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KDE

claimed by KDE

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KDE is a development platform, a set of applications and a graphical desktop; it's all of these things. It is created by a community of people dedicated to create a free, open-source and user-friendly computing experience. KDE offers all the necessary means to easily build all kinds of ... [More] applications upon our libraries, as well as offers many applications out of the box. From a media player, to a text editor, to a workspace, a web browser, a file manager, and so on. KDE has been around since 1996, with the code change history dating back at least to 1997. KDE is one of the biggest free software C++ projects around and one of the two leaders of UNIX desktops. Not only this, but KDE also runs on Windows and OS X. [Less]

4.53222
   
  4 reviews  |  1,156 users  |  23,188,071 lines of code  |  708 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 16 hours ago
 
 

KDevelop

claimed by KDE

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The KDevelop project was founded in 1998 to build up an easy to use IDE (Integrated Development Environment) for KDE. Since then, the KDevelop IDE is publicly available under the GPL and supports many programming languages.

4.35484
   
  0 reviews  |  174 users  |  292,156 lines of code  |  58 current contributors  |  Analyzed 3 days ago
 
 

ScummVM is a program which allows you to run certain classic graphical point-and-click adventure games, provided you already have their data files. The clever part about this: ScummVM just replaces the executables shipped with the game, allowing you to play them on systems for which they were never ... [More] designed! ScummVM lets you run these adventures: Adventure Soft's Simon the Sorcerer 1 and 2; Revolution's Beneath A Steel Sky, Broken Sword 1 and Broken Sword 2; Flight of the Amazon Queen; Wyrmkeep's Inherit the Earth; Coktel Vision's Gobliiins and games based on LucasArts' SCUMM (Script Creation Utility for Maniac Mansion) system. SCUMM is used for many games, including Monkey Island, Day of the Tentacle, Sam and Max and more. Compatibility with supported games is continually improving, so c [Less]

4.73846
   
  0 reviews  |  162 users  |  1,831,851 lines of code  |  53 current contributors  |  Analyzed 1 day ago
 
 

InspIRCd is a modular Internet Relay Chat (IRC) server written in C++ for Linux, BSD, Windows and Mac OS X systems which was created from scratch to be stable, modern and lightweight. As InspIRCd is one of the few IRC servers written from scratch, it avoids a number of design flaws and ... [More] performance issues that plague other more established projects, such as UnrealIRCd, while providing the same level of feature parity. InspIRCd is one of only a few IRC servers to provide a tunable number of features through the use of an advanced but well documented module system. By keeping core functionality to a minimum we hope to increase the stability, security and speed of InspIRCd while also making it customisable to the needs of many different users. [Less]

4.88235
   
  3 reviews  |  26 users  |  98,958 lines of code  |  15 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 24 hours ago
 
 
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Qt is a cross-platform application and UI framework. Using Qt, you can write applications once and deploy them across many desktop and embedded operating systems without rewriting the source code.

5.0
 
  0 reviews  |  24 users  |  7,757,161 lines of code  |  411 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 18 hours ago
 
 

John the Ripper is a fast password cracker, currently available for many flavors of Unix (11 are officially supported, not counting different architectures), Windows, DOS, BeOS, and OpenVMS. Its primary purpose is to detect weak Unix passwords. Besides several crypt(3) password hash types most ... [More] commonly found on various Unix flavors, supported out of the box are Kerberos AFS and Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 LM hashes, plus several more with contributed patches. [Less]

4.0
   
  0 reviews  |  23 users  |  29,441 lines of code  |  1 current contributor  |  Analyzed about 24 hours ago
 
 

ABCL is an implementation of Common Lisp (CL) running in the JVM: it can run in the same JVM as your Java code, allowing full mixture of Lisp and Java code. Being a full CL implementation, it runs many existing libraries and applications, such as Maxima, a computer algebra system. With support for ... [More] JSR-223, you easily extend any JSR-223 compatible application with Lisp as a macro language. This includes integration with the Ant build system using its script-tag. Note: Ohloh indicates few source code comments, based on an average of 32% comment ratio in Java projects. However, in Lisp projects, 19% is much more common. ABCL is nearly 50% Lisp, so the comment rating is underrated. [Less]

3.75
   
  0 reviews  |  22 users  |  250,398 lines of code  |  5 current contributors  |  Analyzed 10 days ago
 
 

The Unreal (perhaps imaginary?) IRCd's stable 3.2 branch.

3.625
   
  0 reviews  |  15 users  |  107,869 lines of code  |  10 current contributors  |  Analyzed 4 days ago
 
 

S.C.O.U.R.G.E. is a Rogue-like game with a modern user interface. The game allows a group of four characters to search for treasure, kill enemies, gain levels, etc.

5.0
 
  0 reviews  |  9 users  |  115,182 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 7 days ago
 
 
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Agar is a modern open-source, cross-platform toolkit for graphical applications implemented in C, C++ and Ada (with bindings to other languages in development). Designed for ease of integration, it follows the philosophy of building the GUI around the application and not the other way around. Unlike ... [More] most other GUI toolkits, Agar takes maximum advantage of hardware graphics acceleration when it is available via OpenGL, but it also supports traditional framebuffer interfaces such as SDL direct video. [Less]

4.33333
   
  0 reviews  |  3 users  |  190,041 lines of code  |  3 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 8 hours ago
 
 
 
 

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