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skinlf from group net.sf.squirrel-sql.thirdparty-non-maven (version 6.7)

Skin Look And Feel allows Java developers to write skin-able application using the Swing toolkit. Skin Look And Feel is able to load themepacks (a bundle of GTK - The Gimp Toolkit - and KDE - The K Desktop Environment - skins) to enhance your application GUI controls such as Buttons, Checks, Radios, Scrollbars, Progress Bar, Lists, Tables, Internal Frames, Colors, Background Textures, Regular Windows. Skin Look And Feel (aka SkinLF) also includes NativeSkin to create irregular windows.

Group: net.sf.squirrel-sql.thirdparty-non-maven Artifact: skinlf
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10 downloads
Artifact skinlf
Group net.sf.squirrel-sql.thirdparty-non-maven
Version 6.7
Last update 01. October 2009
Organization not specified
URL http://www.l2fprod.com/skinlf
License Apache Software License
Dependencies amount 0
Dependencies No dependencies
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javonet-java-sdk from group com.javonet (version 2.3.0)

Javonet allows you to reference and use modules or packages written in (Java/Kotlin/Groovy/Clojure, C#/VB.NET, Ruby, Perl, Python, JavaScript/TypeScript) like they were created in your technology. It works on Linux/Windows and MacOS for applications created in JVM, CLR/Netcore, Perl, Python, Ruby, NodeJS, C++ or GoLang and gives you unparalleled freedom and flexibility with native performance in building your mixed-technologies products. Let it be accessing best AI or cryptography libraries, devices SDKs, legacy client modules, internal custom packages or anything from public repositories available on NPM, Nuget, PyPI, Maven/Gradle, RubyGems or GitHub. Get free from programming languages barriers today! For more information check out our guides at https://www.javonet.com/guides/v2/

Group: com.javonet Artifact: javonet-java-sdk
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0 downloads
Artifact javonet-java-sdk
Group com.javonet
Version 2.3.0
Last update 08. April 2024
Organization not specified
URL https://www.javonet.com
License The MIT License
Dependencies amount 0
Dependencies No dependencies
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clirr-maven-plugin from group org.neo4j.build.plugins (version 1.0.1)

This is a specialized version of the Clirr Maven Plugin. It adds capabilities for excluding specific error types, as well as separating code into three, rather than two, subgroups: Internal code (no checks) Externally invoked code (Annotated with an "externally invoked" annotation, same as Externally implemented, but adding methods to interfaces and abstract classes is allowed) Externally implemented code (Assumed default. Full backwards compatibility required *unless* an interface is annotated with a defined adaptor annotation, in which case full backwards compatibility is required for the adaptor class, but the rules of @ExternallyInvoked apply to the interface itself) Clirr is a tool that checks Java libraries for binary and source compatibility with older releases. Basically you give it two sets of jar files and Clirr dumps out a list of changes in the public API. The clirr-maven-plugin can be configured to break the build, if it detects incompatible api changes. In a continuous integration process, the clirr-maven-plugin can automatically prevent accidental introduction of binary or source compatibility problems. Additionally, the plugin can generate a report as part of the generated site.

Group: org.neo4j.build.plugins Artifact: clirr-maven-plugin
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0 downloads
Artifact clirr-maven-plugin
Group org.neo4j.build.plugins
Version 1.0.1
Last update 09. November 2015
Organization not specified
URL Not specified
License The Apache Software License, Version 2.0
Dependencies amount 14
Dependencies clirr-core, bcel-findbugs, maven-artifact, maven-model, maven-plugin-api, maven-project, doxia-decoration-model, doxia-module-xhtml, doxia-sink-api, doxia-site-renderer, maven-reporting-api, plexus-i18n, plexus-utils, junit,
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maven-glassfishbuild-extension from group org.glassfish.build (version 3.2.2)

GlassFish build depends on properly functioning several custom lifecycle mappings and artifact handlers. Because these are necessary to resolve dependencies and to run "gf:run" goal and etc., it is critical that these extensions be made available to Maven early on during Maven execution. This definition was originally in maven-glassfish-plugin, which was integrated into Maven POM through <plugin>/<extensions>true marking, but after a series of debugging to resolve artifact resolution failure problems, it turns out that that doesn't cause Maven to load components early enough. I tried to circumbent the prolem by also registering the maven-glassfish-plugin as an extension module (via <build>/<extensions/<extension>), but that apparently confuses Maven to no end --- I get build errors like this: [INFO] Internal error in the plugin manager executing goal 'org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-jar-plugin:2.1:jar': Unable to find the mojo 'org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-jar-plugin:2.1:jar' in the plugin 'org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-jar-plugin' This is obviously one of the problematic areas of Maven, so to avoid doing hack over hack, I'm simply moving the component definitions to its own module.

