTML / Single HTML ] Abstract Welcome to FreeBSD! This handbook covers the installation and day to day use of FreeBSD 15.0-RELEASE , FreeBSD 14.3-RELEASE and 13.5-RELEASE . This book is the result of ongoing work by many individuals. Some sections might be outdated. Those interested in helping to update and expand this document should send email to the FreeBSD documentation project mailing list . The latest version of this book is available from the FreeBSD web site . Previous versions can be obtained from https://docs.FreeBSD.org/doc/ . The book can be downloaded in a variety of formats and compression options from the FreeBSD download server or one of the numerous mirror sites . Searches can be performed on the handbook and other documents on the search page . 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https://www.msys2.org/news/ | News - MSYS2 Skip to content MSYS2 News Deutsch (de) Español (es) Français (fr) 日本语 (ja) 한국어 (ko) 中文 (zh) Initializing search GitHub MSYS2 GitHub Getting Started News News Table of contents 2026-01-10 - Python 3.13 Update 2025-06-20 - Replacing x86_64-pc-msys with x86_64-pc-cygwin 2025-04-18 - Hosted Windows ARM64 Runners on GitHub Actions 2025-02-14 - Moving MSYS(2) closer to Cygwin 2025-02-13 - Server maintenance on 2025-02-15/16 2024-12-18 - Removal of the CLANG32 Environment 2024-11-09 - Python 3.12 Update 2024-11-03 - Disabling mingw-w64 wildcard support by default 2024-09-23 - Starting to drop the CLANG32 environment 2024-07-28 - MSYS2 support in setuptools v70.0.2 2024-07-08 - File conflicts when updating python 2024-06-21 - Server changes 2024-05-10 - GCC 14.1 2024-05-03 - Update to Cygwin 3.5 on Unsupported Systems 2024-05-02 - MSYS2 on Linux (Experimental) 2024-04-23 - TLS/SSL Support for the Repository Rsync Server 2024-04-02 - Automated Vulnerability Reporting System 2024-03-30 - xz-utils Backdoor 2024-02-21 - Note to the remaining Windows 7 / 8.0 users 2024-02-19 - Removal of non C/C++ packages from the mingw-w64-toolchain group 2024-02-01 - mingw-w64-gettext converted to split package 2023-12-13 - Starting to drop some 32-bit Packages 2023-11-05 - Package installation issues for very old/outdated installations 2023-08-06 - Python: Changed behavior when loading DLL dependencies of extension modules 2023-04-01 - LLVM 16 2023-02-10 - Server maintenance on 2023-02-18/19 2023-01-15 - Dropping support for Windows 7 and 8.0 2023-01-15 - OpenSSL updated from 1.1.1 to 3.0.x 2023-01-05 - Dropping 32bit support for Qt 6 2022-12-26 - Default _WIN32_WINNT bumped to Windows 8.1 for UCRT environments 2022-12-16 - Dropping Windows 7 support for the MSYS2 installer 2022-10-29 - Changing the default environment from MINGW64 to UCRT64 2022-10-23 - mingw packages now built with -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 and -fstack-protector-strong 2022-10-18 - New minimum hardware requirements (CPUs from ~2006/7+) 2022-10-10 - libssp is no longer required 2022-09-24 - Changed behavior for empty env vars 2022-09-24 - ConPTY support enabled by default 2022-04-06 - Windows 7 / 8 support will be dropped late 2022 or early 2023 2022-03-04 - Sunsetting the SourceForge mirror in 30 days from now 2022-02-24 - repo.msys2.org only available via HTTPS/TLS 2021-12-22 - Ongoing Cleanup of the base-devel Package Group 2021-12-21 - Potential Incompatibilities with newer Python setuptools 2021-10-14 - OpenSSH 8.8 dropped support for old ssh-rsa keys using SHA-1 2021-07-04 - Some Mirror/Server/Repository Changes 2021-04-21 - R.I.P. mingwandroid 2021-03-25 - Temporarily broken msys2-launcher package 2021-02-27 - New server for repo.msys2.org and packages.msys2.org 2021-01-31 - ASLR enabled by default 2020-12-26 - Zstd exemption for core packages removed 2020-10-08 - main repo pruned 2020-10-07 - server downtime 2020-06-29 - new packagers 2020-06-15 - New base metapackage; pacman-contrib is now separate 2020-05-31 - Update may fail with "could not open file" 2020-05-22 - MSYS2 may fail to start after a msys2-runtime upgrade 2020-05-22 - Pacman may fail to install packages with Unrecognized archive format 2020-05-17 - 32-bit MSYS2 no longer actively supported 2019-06-03 - mingw-w64 Ada and ObjC unsupported until further notice 2016-07-15 - Core update integrated into Pacman; update-core removed 2016-04-05 - Command window may linger after startup Package Index Documentation Documentation What is MSYS2? Who Is Using MSYS2? Environments Updating MSYS2 Using MSYS2 in CI Package Mirrors Terminals IDEs and Text Editors MSYS2 Installer Package Management Package Management Package Management Package Naming Repositories and Mirrors Tips and Tricks FAQ Filesystem Paths Symlinks Configuration Locations Just-in-time Debugging ARM64 Support Languages & Tools Languages & Tools Using CMake in MSYS2 Autotools Python Git C/C++ C++ pkg-config pacman Supported Windows Versions and Hardware FAQ Development Development Packaging Packaging Creating a new Package Updating an existing Package Package Guidelines License Metadata PKGBUILD Mirrors MSYS2 Keyring Python Automated Build Process Vulnerability Reporting Accounts and Ownership Other Topics Other Topics Welcome to the MSYS2 wiki Creating Packages TODO LIST Distributing Qt Creator MSYS2 History How does MSYS2 differ from Cygwin? Launchers MSYS2-Introduction Re-installing MSYS2 Porting Setting up SSHd Signing Packages Do you need Sudo? Terminals Get Involved License Privacy Support & Contact Code of Conduct Table of contents 2026-01-10 - Python 3.13 Update 2025-06-20 - Replacing x86_64-pc-msys with x86_64-pc-cygwin 2025-04-18 - Hosted Windows ARM64 Runners on GitHub Actions 2025-02-14 - Moving MSYS(2) closer to Cygwin 2025-02-13 - Server maintenance on 2025-02-15/16 2024-12-18 - Removal of the CLANG32 Environment 2024-11-09 - Python 3.12 Update 2024-11-03 - Disabling mingw-w64 wildcard support by default 2024-09-23 - Starting to drop the CLANG32 environment 2024-07-28 - MSYS2 support in setuptools v70.0.2 2024-07-08 - File conflicts when updating python 2024-06-21 - Server changes 2024-05-10 - GCC 14.1 2024-05-03 - Update to Cygwin 3.5 on Unsupported Systems 2024-05-02 - MSYS2 on Linux (Experimental) 2024-04-23 - TLS/SSL Support for the Repository Rsync Server 2024-04-02 - Automated Vulnerability Reporting System 2024-03-30 - xz-utils Backdoor 2024-02-21 - Note to the remaining Windows 7 / 8.0 users 2024-02-19 - Removal of non C/C++ packages from the mingw-w64-toolchain group 2024-02-01 - mingw-w64-gettext converted to split package 2023-12-13 - Starting to drop some 32-bit Packages 2023-11-05 - Package installation issues for very old/outdated installations 2023-08-06 - Python: Changed behavior when loading DLL dependencies of extension modules 2023-04-01 - LLVM 16 2023-02-10 - Server maintenance on 2023-02-18/19 2023-01-15 - Dropping support for Windows 7 and 8.0 2023-01-15 - OpenSSL updated from 1.1.1 to 3.0.x 2023-01-05 - Dropping 32bit support for Qt 6 2022-12-26 - Default _WIN32_WINNT bumped to Windows 8.1 for UCRT environments 2022-12-16 - Dropping Windows 7 support for the MSYS2 installer 2022-10-29 - Changing the default environment from MINGW64 to UCRT64 2022-10-23 - mingw packages now built with -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 and -fstack-protector-strong 2022-10-18 - New minimum hardware requirements (CPUs from ~2006/7+) 2022-10-10 - libssp is no longer required 2022-09-24 - Changed behavior for empty env vars 2022-09-24 - ConPTY support enabled by default 2022-04-06 - Windows 7 / 8 support will be dropped late 2022 or early 2023 2022-03-04 - Sunsetting the SourceForge mirror in 30 days from now 2022-02-24 - repo.msys2.org only available via HTTPS/TLS 2021-12-22 - Ongoing Cleanup of the base-devel Package Group 2021-12-21 - Potential Incompatibilities with newer Python setuptools 2021-10-14 - OpenSSH 8.8 dropped support for old ssh-rsa keys using SHA-1 2021-07-04 - Some Mirror/Server/Repository Changes 2021-04-21 - R.I.P. mingwandroid 2021-03-25 - Temporarily broken msys2-launcher package 2021-02-27 - New server for repo.msys2.org and packages.msys2.org 2021-01-31 - ASLR enabled by default 2020-12-26 - Zstd exemption for core packages removed 2020-10-08 - main repo pruned 2020-10-07 - server downtime 2020-06-29 - new packagers 2020-06-15 - New base metapackage; pacman-contrib is now separate 2020-05-31 - Update may fail with "could not open file" 2020-05-22 - MSYS2 may fail to start after a msys2-runtime upgrade 2020-05-22 - Pacman may fail to install packages with Unrecognized archive format 2020-05-17 - 32-bit MSYS2 no longer actively supported 2019-06-03 - mingw-w64 Ada and ObjC unsupported until further notice 2016-07-15 - Core update integrated into Pacman; update-core removed 2016-04-05 - Command window may linger after startup News This page lists important changes or issues affecting MSYS2 users. You can subscribe via RSS . We also post them to Mastodon / Bluesky , including some not-so-important things :) 2026-01-10 - Python 3.13 Update We have now updated to Python 3.13. Please let us know if you encounter any issues. Some notable smaller changes: The _wmi module, which is used by various functions in the platform module, and which was missing from our 3.12 build, is now included. The SOABI sysconfig variable format now matches Unix builds, in that it is a subset of EXT_SUFFIX . Various sysconfig fixes: AR is now a Windows path and prefix is now relocated. The python-config tool is now a Python script instead of a Bash script. We plan to remove the isatty() patch for detecting Cygwin pipes as an interactive terminal with the next update to 3.14. This should only affect Windows 8.1 users or those with conpty is disabled. During the package rebuilds, we encountered an issue due to a behavioral change in Python 3.13: os.path.isabs() now returns False for paths beginning with '/'. This change exposed several dependencies on the previous behavior in build tools. Something to watch out for. Thanks to @Alexpux for helping with the rebase/update and to everyone who fixed packages during the rebuild. 2025-06-20 - Replacing x86_64-pc-msys with x86_64-pc-cygwin As part of our ongoing effort to move MSYS2 closer to Cygwin, we have now replaced the x86_64-pc-msys triplet with x86_64-pc-cygwin as the default host triplet for the MSYS environment. This means: The $MSYSTEM_CHOST environment variable will now report x86_64-pc-cygwin instead of x86_64-pc-msys Autotools based configure scripts will default to x86_64-pc-cygwin instead of x86_64-pc-msys gcc -dumpmachine will report x86_64-pc-cygwin instead of x86_64-pc-msys Ideally this should not affect most users. If there are any issues with this change, please let us know. 2025-04-18 - Hosted Windows ARM64 Runners on GitHub Actions Earlier this week, GitHub finally added Windows ARM64 runners to GitHub Actions , which is great news and will help us a lot producing native ARM64 packages in MSYS2 in the future. Since many of our packages are already available for ARM64, you might be wondering how we managed to do this until now. Let's take a look back: In early 2021, Jeremy bootstrapped our CLANGARM64 environment from a Cygwin LLVM build and built our first CLANGARM64 packages. To automate our package builds, we needed GitHub Actions support, which Jeremy also took on himself, and set up a WoA machine with an ARM64 version of GitHub runner, which we integrated into msys2-autobuild in late 2021. The whole ecosystem was in a very early stage at the time, such as the Actions runner itself, ARM64 support for Node.js, ARM64 Windows itself, Windows x64 emulation, etc., so things were not easy. Hardware was also an issue, as emulation was very slow, real hardware was very underpowered, and there were no dev kits in the beginning, so the runner had to move hardware several times over its lifetime. Another challenge was that the self-hosted runner builds were not isolated, which meant that we could only use them for final package builds, so as not to expose them to untrusted users. So no CI checks on random PRs or other repos that are exposed in any way. While this meant that ARM64-only issues were sometimes found very late in the process, fortunately there was always someone around to debug things on real hardware if needed. Some stats on the last year of the self-hosted ARM64 runner: It ran 1835 jobs It built packages for 1593 hours It built 9869 packages It produced 52.4 GB worth of packages After building for 3-4 years we now have ~93% of all MSYS2 packages available for ARM64. Thanks to Jeremy for maintaining the self-hosted runner for so long, setting it up, updating it, moving it, fixing it, scaling it up for large rebuilds, being very responsive when things got stuck or debugging ARM64-only build issues, and much more. Also thanks to Dennis Ameling for funding the "QC710 Dev Kit" and Zac Walker @ Microsoft for providing us with a "Dev Kit 2023". The future: With the new hosted runners, we can now test with ARM64 in many more places, such as package updates before they are merged, for all our forks of external projects, our GitHub action, our installer, our integration test, and much more. We can also run more jobs in parallel, which will be helpful for large rebuilds like major Python updates. And it allows our community to debug ARM64 related issues even if they do not have ARM64 hardware available, even though debugging in CI is not much fun. For users of our "setup-msys2" GitHub Action this means they can easily add ARM64 testing/building to their project: jobs : msys2-clangarm64 : runs-on : windows-11-arm steps : - uses : actions/checkout@v4 - uses : msys2/setup-msys2@v2 with : msystem : CLANGARM64 update : true - name : CI-Build shell : msys2 {0} run : | ./ci-build.sh 2025-02-14 - Moving MSYS(2) closer to Cygwin In MSYS2, in addition to the native environments such as UCRT64/CLANG64, there is also the "MSYS" environment, which contains mostly Cygwin-based software. Since the start of the MSYS2 project, the Cygwin tools in MSYS have been modified to build for MSYS instead of Cygwin. This means that the languages and tools have been patched to report their platform as "msys", and for the build tools this means that we have our own MSYS specific target triplet (x86_64-pc-msys), and uname reports "MSYS" as well. Whatever the motivation was back then, the reality today is that our Cygwin packages are 99% the same as Cygwin's, with only a few things needing tweaking. The downside of defining our own platform/system/triplet is that every build system has to be patched to treat us as Cygwin-like, which is tedious and error-prone when adding/updating packages, and also divides the community. Another drawback is that it's confusing to users, as the names of MSYS2, the project, and MSYS are too similar, and it's not clear that MSYS mostly just means Cygwin. Some time ago we started to remove these differences by replacing "msys" with "cygwin" + patches where possible. So instead of MSYS being a fork of Cygwin, it would just be a slightly modified/extended variant of Cygwin. The goal is that any software that supports Cygwin should be buildable as is under MSYS2. The first change in this direction already happened some time ago, when CMake would define both CYGWIN and MSYS as true when building under MSYS. Since then, we have tweaked several more things to get closer to that goal: CMake has reported CYGWIN as true since 2021 Meson has reported to be running under Cygwin since we added it in 2018 Python has been changed to report "sys.platform" as "cygwin", and recently "sysconfig.get_platform()" has been changed to report "cygwin-x86_64" as well. Perl has recently been changed to report "$^O" as "cygwin" instead of "msys". Bash has recently been changed to report "$OSTYPE" as "cygwin" instead of "msys". Almost all of our packages have been ported to build for the Cygwin triplet, except for the toolchain packages. The rule of thumb is that where possible, things will continue to identify as both Cygwin and MSYS, for example, CMake will set both MSYS and CYGWIN, C/C++ will define both __MSYS__ and __CYGWIN__ . Where this is not possible, things will simply identify as Cygwin, or we will have to find workarounds. The next planned steps for this transition are currently: Change the default host triplet from "x86_64-pc-msys" to "x86_64-pc-cygwin" Change the runtime to be a superset of Cygwin in more places, e.g. make the CYGWIN env var work as a fallback if MSYS is not set. The goal is to make the Cygwin documentation mostly applicable to MSYS2 as well. For MSYS2 users these changes should be mostly invisible, but if you are a developer targeting the MSYS environment there might be some fallout. Despite that, we hope these changes will lead to better compatibility and easier maintenance in the long run. Let us know if you experience any problems. 2025-02-13 - Server maintenance on 2025-02-15/16 There will be a short server maintenance around the weekend of 2025-02-15/16 which will affect repo.msys2.org, mirror.msys2.org, packages.msys2.org, and some subdomain redirects of our website. Update: all done now 2024-12-18 - Removal of the CLANG32 Environment The previously announced removal of the CLANG32 environment is now complete. This concludes the gradual phase-out process that began several months ago. 2024-11-09 - Python 3.12 Update Over the last week we finally moved from Python 3.11 to 3.12. Thanks to @naveen521kk for updating the fork, and everyone else who helped with rebuild issues. Also thanks to @jeremyd2019 for watching the external arm64 runner while it rebuilt all those 940 packages and fixing arm64 related issues. There are some minor things to watch out for with this update: We've enabled PEP 668 by marking the system site-packages directory as externally managed. To prevent this from causing too many problems right away we have patched our version of pip to only give a warning instead of an error if you install outside of a venv. However, we may change this back to a real error in the future. If this is causing any problems or if there are any concerns with re-enabling the error in the future let us know. While not MSYS2 specific, 3.12 is the version that dropped the included distutils package and distutils is now only available as part of setuptools. While the current setuptools should handle our Python out of the box, there may be slight differences. Make sure to remove anything setting SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS=stdlib as that will lead to distutils import errors. As with every major Python update we had to drop a few packages that were incompatible with the new version and for which no update or patch was available. One notable package there is py2exe which does not support 3.12+ right now and there is also no patch available, see the upstream issue for details. 