Commit graph

10 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Thomas Klausner
6ede639c74 Reset MAINTAINER -- he stopped working on pkgsrc. 2005-07-27 16:24:52 +00:00
Roland Illig
905ad5a1e3 Removed trailing white-space. 2005-05-23 10:27:02 +00:00
Todd Vierling
5f60a41bb5 Remove USE_BUILDLINK3 and NO_BUILDLINK; these are no longer used. 2005-04-11 21:09:34 +00:00
Michal Pasternak
d56aadaae5 Add PYBINMODULE 2004-02-26 22:52:11 +00:00
Michal Pasternak
b50536cfe7 zip -> tgz, as pointed by Min Sik Kim 2004-02-26 22:48:00 +00:00
Michal Pasternak
a604734833 Dont -L in EXTRACT_OPTS.zip 2004-02-26 21:14:27 +00:00
Michal Pasternak
508d66843b Add bl3 2004-02-26 21:02:28 +00:00
Michal Pasternak
b9a8da41ca Old DESCR was a misunderstanding, my fault 2004-02-26 20:55:02 +00:00
Michal Pasternak
5d55c5a5dc Forgot about | brain after print-PLIST 2004-02-26 20:40:22 +00:00
Michal Pasternak
986fbf7117 PEAK is the "Python Enterprise Application Kit". If you develop "enterprise"
applications with Python, or indeed almost any sort of application with
Python, PEAK may help you do it faster, easier, on a larger scale, and with
fewer defects than ever before. The key is component-based development, on a
reliable infrastructure.

PEAK is an application kit, and applications are made from components. PEAK
provides you with a component architecture, component infrastructure, and
various general-purpose components and component frameworks for building
applications. As with J2EE, the idea is to let you stop reinventing
architectural and infrastructure wheels, so you can put more time into your
actual application.

But PEAK is different from J2EE: it's a single, free implementation of
simpler API's based on an easier-to-use language that can nonetheless scale
with better performance than J2EE.
2004-02-26 20:37:43 +00:00