stage (not at 'extract' stage) and this can't be properly handled.
(We don't have INSTALL_DEPENDS and similar to it RUN_DEPENDS used on
'install' stage too adds unneded depend into the package itself)
--
This package allows you to install the compat6x libraries on your
system, so you can use legacy binaries that depend on them.
--
Thanks to: All testers
gretl is used in the mathematical analysis of time series,
and has a functionality that is similar to various statistical
and signal processing components of it++, octave, scilab,
R, numpy/scipy, etc. -- most of which are in the math
category. It should really be placed there, rather than
in misc. In recognition of the fact that it implements
some methods that are commonly (but not exclusively!) used
in econometrics, it should also be given a secondary listing
in finance. (In my opinion, however, it shouldn't be given
a primary listing in that category, because most of the
ports there deal with the nuts-and-bolts of accounting,
payment methods, taxes, and stock tracking. To my knowledge,
the only ports now in finance that remotely resemble gretl
are quantlib, xtrader, and qtstalker, all of which employ
simpler methods that are more specific to financial time
series than are the more general methods in gretl.
PR: ports/113052
Submitted by: bf <bf2006a@yahoo.com>
cloc counts blank lines, comment lines, and physical lines of source
code in many programming languages.
cloc contains code from David Wheeler's SLOCCount and Damian Conway and
Abigail's Perl module Regexp::Common.
WWW: http://cloc.sourceforge.net/
Author: Al Danial <al.danial@gmail.com>
The SWORD Project is an effort to create an ever expanding software
package for research and study of God and His Word. The SWORD Bible
Framework allows easy manipulation of Bible texts, commentaries,
lexicons, dictionaries, etc. Many frontends are build using this
framework. An installed module set may be shared between any frontend
using the framework.
WWW: http://gnomesword.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/112196
Submitted by: Thomas Abthorpe <thomas at goodking.ca>