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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2, June 1991
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains
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END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
<one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
Copyright (C) 19yy <name of author>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
when it starts in an interactive mode:
Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) 19yy name of author
Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be
mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program.
You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
<signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
Ty Coon, President of Vice
This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
Public License instead of this License.

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<TITLE>About Tcl/Tk Project Manager</TITLE>
<center><h1>Tcl/Tk Project Manager</h1></center>
<p>Author: Sergey Kalinin (aka BanZaj) <a href="mailto:banzaj@lrn.ru">banzaj@lrn.ru</a>
<br>Home page: <a href="http://conero.lrn.ru">http://conero.lrn.ru</a>
<p>Tcl/Tk Project Manager is a full IDE for programming in TCL/Tk.
It includes a project and file manager, a source editor with
syntax highlighting and procedure navigation, a context-sensitive
help system, and much more. Included TkDIFF+ - compare tools and TkREGEXP - a graphical front-end to write/debug regular expression.
<br>Working an Unix (Linux tested) and Windows.
<p><center>&copy; Copyright <a href="http://conero.lrn.ru">CONERO lab</a>, 2002

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<TITLE>Begin work</TITLE>
<CENTER><h1>Begin work with ProjMan</h1></center>
<p>CREAT NEW PROJECT
<p>Select "New project" for creation new project or "Open project" for opened existing project into "Projects" menu.
<p>SET ACTIVE PROJECT
<p>All operation with projects into ProjMan implemented only active project.
Click mouse on project name in tree for set active project.
Name of current (active) project You will see into status bar.
<p>DELETING PROJECT
<p>For deleting project You must select "Delete project" into "Projects" menu.
<p>EDITING FILE
<p>For editing file click twice on file name into tree.

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<TITLE>Help system</TITLE>
<CENTER><h1>Help system manual</h1></center>
<p>Needed translate from russian language!

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<TITLE>Hot keys</TITLE>
<center><h1>Hot keys</h1></center>
<p><b>Ctrl + A</b> - Saved file eith different name
<p><b>Ctrl + C</b> - Copy selected text into clipboard.
<p><b>Ctrl + F</b> - Search words into text.
<p><b>Ctrl + G</b> - Goto line with number
<p><b>Ctrl + J</b> - Get procedure list
<p><b>Ctrl + L</b> - Get word list
<p><b>Ctrl + M</b> - Switch editors open tabs
<p><b>Ctrl + N</b> - Create new file
<p><b>Ctrl + O</b> - Opened existing file.
<p><b>Ctrl + Q</b> - Quit from Project Manager.
<p><b>Ctrl + R</b> - Find and replacement words into text.
<p><b>Ctrl + S</b> - Saved current opened file.
<p><b>Ctrl + T</b> - Reverses the order of the two characters to the right of the insertion cursor
<p><b>Ctrl + U</b> - Jump cursor on open/close bracked
<p><b>Ctrl + V</b> - Insert text from clipboard
<p><b>Ctrl + W</b> - Close current opened file.
<p><b>Ctrl + X</b> - Cut selected text into clipboard.
<p><b>Ctrl + Z</b> - Undo last operation
<p><b>Ctrl + /</b> - Selects the entire contents of the widget
<p><b>Ctrl + \\</b> - Clears any selection in the widget
<p><b>F1</b> - Execute context-sensitive help system
<p><b>F3</b> - Repeat search
<p><b>F5</b> - Make archive. Workined with active project only.
<p><b>F6</b> - Make RPM
<p><b>F9</b> - Run current project.

