| 
This is disk 321 of the freely distributable AMIGA software library.
Below is a listing of the significant directories and their contents.
DezHexBin	An intuition based programmers tool to convert integers
		between decimal, hexadecimal, and binary.  Very small.
		Version 1.1, includes source in assembly code.
		Author:  Michael Djavidan
IconJ		IconJ significantly enhances the IconX program, and is
		100% compatible.  It allows scripts to be executed by
		double-clicking the script's icon.  Abilities include
		joining the script with the icon file itself, or calling
		it from any directory or disk, executing either AmigaDOS
		or ARexx scripts, outputing to any file or device, running
		interactive scripts and scripts that contain conditionals,
		and creating relative console windows.  Includes a utility
		called AtatJ which attaches or detaches a script to/from
		an icon file.  Version 1.0, includes source in JForth.
		Author:  Rich Franzen
Ifs		An Iterated Function System viewer which graphically
		displays iterated function systems and allows the user
		to interactively create the affine functions that define
		such systems.  An IFS can represent complex pictures very
		compactly.  Simple IFSs can describe an infinite number of
		different and interesting fractal displays.  Includes a
		number of displays that the author and others have
		discovered.  Version 1.5, includes source in C.
		Author:  Glen Fullmer
Planets		Some routines ported to the Amiga by Bob Leivian, that
		compute the location of the planets (as viewed from a
		specific point on the earth) and the phase of the moon,
		for an arbitrary date and time.  Includes source.
		Author:  Keith Brandt VIII, Jim Cobb, F. T. Mendenhall,
			 Alan Paeth, Petri Launiainen, Bob Leivian
Turtle		A shared library of "turtle" functions for drawing in a
		RastPort.  Includes source in assembly and C.
		Author:  Thomas Albers
UnixDirs	A program which intercepts calls to dos.library to add
		the UNIX style '.' and '..' syntax for current and parent
		directories, respectively, to file and path names.  I.E.,
		you can refer to files in the current directory as './foo'
		and files in the parent directory as '../foo', or any
		combination of the two.  Includes source in assembly.
		Author:  Murray Bennett and Mark Cyster
Whereis		Another "find-that-file" utility.  Whereis searches on your
		(hard-)disk for a file(name) and displays the path to that
		file.  Some features are case independent search, wildcards,
		interactive mode (cd implemented), can display size and date
		of files, always abortable, can archive filenames for "ZOO"
		(like fnams/recurdir), and no recursive procedures. Includes
		source in C.  Version 1.18 (2-15-90).
		Author: Roland Bless
 |