Group: org.glassfish.build Artifact: maven-glassfishbuild-extension
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0 downloads
Artifact maven-glassfishbuild-extension
Group org.glassfish.build
Version 3.2.2
Last update 14. September 2011
Organization not specified
URL Not specified
License not specified
Dependencies amount 0
Dependencies No dependencies
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maven-glassfish-extension from group org.glassfish.build (version 10.0-alpha-4)

GlassFish build depends on properly functioning several custom lifecycle mappings and artifact handlers. Because these are necessary to resolve dependencies and to run "gf:run" goal and etc., it is critical that these extensions be made available to Maven early on during Maven execution. This definition was originally in maven-glassfish-plugin, which was integrated into Maven POM through <plugin>/<extensions>true marking, but after a series of debugging to resolve artifact resolution failure problems, it turns out that that doesn't cause Maven to load components early enough. I tried to circumbent the prolem by also registering the maven-glassfish-plugin as an extension module (via <build>/<extensions/<extension>), but that apparently confuses Maven to no end --- I get build errors like this: [INFO] Internal error in the plugin manager executing goal 'org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-jar-plugin:2.1:jar': Unable to find the mojo 'org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-jar-plugin:2.1:jar' in the plugin 'org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-jar-plugin' This is obviously one of the problematic areas of Maven, so to avoid doing hack over hack, I'm simply moving the component definitions to its own module.

Group: org.glassfish.build Artifact: maven-glassfish-extension
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0 downloads
Artifact maven-glassfish-extension
Group org.glassfish.build
Version 10.0-alpha-4
Last update 30. April 2008
Organization not specified
URL Not specified
License not specified
Dependencies amount 1
Dependencies maven-core,
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xapi-gwt-parent from group net.wetheinter (version 0.5)

This is the main aggregator for all gwt submodules. All gwt-specific code resides here. Submodules should avoid inheriting from each other unless necessary. This goes for maven structure and gwt.xml structure. The super module is where our jre emulation layer and super-source live; all modules should inherit super, and a minimum of other modules. Some modules, like injection, are fulfilling an api in the core module, and should be accessed only through core service interfaces. Other modules, like reflection, are capable of being standalone inherits, but can benefit from core utilities like injection, so, two (or more) .gwt.xml modules may be provided. As XApi nears 1.0, all submodules will be routinely stitched together into an uber-jar, in order to have a single jar with a single gwt module that can provide all of the services at once. Internal projects will never use the uber jar, to help maintain modularity, but external projects that want to use more than one service will certainly prefer inheriting one artifact, instead of twelve. When distributed in uber-jar format, it will likely be necessary for either the uber jar, or just xapi-gwt-api.jar to appear before gwt-dev on your compile-time classpath. If using gwt-maven-plugin, the gwtFirstOnClasspath option may become problematic. If so, we will provide a forked gwt-plugin to make sure our compiler enhancements are included in the build process. There is also work going on to make a super-source-everything plugin, which will use maven to find source files, and generate synthetic .gwt.xml for you, as part of an effort to create a wholly unified programming environment. In addition to java-to-javascript, we intend to compile java-to-java and possibly other languages, like go; imagine implementing gwt deferred binding to eliminate cross-platform differences between server environments, or operating systems, or versions of a platform, or anywhere else a core api needs to bind to multiple implementations, depending on the runtime environment.

Group: net.wetheinter Artifact: xapi-gwt-parent
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0 downloads
Artifact xapi-gwt-parent
Group net.wetheinter
Version 0.5
Last update 30. May 2015
Organization not specified
URL WeTheInter.net
License not specified
Dependencies amount 0
Dependencies No dependencies
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