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<title>VisualREGEXP</title>
<center><h1>VisualREGEXP</h1>
<p>Copyright (c) 2000-2001 Laurent Riesterer
<br>Latest version 2.2</center>
<p><b>ABOUT</b>
<p>VisualREGEXP helps you to design, debug or more generally work with regular
expression. As it is often difficult to write the right regexp at the first
try, this tool will show you the effect of your regexp on a sample you can
choose.
<p><b>REQUIREMENTS</b>
<p>This program requires Tcl/Tk 8.3.0 or later.
<p><b>HOW TO USE</b>
<p><b>Launching the program</b>
<p>On Unix, use 'chmod +x ...' to make the program executable. You can then
integrate it with your Window Manager or put it into an executable path.
<br>On Windows, create a shortcut and invoke the script with 'wish.exe'
<p><b>Design of regexps</b>
<p>To design regexp, just type the expression in the top text widget.
Press the 'Go' button to highlight the matched part of the text in the sample
text widget.
<p>To get a quickref of the regexp syntax use the menu 'View/Show regexp help'.
<p>You can specify some options using the checkboxes (please read Tcl help to
learn the meaning of these options).
<p><b>Recursive design of regexps</b>
<p>Sometimes you will need more than one step to extract the information you want
from the sample. For example, imagine you want to retrieve information from
an HTML table inside an another HTML table :
'<html><body>
<table border=1>
<tr><td>
<table bgcolor="#FFFF00" border=1>
<tr> <td>One</td> <td>1</td> </tr>
<tr> <td>Two</td> <td>2</td> </tr>
</table>
<tr> <td>Foo</td> <td>Bar</td> </tr>
</table>
</body></html>'
<p>You cannot use one global regexp to extract the two lines "One 1" and "Two 2".
You have to use a first regexp to narrow the processed region.
Type the following regexp '<table bg[^>]*?>(.*?)<table>' and press 'Go'.
You see now that the interessing area is shown in blue. Press the Match '1'
button which will extract the blue text (the regexp to use to get this text
is then printed on the console).
Now use '<td>(.*?)</td>.*?<td>(.*?)</td>' to get the information you need.
<p><b>Optimization of regexps</b>
<p>When you need to match a list of words, use the menu
'Insert regexp/Make regexp' to design an optimized version of the word list.
<p>For example, the list 'aa aab ab ad' is optimized into 'a(ab?|b|d)'.
<p><b>Processing the sample text</b>
<p>Use can use VisualREGEXP to perform modification of a text.
Just use the menu 'Select mode/Use replace'. You can now design a regexp to
match what you want. Then use the replace text widget to enter the substitution
you want to apply (use \0, \1, \2, ... to match the subregexp, use the color
to map the number with the matched sub-expressions).
<p>After the substitution, you can save the new text using the 'File/Save ...'
menu. You can let the program choose the end-of-line format or force them for
a specific environment (Unix, Windows, Mac).
<p><b>CONTACT</b>
<p>Send your bug reports, suggestions or any feedback to:
<dir>
<p><a href="mailto:laurent.riesterer@free.fr">laurent.riesterer@free.fr</a><br>
<a href="http://laurent.riesterer.free.fr">http://laurent.riesterer.free.fr</a>
</dir>