2024-11-03 - Disabling mingw-w64 wildcard support by default For historical reasons MSYS2 enabled wildcard support in mingw-w64 at build time. This means that every built executable had wildcard support enabled by default, unless it explicitly opted out. Wildcard support in this case means that program arguments containing ? and * can be expanded to one or more file paths if the pattern happens to match paths of files on disk. Note that this happens directly in the target program, not in a shell beforehand. This expansion has several problems: Behave differently than MSVC built executables It's confusing to users when wildcard handling is accidentally triggered. For example, passing a regex as an argument to a CLI tool that starts matching random files, breaking the pattern. It may have security implications if arguments to executables are forwarded from user-controlled input, in which case an argument could expand to a different string depending on the files present on the filesystem. Given all this, we have decided to disable wildcard handling by default. This means that any package and executable that is built after this change will get the new default behavior. $ python -c 'import sys; print(sys.argv)' '*a.txt' # before ['-c', 'a.txt', 'aaaa.txt', 'bla.txt'] $ python -c 'import sys; print(sys.argv)' '*a.txt' # after ['-c', '*a.txt'] Our hope/assumption is that this will not affect many users, as most will rely on globbing at a higher level, be it bash, or build systems. If you experience any problems, please let us know. See also the documentation on how to force wildcard handling for your applications even after this change. 2024-09-23 - Starting to drop the CLANG32 environment 9 months ago we started to reduce the number of packages for the 32-bit environments. Now we are starting to drop the CLANG32 environment. This means that we will no longer add new packages for this environment and will remove the existing ones over the next months. If this is affecting you, please let us know. While CLANG32 has some unique features in the context of MSYS2, such as being the only environment to use UCRT for 32-bit and the LLVM toolchain, it has seen very little use in our download statistics, and we don't think it's worth supporting any longer. If you are in need for a 32-bit LLVM toolchain, consider using LLVM MinGW instead. 2024-07-28 - MSYS2 support in setuptools v70.0.2 Setuptools v70.0.2 now supports mingw Python and MSYS2 natively. This eliminates the need for SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS=stdlib when building C extensions, enabling "pip install" to just work for most packages without extra steps. With the stdlib distutils now no longer being required to build packages we can continue our work to update to Python 3.12. 2024-07-08 - File conflicts when updating python Due to the recent Python 3.12 update missing .pyc files, you might see file conflicts when updating: error: failed to commit transaction (conflicting files) python: /usr/lib/python3.12/__pycache__/ast.cpython-312.pyc exists in filesystem python: /usr/lib/python3.12/__pycache__/dis.cpython-312.pyc exists in filesystem python: /usr/lib/python3.12/__pycache__/inspect.cpython-312.pyc exists in filesystem python: /usr/lib/python3.12/__pycache__/opcode.cpython-312.pyc exists in filesystem ... This can be fixed by running $ pacman --overwrite "/usr/lib/python3.12/*" -Suy Sorry for the inconvenience. 2024-06-21 - Server changes Over the past few weeks we've been experiencing various problems with our server, which also led to an extended downtime on 2024-06-12. It turned out that both disks were failing and instead of replacing them both we decided to simply move to a new server. This transition is now complete and everything should be back to normal. Old IP: 178.63.98.68 New IP: 88.99.69.85 Many thanks to Dmitriy Akulov of jsDelivr and Globalping for helping us diagnose the problem and generously providing us with a new server. 2024-05-10 - GCC 14.1 We have updated GCC to version 14.1. See the GCC 14.1 release notes for more information. Similar to recent Clang releases, GCC also got stricter and multiple warnings are now errors by default, see the GCC 14.1 porting guide for details. To reduce the maintenance burden we have dropped Ada/Objective-C/libgccjit support from the 32-bit/mingw32 variant. 2024-05-03 - Update to Cygwin 3.5 on Unsupported Systems The update to Cygwin 3.5 means MSYS2 will no longer start on long unsupported systems like Windows 7 and 8.0. To keep MSYS2 running for a bit longer on such systems you can switch to the legacy runtime using: $ pacman --noconfirm -Sy msys2-runtime-3.4 msys2-runtime-3.4-devel In case you have already updated and can't start MSYS2 anymore, you can use the following steps to downgrade: Get the last MSYS2 installer release and extract it Copy the "msys64\usr\bin\msys-2.0.dll" from there to the same location in your existing MSYS2 installation Start a MSYS2 terminal and switch to the legacy runtime using the command above 2024-05-02 - MSYS2 on Linux (Experimental) We've created a Docker image including a Wine fork + Cygwin fixes + MSYS2, as an experiment, so you can run MSYS2 on Linux: https://github.com/msys2/msys2-docker Be warned, it's very slow and flaky, and signature verification is disabled for packages/repos, because otherwise things would be unacceptably slow. Don't use it for anything important. Shout out to @pojntfx (Felicitas Pojtinger) for the idea and initial Dockerfile and to @jhol (Joel Holdsworth) for developing the wine fork. 2024-04-23 - TLS/SSL Support for the Repository Rsync Server We have added TLS/SSL support for the repository rsync server. This means that you can now use $ rsync-ssl rsync://repo.msys2.org/builds to sync the repository over an encrypted connection. 2024-04-02 - Automated Vulnerability Reporting System The package index now has some rudimentary support for detecting and displaying CVEs and other vulnerability reports for the packages included in MSYS2. We piggyback on existing security scanner tools by using the metadata in the package recipes to create a dummy SBOM file and then feed the scan results to our website. This gives us some insight into which packages have potential vulnerabilities or which updates should be prioritized. For more information on the process see Vulnerability Reporting . Some caveats: Only about half of our packages have the necessary metadata to be scanned at all. This is mainly because packages that have never had a CVE assigned also don't have a CPE to link to, and partly because it's just incomplete on our end. The CVE system is currently not fully operational , and for the past few weeks most of the incoming CVEs have not been processed at all. This means that newer CVEs are likely not linked to our packages. Since we use grype for scanning we do get some new data from their nvd-data-overrides effort though. Note that we will not try to reduce the number of reported vulnerabilities to zero. We will mainly use them to prioritize updates and be better informed about the security status of our packages. 2024-03-30 - xz-utils Backdoor In response to the recent xz backdoor we have rebuilt the xz packages for msys and mingw from the git source instead of the tarball, following what Arch Linux did . Although we have built and shipped the affected versions, there is no indication at this time that this issue has affected MSYS2 users. 2024-02-21 - Note to the remaining Windows 7 / 8.0 users Note to Windows 7 / 8.0 users: While we stopped supporting these systems over a year ago, many things in MSYS2 continued to work as before. With the upcoming update to Cygwin 3.5, this will change and MSYS2 will no longer start on these systems. We're trying to come up with a migration path, but it's not clear yet if and how this will work. We'll post here when we know more. 2024-02-19 - Removal of non C/C++ packages from the mingw-w64-toolchain group Unlike the LLVM variant, the GCC variant of the mingw-w64-toolchain package group also contained non C/C++ toolchains, such as fortran/ada/objc/libgccjit due to the nature of them being built from the same source. Since this was never the intention of the group and was causing a lot of unnecessary downloads and bandwidth usage, we decided to clean this up now. If this broke things for you, make sure you explicitly install Fortran/Ada/ObjC packages if you depend on them. 2024-02-01 - mingw-w64-gettext converted to split package mingw-w64-gettext has been split into "gettext-tools" and "gettext-runtime" subpackages. While this is a backwards compatible change, this means that the gettext tools, like msgmerge and msgfmt, are less likely to be installed as transitive dependencies via other packages, and may now be missing for you if you were implicitly depending on them. If this broke things for you, make sure you explicitly install the gettext tools if you depend on them. 2023-12-13 - Starting to drop some 32-bit Packages Three years ago we dropped 32-bit Windows support for running MSYS2 itself, now we are taking the next step and slowly starting to reduce the number of 32-bit packages, meaning the packages for the MINGW32 and CLANG32 environments. The goal of the phase-out is to reduce maintenance costs and server resources while not affecting most users. The focus will be on packages that aren't likely to see much use anyway, or where 64-bit alternatives are available and viable: Packages which are likely not used outside of MSYS2 (re-packaged) End-user applications which are likely not used outside of MSYS2 (GUI apps, ...) Packages for resource intensive work where most external users are likely already on 64-bit (some scientific packages, ...) Leaf packages with complex and resource intensive builds that are likely not used New leaf packages To find out if a package you have installed is affected you can run pacman -Qm which lists all installed packages which are no longer available in the repo. Ideally not many people should notice these changes, but in case they affect you: Switch your workflow to use 64-bit packages instead ;) Tell us which packages that were removed you still need, so we can consider reinstating them. Please use the issue template to file your request. If you are wondering if you should continue to support 32-bit Windows for your users, here are some relevant resources: Usage stats: https://store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey/Steam-Hardware-Software-Survey-Welcome-to-Steam 32-bit Win8.1+ below the list threshold. Heavily biased towards newer hardware though. https://www.pcbenchmarks.net/os-marketshare.html 32-bit users at ~0.1%. Heavily biased towards newer hardware though. https://data.firefox.com/dashboard/hardware 32-bit at ~14%, but this includes ~11% Win7 and other operating systems which we don't support, so it's not clear. In MSYS2 32-bit packages made up ~3.95% of all downloads at the end of 2023, and ~6.45% one year before (ignoring CI downloads) Some applications dropping 32-bit support: Krita dropped 32-bit support in 2021 qBittorrent dropped 32-bit support in 2022 KeePassXC dropped 32-bit support in 2022 SciPy dropped 32-bit support in 2022 There are of course lots of applications not planning to drop support and 32-bit Windows is still supported until at least October 2025, so we understand that 32-bit support is still required in various cases, and we will try to keep important packages around for as long as possible. 2023-11-05 - Package installation issues for very old/outdated installations If you haven't updated pacman in 2.5 years or longer, but are installing new packages, you will see errors like this, due to a format change in the package database: error: mingw-w64-ucrt-x86_64-shared-mime-info: missing required signature error: mingw-w64-ucrt-x86_64-gtk3: missing required signature error: failed to commit transaction (package missing required signature) Errors occurred, no packages were upgraded. This can be fixed by updating your installation . 2023-08-06 - Python: Changed behavior when loading DLL dependencies of extension modules Starting with CPython 3.8, upstream CPython changed their DLL lookup behavior to a safer default when loading extension modules, which meant no longer looking in PATH and the current working directory as a fallback, but requiring code to explicitly add directories containing dependencies via os.add_dll_directory() . Because many packages weren't ported yet back then, and this behavior interfered with our MinGW port build process we reverted this change and kept the old behavior. This had the downsides of being less secure and os.add_dll_directory() not working. We have now finally managed to fix this in our port, so that DLL loading works the same as with the official CPython distribution. If this change is causing problems for you: Make sure to use os.add_dll_directory() where needed, as recommended by upstream, see https://docs.python.org/3/library/os.html#os.add_dll_directory for details To ease the transition we've temporarily added a PYTHONLEGACYWINDOWSDLLLOADING environment variable, which you can set to 1 to get back the old behavior. We will remove this workaround after some time, so please let us know if there are any problems that can't be solved without it. 2023-04-01 - LLVM 16 LLVM/Clang has now been updated to v16, here are some things to look out for: Stricter C compiler: Various previously warnings are now errors by default and might make your build fail. See the following for more information: The upstream changelog entry: https://releases.llvm.org/16.0.0/tools/clang/docs/ReleaseNotes.html#potentially-breaking-changes The Gentoo guide for how to adjust your code for the new stricter defaults: https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Modern_C_porting The Gentoo bug which tracks all related issues in Gentoo: https://bugs.gentoo.org/870412 autoconf bugs: The stricter defaults in clang v16 exposed some autoconf bugs which lead to some compiler checks returning the wrong results. We have backported the respective fixes into all our autoconf versions (2.13, 2.69 and 2.71) and updated autoconf-archive, but this means you will have to run autoreconf to get those fixes. There is also a chance that other checks in configure.ac or m4 macros shipped with your project will need to be updated. So watch out for changes in your configure results. fortran/flang: flang, the llvm based Fortran compiler, is now capable of building some of our Fortran based packages. But despite that, it still has known issues of generating wrong or broken code without warnings and should not be used in production. The same is true for all Fortran based packages we are building with it. Packages not compatible with llvm v16: So we don't have to wait for all packages/projects to support the newest llvm version, we added new packages for llvm v14 and v15 which only contain static builds and are now used by the packages not supporting llvm v16. This currently affects python-llvmlite, openshadinglanguage and include-what-you-use. 2023-02-10 - Server maintenance on 2023-02-18/19 There will be a short server maintenance around the weekend of 2023-02-18/19 which will affect repo.msys2.org, mirror.msys2.org, packages.msys2.org, and some subdomain redirects of our website. Update: all done now 2023-01-15 - Dropping support for Windows 7 and 8.0 As announced last April we will no longer support Windows 7 / 8.0 from now on. 2023-01-15 - OpenSSL updated from 1.1.1 to 3.0.x With v3.0 being out for more than a year and the EOL of v1.1.1 approaching this year we have moved both cygwin and mingw builds to v3.0.x now. If there are any issues let us know. Note that the license of OpenSSL has changed to Apache-2.0 starting with v3. 2023-01-05 - Dropping 32bit support for Qt 6 Qt project dropped support for Windows version older than Windows 10 from Qt 6, see this official blog post . It was also added that we will not have 32 bit x86 Windows support available. With this above condition, we too have very few users who are using 32 bit x86 Windows 10. So, we decided to remove 32 bit builds for Qt 6 and their dependencies. The remaining 32 bit x86 packages which depends on Qt will be linked with Qt 5. With this, our Qt 6 packages will be available for all official Windows platforms . 2022-12-26 - Default _WIN32_WINNT bumped to Windows 8.1 for UCRT environments We have bumped the default _WIN32_WINNT version defined in mingw-w64 from Windows 7 to Windows 8.1 for non-arm UCRT environments (CLANG32, CLANG64, UCRT64). For projects that don't define their own _WIN32_WINNT and conditionally include features depending on the minimum supported Windows version this might mean that new builds will start depending on Windows 8.1. MINGW32/64 will default to Windows 7 for a bit longer to smooth over the transition. This is part of our goal to phase out Windows 7 support and target newer Windows versions by default. 2022-12-16 - Dropping Windows 7 support for the MSYS2 installer The latest release of the MSYS2 installer (v2022-12-16) has dropped support for Windows 7. It will show an error message and abort if started on Windows 7. 2022-10-29 - Changing the default environment from MINGW64 to UCRT64 About 1.5 years ago we started adding a new variant of the MINGW64 environment called UCRT64 , which uses the Universal CRT instead of the old msvcrt.dll. Now that all our packages are available in this new environment and a very large percentage of our users (~97%) are on a system that includes UCRT, we recommend it as the default environment instead of MINGW64. The MINGW32/64 environments will continue to exist and there are no plans to remove them, but we will focus our attention more on UCRT64 and the other UCRT-using environments such as CLANG64 and CLANGARM64. 2022-10-23 - mingw packages now built with -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 and -fstack-protector-strong Our mingw packages will be built with -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 and -fstack-protector-strong from now on. 2022-10-18 - New minimum hardware requirements (CPUs from ~2006/7+) As a first step of phasing out support for Windows 7, we're raising the minimum hardware requirements to match Windows 8.1, which roughly equals Intel Core 2 / AMD Phenom, so anything after 2006/7 is fine. In terms of GCC/Clang compiler flags this means going from -march=x86-64 to -march=nocona -msahf . This only affects 64bit packages, and only those that use features only available in those newer CPUs, and only once they are updated or rebuilt. 2022-10-10 - libssp is no longer required Building with _FORTIFY_SOURCE no longer requires explicitly linking with libssp (-lssp) and enabling stack protection no longer pulls in libssp. This brings things in line with other platforms. Thanks to Martin Storsjö for implementing this in mingw-w64. Once all our affected packages are rebuilt we will remove the libssp package from our repo. 2022-10-13: We have decided to keep just the libssp DLL around for some more time to avoid breaking existing users 2022-09-24 - Changed behavior for empty env vars Empty environment variables are no longer removed when starting a new non-cygwin process. $ FOO = python -c "import os; print('FOO' in os.environ)" # Old False $ FOO = python -c "import os; print('FOO' in os.environ)" # New True You can revert to the old behavior by setting MSYS=noemptyenvvalues . Please let us know if this is breaking anything that can't be solved by just unsetting the env var where needed. 