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CVS Commit History:
2021-10-26 12:21:45 by Nia Alarie | Files touched by this commit (161) |
Log message:
editors: Replace RMD160 checksums with BLAKE2s checksums
All checksums have been double-checked against existing RMD160 and
SHA512 hashes
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2021-10-07 15:47:53 by Nia Alarie | Files touched by this commit (161) |
Log message:
editors: Remove SHA1 hashes for distfiles
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2020-05-20 08:09:10 by Roland Illig | Files touched by this commit (52) |
Log message:
mark packages that fail with -Werror=char-subscripts
These packages are susceptible to bugs when confronted with non-ASCII
characters.
See https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=94182.
It takes some time to analyze and fix these individually, therefore they
are only marked as "needs work".
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2017-12-24 10:46:06 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (1) |
Log message:
em: follow redirect
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2015-11-03 04:32:24 by Alistair G. Crooks | Files touched by this commit (138) |
Log message:
Add SHA512 digests for distfiles for editors category
Problems found with existing distfiles:
distfiles/javascript-2.1b1.el
distfiles/yEd-3.14.2.zip
No changes made to the javascript-mode or yEd distinfo files.
Otherwise, existing SHA1 digests verified and found to be the same on
the machine holding the existing distfiles (morden). All existing
SHA1 digests retained for now as an audit trail.
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2013-05-02 07:06:13 by Alistair G. Crooks | Files touched by this commit (4) | |
Log message:
Import editors/em-1.0.0 into the Packages Collection
em - the editor for mortals - is a variant of the standard Unix text
editor - ed. It includes all of ed, so the documentation for ed is
fully applicable to em. Em also has a number of new commands and
facilities designed to improve its interaction and increase its
usefulness.
Em differs from ed in that it normally prefixes command lines with a
'>'. For those who prefer silence, if the editor is invoked by any
name not having 'm' as its second character, no prompts will appear.
Other ways of controlling prompts are described below.
The em editor was designed for display terminals and was a
single-line-at-a-time visual editor. It was one of the first programs
on Unix to make heavy use of "raw terminal input mode", in which the
running program, rather than the terminal device driver, handled all
keystrokes.
Inspired by em, and by their own tweaks to ed, Bill Joy and Chuck
Haley, both graduate students at UC Berkeley, took code from em to
make en, and then "extended" en to create ex version 0.1.
This version was translated from V6 Unix C (mid-70s era) to the
present day by Pierre Gaston.
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