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<title>TkDIFF+</title>
<center><h1>TkDIFF+</h1></center>
<p>The top row contains the File, Edit, View, Mark, Merge and Help menus. The second row contains the labels which identify the contents of each text window. Below that is a toolbar which contains navigation and merge selection tools.
<p>The left-most text widget displays the contents of FILE1, the most recently checked-in revision, REV or REV1, respectively (as per the startup options described in the "On Command Line" help). The right-most widget displays the contents of FILE2, FILE or REV2, respectively. Clicking the right mouse button over either of these windows will give you a context sensitive menu with actions that will act on the window you clicked over. For example, if you click right over the right hand window and select "Edit", the file displayed on the right hand side will be loaded into a text editor.
<p>At the bottom of the display is a two line window called the "Line Comparison" window. This will show the "current line" from the left and right windows, one on top of the other. The "current line" is defined by the line that has the blinking insertion cursor, which can be set by merely clicking on any line in the display. This window may be hidden if the View menu item Show Line Comparison is deselected.
<p>All difference regions (DRs) are highlighted to set them apart from the surrounding text. The current difference region, or CDR, is further set apart so that it can be correlated to its partner in the other text widget (that is, the CDR on the left matches the CDR on the right).
<p>Changing the CDR
<p>The CDR can be changed in a sequential manner by means of the Next and Previous buttons. The First and Last buttons allow you to quickly navigate to the first or last CDR, respectively. For random access to the DRs, use the dropdown listbox in the toolbar or the diff map, described below.
<p>By clicking right over a window and using the popup menu you can select Find Nearest Diff to find the diff record nearest the point where you clicked.
<p>You may also select any highlighted diff region as the current diff region by double-clicking on it.
<p>Operations
<p>1. From the File menu:
<p>The New... button displays a dialog where you may choose two files to compare. Selecting "Ok" from the dialog will diff the two files. The Recompute Diffs button recomputes the differences between the two files whose names appear at the top of the TkDiff window. The Write Report... lets you create a report file that contains the information visible in the windows. Lastly, the Exit button terminates TkDiff.
<p>2. From the Edit menu:
<p>Copy copies the currently selected text to the system clipboard. Find pops up a dialog to let you search either text window for a specified text string. Edit File 1 and Edit File 2 launch an editor on the files displayed in the left- and right-hand panes. Preferences pops up a dialog box from which display (and other) options can be
changed and saved.
<p>3. From the View menu:
<p>Show Line Numbers toggles the display of line numbers in the text widgets. If Synchronize Scrollbars is on, the left and right text widgets are synchronized i.e. scrolling one of the windows scrolls the other. If Auto Center is on, pressing the Next or Prev buttons centers the new CDR automatically. Show Diff Map toggles the display of the diff map (see below) on or off. Show Merge Preview shows or hides the merge preview (see below). Show Line Comparison toggles the display of the "line comparison" window at the bottom of the display.
<p>4. From the Mark menu:
The Mark Current Diff creates a new toolbar button that will jump to the current diff region. The Clear Current Diff Mark will remove the toolbar mark button associated with the current diff region, if one exists.
<p>5. From the Merge menu:
The Show Merge Window button pops up a window with the current merged version of the two files. The Write Merge File button will allow you to save the contents of that window to a file.
<p>6. From the Help menu:
The About TkDiff button displays copyright and author information. The On GUI button generates this window. The On Command Line button displays help on the TkDiff command line options. The On Preferences button displays help on the user-settable preferences.
<p>7. From the toolbar:
The first tool is a dropdown list of all of the differences in a standard diff-type format. You may use this list to go directly to any diff record. The Next and Previous buttons take you to the "next" and "previous" DR, respectively. The First and Last buttons take you to the "first" and "last" DR. The Center button centers the CDRs in their respective text windows. You can set Auto Center in Preferences to do this automatically for you as you navigate through the diff records.
<p>Keyboard Navigation
<p>When a text widget has the focus, you may use the following shortcut keys:
<dir>
f First diff
c Center current diff
l Last diff
n Next diff
p Previous diff
1 Merge Choice 1
2 Merge Choice 2
u Switch back to directories view
</dir>
<p>The cursor, Home, End, PageUp and PageDown keys work as expected, adjusting the view in whichever text window has the focus. Note that if Synchronize Scrollbars is set in Preferences, both windows will scroll at the same time.
<p>Scrolling
<p>To scroll the text widgets independently, make sure Synchronize Scrollbars in Preferences is off. If it is on, scrolling any text widget scrolls all others. Scrolling does not change the current diff record (CDR).
<p>Diff Marks
<p>You can set "markers" at specific diff regions for easier navigation. To do this, click on the Set Mark button. It will create a new toolbar button that will jump back to this diff region. To clear a diff mark, go to that diff record and click on the Clear Mark button.
<p>Diff Map
<p>The diff map is a map of all the diff regions. It is shown in the middle of the main window if "Diff Map" on the View menu is on. The map is a miniature of the file's diff regions from top to bottom. Each diff region is rendered as a patch of color, Delete as red, Insert as green and Change as blue. In the case of a 3-way merge, overlap regions are marked in yellow. The height of each patch corresponds to the relative size of the diff region. A thumb lets you interact with the map as if it were a scrollbar.
All diff regions are drawn on the map even if too small to be visible. For large files with small diff regions, this may result in patches overwriting each other.
<p>Merging
<p>To merge the two files, go through the difference regions (via "Next", "Prev" or whatever other means you prefer) and select "Left" or "Right" (next to the "Merge Choice:" label) for each. Selecting "Left" means that the the left-most file's version of the difference will be used in creating the final result; choosing "Right" means that the right-most file's difference will be used. Each choice is recorded, and can be changed arbitrarily many times. To commit the final, merged result to disk, choose "Write Merge File..." from the Merge menu.
<p>Merge Preview
<p>To see a preview of the file that would be written by "Write Merge File...", select "Show Merge Window" in the View menu. A separate window is shown containing the preview. It is updated as you change merge choices. It is synchronized with the other text widgets if "Synchronize Scrollbars" is on.
<p>Credits
<p>Thanks to Wayne Throop for beta testing, and for giving valuable suggestions (and code!) along the way. Thanks (and credit) to John Heidemann for his window tags routines, which I shamelessly stole (with permission) out of his great Tk-based Solitaire game, Klondike. Thanks to D. Elson (author of tkCVS) for writing the code that extends the RCS support to include CVS. Thanks to John Brown for writing the code that extends the revision control support to SCCS.
<p>Major thanks to Warren Jones (wjones@tc.fluke.com) and Peter Brandstrom (qraprbm@era-lvk.ericsson.se) for going way above and beyond the call. Warren added support for NT and cleaned up the Unix code as well. Peter, independently, did the same thing and then added the new interface. The end result was the 2.x series... Many, many thanks to you both!
<p>Major thanks also to Bryan Oakley (boakley@vignette.com), who made the GUI even more appealing... Bryan did a ton of work, the result of which was the 3.x series. Dorothy Robinson provided helpful comments and patches for 3.x, too. Thanks, Bryan and Dorothy!
<p>Thanks to Dean Jones (dean@gallant.com) for permission to use his icons in the toolbar.
<p>Thanks to Laurent Riesterer (laurent.riesterer@free.fr) for adding support to display the differences between files in directories.
<p>Many, many thanks also to the many others who have written and provided ideas and encouragement and code since TkDiff was first released! I haven't done much coding since the 1.x series; almost every new feature that has come about since then has been the result of volunteer efforts. Thanks, folks!
<p>Author
<br>John M. Klassa
<p>Comments
<p>Questions and comments should be sent to the TkDiff mailing list at
<a href="http://www.accurev.com/free/tkdiff">http://www.accurev.com/free/tkdiff</a>.
<p>To get it, please visit:
<br><a href="http://www.gnu.org/gnulist/production/diffutils.html">http://www.gnu.org/gnulist/production/diffutils.html

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<title>Tcl/Tk Project Manager</title>
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