2022-09-24 - ConPTY support enabled by default ConPTY support in our cygwin fork is now enabled by default. This means any non-cygwin apps will now behave as if they are run in with a console attached and not redirected. This feature has been enabled in upstream cygwin for quite a while but we wanted to wait until there are no more known issues. We now feel that not enabling it causes more problems then enabling it. You can disable it again by setting MSYS=disable_pcon . 2022-04-06 - Windows 7 / 8 support will be dropped late 2022 or early 2023 Cygwin 3.5 will drop support for Windows <8.1, which means the new requirement will be "64 bit Windows 8.1 / Windows Server 2012 R2". We expect the update to Cygwin 3.5 to be around late 2022, early 2023. For more information, look here . A recent survey suggests that ~2-3% of our active users (excluding cloud servers and CI systems) are still using Windows <8.1. We recommend them stopping to update at the end of the year. We've enabled an inline warning message for them when they open a terminal. For developers bundling our packages, we recommend simply pointing out the last version of their application that still worked with Windows 7 / 8 on their download page. 2022-03-04 - Sunsetting the SourceForge mirror in 30 days from now Note: This should only affect systems not updated in over a year, or users that actively switched to this mirror, which is unlikely. Due to space constrains and our ever growing package archive we can no longer update the SourceForge mirror . We already hit the space limit last year but worked around it by no longer syncing source packages. We have now hit the limit again, and decided that it is no longer worth it maintaining it. We will remove the SourceForge mirror on 2022-04-03 . We will delete the package databases as well to make DB syncs fail to avoid users using outdated software without them knowing it. After 4 more weeks we will delete the remaining packages and installers. 2022-05-07 : The mirror has now been removed. 2022-02-24 - repo.msys2.org only available via HTTPS/TLS We have switched repo.msys2.org to always redirect to a secure connection. If for some reason you require HTTP you can use one of our tier 1 mirrors . 2021-12-22 - Ongoing Cleanup of the base-devel Package Group The base-devel package group is the set of packages required to be installed before running makepkg / makepkg-mingw . We have recently started to clean this group up and moved some of the packages to be explicit dependencies in the PKGBUILD files instead. One notable removal is various autotools related packages. There now exists an autotools and a ${MINGW_PACKAGE_PREFIX}-autotools meta package which will pull in anything related to autotools which packages can add to their makedepends . Further more the group was replaced with a package of the same name, to make adding/removing packages easier. Note that pacman prefers packages over groups for the same name, so the set of included packages is now listed here https://packages.msys2.org/package/base-devel This cleanup can lead to build errors in case your build setup assumes certain packages being installed with base-devel . If that is the case make sure to install those missing packages explicitly instead. 2021-12-21 - Potential Incompatibilities with newer Python setuptools tl;dr: use export SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS=stdlib if you have problems building/installing packages with newer versions of setuptools from pypi. The Python packaging ecosystem is currently in the transition of removing distutils from CPython and moving it into setuptools. Historically distutils is patched quite a bit by us to make it work with our directory layout and to build packages with gcc/clang instead of MSVC. With this move our patches are no longer used and setuptools will fail in various ways, or install things into wrong places. We are working with upstream to include our patches, but this will take some more time. In the meantime you can force setuptools to use the (still patched) distutils from the CPython stdlib via export SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS=stdlib The setuptools version in our repo however will continue to use the patched distutils until all issues are resolved and is not affected. 🙏 Many thanks to the distutils and setuptools maintainers for considering our patches, despite Cygwin/MSYS2 not being officially supported by CPython. 2021-10-14 - OpenSSH 8.8 dropped support for old ssh-rsa keys using SHA-1 The recent OpenSSH update disabled support for old ssh-rsa keys using SHA-1 by default. See https://www.openssh.com/txt/release-8.8 "Potentially-incompatible changes" for details and possible workarounds. 2021-07-04 - Some Mirror/Server/Repository Changes Primary Pacman Server : We've switched the main server in the pacman config to https://mirror.msys2.org . This server will redirect pacman to an up-to-date mirror near you for each file. We hope this will improve the download speed for users further away from Europe. We also have a new overview of all mirrors here . Repo Path Renaming: We've renamed mingw/i686/ to mingw/mingw32/ and mingw/x86_86/ to mingw/mingw64/ and added symlinks for the old paths. This means 100GB of resyncing for mirrors using rsync (sorry :/). Having the repo name in the directory path allows us to have one mirrorlist configuration for all repos in the future. Sourceforge : Due to space constraints we no longer host the source packages on Sourceforge. They are still available on our main server and on all mirrors. 2021-04-21 - R.I.P. mingwandroid Ray Donnelly is a co-founder and developer of MSYS2 and after a multi year fight with cancer passed away on 2021-04-20. If you want to know more about his life and work see his fundraiser descriptions: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-Ray-fund-a-hospice-bedroom https://www.gofundme.com/f/arku72-help-ray-fight-cancer He was always helpful, knowledgeable, and friendly, and he will be greatly missed. 2021-03-25 - Temporarily broken msys2-launcher package The repo contained a broken msys2-launcher package for a few hours today causing things like "msys2.exe" to just show an error dialog. You can get back to a working setup this way: Start C:/msys64/msys2_shell.cmd to get a shell Run pacman -Suy to get all the fixed packages 2021-02-27 - New server for repo.msys2.org and packages.msys2.org We have moved repo.msys2.org (and package.msys2.org) to a new server. There was a short downtime, but everything should be running great now. Big thanks to appfleet.com jsdelivr.com for sponsoring the new server. New mirrorlists for Pacman will be published soon. After you get them, your package installs and updates should be faster than before and without the 404s and glitches. With the migration, Christoph (@lazka) will now be updating and signing the Pacman databases more often. This should go smoothly as the GPG keys are already in place and the process has been tested on the new server before it went live. By the way, the redirect domain msys2.org (no www.) should work more reliably now and HTTPS is now available for it. 2021-01-31 - ASLR enabled by default About 5 months ago we started backporting patches to our binutils 2.35 to allow enabling ASLR support via various flags. We also enabled these flags in our build system, so any package in our repo that was updated in the last 5 months has ASLR support enabled. We've now updated to 2.36 which has ASLR enabled by default. Ideally you shouldn't notice any changes, but in case this leads to problems all of it can be disabled/reverted via linker flags: mingw64: -Wl,--disable-dynamicbase,--disable-high-entropy-va,--default-image-base-low mingw32: -Wl,--disable-dynamicbase Note that this is only a temporary workaround and some of these flags will not be available forever, so you should either fix your code or file a bug in case you suspect a toolchain issue. Thanks to the binutils developers for improving/fixing ASLR support and to everyone helping on the MSYS2 side of things, especially Jeremy Drake for backporting, upstreaming and fixing bugs exposed by these changes. Known issues: (Fixed now) In case you are seeing errors such as relocation truncated to fit: IMAGE_REL_AMD64_REL32 against undefined symbol try building with -Wl,--default-image-base-low . Here is the upstream bug report: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26659 2020-12-26 - Zstd exemption for core packages removed Given it's been months since we began the switch to Zstd for compressing packages, we've now started using it for core packages as well. This means older installations without Zstd support won't be able to cleanly upgrade anymore. @dmn-star compiled these commands that should update an older installation to support Zstd and unblock futher upgrades: pacman --noconfirm -U "https://repo.msys2.org/msys/x86_64/libzstd-1.4.4-2-x86_64.pkg.tar.xz" pacman --noconfirm -U "https://repo.msys2.org/msys/x86_64/zstd-1.4.4-2-x86_64.pkg.tar.xz" pacman --noconfirm -U "https://repo.msys2.org/msys/x86_64/pacman-5.2.1-6-x86_64.pkg.tar.xz" 2020-10-08 - main repo pruned Due to limited space on the new server and SourceForge file hosting, we are starting to remove older unused packages from the archives. There should still be a 1 year's worth of packages available for downgrades. Mirrors are free to choose whether they want to keep everything or follow the lead. 2020-10-07 - server downtime From Friday 2 nd to Wednesday 10 th , the main hosting at repo.msys2.org was down. The server unfortunately completely died and the hosting had to be moved elsewhere. We thank Diablo-D3 for having provided the hardware and hosting. If you notice anything wrong with repo.msys2.org since the move, please tell us. 2020-06-29 - new packagers Alexey is stepping down from his role as the main packager and two new packagers have been appointed in his place: David Macek with signing key 0x9078f532 Christoph Reiter with signing key 0xa0aa7f57 You can see the keys in full without relying on keyservers in the msys2-keyring GitHub repository . We have released a new msys2-keyring package from that source (and a new installer that includes them) and we are waiting for a bit before uploading new databases and packages to give people time to update. If you don't update the keyring in time, you'll see something like this: :: Synchronizing package databases... downloading mingw32.db... downloading mingw32.db.sig... error: mingw32: key "4A6129F4E4B84AE46ED7F635628F528CF3053E04" is unknown :: Import PGP key 4096R/87771331B3F1FF5263856A6D974C8BE49078F532, "David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>", created: 2018-01-14? [Y/n] error: mingw32: signature from "David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>" is marginal trust error: failed to update mingw32 (invalid or corrupted database (PGP signature)) downloading mingw64.db... downloading mingw64.db.sig... error: mingw64: signature from "David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>" is marginal trust error: failed to update mingw64 (invalid or corrupted database (PGP signature)) downloading msys.db... downloading msys.db.sig... error: msys: signature from "David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>" is marginal trust error: failed to update msys (invalid or corrupted database (PGP signature)) error: failed to synchronize all databases error: mingw32: signature from "David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>" is marginal trust error: mingw64: signature from "David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>" is marginal trust error: msys: signature from "David Macek <david.macek.0@gmail.com>" is marginal trust We have prepared the following steps to verify and install the new keyring manually after which you should be able to use pacman -Syu again: $ curl -O https://repo.msys2.org/msys/x86_64/msys2-keyring-r21.b39fb11-1-any.pkg.tar.xz $ curl -O https://repo.msys2.org/msys/x86_64/msys2-keyring-r21.b39fb11-1-any.pkg.tar.xz.sig $ pacman-key --verify msys2-keyring-r21.b39fb11-1-any.pkg.tar.xz.sig ==> Checking msys2-keyring-r21.b39fb11-1-any.pkg.tar.xz.sig... (detached) gpg: Signature made Mon Jun 29 07:36:14 2020 CEST gpg: using DSA key AD351C50AE085775EB59333B5F92EFC1A47D45A1 gpg: Good signature from "Alexey Pavlov (Alexpux) <alexpux@gmail.com>" [full] # pacman -U msys2-keyring-r21.b39fb11-1-any. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
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https://www.scrive.com/fi/tuotteet/digitaalinen-henkilollisyys | Turvalliset sisäänkirjautumisratkaisut ja henkilöllisyyspalvelut Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Suomi United Kingdom English Global Sverige Danmark Norge Deutschland Nederland France Help Centre +358 45 4909684 Ota yhteytta Kirjaudu sisään Primary navigation Tuotteet Ratkaisut Resurssit Yritys Hinnat Help Centre Ota yhteyttä Osta nyt Kokeile ilmaiseksi Etsi Avaa valikko Koti / Tuotteet / Digitaalinen henkilöllisyys ja tunnistaminen Digitaalinen henkilöllisyys ja tunnistaminen Kuinka liiketoiminnan hoitaminen onnistuu turvallisesti verkkomaailmassa? Scriven identiteettialusta tarjoaa työkalut, joita tarvitaan seuraaviin: Petosten ja rahanpesun torjunta (AML) Kaikenlaisten tapahtumien todentaminen Järjestelmien suojaaminen luvattomalta käytöltä Liiketoimia kanssanne tekevän asiakkaan tunteminen (KYC) Yleisen tietosuoja-asetuksen (GDPR) mukainen tärkeiden tietojen suojaaminen Tuki- ja rahoitustoimien tehostaminen Liiketoimintapotentiaalin kasvattaminen Avaa yrityksesi kasvu- ja laajentumismahdollisuudet ja välty huolilta varmentamalla asiakkaiden, käyttäjien, työntekijöiden, yhteistyökumppanien – kaikkien liiketoimia kanssasi tekevien – henkilöllisyys nopeasti ja turvallisesti. Missä tahansa päin maailmaa he ovatkaan. Scrive tarjoaa tarpeitasi ja etenemissuunnitelmaasi vastaavan nopean ja joustavan digitaalisen henkilöllisyyskokemuksen toimintasi laajentamiseksi, turvaamiseksi ja virtaviivaistamiseksi. Hyödynnä useita digitaalisen henkilöllisyyden menetelmiä sähköisestä tunnistautumisesta (eID-todennuspalvelut) henkilöllisyyden varmennuspalveluihin (IDV). Katso kaikki tuetut henkilöllisyyspalvelut. Valitse paras tapa tuoda palvelumme osaksi toimintaasi: API-rajapinta ( eID Hub ) tai erillinen henkilöllisyyden portaali ( ID Check ). Contact Mitä yrityksesi tarvitsee? Scrive on identiteettialustan tarjoaja, joka ymmärtää sekä uusien että vakiintuneiden yritysten tarpeet, kun tavoitteena on yrityksen toiminnan digitalisointi. Nopea ja turvallinen käyttöönotto Virtaviivaista uusien asiakkaiden hankinta, kasvata konversioastetta, tehosta turvallisuutta ja säännöstenmukaisuutta, vähennä manuaalista työtä ja paranna toiminnan tehokkuutta. Yksinkertaistettu säännöstenmukaisuus 100-prosenttisesti digitaaliset henkilöllisyyden varmentamisprosessit säännöstenmukaisuuden saavuttamiseksi säännellyillä verkkoalueilla, kuten KYC, KYB ja AML. Tehostetut tuki- ja rahoitustoimet Anna tukihenkilöstön ja myyntiedustajien saada välitön todiste henkilöllisyydestä ennen arkaluonteisten tietojen jakamista ja turvallisten maksutapahtumien tekemistä. Sisäänkirjautumisratkaisut Lisää turvallisuutta, luottamusta ja brändiuskollisuutta tarjoamalla asiakkaille, työntekijöille, käyttäjille ja yhteistyökumppaneille kitkaton tapa päästä turvallisesti käsiksi järjestelmiisi ja palveluihisi. Valitse tarpeisiisi sopivin henkilöllisyyden ratkaisu API-rajapinta eID Hub on API-rajapinta, joka tarjoaa pääsyn yhdestä paikasta koko Scriven digitaalisten henkilöllisyyspalveluiden valikoimaan. Maksat vain käyttämistäsi palveluista, ja voit lisätä palveluja liiketoimintasi kasvaessa. Tutustu eID Hub -palveluun Ei integraatiota Pääse alkuun välittömästi erillisellä, alustasta riippumattomalla ID Check -työkalulla, jota voit käyttää minkä tahansa järjestelmän rinnalla kaikilla kanavillasi. Tutustu ID Check -palveluun "Scrive tekee työstäni paljon helpompaa! Olen kiintynyt tuotteeseenne, sillä sen avulla pystyn skaalautumaan entistä useampiin maihin yhdellä integraatiolla sen sijaan, että joutuisin jokaisen eID:n kohdalla työskentelemään uuden integroinnin parissa viikkoja tai kuukausia." Paulo Unia, Director of Engineering, Pleo Usein kysytyt kysymykset – Digitaalinen henkilöllisyys Mikä on eID? eID (sähköinen henkilötunnistetieto) on ikään kuin digitaalinen versio passista tai muusta virallisesta henkilöllisyystodistuksesta. Se tarjoaa henkilöille keinon varmentaa henkilöllisyytensä digitaalisessa ympäristössä. Miten eID:n voi saada? eID-todennuspalvelun voi myöntää joko julkinen tai yksityinen organisaatio (yleensä valtio tai pankki), ja sen aitous perustuu alkuperäisen, fyysisen henkilöllisyystodistuksen tarkistukseen. Mitä tietoja eID-todennuksessa tallennetaan? eID-todennuksessa voidaan tallentaa henkilötietoja, jotka jaetaan turvallisesti palveluntarjoajille. Jaettavat tiedot voidaan rajoittaa tietyn tapahtuman vaatimiin edellytyksiin (esim. verkkokaupan maksutapahtuma, terveydenhuolto, veroilmoitus). Mikä on henkilötodistuksen varmennus (IDV)? Henkilötodistuksen varmennuspalvelu (IDV) on vaihtoehto eID-todennuspalvelun käyttämiselle. Se perustuu fyysisen henkilötodistuksen jakamiseen digitaalisessa ympäristössä. Kunkin tapahtuman riskitekijöistä riippuen IDV-tarkistus voi sisältää eri menetelmien yhdistelmiä, mukaan lukien valokuvan lataaminen henkilöllisyystodistuksesta analysointia varten, selfien lähettäminen lisävarmennusta varten ja “elävyyden tarkistus”, joka suoritetaan asiakkaan ja edustajan välisessä suorassa videotapaamisessa. Ovatko eID-todennuspalvelut laillisesti tunnustettuja? Sähköisen tunnistamisen, todentamisen ja luottamuspalvelujen (eIDAS) asetus tarjoaa oikeudellisen kehyksen digitaalisten henkilöllisyyspalveluiden käytölle EU:ssa. Ota meihin yhteyttä saadaksesi lisätietoja Contact us Etunimi * Sukunimi * Sähköpostiosoite * Phone number Tämä kenttä on pakollinen Country code Tämä kenttä on pakollinen * +358 Puhelinnumero Tämä kenttä on pakollinen * Yritys * Valitse työntekijöiden määrä * Valitse työntekijöiden määrä Oletko nykyinen asiakas? Tämä kenttä on pakollinen * Kyllä Ei Haluaisitko kertoa meille jotakin? Hyväksyn Privacy Notice ja Terms of Service Ottakaa yhteyttä minuun Miksi Scrive? Scrive tarjoaa sähköisiä allekirjoituksia ja e-ID-ratkaisuja pienille ja keskisuurille yrityksille ja yritysorganisaatioille. Scrive tarjoaa turvallisen ja nopean tavan allekirjoittaa ja hallita sähköisiä asiakirjoja. Miksi Scrive Footer navigation Tuotteet eSign Online eSign API eSign GO eID Hub eSign Forms Forms Builder Ratkaisut Toimialat Tapausesimerkit Integraatiot Hinnat eSign Online eSign API eSign GO Resurssit Trust Centre Tieto Help Centre Käyttötapaukset Digitaalinen vs. sähköinen allekirjoitus Digitalisaatio Ulkoiset resurssit Vahvista dokumentin aitous Järjestelmän tila API-dokumentaatio Scrive brand guidelines Yritys Tietoja Scrive Partners Ura Contact Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
