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WYMeditor is a web-based WYSIWYM XHTML editor. WYMeditor's main concept is to leave details of the document's visual layout, and to concentrate on its structure and meaning, while trying to give the user as much comfort as possible (at least as WYSIWYG editors). WYMeditor has been ... [More] created to generate perfectly structured XHTML strict code, to conform to the W3C XHTML specifications and to facilitate further processing by modern applications. With WYMeditor, the code can't be contaminated by visual informations like font styles and weights, borders, colors, ... The end-user defines content meaning, which will determine its aspect by the use of style sheets. The result is easy and quick maintenance of information. [Less]

5.0
 
  0 reviews  |  9 users  |  29,826 lines of code  |  9 current contributors  |  Analyzed 4 days ago
 
 

Denemo is a GUI musical score editor written in C/gtk2. It is intended primarily as a frontend to GNU Lilypond.

5.0
 
  0 reviews  |  2 users  |  325,034 lines of code  |  3 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 19 hours ago
 
 

An experimental semantic approach to a visual editor for Mediawiki. The base for the implementation is the XHTML compatible editor WYMEditor

5.0
 
  0 reviews  |  1 user  |  5,555 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 9 days ago
 
 

RDFaCE is an online RDFa content editor based on TinyMCE. It uses existing semantic Web APIs to facilitate annotating/editing RDFa contents.

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  87,142 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 11 hours ago
 
 

WMD is a small, simple WYSIWYM (What You See Is What You Mean) markdown editor written in Javascript. Type your text in markdown and WMD will convert it to HTML behind the scenes with an optional real-time preview. This version of WMD has been tested with IE 6, 7 and 8 RC1, Firefox 3, Safari 3.2 ... [More] , Chrome 1.0 and Opera 9.6. iPhone and iPod Touch support is rumored to work with the exception of the link/image prompt location. There are a few (minor) known issues with keyboard handling in IE and Opera. See the issues page for more details. This is a new Google Code project based on John Fraser's original WMD. Since John has disappeared off the Internet, I'll be hosting the new code here until he shows up. Actual development takes place on github (see links). I'll create release versions and post them here when they are ready. NOTE Version 2.0 of this code was developed as a private bugfix/feature branch for Stackoverflow.com and is missing most of the optional features found in the original WMD as SO did not use them. Now that I'm putting this out on Google Code I'll be adding the new features back in v2.1 due out sometime in February 2009. Version 3.0 should be released in February/March 2009 and will a major rewrite making use of jQuery. [Less]

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  7,790 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 7 days ago
 
 

e-Bibliophile is the first iteration of a grammar and surrounding tools to make use of that grammar, targeting written media including but not limited to: Literature, Fiction, Essays, Articles, and Plays. As such it is meant to focus on syntactical markup of those sorts of works, and not be a ... [More] solution for all written works. With a goal of only targeting the bulk of written materials (excluding things such as text books, mathematical formulae, technical documents, contractual agreements etc.) we have been able to come up with a concise grammar that is easy to read, and apply, with a minimum of arbitrary methods to properly mark up a single document. The advantage? By not being a solution for all things, we are able to provide an incredibly effective and dynamic solution to things that fall within the range of our target. We are able to realize the sort of flexibility and separation of contextual/syntactical markup and style markup shown at projects like CSS Zen Garden, and has been talked about at the W3 consortium for over a decade now. e-Bibliophile as a piece of software centers around a "what you see is what you mean" (wysiwym) document markup gui, an IDE like text based editor for manual editing of the document and the associated CSS type documents, and an IDE like editor to "tweak" the processing engine's output. It also features interfaces to convert images into text, the facilities to then check the accuracy of the document, and tools to refer back to the original document throughout the markup process. For documents that are originally composed inside e-Bibliophile there are also many algorithms that will assist in checking for consistency of spelling non-standard non-dictionary words, as well as checking to assess the difficulty for readers to understand the document. News1-26-2009 Finally finished the first draft of the markup language. Work has started on prototyping the system we will be using to keep all of the parts of the application synchronized. 12-28-2008 Xmas is over, new years is just around the corner, and energy towards e-Bibliophile is ramping up. Our main developer is going to have more time to start working on making this project a reality starting in less than 2 weeks. We have also had a few "nibbles" from other developers who are interested in making our dream a reality. Documenting the last few parts of the grammar is proving to be more difficult that expected, but getting this right up front is more important than getting words on a sheet. 12-12-2008 The grammar is almost completely outlined. The only major hurdles left are Images, Cites, and Notes. We have decided that will will set up an event driven parser, that will allow LARGE amounts of flexibility for any document compliant to this grammar, so that as we work on the GUI, members of the e-book community can use the markup to format books. 11-17-2008 We have spent significant time working on the grammar and scope of the markup language. Coding may start as soon as January 2009. If all goes well we should have a functional program by Q3 of 2009. 10-28-2008 Real life, wedding planning, work, twins and plenty of other things have slowed down initial development of the project, but it is far from dead. 4-10-2008 We are currently refining the set of tags/data model that we are going to employ in the application. Code modeling and GUI design to follow shortly there after. [Less]

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 5 days ago
 
 

Easy Fun Symentic Web Standard Accessbility Reuse

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 18 hours ago
 
 
 
 

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