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History of commit frequency

CVS Commit History:


   2020-03-08 17:51:54 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2833)
Log message:
*: recursive bump for libffi
   2020-01-26 13:53:34 by Olaf Seibert | Files touched by this commit (5)
Log message:
Python-version some more files to avoid conflicts.

This package installs once per python version. A few files were not
versioned and caused conflicts.  These files now have the python version
number in their path.
   2020-01-18 22:51:16 by Jonathan Perkin | Files touched by this commit (1836)
Log message:
*: Recursive revision bump for openssl 1.1.1.
   2019-10-29 20:17:09 by Manuel Bouyer | Files touched by this commit (4)
Log message:
Be consistent with py-sip and install files in share/sip${PYVERSSUFFIX}/,
not share/sip/. Otherwise sip doesn't find the files.
bump PKGREVISIONs.
No changes expected in packages dependant on py-qt5, so no recursive bump.
   2019-10-29 18:46:36 by Kamil Rytarowski | Files touched by this commit (4)
Log message:
x11/py-qt5-qscintilla: import py37-qt5-qscintilla-2.11.2

These are the python-bindings for QScintilla2.

Qt(TM) is a GUI software toolkit. Qt simplifies the task of writing and
maintaining GUI (graphical user interface) applications.

Qt is written in C++ and is fully object-oriented. It has everything you need
to create professional GUI applications. And it enables you to create them
quickly.

Qt is a multi-platform toolkit. When developing software with Qt, you can run
it on the X Window System (Unix/X11) or Microsoft Windows NT and Windows 95/98.
Simply recompile your source code on the platform you want.

Qt cuts down the complexity in implementing large and complex systems. Its
ingenious signal-slot technology enables true component programming.

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