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https://hackage.haskell.org/package/HUnit | HUnit: A unit testing framework for Haskell Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts HUnit : A unit testing framework for Haskell [ bsd3 , library , testing ] [ Propose Tags ] [ Report a vulnerability ] HUnit is a unit testing framework for Haskell, inspired by the JUnit tool for Java, see: http://www.junit.org . [ Skip to Readme ] Modules [ Index ] [ Quick Jump ] Test Test.HUnit Test.HUnit.Base Test.HUnit.Lang Test.HUnit.Terminal Test.HUnit.Text Downloads HUnit-1.6.2.0.tar.gz [ browse ] (Cabal source package) Package description (as included in the package) Maintainer's Corner Package maintainers AdamBergmark , DonaldStewart , DuncanCoutts , RichardGiraud , SimonHengel , ryanglscott For package maintainers and hackage trustees edit package information Candidates No Candidates Versions [ RSS ] 1.1 , 1.2.0.0 , 1.2.0.1 , 1.2.0.2 , 1.2.0.3 , 1.2.2.0 , 1.2.2.1 , 1.2.2.3 , 1.2.4.2 , 1.2.4.3 , 1.2.5.0 , 1.2.5.1 , 1.2.5.2 , 1.3.0.0 , 1.3.1.0 , 1.3.1.1 , 1.3.1.2 , 1.4.0.0 , 1.5.0.0 , 1.6.0.0 , 1.6.1.0 , 1.6.2.0 Change log CHANGELOG.md Dependencies base (>=4 && <5) , call-stack (>=0.3.0) , deepseq [ details ] License BSD-3-Clause Author Dean Herington Maintainer Simon Hengel <sol@typeful.net> Uploaded by SimonHengel at 2021-01-19T18:27:38Z Stability stable --> Category Testing Home page https://github.com/hspec/HUnit#readme Bug tracker https://github.com/hspec/HUnit/issues Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/hspec/HUnit Distributions Arch: 1.6.2.0 , Debian: 1.6.0.0 , Fedora: 1.6.2.0 , FreeBSD: 1.2.5.2 , LTSHaskell: 1.6.2.0 , NixOS: 1.6.2.0 , Stackage: 1.6.2.0 , openSUSE: 1.6.2.0 Reverse Dependencies 217 direct, 4686 indirect [ details ] Downloads 241212 total (57 in the last 30 days) Rating 2.25 (votes: 2) [estimated by Bayesian average ] Your Rating λ λ λ Status Docs available [ build log ] Last success reported on 2021-01-19 [ all 1 reports ] Readme for HUnit-1.6.2.0 [ back to package description ] HUnit User's Guide HUnit is a unit testing framework for Haskell, inspired by the JUnit tool for Java. This guide describes how to use HUnit, assuming you are familiar with Haskell, though not necessarily with JUnit. You can obtain HUnit, including this guide, at https://github.com/hspec/HUnit Introduction A test-centered methodology for software development is most effective when tests are easy to create, change, and execute. The JUnit tool pioneered support for test-first development in Java . HUnit is an adaptation of JUnit to Haskell, a general-purpose, purely functional programming language. (To learn more about Haskell, see www.haskell.org ). With HUnit, as with JUnit, you can easily create tests, name them, group them into suites, and execute them, with the framework checking the results automatically. Test specification in HUnit is even more concise and flexible than in JUnit, thanks to the nature of the Haskell language. HUnit currently includes only a text-based test controller, but the framework is designed for easy extension. (Would anyone care to write a graphical test controller for HUnit?) The next section helps you get started using HUnit in simple ways. Subsequent sections give details on writing tests and running tests . The document concludes with a section describing HUnit's constituent files and a section giving references to further information. Getting Started In the Haskell module where your tests will reside, import module Test.HUnit : import Test.HUnit Define test cases as appropriate: test1 = TestCase (assertEqual "for (foo 3)," (1,2) (foo 3)) test2 = TestCase (do (x,y) <- partA 3 assertEqual "for the first result of partA," 5 x b <- partB y assertBool ("(partB " ++ show y ++ ") failed") b) Name the test cases and group them together: tests = TestList [TestLabel "test1" test1, TestLabel "test2" test2] Run the tests as a group. At a Haskell interpreter prompt, apply the function runTestTT to the collected tests. (The TT suggests T ext orientation with output to the T erminal.) > runTestTT tests Cases: 2 Tried: 2 Errors: 0 Failures: 0 > If the tests are proving their worth, you might see: > runTestTT tests ### Failure in: 0:test1 for (foo 3), expected: (1,2) but got: (1,3) Cases: 2 Tried: 2 Errors: 0 Failures: 1 > Isn't that easy? You can specify tests even more succinctly using operators and overloaded functions that HUnit provides: tests = test [ "test1" ~: "(foo 3)" ~: (1,2) ~=? (foo 3), "test2" ~: do (x, y) <- partA 3 assertEqual "for the first result of partA," 5 x partB y @? "(partB " ++ show y ++ ") failed" ] Assuming the same test failures as before, you would see: > runTestTT tests ### Failure in: 0:test1:(foo 3) expected: (1,2) but got: (1,3) Cases: 2 Tried: 2 Errors: 0 Failures: 1 > Writing Tests Tests are specified compositionally. Assertions are combined to make a test case , and test cases are combined into tests . HUnit also provides advanced features for more convenient test specification. Assertions The basic building block of a test is an assertion . type Assertion = IO () An assertion is an IO computation that always produces a void result. Why is an assertion an IO computation? So that programs with real-world side effects can be tested. How does an assertion assert anything if it produces no useful result? The answer is that an assertion can signal failure by calling assertFailure . assertFailure :: String -> Assertion assertFailure msg = ioError (userError ("HUnit:" ++ msg)) (assertFailure msg) raises an exception. The string argument identifies the failure. The failure message is prefixed by " HUnit: " to mark it as an HUnit assertion failure message. The HUnit test framework interprets such an exception as indicating failure of the test whose execution raised the exception. (Note: The details concerning the implementation of assertFailure are subject to change and should not be relied upon.) assertFailure can be used directly, but it is much more common to use it indirectly through other assertion functions that conditionally assert failure. assertBool :: String -> Bool -> Assertion assertBool msg b = unless b (assertFailure msg) assertString :: String -> Assertion assertString s = unless (null s) (assertFailure s) assertEqual :: (Eq a, Show a) => String -> a -> a -> Assertion assertEqual preface expected actual = unless (actual == expected) (assertFailure msg) where msg = (if null preface then "" else preface ++ "\n") ++ "expected: " ++ show expected ++ "\n but got: " ++ show actual With assertBool you give the assertion condition and failure message separately. With assertString the two are combined. With assertEqual you provide a "preface", an expected value, and an actual value; the failure message shows the two unequal values and is prefixed by the preface. Additional ways to create assertions are described later under Advanced Features Since assertions are IO computations, they may be combined--along with other IO computations--using (>>=) , (>>) , and the do notation. As long as its result is of type (IO ()) , such a combination constitutes a single, collective assertion, incorporating any number of constituent assertions. The important features of such a collective assertion are that it fails if any of its constituent assertions is executed and fails, and that the first constituent assertion to fail terminates execution of the collective assertion. Such behavior is essential to specifying a test case. Test Case A test case is the unit of test execution. That is, distinct test cases are executed independently. The failure of one is independent of the failure of any other. A test case consists of a single, possibly collective, assertion. The possibly multiple constituent assertions in a test case's collective assertion are not independent. Their interdependence may be crucial to specifying correct operation for a test. A test case may involve a series of steps, each concluding in an assertion, where each step must succeed in order for the test case to continue. As another example, a test may require some "set up" to be performed that must be undone ("torn down" in JUnit parlance) once the test is complete. In this case, you could use Haskell's IO.bracket function to achieve the desired effect. You can make a test case from an assertion by applying the TestCase constructor. For example, (TestCase (return ())) is a test case that never fails, and (TestCase (assertEqual "for x," 3 x)) is a test case that checks that the value of x is 3. Additional ways to create test cases are described later under Advanced Features . Tests As soon as you have more than one test, you'll want to name them to tell them apart. As soon as you have more than several tests, you'll want to group them to process them more easily. So, naming and grouping are the two keys to managing collections of tests. In tune with the "composite" design pattern [1], a test is defined as a package of test cases. Concretely, a test is either a single test case, a group of tests, or either of the first two identified by a label. data Test = TestCase Assertion | TestList [Test] | TestLabel String Test There are three important features of this definition to note: A TestList consists of a list of tests rather than a list of test cases. This means that the structure of a Test is actually a tree. Using a hierarchy helps organize tests just as it helps organize files in a file system. A TestLabel is attached to a test rather than to a test case. This means that all nodes in the test tree, not just test case (leaf) nodes, can be labeled. Hierarchical naming helps organize tests just as it helps organize files in a file system. A TestLabel is separate from both TestCase and TestList . This means that labeling is optional everywhere in the tree. Why is this a good thing? Because of the hierarchical structure of a test, each constituent test case is uniquely identified by its path in the tree, ignoring all labels. Sometimes a test case's path (or perhaps its subpath below a certain node) is a perfectly adequate "name" for the test case (perhaps relative to a certain node). In this case, creating a label for the test case is both unnecessary and inconvenient. The number of test cases that a test comprises can be computed with testCaseCount . testCaseCount :: Test -> Int As mentioned above, a test is identified by its path in the test hierarchy. data Node = ListItem Int | Label String deriving (Eq, Show, Read) type Path = [Node] -- Node order is from test case to root. Each occurrence of TestList gives rise to a ListItem and each occurrence of TestLabel gives rise to a Label . The ListItem s by themselves ensure uniqueness among test case paths, while the Label s allow you to add mnemonic names for individual test cases and collections of them. Note that the order of nodes in a path is reversed from what you might expect: The first node in the list is the one deepest in the tree. This order is a concession to efficiency: It allows common path prefixes to be shared. The paths of the test cases that a test comprises can be computed with testCasePaths . The paths are listed in the order in which the corresponding test cases would be executed. testCasePaths :: Test -> [Path] The three variants of Test can be constructed simply by applying TestCase , TestList , and TestLabel to appropriate arguments. Additional ways to create tests are described later under Advanced Features . The design of the type Test provides great conciseness, flexibility, and convenience in specifying tests. Moreover, the nature of Haskell significantly augments these qualities: Combining assertions and other code to construct test cases is easy with the IO monad. Using overloaded functions and special operators (see below), specification of assertions and tests is extremely compact. Structuring a test tree by value, rather than by name as in JUnit, provides for more convenient, flexible, and robust test suite specification. In particular, a test suite can more easily be computed "on the fly" than in other test frameworks. Haskell's powerful abstraction facilities provide unmatched support for test refactoring. Advanced Features HUnit provides additional features for specifying assertions and tests more conveniently and concisely. These facilities make use of Haskell type classes. The following operators can be used to construct assertions. infix 1 @?, @=?, @?= (@?) :: (AssertionPredicable t) => t -> String -> Assertion pred @? msg = assertionPredicate pred >>= assertBool msg (@=?) :: (Eq a, Show a) => a -> a -> Assertion expected @=? actual = assertEqual "" expected actual (@?=) :: (Eq a, Show a) => a -> a -> Assertion actual @?= expected = assertEqual "" expected actual You provide a boolean condition and failure message separately to (@?) , as for assertBool , but in a different order. The (@=?) and (@?=) operators provide shorthands for assertEqual when no preface is required. They differ only in the order in which the expected and actual values are provided. (The actual value--the uncertain one--goes on the "?" side of the operator.) The (@?) operator's first argument is something from which an assertion predicate can be made, that is, its type must be AssertionPredicable . type AssertionPredicate = IO Bool class AssertionPredicable t where assertionPredicate :: t -> AssertionPredicate instance AssertionPredicable Bool where assertionPredicate = return instance (AssertionPredicable t) => AssertionPredicable (IO t) where assertionPredicate = (>>= assertionPredicate) The overloaded assert function in the Assertable type class constructs an assertion. class Assertable t where assert :: t -> Assertion instance Assertable () where assert = return instance Assertable Bool where assert = assertBool "" instance (ListAssertable t) => Assertable [t] where assert = listAssert instance (Assertable t) => Assertable (IO t) where assert = (>>= assert) The ListAssertable class allows assert to be applied to [Char] (that is, String ). class ListAssertable t where listAssert :: [t] -> Assertion instance ListAssertable Char where listAssert = assertString With the above declarations, (assert ()) , (assert True) , and (assert "") (as well as IO forms of these values, such as (return ()) ) are all assertions that never fail, while (assert False) and (assert "some failure message") (and their IO forms) are assertions that always fail. You may define additional instances for the type classes Assertable , ListAssertable , and AssertionPredicable if that should be useful in your application. The overloaded test function in the Testable type class constructs a test. class Testable t where test :: t -> Test instance Testable Test where test = id instance (Assertable t) => Testable (IO t) where test = TestCase . assert instance (Testable t) => Testable [t] where test = TestList . map test The test function makes a test from either an Assertion (using TestCase ), a list of Testable items (using TestList ), or a Test (making no change). The following operators can be used to construct tests. infix 1 ~?, ~=?, ~?= infixr 0 ~: (~?) :: (AssertionPredicable t) => t -> String -> Test pred ~? msg = TestCase (pred @? msg) (~=?) :: (Eq a, Show a) => a -> a -> Test expected ~=? actual = TestCase (expected @=? actual) (~?=) :: (Eq a, Show a) => a -> a -> Test actual ~?= expected = TestCase (actual @?= expected) (~:) :: (Testable t) => String -> t -> Test label ~: t = TestLabel label (test t) (~?) , (~=?) , and (~?=) each make an assertion, as for (@?) , (@=?) , and (@?=) , respectively, and then a test case from that assertion. (~:) attaches a label to something that is Testable . You may define additional instances for the type class Testable should that be useful. Running Tests HUnit is structured to support multiple test controllers. The first subsection below describes the test execution characteristics common to all test controllers. The second subsection describes the text-based controller that is included with HUnit. Test Execution All test controllers share a common test execution model. They differ only in how the results of test execution are shown. The execution of a test (a value of type Test ) involves the serial execution (in the IO monad) of its constituent test cases. The test cases are executed in a depth-first, left-to-right order. During test execution, four counts of test cases are maintained: data Counts = Counts { cases, tried, errors, failures :: Int } deriving (Eq, Show, Read) cases is the number of test cases included in the test. This number is a static property of a test and remains unchanged during test execution. tried is the number of test cases that have been executed so far during the test execution. errors is the number of test cases whose execution ended with an unexpected exception being raised. Errors indicate problems with test cases, as opposed to the code under test. failures is the number of test cases whose execution asserted failure. Failures indicate problems with the code under test. Why is there no count for test case successes? The technical reason is that the counts are maintained such that the number of test case successes is always equal to (tried - (errors + failures)) . The psychosocial reason is that, with test-centered development and the expectation that test failures will be few and short-lived, attention should be focused on the failures rather than the successes. As test execution proceeds, three kinds of reporting event are communicated to the test controller. (What the controller does in response to the reporting events depends on the controller.) start -- Just prior to initiation of a test case, the path of the test case and the current counts (excluding the current test case) are reported. error -- When a test case terminates with an error, the error message is reported, along with the test case path and current counts (including the current test case). failure -- When a test case terminates with a failure, the failure message is reported, along with the test case path and current counts (including the current test case). Typically, a test controller shows error and failure reports immediately but uses the start report merely to update an indication of overall test execution progress. Text-Based Controller A text-based test controller is included with HUnit. runTestText :: PutText st -> Test -> IO (Counts, st) runTestText is generalized on a reporting scheme given as its first argument. During execution of the test given as its second argument, the controller creates a string for each reporting event and processes it according to the reporting scheme. When test execution is complete, the controller returns the final counts along with