NOTICE: This package has been removed from pkgsrc

./editors/bred, Simple binary file reader

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Branch: CURRENT, Version: 0.3.2, Package name: bred-0.3.2, Maintainer: pkgsrc-users

A simple binary file reader that dumps the output to stdout.

To use, simply input a file (stdin support coming soon), and add any desired
options.
--length option changes how many characters to print (not including any
formatting like offsets and borders).
--chunk option changes how large the buffer array should be; the bigger it is,
the faster but uses more memory.
--hex option simply prints the file in hexadecimal.
--color option uses colors to differentiate between letters (\0 are gray,
others indicate how large the character code is, and orange is non-ascii
characters). Note, make sure you use a terminal emulator that supports ANSI
256-color mode.
--space option replaces all the spaces (0x20) with a green-colored _.
This also affects the hex output.


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   2024-02-26 20:16:27 by pin | Files touched by this commit (5) | Package removed
Log message:
editors/bred: remove package
   2022-11-24 16:23:32 by pin | Files touched by this commit (2) | Package updated
Log message:
editors/bred: update to 0.3.2

 - Fixed issue with space not displaying with -G command
 - Bug fixes and new version number
   2022-11-17 10:52:13 by pin | Files touched by this commit (3) | Package updated
Log message:
editors/bred: update to 0.3.1

 - Fixed issue with space not displaying with -G command
 - Added binary reading with color support
   2022-10-09 18:12:17 by pin | Files touched by this commit (5)
Log message:
editors/bred: import package

A simple binary file reader that dumps the output to stdout.

To use, simply input a file (stdin support coming soon), and add any desired
options.
 --length option changes how many characters to print (not including any
   formatting like offsets and borders).
 --chunk option changes how large the buffer array should be; the bigger it is,
   the faster but uses more memory.
 --hex option simply prints the file in hexadecimal.
 --color option uses colors to differentiate between letters (\0 are gray,
   others indicate how large the character code is, and orange is non-ascii
   characters). Note, make sure you use a terminal emulator that supports ANSI
   256-color mode.
 --space option replaces all the spaces (0x20) with a green-colored _.
   This also affects the hex output.