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PLEAC

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Project Release infomations and Project Resources. Note that these informations are from this projects Freecode.com page and the downloads themselves may not be hosted with SourceForge.JP.

Project Release Information

2005-01-22 22:50
Python and Ruby contributions have been coming in
steadily (both now over 60%). Sizable
contributions have been made to Tcl (25%), Ocaml
(24%), Ada (26%) and Pliant (9%). Pike has also
picked up as of late (14%). R has been added. To
simplify using and creating example scripts, an
include system has been implemented, allowing
scripts and data to live in separate files, which
makes them easier to be accessed and used.
Standalone scripts are also accessible as links
from the Web presentation. There are now graphics
that show the evolution of the project over time.
2001-10-23 22:02
Major enhancements were made. There are now decent versions in: Python (43%),
Guile (27%), Ruby (25%), Haskell (21%), and Tcl (17%). New versions were
started for Java (already 14%), Pliant, and Erlang.
2001-08-23 04:08
Major upgrades of Python and Haskell, and new implementations in Guile, TCL, C++/Stl/Boost, OCaml, and Java.
2001-08-06 20:57
This release contains a working engine for generating syntax-beautified Web
content. The Merd version is around 30% complete. The Ruby version is around
25% complete. The Haskell and Python versions are around 10% complete.
Embryonic Nasm and Masd versions are also available.

Project Resources

http://freecode.com/urls/f707ab2ec9b097a5bb3a1363595305cb
http://freecode.com/urls/38adaadc7bd0574d017e180b625c7932
http://freecode.com/urls/0ee662ec9436d54f673fe977af059e02
http://freecode.com/urls/0bef46b52568ff85b50e80e192caeb45
http://freecode.com/projects/pleac

Project Description

The PLEAC project aims to re-implement the solutions presented in the Perl
Cookbook (by Tom Christiansen & Nathan Torkington, published by O'Reilly) in
other programming languages. If successful, this project may become a primary
resource for quick, handy, free solutions to most common programming problems
using higher-level programming languages. It could also be useful for
comparison on ease-of-use and power/efficiency of these languages.

(This Description is auto-translated)

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