the final state for the reporting scheme. The strings for the three kinds of reporting event are as follows. A start report is the result of the function showCounts applied to the counts current immediately prior to initiation of the test case being started. An error report is of the form " Error in: *path*\n*message* ", where path is the path of the test case in error, as shown by showPath , and message is a message describing the error. If the path is empty, the report has the form " Error:\n*message* ". A failure report is of the form " Failure in: *path*\n*message* ", where path is the path of the test case in error, as shown by showPath , and message is the failure message. If the path is empty, the report has the form " Failure:\n*message* ". The function showCounts shows a set of counts. showCounts :: Counts -> String The form of its result is Cases: *cases* Tried: *tried* Errors: *errors* Failures: *failures* where cases , tried , errors , and failures are the count values. The function showPath shows a test case path. showPath :: Path -> String The nodes in the path are reversed (so that the path reads from the root down to the test case), and the representations for the nodes are joined by ' : ' separators. The representation for (ListItem *n*) is (show n) . The representation for (Label *label*) is normally label . However, if label contains a colon or if (show *label*) is different from label surrounded by quotation marks--that is, if any ambiguity could exist--then (Label *label*) is represented as (show *label*) . HUnit includes two reporting schemes for the text-based test controller. You may define others if you wish. putTextToHandle :: Handle -> Bool -> PutText Int putTextToHandle writes error and failure reports, plus a report of the final counts, to the given handle. Each of these reports is terminated by a newline. In addition, if the given flag is True , it writes start reports to the handle as well. A start report, however, is not terminated by a newline. Before the next report is written, the start report is "erased" with an appropriate sequence of carriage return and space characters. Such overwriting realizes its intended effect on terminal devices. putTextToShowS :: PutText ShowS putTextToShowS ignores start reports and simply accumulates error and failure reports, terminating them with newlines. The accumulated reports are returned (as the second element of the pair returned by runTestText ) as a ShowS function (that is, one with type (String -> String) ) whose first argument is a string to be appended to the accumulated report lines. HUnit provides a shorthand for the most common use of the text-based test controller. runTestTT :: Test -> IO Counts runTestTT invokes runTestText , specifying (putTextToHandle stderr True) for the reporting scheme, and returns the final counts from the test execution. References [1] Gamma, E., et al. Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1995: The classic book describing design patterns in an object-oriented context. junit.org : Web page for JUnit, the tool after which HUnit is modeled. http://junit.sourceforge.net/doc/testinfected/testing.htm : A good introduction to test-first development and the use of JUnit. http://junit.sourceforge.net/doc/cookstour/cookstour.htm : A description of the internal structure of JUnit. Makes for an interesting comparison between JUnit and HUnit. The HUnit software and this guide were written by Dean Herington heringto@cs.unc.edu Produced by hackage and Cabal 3.16.1.0. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://aws.amazon.com/es/what-is/data-catalog/ | ¿Qué es un catálogo de datos? - Explicación de los catálogos de datos - AWS Saltar al contenido principal Filter: Todo English Contáctenos AWS Marketplace Soporte Mi cuenta Búsqueda Filter: Todo Iniciar sesión en la consola Crear cuenta ¿Qué es la computación en la nube? › Centro de conceptos de computación en la nube › Administración y gobernanza Desde principiantes hasta expertos, tenemos cursos de formación digital que se adaptan a todos los niveles de habilidad. Explore AWS Skill Builder» ¿Qué es un catálogo de datos? Cree una cuenta de AWS ¿Qué es un catálogo de datos? ¿Cuáles son las ventajas de un catálogo de datos? ¿Cuáles son los casos de uso de un catálogo de datos? ¿Qué información contiene un catálogo de datos? ¿Cuáles son las características principales de un catálogo de datos? ¿Cuál es la diferencia entre la gobernanza de datos y un catálogo de datos? ¿Cómo puede AWS satisfacer sus requisitos de catálogo de datos? ¿Qué es un catálogo de datos? Un catálogo de datos es un inventario de todos los datos que una organización recopila y procesa. Los requisitos reglamentarios obligan a las organizaciones a asegurar y proteger sus datos en todo momento, desde la recopilación hasta el consumo. Un catálogo de datos organiza y clasifica los datos para respaldar la gobernanza y la detección de datos. De este modo, facilita la eficiencia operativa al compartir el contexto, ya que todos pueden entender con rapidez por qué y cómo se utiliza un conjunto de datos específico en una organización. ¿Cuáles son las ventajas de un catálogo de datos? Como herramienta organizativa, un catálogo de datos agiliza la búsqueda de datos y la identificación para qué se utilizan. A continuación, indicamos algunos beneficios. Descubrimiento rápido de activos Un catálogo de datos simplifica el proceso de identificación de datos, lo que ayuda a aumentar la productividad de los empleados. A continuación, puede buscar datos mediante etiquetas descriptivas para descubrir rápidamente los datos relacionados y, al mismo tiempo, comprender el contexto y el propósito de cada conjunto de datos. Ofrece una visión de dónde provienen los datos, cómo se mueven a través de los sistemas y cómo se transforman. Los analistas de datos a menudo pueden realizar sus análisis sin depender en gran medida de la TI, lo que permite obtener información más rápida. Calidad de datos mejorada Los catálogos de datos requieren varios campos que los empleados deben completar cuando una empresa ingiere datos nuevos. Cuando los usuarios acceden al catálogo, su capacidad para leer sobre los orígenes de los datos, los procesos de transformación y las fechas de edición significa que pueden tener más confianza al interactuar con la información. Un alto grado de integridad ayuda a aumentar la facilidad de la gobernanza de los datos y a mejorar la calidad de los datos. Las empresas también pueden automatizar la generación de los metadatos de este catálogo de datos para proporcionar catálogos de datos completos con menos esfuerzo. Mayor eficiencia Un catálogo de datos fomenta la coherencia en los nombres, las definiciones y las métricas, lo que garantiza que los diferentes equipos de una organización estén alineados en su comprensión y uso de los datos. Con la visibilidad de todos los activos de datos, las organizaciones pueden reducir la redundancia de los datos, lo que garantiza que los esfuerzos no se dupliquen y los costes de almacenamiento se minimicen. Las ganancias de productividad que experimentan los científicos de datos también ayudan a reducir los costes generales. Seguridad mejorada Las normas de privacidad exigen que las organizaciones sepan dónde se encuentran los datos personales y quién ha accedido a ellos. Un catálogo de datos puede ayudar a garantizar que los datos confidenciales se gestionen correctamente y que el acceso se conceda de forma adecuada. Las organizaciones pueden rastrear de dónde provienen sus datos, quién ha accedido a ellos y cómo se utilizan, lo que mejora las iniciativas de cumplimiento normativo. ¿Cuáles son los casos de uso de un catálogo de datos? Las organizaciones pueden usar los catálogos de datos para optimizar su almacenamiento y administración de datos. A continuación se muestran algunos de los casos de uso de un catálogo de datos. Análisis de autoservicio Un catálogo de datos proporciona una descripción detallada de lo que contienen los datos y para qué los utiliza una empresa. También permite a las empresas diferenciar muchos datos similares y acelerar cualquier proceso relacionado con la recuperación y el uso de datos, especialmente en entornos empresariales. Esta transparencia mejorada permite a los usuarios determinar rápidamente qué datos están consultando y descubrir toda la información necesaria en un solo lugar. Puede crear flujos de trabajo de análisis de autoservicio para usuarios de datos no técnicos, incluso con grandes volúmenes de datos almacenados. Intercambio de conocimientos La colaboración es clave para obtener información procesable a partir de los datos. Un catálogo de datos fomenta un entorno colaborativo al permitir a los usuarios comentar, calificar y revisar conjuntos de datos. Al compartir sus experiencias y conocimientos sobre conjuntos de datos específicos, los usuarios pueden trabajar juntos para reducir los riesgos y acelerar los análisis en toda la organización. Análisis de linaje de datos Comprender dónde se originan los datos y cómo atraviesan varios sistemas es fundamental para solucionar problemas de datos, realizar análisis de impacto o cumplir con los estándares de cumplimiento. Un catálogo de datos proporciona visibilidad del linaje de datos, lo que brinda a los usuarios una imagen clara del recorrido de los datos desde su origen hasta su destino final. Las empresas pueden crear documentos de taxonomía internos que permitan a todos los empleados entender los nombres correctos de todos los activos de datos. Tener un documento o una hoja de referencia en un catálogo de datos aumenta la coherencia de los datos en toda la organización. ¿Qué información contiene un catálogo de datos? Los catálogos de datos contienen metadatos para describir su inventario de activos de datos y proporcionar información adicional sobre lo que contienen los datos. Los campos de metadatos le permiten buscar rápidamente en los datos y localizar los activos. Un catálogo de datos puede incluir un rango de metadatos, como los siguientes ejemplos. Metadatos empresariales Los metadatos empresariales son cualquier información relacionada con el valor que proporcionan a una empresa. Podría incluir información sobre el uso de los datos en una empresa, detalles de cumplimiento normativo y un contexto empresarial útil para otros usuarios. Por ejemplo, puede contener anotaciones de proyectos de datos, como los niveles de confidencialidad de los datos, las descripciones, la ubicación, los usuarios, el departamento, etc. Por lo general, una organización definirá los datos empresariales exactos que necesita e incluirá varios campos relacionados. Metadatos técnicos Los metadatos técnicos describen la estructura general de un conjunto de datos. Describe la estructura de los objetos de datos y comenta sus relaciones, conexiones, índices, filas, columnas y forma tabular. Estos metadatos también proporcionan contexto a los profesionales de datos sobre los procesos a los que deben someterse los datos, como pasar a la transformación o al análisis. Los usuarios entienden rápidamente cómo una organización ha organizado y mostrado la información. Metadatos operativos Los metadatos operativos comentan el origen de los datos y su transformación, actualizaciones, cardinalidad y otros marcadores de identificación de procesos. Con los metadatos operativos, puede ver cómo ingresaron los datos a su organización, qué transformación sufrió y otras actualizaciones de estado actuales. Con los campos de metadatos operativos, puede ver cuándo los usuarios editaron los datos por última vez y quién tiene permiso para editar los datos. ¿Cuáles son las características principales de un catálogo de datos? Las plataformas modernas de catálogos de datos utilizan varias características clave para optimizar su uso y aumentar la eficiencia. Automatización La automatización permite a las empresas gestionar su catálogo de datos con menos esfuerzo. Las capacidades de integración permiten que el catálogo extraiga automáticamente metadatos de varias fuentes. El catálogo permanece actualizado cuando se agregan nuevos activos de datos o se actualizan los existentes. Algunos sistemas avanzados también aprovechan el aprendizaje automático para mejorar y refinar sus procesos de categorización de datos a lo largo del tiempo. Las características de automatización de un catálogo de datos mejoran la agilidad a pesar del aumento constante de los volúmenes de datos. Opciones de búsqueda eficientes Las características de búsqueda en el catálogo de datos van más allá de las búsquedas básicas de palabras clave para ofrecer sugerencias. También incorporan filtros para que los usuarios puedan encontrar los datos en función de varios criterios. La experiencia del usuario es similar a la de los motores de búsqueda modernos, ya que proporcionan resultados relevantes, clasificados y de acceso rápido. La eficiencia en la recuperación de datos ahorra tiempo y fomenta el descubrimiento y la exploración de datos. Glosario universal Un glosario universal ofrece definiciones estandarizadas de términos y métricas en toda la organización. Garantiza que todos los términos de metadatos tengan una definición única y clara. Cuando los usuarios encuentran un término en el catálogo, pueden consultar el significado del glosario, lo que garantiza una comprensión y un uso coherentes en todos los ámbitos. Esto es particularmente crucial para mantener la integridad de los datos y promover una comunicación clara entre los diferentes equipos. ¿Cuál es la diferencia entre la gobernanza de datos y un catálogo de datos? La gobernanza de datos es una metodología que garantiza que los datos estén en las condiciones adecuadas para respaldar las iniciativas y operaciones empresariales. Establecer la gobernanza adecuada significa equilibrar el acceso y el control de los datos y brindar a las personas confianza en los datos, al tiempo que se fomenta la experimentación. Ofrece un marco que las personas pueden seguir al utilizar los datos y la tecnología empresariales. La gobernanza de datos es útil para garantizar una alta calidad de los datos y un uso adecuado bajo restricciones reglamentarias. Los catálogos de datos son una tecnología para implementar políticas de gobernanza de datos. La gobernanza de datos define las políticas de uso de datos, mientras que los catálogos de datos las aplican. Estos catálogos permiten a las empresas realizar un seguimiento de su gobernanza de datos de manera más eficaz. ¿Cómo puede AWS satisfacer sus requisitos de catálogo de datos? AWS Glue es un servicio de integración de datos sin servidor que facilita el descubrimiento, la preparación, el traslado y la integración de datos de varias fuentes para el análisis de datos, el aprendizaje automático (ML) y el desarrollo de aplicaciones. El Catálogo de datos de AWS Glue es un repositorio central que almacena metadatos estructurales y operativos para sus recursos de datos. Puede almacenar la definición de la tabla y la ubicación física de un conjunto de datos determinado, agregar atributos relevantes para la empresa y realizar un seguimiento de cómo han cambiado estos datos a lo largo del tiempo. El catálogo de datos también se integra con Amazon Athena , Amazon EMR y Amazon Redshift Spectrum. Una vez que haya agregado las definiciones de las tablas al catálogo de datos, podrá tener una vista común de los datos entre estos servicios. AWS Glue ofrece numerosas formas de incluir metadatos en el catálogo de datos. Podrá, por ejemplo: configurar rastreadores de AWS Glue para analizar varios almacenes de datos y deducir automáticamente esquemas y la estructura de particiones y rellenar el catálogo de datos con las estadísticas y definiciones de tablas correspondientes; programar rastreadores para que se ejecuten de manera periódica, de modo que los metadatos siempre estén actualizados y sincronizados con los datos subyacentes; agregar y actualizar manualmente los detalles de la tabla mediante la consola de AWS Glue o mediante una llamada a la API. Comience a utilizar los catálogos de datos en AWS configurando una cuenta gratuita hoy mismo. 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https://msys2.github.io/docs/installer/#cli-usage-examples | MSYS2 Installer - MSYS2 Skip to content MSYS2 MSYS2 Installer Deutsch (de) Español (es) Français (fr) 日本语 (ja) 한국어 (ko) 中文 (zh) Initializing search GitHub MSYS2 GitHub Getting Started News Package Index Documentation Documentation What is MSYS2? Who Is Using MSYS2? Environments Updating MSYS2 Using MSYS2 in CI Package Mirrors Terminals IDEs and Text Editors MSYS2 Installer MSYS2 Installer Table of contents CLI Usage Examples FAQ What's the difference between the installer and the archives? What is contained in the installer/archives? How can I verify the basic integrity of the downloaded files? How can I verify that the downloaded files were generated by MSYS2 developers? Microsoft Defender SmartScreen prevents me from running the installer What are the installation folder recommendations? Package Management Package Management Package Management Package Naming Repositories and Mirrors Tips and Tricks FAQ Filesystem Paths Symlinks Configuration Locations Just-in-time Debugging ARM64 Support Languages & Tools Languages & Tools Using CMake in MSYS2 Autotools Python Git C/C++ C++ pkg-config pacman Supported Windows Versions and Hardware FAQ Development Development Packaging Packaging Creating a new Package Updating an existing Package Package Guidelines License Metadata PKGBUILD Mirrors MSYS2 Keyring Python Automated Build Process Vulnerability Reporting Accounts and Ownership Other Topics Other Topics Welcome to the MSYS2 wiki Creating Packages TODO LIST Distributing Qt Creator MSYS2 History How does MSYS2 differ from Cygwin? Launchers MSYS2-Introduction Re-installing MSYS2 Porting Setting up SSHd Signing Packages Do you need Sudo? Terminals Get Involved License Privacy Support & Contact Code of Conduct Table of contents CLI Usage Examples FAQ What's the difference between the installer and the archives? What is contained in the installer/archives? How can I verify the basic integrity of the downloaded files? How can I verify that the downloaded files were generated by MSYS2 developers? Microsoft Defender SmartScreen prevents me from running the installer What are the installation folder recommendations? MSYS2 Installer The MSYS2 installer can be used to set up an initial MSYS2 environment. For further updating pacman is used. See the updating guide for more information. The installer comes in four variants: msys2-x86_64-.exe : The GUI installer (see screenshot above) msys2-base-x86_64-*.sfx.exe : Just the files in a self extracting archive (missing Windows integration like shortcuts, uninstall entry, but otherwise works the same) msys2-base-x86_64-*.tar.zst : Same as .sfx.exe but as an ZSTD archive msys2-base-x86_64-*.tar.xz : Same as .sfx.exe but as an XZ archive (deprecated) The installer executables and tarballs are hosted on GitHub as well as on the repo server . We also provide nightly builds . CLI Usage Examples The GUI installer utilizes the Qt Installer Framework which also offers CLI options for automation. Installing the GUI installer via the CLI to C:\msys64 : .\ msys2-x86_64-latest . exe in - -confirm-command - -accept-messages - -root C :/ msys64 Uninstalling an existing installation in C:\msys64 via the CLI: C :\ msys64 \ uninstall . exe pr - -confirm-command Installing the self extracting archive to C:\msys64 : .\ msys2-base-x86_64-latest . sfx . exe -y -oC :\ FAQ What's the difference between the installer and the archives? The installer provides some additional features such as installing shortcuts, registering an uninstaller, a GUI for selecting the installation path and automatically running a login shell at the end to initialize the MSYS2 environment. If you unpack the archives and run a login shell once, you will get a functionally equivalent MSYS2 installation. What is contained in the installer/archives? It contains the base package and all its dependencies. You can list the contained packages using: pactree base -lu | sort How can I verify the basic integrity of the downloaded files? Note The examples below use old releases and checksums as examples. Make sure to adjust the version numbers and checksums to the ones of the release you are verifying. You can download the expected checksum by appending .sha256 to each download URL. You can verify that the downloaded file matches the checksum by computing the checksum either with Powershell: ( Get-FileHash -Algorithm SHA256 -Path .\ msys2-x86_64 - 20230526 . exe ). Hash . toLower () 432dcc8b5cc7d5104a85b52df8b1e77cdf91018e102ac7aa998248637d636229 or with 7-Zip, if you have it installed: Right clicking on msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe Go into the "7-Zip" and then "CRC SHA" sub menu, and finally click on "SHA-256" 7-Zip will pop up a window containing the checksum Compare the result with the content of " https://github.com/msys2/msys2-installer/releases/download/2023-05-26/msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe.sha256 " to verify that your local file matches the checksum. How can I verify that the downloaded files were generated by MSYS2 developers? The installer is signed using the following key: 0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC You can download the signature by appending a .sig to all download URLs. Verification example: $ gpg --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv "0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC" gpg: key 46BD761F7A49B0EC: public key "Christoph Reiter <reiter.christoph@gmail.com>" imported gpg: Total number processed: 1 gpg: imported: 1 $ ls msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe.sig $ gpg --verify msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe.sig gpg: assuming signed data in 'msys2-x86_64-20230526.exe' gpg: Signature made Fr 26 Mai 2023 11:46:54 CEST gpg: using RSA key E0AA0F031DBD80FFBA57B06D5A62D0CAB6264964 gpg: Good signature from "Christoph Reiter <reiter.christoph@gmail.com>" [unknown] gpg: WARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature! gpg: There is no indication that the signature belongs to the owner. Primary key fingerprint: 0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC Subkey fingerprint: E0AA 0F03 1DBD 80FF BA57 B06D 5A62 D0CA B626 4964 For the signature to be valid, gnupg has to print "Good signature" and the primary fingerprint shown has to match 0EBF 782C 5D53 F7E5 FB02 A667 46BD 761F 7A49 B0EC . Microsoft Defender SmartScreen prevents me from running the installer Depending on the age of the installer release and how many people have already used it successfully, Windows will show a SmartScreen warning, preventing you from running the installer. You can skip this warning by first clicking on "More info" and then on "Run anyway". What are the installation folder recommendations? We recommend a short ASCII-only path on a NTFS volume, no accents, no spaces, no symlinks, no subst or network drives. While you are free to choose a different installation path, please be aware that some tools and packages may not work correctly if you deviate from these recommendations. Tools that do not handle spaces or non-ASCII characters in paths may fail due to truncated or mangled paths. Tools which work with long absolute paths might hit the Windows MAX_PATH limit (260 characters) if the base installation path is long. This can be partly worked around by enabling long path support in Windows, but not all tools can handle long paths even then. Please report any issues you encounter with packages or tools due to the installation path. Default permissions of the installation folder The installer does not set any special permissions on the installation folder, which means for the default C:\msys64 path, the permissions are inherited from C: , which by default gives all users read/write access. If you need to restrict access to the installation folder, you have to do this manually after installation, or choose a different installation path with the desired permissions. Made with Material for MkDocs | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://www.scrive.com/no/priser | Priser - Scrive Skip to main content Tertiary navigation Scrive inngår avtale med Svea Bank Norge France English Global Nederland Sverige Danmark Deutschland Suomi United Kingdom Help Centre Salg +47 23 507 090 Kontakt salg Logg in Primary navigation Produkter Løsninger Ressurser Virksomhet Priser Help Centre Kontakt salg Kjøp nå Prøv Gratis Søk Åpne menyen Hjem / Priser Priser Klar til å komme i gang? Send inn en forespørsel , så tar vi kontakt innen kort tid, eller ta kontakt med salgsavdelingen direkte på +4723507090 Prisliste eSign Signer avtalene online via vår portal, API eller administrerte tjenester. Se priser for våre ulike eSign-produkter: eSign Online eSign GO eSign API Priser for identifisering Løsninger som hjelper deg med å identifisere og autentisere kundene dine med vårt voksende utvalg av digitale ID-tjenester: eID Hub ID Check Priser for Web Forms Samle inn data og signaturer i én enkelt digital flyt med løsninger for utfylling og signering av nettskjemaer. Priser for våre ulike nettskjemaløsninger: eSign Forms Forms builder Kontakt oss Klar til å komme i gang? Kontakt oss så tar vi kontakt innen kort tid Fornavn * Etternavn * E-post * Phone number Dette feltet er obligatorisk Country code Dette feltet er obligatorisk * +47 Telefon Dette feltet er obligatorisk * Firma * Antall ansatte * Antall ansatte Er du en eksisterende kunde? Dette feltet er obligatorisk * Ja Nei Hva gjelder henvendelsen? * Jeg aksepterer Privacy Notice Kontakt meg Hvorfor Scrive? Scrive tilbyr e-signaturer og e-ID-løsninger for små og mellomstore bedrifter samt bedriftsorganisasjoner. Scrive tilbyr en sikker og rask måte å signere og håndtere elektroniske dokumenter på. Hvorfor Scrive? Scrive / Rebel Universitetsgate 2 0164 Oslo Kontakt skjema Footer navigation Produkter eSign Online eSign Go eSign API eID Hub ID Check eSign Forms Forms Builder Løsninger Industrier Casestudier Integrasjoner Priser Priser eSign Online Priser eSign GO Priser eSign API Priser ID Check Priser eID Hub Priser eSign Forms Priser Forms Builder Ressurser Kunnskap Trust Centre Help Centre Digital vs. Elektronisk Signatur Digitalisering Bytt til Scrive Eksterne ressurser System status Verifisere et dokument API-dokumentasjon Scrive brand guidelines Virksomhet Om Scrive Partner Karriere Kontakt oss Secondary navigation Terms of service Privacy notice Cookie declaration © 2026 Scrive | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/xml-1.3.13/docs/Text-XML-Light-Proc.html | Text.XML.Light.Proc Source Contents Index xml-1.3.13: A simple XML library. Portability Stability provisional Maintainer Iavor S. Diatchki <diatchki@galois.com> Safe Haskell Safe-Inferred Text.XML.Light.Proc Description Synopsis strContent :: Element -> String onlyElems :: [ Content ] -> [ Element ] elChildren :: Element -> [ Element ] onlyText :: [ Content ] -> [ CData ] findChildren :: QName -> Element -> [ Element ] filterChildren :: ( Element -> Bool ) -> Element -> [ Element ] filterChildrenName :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> [ Element ] findChild :: QName -> Element -> Maybe Element filterChild :: ( Element -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe Element filterChildName :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe Element findElement :: QName -> Element -> Maybe Element filterElement :: ( Element -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe Element filterElementName :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe Element findElements :: QName -> Element -> [ Element ] filterElements :: ( Element -> Bool ) -> Element -> [ Element ] filterElementsName :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> [ Element ] findAttr :: QName -> Element -> Maybe String lookupAttr :: QName -> [ Attr ] -> Maybe String lookupAttrBy :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> [ Attr ] -> Maybe String findAttrBy :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe String Documentation strContent :: Element -> String Source Get the text value of an XML element. This function ignores non-text elements, and concatenates all text elements. onlyElems :: [ Content ] -> [ Element ] Source Select only the elements from a list of XML content. elChildren :: Element -> [ Element ] Source Select only the elements from a parent. onlyText :: [ Content ] -> [ CData ] Source Select only the text from a list of XML content. findChildren :: QName -> Element -> [ Element ] Source Find all immediate children with the given name. filterChildren :: ( Element -> Bool ) -> Element -> [ Element ] Source Filter all immediate children wrt a given predicate. filterChildrenName :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> [ Element ] Source Filter all immediate children wrt a given predicate over their names. findChild :: QName -> Element -> Maybe Element Source Find an immediate child with the given name. filterChild :: ( Element -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe Element Source Find an immediate child with the given name. filterChildName :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe Element Source Find an immediate child with name matching a predicate. findElement :: QName -> Element -> Maybe Element Source Find the left-most occurrence of an element matching given name. filterElement :: ( Element -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe Element Source Filter the left-most occurrence of an element wrt. given predicate. filterElementName :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe Element Source Filter the left-most occurrence of an element wrt. given predicate. findElements :: QName -> Element -> [ Element ] Source Find all non-nested occurances of an element. (i.e., once we have found an element, we do not search for more occurances among the element's children). filterElements :: ( Element -> Bool ) -> Element -> [ Element ] Source Find all non-nested occurrences of an element wrt. given predicate. (i.e., once we have found an element, we do not search for more occurances among the element's children). filterElementsName :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> [ Element ] Source Find all non-nested occurences of an element wrt a predicate over element names. (i.e., once we have found an element, we do not search for more occurances among the element's children). findAttr :: QName -> Element -> Maybe String Source Lookup the value of an attribute. lookupAttr :: QName -> [ Attr ] -> Maybe String Source Lookup attribute name from list. lookupAttrBy :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> [ Attr ] -> Maybe String Source Lookup the first attribute whose name satisfies the given predicate. findAttrBy :: ( QName -> Bool ) -> Element -> Maybe String Source Lookup the value of the first attribute whose name satisfies the given predicate. Produced by Haddock version 2.13.2 | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/user/MalcolmWallace | Malcolm Wallace | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Home Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Malcolm Wallace MalcolmWallace is part of the following groups: Maintainers for FpMLv53 : candidates Maintainers for HaXml : candidates Maintainers for HsASA : candidates Maintainers for cpphs : candidates Maintainers for hscolour : candidates Maintainers for integer-pure : candidates Maintainers for lazy-csv : candidates Maintainers for polyparse : candidates Package uploaders Click here to manage this account | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://omny.fm/shows/potomac-perspective-with-brian-gardner | Potomac Perspective with Brian Gardner clips - Omny.fm Potomac Perspective with Brian Gardner Potomac Perspective with Brian Gardner Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner provides timely insight and analysis into how political, legislative, and regulatory developments are impacting business and capital markets. Moderated by Stifel Head of Corporate Communications Neil Shapiro. This material is prepared by the Washington Policy Strategy Group of Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated (“Stifel”). This materia … More Social links: Website Facebook X (Twitter) Follow the podcast: Apple Podcasts iHeart Spotify RSS feed Clips Playlists 2026 Preview 2026 is shaping up as a pivotal year for policy, with potential actions on healthcare and housing plus we'll get a new head at the Fed. In the latest episode of Potomac Perspective, Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro preview what to expect. This materi… 31:04 The Final Countdown December is shaping up as a busy month in Washington, as Congress races to enact “must pass” legislation before year end. Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro examine what’s at stake. Also discussed: President Trump closes in on a new Fed Chairman and all… 24:02 Back to Business Now that the government has reopened, Congress will begin to address numerous policy matters that were shelved during the recent shutdown. Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro examine how lawmakers are leaning into “affordability” issues. Also discussed: … 16:56 Election Reflection Democrats win big on election night, the Supreme Court tackles the Trump tariffs, and the latest government shutdown becomes the longest in American history. Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro have a recap in this edition of Potomac Perspective. This m… 20:59 The Shutdown Stalemate The latest government shutdown stretches into a second week, with no clear resolution in sight. In the new episode of Potomac Perspective, Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro have the latest on efforts to break the stalemate. Also discussed: Banks get… 15:01 Tik Tok on the Clock! It looks like there’s a deal to control the scroll. In the latest episode of Potomac Perspective, Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro discuss Tik Tok’s likely fate in the United States. Also covered: New H-1B visa fees leave many in state of confusion … 20:39 The Building Blocks of a National Housing Emergency The Trump administration is building a case for a national housing emergency. In the latest episode of Potomac Perspective, Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro discuss what that could mean for the real estate market. Also discussed: The Bureau of Labor … 25:22 Deals & Ideals Deals and ideals take center stage in Washington. In the latest episode of Potomac Perspective, Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro dive into President Trump’s evolving approach to antitrust at home and peacemaking abroad. This material is prepared by t… 16:38 Trump, Trade & The Fed Remade? Investors digest a whirlwind out of the White House, as President Trump faces a vacancy at the Federal Reserve and a legal challenge to his trade agenda. Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro discuss the latest developments. This material is prepared by t… 24:14 Powell Under Pressure & Crypto Short Circuits in Congress President Trump turns up the pressure on Fed Chair Powell. Plus, crypto’s big week short circuits on Capitol Hill. Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner and co-host Neil Shapiro have the latest in this episode of Potomac Perspective. This material is prepared by the Washington Po… 22:35 Load more Powered by Omny Studio is the complete audio management solution for podcasters and radio stations © 121cast Pty Ltd Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Listener Privacy Policy | Copyright Policy (DMCA) | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/financial | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged financial 2 packages have this tag. [Merge tag] (trustees only) Related tags: bsd3 (1), library (1), program (1), xml (1) Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers FpMLv53 2 0.0 1 A binding for the Financial Products Markup Language (v5.3) ( financial , library , xml ) 2012-06-19 0.1 MalcolmWallace hasloGUI 4 0.0 1 Loan calculator Gtk GUI. Based on haslo (Haskell Loan) library. ( bsd3 , financial , program ) 2012-08-22 0.1 BartoszWojcik | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/manage-payment-methods/ | Manage payment methods | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods We’re rolling out an improved billing experience to make it easier to manage your cloud subscriptions. This means your subscriptions could be managed on either the original or the improved experience. Read more about the key differences Read Atlassian payment methods and payment terms for detailed information on various payment methods and terms, helping you determine which is best for you. Improved billing experience Who can do this? Billing admins Add a payment method If you don’t have a payment method on file, you can add one through your billing account, or when you purchase your first paid subscription. To add a credit card: Go to admin.atlassian.com/billing . Select your billing account if you have more than one. From the side navigation, select Payment method . Select Add payment details . Add your credit card information and select Confirm . Your card will be saved as the default payment method for future payments on your billing account. If you’d like to add multiple payment methods, contact us . 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https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/composite | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged composite 9 packages have this tag. [Merge tag] (trustees only) Related tags: library (9), mit (8), data (3), dhall (2), pandoc (2), bsd3 (1), csv (1), data-structures (1), lens (1), modelling (1), polysemy (1), polysemy-vinyl-composite (1), ... Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers compdoc 10 0.0 2 Parse a Pandoc to a composite value. ( composite , library , mit , pandoc , text ) 2021-07-26 0.3.0.0 locallycompact compdoc-dhall-decoder 12 0.0 0 Allows you to write FromDhall instances for Compdoc ( bsd3 , composite , dhall , library , pandoc ) 2021-07-26 0.3.0.0 locallycompact composite-cassava 16 0.0 1 Csv parsing functionality for composite. ( composite , csv , library , mit ) 2021-09-01 0.0.3.1 locallycompact composite-dhall 32 0.0 0 Dhall instances for composite records. ( composite , data , dhall , library , mit ) 2022-09-02 0.1.0.1 locallycompact composite-lens-extra 5 0.0 0 Extra lens functions for composite. ( composite , data , lens , library , mit ) 2022-09-04 0.1.0.0 locallycompact composite-tuple 8 0.0 1 Tuple functions for composite records. ( composite , data-structures , library , mit ) 2020-09-18 0.1.2.0 locallycompact composite-xml 7 0.0 0 RecXML Type ( composite , data , library , mit , xml ) 2022-07-16 0.1.0.0 locallycompact fcf-composite 5 0.0 0 Type-level computation for composite using first-class-families. ( composite , library , mit , types ) 2021-08-26 0.1.1.0 locallycompact polysemy-methodology-composite 23 0.0 2 Functions for using polysemy-methodology with composite. ( composite , library , mit , modelling , polysemy , polysemy-vinyl-composite , vinyl ) 2020-11-14 0.1.4.0 locallycompact | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://aws.amazon.com/fr/what-is/data-catalog/ | Qu'est-ce qu'un catalogue de données ? - Explication des catalogues de données - AWS Passer au contenu principal Filter: Tout English Nous contacter AWS Marketplace Assistance Mon compte Recherche Filter: Tout Se connecter à la console Créer un compte Qu’est-ce que le cloud computing ? › Hub des concepts liés au cloud computing › Gestion et gouvernance Des débutants aux experts, nous proposons des cours de formation numériques adaptés à tous les niveaux de compétence. Découvrez AWS Skill Builder » Qu'est-ce qu'un catalogue de données ? Créer un compte AWS Qu'est-ce qu'un catalogue de données ? Quels sont les avantages d'un catalogue de données ? Quels sont les cas d'utilisation d'un catalogue de données ? Quelles informations contient un catalogue de données ? Quelles sont les principales fonctionnalités d'un catalogue de données ? Quelle est la différence entre la gouvernance des données et un catalogue de données ? Comment AWS peut-il répondre à vos besoins en matière de catalogue de données ? Qu'est-ce qu'un catalogue de données ? Un catalogue de données est un inventaire de toutes les données qu'une organisation collecte et traite. Les exigences réglementaires obligent les organisations à sécuriser et à protéger leurs données à tout moment, de la collecte à la consommation. Un catalogue de données organise et classe les données pour faciliter la gouvernance et la découverte des données. Il facilite l'efficacité opérationnelle grâce au partage du contexte, car chacun peut rapidement comprendre pourquoi et comment un jeu de données spécifique est utilisé au sein d'une organisation. Quels sont les avantages d'un catalogue de données ? En tant qu'outil organisationnel, un catalogue de données rationalise la recherche de données et l'identification de leur utilisation. Retrouvez ci-dessous certains avantages. Découverte rapide des actifs Un catalogue de données simplifie le processus d'identification des données, ce qui contribue à augmenter la productivité des employés. Vous pouvez ensuite rechercher des données à l'aide de balises descriptives pour découvrir rapidement les données associées tout en comprenant le contexte et l'objectif de chaque jeu de données. Il offre un aperçu de l'origine des données, de la manière dont elles circulent dans les systèmes et de la manière dont elles sont transformées. Les analystes de données peuvent souvent effectuer leurs analyses sans trop s'appuyer sur l'informatique, ce qui permet d'obtenir de Insights plus rapidement. Qualité des données améliorée Les catalogues de données nécessitent plusieurs champs que les employés doivent remplir lorsqu'une entreprise ingère de nouvelles données. Lorsque les utilisateurs accèdent au catalogue, leur capacité à connaître l'origine des données, les processus de transformation et les dates de modification leur permet d'interagir avec les informations en toute confiance. Un degré élevé d'exhaustivité contribue à faciliter la gouvernance des données et à améliorer la qualité des données. Les entreprises peuvent également automatiser la génération de ces métadonnées de catalogues de données afin de fournir des catalogues de données complets avec moins d'efforts. Efficacité accrue Un catalogue de données favorise la cohérence des noms, des définitions et des indicateurs, garantissant ainsi que les différentes équipes d'une organisation comprennent et utilisent les données de la même manière. Grâce à la visibilité de tous les actifs de données, les organisations peuvent réduire la redondance des données, en veillant à ne pas dupliquer les efforts et à minimiser les coûts de stockage. Les gains de productivité réalisés par les spécialistes de données contribuent également à réduire les coûts globaux. Sécurité renforcée Les réglementations en matière de confidentialité obligent les organisations à savoir où se trouvent les données personnelles et qui y a accédé. Un catalogue de données peut aider à garantir que les données sensibles sont traitées correctement et que l'accès est accordé de manière appropriée. Les organisations peuvent suivre l'origine de leurs données, qui y a accédé et comment elles sont utilisées, améliorant ainsi les initiatives de conformité réglementaire. Quels sont les cas d'utilisation d'un catalogue de données ? Les organisations peuvent utiliser des catalogues de données pour rationaliser leur stockage et leur gestion des données. Vous trouverez ci-dessous certains des cas d'utilisation d'un catalogue de données. Analyse en libre-service Un catalogue de données fournit une description détaillée du contenu des données et de l'utilisation qu'en fait une entreprise. Cela permet également aux entreprises de différencier de nombreuses données similaires et d'accélérer tout processus lié à la récupération et à l'utilisation des données, en particulier dans les environnements d'entreprise. Cette transparence accrue permet aux utilisateurs de déterminer rapidement les données qu'ils consultent et de découvrir toutes les informations nécessaires en un seul endroit. Vous pouvez créer des flux de travail analytiques en libre-service pour les utilisateurs de données non techniques, même lorsque de gros volumes de données sont stockés. Partage des connaissances La collaboration est essentielle pour obtenir des informations exploitables à partir des données. Un catalogue de données favorise un environnement collaboratif en permettant aux utilisateurs de commenter, d'évaluer et de consulter des jeux de données. En partageant leurs expériences et leurs connaissances sur des jeux de données spécifiques, les utilisateurs peuvent travailler ensemble pour réduire les risques et accélérer les analyses dans l'ensemble de l'organisation. Analyse du lignage des données Il est essentiel de comprendre d'où proviennent les données et comment elles traversent les différents systèmes pour résoudre les problèmes liés aux données, effectuer des analyses d'impact ou respecter les normes de conformité. Un catalogue de données fournit une visibilité sur le lignage des données, donnant aux utilisateurs une image claire du parcours des données depuis leur source jusqu'à leur destination finale. Les entreprises peuvent créer des documents de taxonomie internes permettant à tous les employés de comprendre les noms corrects de tous les actifs de données. La présence d'un document ou d'une feuille de référence dans un catalogue de données améliore la cohérence des données au sein de l'organisation. Quelles informations contient un catalogue de données ? Les catalogues de données contiennent des métadonnées qui décrivent votre inventaire des actifs de données et fournissent des informations supplémentaires sur ce que contiennent les données. Les champs de métadonnées vous permettent de rechercher rapidement dans les données et de localiser les actifs. Un catalogue de données peut inclure une série de métadonnées, comme les exemples suivants. Métadonnées commerciales Les métadonnées commerciales sont toutes les informations relatives à la valeur qu'elles apportent à une entreprise. Elle peut inclure des informations sur l'utilisation des données dans une entreprise, des détails de conformité réglementaire et un contexte commercial utile pour les autres utilisateurs. Par exemple, il peut contenir des annotations de projets de données telles que les niveaux de confidentialité des données, les descriptions, l'emplacement, les utilisateurs, le département, etc. Une organisation définira généralement les données commerciales exactes dont elle a besoin et inclura plusieurs domaines connexes. Métadonnées techniques Les métadonnées techniques décrivent la structure globale d'un jeu de données. Elles décrivent la structure des objets de données, en commentant leurs relations, leurs connexions, leurs index, leurs lignes, leurs colonnes et leur forme tabulaire. Ces métadonnées fournissent également aux professionnels des données un contexte sur les processus auxquels les données doivent être soumises, tels que le passage à une transformation ou à une analyse. Les utilisateurs comprennent rapidement comment une organisation a organisé et affiché les informations. Métadonnées opérationnelles Les métadonnées opérationnelles commentent l'origine des données et leur transformation, leurs mises à jour, leur cardinalité et d'autres marqueurs d'identification des processus. À l'aide des métadonnées opérationnelles, vous pouvez voir comment les données sont entrées dans votre organisation, la transformation qu'elle a subie et d'autres mises à jour de statut en cours. Les champs de métadonnées opérationnelles vous permettent de savoir quand les utilisateurs ont modifié les données pour la dernière fois et qui est autorisé à modifier les données. Quelles sont les principales fonctionnalités d'un catalogue de données ? Les plateformes de catalogues de données modernes utilisent diverses fonctionnalités clés pour rationaliser leur utilisation et accroître leur efficacité. Automatisation L'automatisation permet aux entreprises de gérer leur catalogue de données avec moins d'efforts. Les fonctionnalités d'intégration permettent au catalogue d'extraire automatiquement les métadonnées de différentes sources. Le catalogue reste à jour lorsque de nouvelles ressources de données sont ajoutées ou que des ressources existantes sont mises à jour. Certains systèmes avancés tirent également parti de l'apprentissage automatique pour améliorer et affiner leurs processus de catégorisation des données au fil du temps. Les fonctionnalités d'automatisation d'un catalogue de données améliorent l'agilité malgré l'augmentation constante des volumes de données. Options de recherche efficaces Les fonctionnalités de recherche dans le catalogue de données vont au-delà des simples recherches par mots clés et fournissent des suggestions. Celles-ci intègrent également des filtres permettant aux utilisateurs de trouver les données en fonction de divers critères. L'expérience utilisateur s'apparente à celle des moteurs de recherche modernes, fournissant des résultats pertinents, classés et accessibles rapidement. L'efficacité de la récupération des données permet de gagner du temps tout en encourageant la découverte et l'exploration des données. Glossaire universel Un glossaire universel propose des définitions normalisées des termes et des indicateurs au sein d'une organisation. Cela garantit que tous les termes de métadonnées ont une définition unique et claire. Lorsque les utilisateurs découvrent un terme dans le catalogue, ils peuvent se référer au glossaire pour en connaître la signification, ce qui garantit une compréhension et une utilisation cohérentes dans tous les domaines. Cela est particulièrement crucial pour préserver l'intégrité des données et promouvoir une communication claire entre les différentes équipes. Quelle est la différence entre la gouvernance des données et un catalogue de données ? La gouvernance des données est une méthodologie qui garantit que les données sont en bon état pour soutenir les initiatives et les opérations commerciales. Mettre en place la bonne gouvernance implique de trouver un équilibre entre l'accès et le contrôle des données et de donner confiance aux utilisateurs dans les données tout en encourageant l'expérimentation. Celle-ci propose un cadre que les utilisateurs peuvent suivre lorsqu'ils utilisent les données et les technologies d'entreprise. La gouvernance des données est utile pour garantir une qualité élevée des données et une utilisation appropriée dans le respect des restrictions réglementaires. Les catalogues de données sont une technologie permettant de mettre en œuvre des politiques de gouvernance des données. La gouvernance des données définit les politiques d'utilisation des données tandis que les catalogues de données les appliquent. Ces catalogues permettent aux entreprises de suivre plus efficacement la gouvernance de leurs données. Comment AWS peut-il répondre à vos besoins en matière de catalogue de données ? AWS Glue est un service d'intégration de données sans serveur qui facilite la découverte, la préparation, le déplacement et l'intégration de données provenant de sources multiples à des fins d'analyse de données, d'apprentissage automatique (ML) et de développement d'applications. Le catalogue de données AWS Glue est un référentiel central pour stocker les métadonnées structurelles et opérationnelles de tous vos actifs de données. Vous pouvez stocker la définition des tables et l'emplacement physique d'un jeu de données donné, ajouter des attributs pertinents pour l'entreprise et suivre l'évolution de ces données au fil du temps. Le catalogue de données s'intègre également à Amazon Athena , Amazon EMR et Amazon Redshift Spectrum. Une fois que vous avez ajouté les définitions de vos tables au catalogue de données, vous pouvez avoir une vue commune de vos données entre ces services. AWS Glue propose de nombreuses méthodes pour renseigner les métadonnées dans le catalogue de données. Par exemple, vous pouvez : Configurer des crawlers AWS Glue pour analyser divers magasins de données et déduire automatiquement les schémas, la structure des partitions et remplir le catalogue de données avec les définitions de tables et les statistiques correspondantes. Planifiez l'exécution périodique des crawlers afin que vos métadonnées soient toujours à jour et synchronisées avec les données sous-jacentes. Ajoutez et mettez à jour manuellement les détails des tables à l'aide de la console AWS Glue ou en appelant l'API. Commencez à utiliser les catalogues de données sur AWS en créant un compte gratuit dès aujourd'hui. Prochaines étapes avec AWS Consultez d'autres ressources liées aux produits Découvrir les services de gestion et de gouvernance Créer gratuitement un compte Obtenez un accès instantané à l’offre gratuite AWS. S’inscrire Commencer à créer dans la console Démarrez la création dans la console de gestion AWS. Se connecter Créer un compte AWS Apprendre Qu’est-ce qu’AWS ? Qu’est-ce que le cloud computing ? Qu’est-ce que l’IA agentique ? Hub de concepts de cloud computing Sécurité dans le Cloud AWS Nouveautés Blogs Communiqués de presse Ressources Démarrer Formation Centre de confiance AWS Bibliothèque de solutions AWS Centre d'architecture Questions fréquentes (FAQ) techniques et sur les produits Rapports d'analystes Partenaires AWS Développeurs Centre pour concepteurs Kits SDK et outils .NET sur AWS Python sur AWS Java sur AWS PHP sur AWS JavaScript sur AWS Aide Contactez-nous Soumettez un ticket de support AWS re:Post Centre de connaissances Présentation d’AWS Support Obtenez l’aide d’experts Accessibilité AWS Informations juridiques English Retour en haut de la page Amazon est un employeur qui souscrit aux principes d’équité en matière d’emploi : minorités, femmes, handicaps, seniors, identité de genre, orientation sexuelle, âge. x facebook linkedin instagram twitch youtube podcasts email Confidentialité Conditions d’utilisation du site Préférences en matière de cookies © 2025, Amazon Web Services, Inc. ou ses sociétés apparentées. Tous droits réservés. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/manage-your-bill-for-add-ons/ | Manage your bill for add-ons | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your bill for add-ons Add-ons are extra features or usage that you can buy for Atlassian apps in addition to what’s already included in your app. Currently, add-ons are available for Jira Service Management Premium plan, Atlassian Guard Standard, and for additional sandboxes. How are you billed? You’re billed for add-ons based on the specific app for which you’re buying the add-on. You can also buy additional sandboxes as an add-on to your existing free sandboxes (1 with the Premium plan, 5 with the Enterprise plan). Since add-ons are added to an existing Atlassian app subscription, they inherit the billing cycle of the parent app. For example, if your Jira Service Management Premium subscription is billed monthly and you purchase Extra objects, the add-on will also be billed monthly. For all the details about managing add-ons for each app, see: Jira Service Management Jira Service Management add-ons Manage your bill for Extra objects for Assets Manage your bill for extra assisted conversations in the virtual service agent Atlassian Guard Premium Atlassian Guard Premium add-ons Sandbox Manage Atlassian sandboxes Was this helpful? Yes No It wasn't accurate It wasn't clear It wasn't relevant Provide feedback about this article Still need help? The Atlassian Community is here for you. Ask the Community Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Show more How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Show more Community Questions, discussions, and articles Accessibility Notice at Collection Privacy Policy Terms of Use Security 2026 Atlassian | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/quicksuite/latest/userguide/quickstart-createanalysis.html | Quick start: Create an Amazon Quick Sight analysis with a single visual using sample data - Amazon Quick Suite Quick start: Create an Amazon Quick Sight analysis with a single visual using sample data - Amazon Quick Suite Documentation Amazon Quick Suite User Guide Quick start: Create an Amazon Quick Sight analysis with a single visual using sample data Before you create your first analysis, make sure to complete the steps in Setting up and signing into Amazon Quick Suite . With the following procedure, you use the Web and Social Media Analytics sample dataset to create an analysis containing a line chart visual. This visual shows the count by month of people that have added themselves to the mailing list. To create an analysis containing a line chart visual using a sample dataset From the Amazon Quick Suite homepage, from Amazon Quick Sight, choose Analyses from the left navigation menu. If you don't have sample data, you can download it from web-and-social-analytics.csv.zip . Unzip the file so you can use the .csv file. To upload the sample data, do the following: Choose Data from the left navigation menu. Under the Dataset tab, select New then Dataset . Choose Upload file . Choose the sample file, web-and-social-analytics.csv , from your drive. If you don't see it, check that you unzipped the web-and-social-analytics.csv.zip file. Confirm file upload settings by choosing Next on the Confirm file upload settings screen. Choose Visualize on the Data source details screen. Skip the next step. Choosing Visualize brings you to the same screen as the process in Step 2. On the Datasets page, choose the Web and Social Media Analytics dataset, and then choose Use in Analysis at upper right. In the Data pane, choose Date , and then choose Mailing list adds . Amazon Quick Sight uses AutoGraph to create the visual, selecting the visual type that it determines is most compatible with those fields. In this case, it selects a line chart that shows mailing list adds by day, which is the date granularity default. Navigate to the Field wells at the bottom of the Visuals pane. Choose the X axis field well. Select the three-dot menu, choose Aggregate , and then choose Month . The line chart updates to show mailing list adds by month, rather than by the default of by year. Javascript is disabled or is unavailable in your browser. To use the Amazon Web Services Documentation, Javascript must be enabled. Please refer to your browser's Help pages for instructions. Document Conventions Getting started with Amazon Quick Sight Create a dashboard using sample data Did this page help you? - Yes Thanks for letting us know we're doing a good job! If you've got a moment, please tell us what we did right so we can do more of it. Did this page help you? - No Thanks for letting us know this page needs work. We're sorry we let you down. If you've got a moment, please tell us how we can make the documentation better. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://support.atlassian.com/subscriptions-and-billing/docs/manage-quotes/ | Manage Atlassian quotes | Atlassian Support Skip to main content Atlassian Support Apps Documentation Resources Contact us Sign in Sign in Subscriptions and billing Documentation Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage your subscription for Standard and Premium plans Manage your bill for Enterprise plans Cancel a subscription Service Level Agreement for Atlassian cloud apps Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Request a refund Switch from a monthly to an annual subscription Manage your billing address Apply a promo code to a Marketplace app purchase Billing permissions by role How billing works for Atlassian Collections How billing works for Rovo Dev How maximum quantity billing works How pricing works for multi-instance Marketplace apps Manage your bill for add-ons Manage your bill for Rovo Manage your Bitbucket subscription on the new billing system Manage your subscription for Atlassian Collections Prepare your contacts ahead of billing migration Reactivate a subscription Set up Atlassian app subscription after purchase Unable to make payments Understand billing accounts Understand billing administration Understand billing for Marketplace apps Understand billing profiles Understand the improved Atlassian billing experience Understand the new partner-managed subscriptions portal Understand your invoice Usage charges and billing Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian Guard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Standard Manage your bill for Atlassian Guard Premium Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Standard Unsubscribe from Atlassian Guard Premium Impact of Trello users on your Atlassian Guard Standard bill Resolve Atlassian Guard payment issue Atlassian Support Subscriptions and billing Resources Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Manage Atlassian quotes When buying Atlassian apps, you can create a quote, valid for 30 days. Quotes are only available for annual cloud subscriptions under Standard and Premium plans. Quotes can't be created for apps on a Free plan. We’re rolling out an improved billing experience to make it easier to manage your cloud subscriptions. This means your subscriptions could be managed on either the original or the improved experience. Find out which experience you’re viewing The following screenshots indicate how the interface of the two billing experiences differs. Original billing experience Improved billing experience In the original billing experience, the first option on the left is Overview . In the improved billing experience, Subscriptions is the first option on the left. Improved billing experience Who can do this? Billing admins Create a quote We’re working on a better quote experience, where you can create, save, and update quotes all within your account. Watch this space for updates. Currently, you need to contact us to create a quote. To request a quote, Select Quotes and Plan changes, in the support form. Under Choose a topic , select Create a new quote. Add the rest of the details and Submit . You’ll receive a request confirmation email and we’ll get in touch with you. You can also request a quote from the Quotes tab of your billing account at admin.atlassian.com/billing . Select Create quote and follow the instructions. We’ll email the quote once it’s ready. You may view your quote in your billing account or download it as PDF. View or download quotes To view or download a quote, go to your billing account from admin.atlassian.com/billing . From the Quotes tab, you can view, download, or place an order. To download a quote: Select View details against the quote number you’d like to download. Select Download quote from the top of the quote details page. Your quote will be downloaded as a PDF on your device. What do the different quote statuses mean Open The quote is active. You can convert this quote to an order. Accepted The quote is paid and converted to an order. Once the quote is converted, head to the Subscriptions tab to manage your subscription. Any scheduled changes at the time of order will immediately reflect on the subscription details page. Needs review The quote needs to go through review due to modifications. Reach out to us to update the quote. Canceled The quote has expired or is no longer available for any action. Status unknown At the time of viewing the quote, the status is undergoing changes and won’t be available for any action. Check back later to see if the status has been updated. Convert a quote to an order To pay a quote and create an order: Go to admin.atlassian.com/billing . Go to the Quotes tab. You’ll see a list of all your quotes. Select the quote you’d like to convert. Select Place order . Add your payment details or select from an existing payment method. Review your order details and select Agree and confirm . You’ll receive a confirmation email right away. We’ll send you the invoice with all details within 24 hours. Change or revise a quote You’ll need to contact us to make any changes to a quote. To request a change in an existing quote, Select Contact us from the :meatballs: menu or select Revise quote in the quotes detail page. You’ll be directed to the support form. Select Quotes and Plan changes. Under Choose a topic , select Change existing quote. Add the rest of the details and Submit . You’ll receive a request confirmation email and we’ll get in touch with you. Original billing experience Who can do this Organization admin Site admin Billing contacts When buying Atlassian apps, a site admin can save a cart as a quote to lock the quoted price for 30 days. Save a quote Go to admin.atlassian.com . Select your organization if you have more than one. Go to Billing and you’ll see a billing preview of all your apps. Select Manage subscriptions for any one of the apps. Under Payment options > Choose annual payment . On the billing details page, select Save this as a quote . Your quote will be emailed to you and available for download as a PDF. Pay a quote To pay a quote by credit card: Log in to my.atlassian.com . Select Orders > Pay quote. Add your order details and continue to complete your order. We accept Mastercard, VISA, or American Express for paying quotes. You can also pay by PayPal, bank transfer, ACH bank transfer, mailed check, and ACH (US banks only). You can find bank transfer details and instructions on the first page of your quote. To learn more about the different payment methods, see Manage payment methods . View or download quotes The primary and secondary billing and technical contacts listed on a quote can retrieve quotes from my.atlassian.com . To view or download a quote, log in to my.atlassian.com , and from the Orders tab, you can view, download, and pay your saved quotes. Quotes cannot be edited once created. Please contact us for any quote revisions. Was this helpful? Yes No It wasn't accurate It wasn't clear It wasn't relevant Provide feedback about this article Still need help? The Atlassian Community is here for you. Ask the Community Manage subscriptions and bills for Atlassian cloud apps Show more Buying Atlassian cloud apps Manage payment methods Manage Atlassian quotes Manage tax information Manage users and user tiers Show more On this page Improved billing experience Create a quote View or download quotes What do the different quote statuses mean Convert a quote to an order Change or revise a quote Original billing experience Save a quote Pay a quote View or download quotes Community Questions, discussions, and articles Accessibility Notice at Collection Privacy Policy Terms of Use Security 2026 Atlassian | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://hackage.haskell.org/packages/tag/html | All packages by name | Hackage Hackage :: [Package] Search Browse What's new Upload User accounts Packages tagged html 29 packages have this tag. [Merge tag] (trustees only) Related tags: library (29), web (18), bsd3 (15), mit (13), frp (8), gui (8), javascript (8), reactive (8), reactivity (8), user-interface (8), user-interfaces (8), text (6), reflex (4), xml (4), ... Name DLs Rating Rev Deps Description Tags Last U/L Last Version Maintainers flamethrower 33 0.0 1 A template engine for HTML ( html , library , mit , text , web ) 2014-12-05 0.0.5.1 charmander haquery 7 0.0 1 jQuery for Haskell. ( bsd3 , html , library ) 2016-10-15 0.1.1.3 crufter html-entities 48 0.0 16 A codec library for HTML-escaped text and HTML-entities ( codecs , html , library , mit , parsing ) 2024-01-23 1.1.4.7 NikitaVolkov html-entity-map 5 0.0 1 Map from HTML5 entity names to the corresponding Unicode text ( bsd3 , html , library ) 2017-12-18 0.1.0.0 mrkkrp html-rules 5 0.0 1 Perform traversals of HTML structures using sets of rules. ( bsd3 , html , library , text , transformation , web ) 2014-05-13 0.1.0.1 KyleCarter html-tokenizer 40 0.0 1 An "attoparsec"-based HTML tokenizer ( html , library , mit , parsing , xml ) 2018-02-05 0.6.4 NikitaVolkov htmx 7 0.0 2 Use htmx with various haskell libraries ( html , library , mit , web ) 2024-09-27 0.1.0.2 JonathanLorimer htmx-lucid 7 0.0 1 Use htmx with lucid ( html , library , mit , web ) 2024-09-27 0.2.0.1 JonathanLorimer htmx-servant 10 0.0 0 Use htmx with servant ( html , library , mit , web ) 2024-09-27 0.2.0.2 JonathanLorimer hxt-css 14 0.0 1 CSS selectors for HXT ( bsd3 , html , library , xml ) 2016-08-23 0.1.0.3 MariosTitas ihp-hsx 26 0.0 2 JSX-like but for Haskell ( html , library , mit ) 2025-08-09 1.5.0 MarcScholten islink 4 0.0 1 Check if an HTML element is a link ( bsd3 , html , library , xml ) 2014-10-07 0.1.0.0 MariosTitas list-t-html-parser 30 0.0 1 Streaming HTML parser ( html , library , mit , parser , streaming ) 2016-10-19 0.4.2 NikitaVolkov lucid-alpine 33 0.0 0 Use Alpine.js in your lucid templates ( bsd3 , html , library , program , web ) 2022-01-30 0.1.0.7 rashad1030 lucid-htmx 28 2.0 0 Use htmx in your lucid templates ( bsd3 , html , library , web ) 2023-09-07 0.1.0.7 rashad1030 lucid2-htmx 5 0.0 0 Use htmx in your lucid templates ( bsd3 , html , library , web ) 2022-09-21 0.1.0.8 rashad1030 pretty-html 3 0.0 0 Produce nice human-readable HTML ( html , library , mit ) 2023-01-10 0.1.0.1 chris_martin , Monoid_Mary readability 3 0.0 0 Extracts text of main article from HTML document ( bsd3 , html , library , program , text ) 2020-07-09 0.1.0.0 geyaeb reflex-dom 41 2.5 9 Functional Reactive Web Apps with Reflex ( bsd3 , frp , gui , html , javascript , library , reactive , reactivity , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2025-04-05 0.6.3.4 JohnEricson , RyanTrinkle , abrar , 3noch , alexfmpe , maralorn , ymeister reflex-dom-core 66 2.0 11 Functional Reactive Web Apps with Reflex ( bsd3 , frp , gui , html , javascript , library , reactive , reactivity , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2025-05-15 0.8.1.4 JohnEricson , RyanTrinkle , abrar , 3noch , alexfmpe , maralorn , ymeister reflex-dom-ionic 7 0.0 0 Compatible highlevel Wigdets for some Ionic Input Components ( bsd3 , frp , gui , html , javascript , library , reactive , reactivity , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2022-04-18 0.2.0.0 ChristophBauer reflex-dom-retractable 16 2.0 0 Routing and retractable back button for reflex-dom ( frp , gui , html , javascript , library , mit , reactive , reactivity , reflex , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2020-11-26 0.1.7.0 NCrashed reflex-dom-th 21 0.0 0 reflex-dom-th transpiles HTML templates to haskell code for reflex-dom ( bsd3 , frp , gui , html , javascript , library , reactive , reactivity , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2022-10-01 0.3.4 ChristophBauer reflex-external-ref 10 0.0 2 External reference with reactivity support ( frp , gui , html , javascript , library , mit , reactive , reactivity , reflex , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2024-03-16 1.1.0.0 NCrashed reflex-localize 16 0.0 1 Localization library for reflex ( frp , gui , html , javascript , library , mit , reactive , reactivity , reflex , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2024-03-16 1.2.0.0 NCrashed reflex-localize-dom 9 0.0 0 Helper widgets for reflex-localize ( frp , gui , html , javascript , library , mit , reactive , reactivity , reflex , user-interface , user-interfaces , web ) 2024-03-16 1.1.0.0 NCrashed type-of-html 86 2.25 1 High performance type driven html generation. ( bsd3 , html , language , library , text , web ) 2021-02-06 1.6.2.0 knupfer type-of-html-static 4 0.0 1 Optimize static parts of type-of-html. ( bsd3 , html , language , library , text , web ) 2018-05-02 0.1.0.2 knupfer xmlbf-xmlhtml 11 0.0 1 xmlhtml backend support for the xmlbf library. ( apache , html , library , text , xml ) 2022-12-08 0.2.2 RenzoCarbonara | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/quicksuite/latest/userguide/quickstart-createanalysis.html | Quick start: Create an Amazon Quick Sight analysis with a single visual using sample data - Amazon Quick Suite Quick start: Create an Amazon Quick Sight analysis with a single visual using sample data - Amazon Quick Suite Documentation Amazon Quick Suite User Guide Quick start: Create an Amazon Quick Sight analysis with a single visual using sample data Before you create your first analysis, make sure to complete the steps in Setting up and signing into Amazon Quick Suite . With the following procedure, you use the Web and Social Media Analytics sample dataset to create an analysis containing a line chart visual. This visual shows the count by month of people that have added themselves to the mailing list. To create an analysis containing a line chart visual using a sample dataset From the Amazon Quick Suite homepage, from Amazon Quick Sight, choose Analyses from the left navigation menu. If you don't have sample data, you can download it from web-and-social-analytics.csv.zip . Unzip the file so you can use the .csv file. To upload the sample data, do the following: Choose Data from the left navigation menu. Under the Dataset tab, select New then Dataset . Choose Upload file . Choose the sample file, web-and-social-analytics.csv , from your drive. If you don't see it, check that you unzipped the web-and-social-analytics.csv.zip file. Confirm file upload settings by choosing Next on the Confirm file upload settings screen. Choose Visualize on the Data source details screen. Skip the next step. Choosing Visualize brings you to the same screen as the process in Step 2. On the Datasets page, choose the Web and Social Media Analytics dataset, and then choose Use in Analysis at upper right. In the Data pane, choose Date , and then choose Mailing list adds . Amazon Quick Sight uses AutoGraph to create the visual, selecting the visual type that it determines is most compatible with those fields. In this case, it selects a line chart that shows mailing list adds by day, which is the date granularity default. Navigate to the Field wells at the bottom of the Visuals pane. Choose the X axis field well. Select the three-dot menu, choose Aggregate , and then choose Month . The line chart updates to show mailing list adds by month, rather than by the default of by year. Javascript is disabled or is unavailable in your browser. To use the Amazon Web Services Documentation, Javascript must be enabled. Please refer to your browser's Help pages for instructions. Document Conventions Getting started with Amazon Quick Sight Create a dashboard using sample data Did this page help you? - Yes Thanks for letting us know we're doing a good job! If you've got a moment, please tell us what we did right so we can do more of it. Did this page help you? - No Thanks for letting us know this page needs work. We're sorry we let you down. If you've got a moment, please tell us how we can make the documentation better. | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
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https://cdn.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/ | Index of /pub/OpenBSD/ Index of /pub/OpenBSD/ Name Date Size ../ 13-Apr-2025 20:03 - 7.7/ 12-Oct-2025 11:13 - 7.8/ 16-Oct-2025 08:00 - Changelogs/ 13-Jan-2026 01:24 - LibreSSL/ 30-Oct-2025 06:29 - OpenBGPD/ 30-Dec-2025 06:05 - OpenIKED/ 10-Apr-2025 11:10 - OpenNTPD/ 09-Dec-2020 07:56 - OpenSSH/ 10-Oct-2025 01:02 - ftplist 13-Jan-2026 02:16 4.0K patches/ 27-Oct-2025 10:46 - robots.txt 13-Apr-2025 20:02 37B rpki-client/ 21-Sep-2025 11:01 - signify/ 23-Oct-2025 09:29 - snapshots/ 26-Mar-2023 08:18 - songs/ 06-Apr-2023 16:15 - syspatch/ 11-Sep-2025 08:54 - timestamp 13-Jan-2026 02:00 11B | 2026-01-13T09:29:08 |
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