Commit graph

8 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
wiz
c033c14aa2 Add patch-subs.c here as well (hi joerg) 2013-03-07 06:41:13 +00:00
joerg
eea53fc980 Add forgotten patch file to fix one more missing return value. 2013-03-04 14:45:07 +00:00
asau
fae34ba053 Drop superfluous PKG_DESTDIR_SUPPORT, "user-destdir" is default these days. 2012-10-03 11:43:30 +00:00
sbd
dbf8a0c0fc Add missing mk/termcap buildlink.
Respect LDFLAGS

Bump PKGREVISION
2011-12-17 10:15:24 +00:00
dholland
e358a2fdf6 getline. (fix it with SUBST instead of five one-line patches) 2011-10-02 22:55:25 +00:00
joerg
012dc3eef2 DESTDIR support 2010-01-29 19:31:33 +00:00
joerg
bc3e24b5f1 Remove conflicting prototype for malloc. 2005-12-09 14:33:34 +00:00
wiz
d0d66d75c7 Import gate-2.06 from pkgsrc-wip, packaged by Hugo Rivera:
Gate is text-gatherer. A text-gatherer is like a text-editor, but much
more lightweight and unobtrusive.
If you have a program or shell script that asks people to enter a small
chunk of text, a text-gatherer like Gate is a good way to do it. It
doesn't clear the screen (annoying if there were just some instructions
printed there). It doesn't require you to know a lot of obscure editing
commands. It doesn't make excessive demands on the intelligence of your
terminal emulation software.
It does provide a number of features that make it easier for novice users
to produce good text. It does word-wrap, prints a prompt on each new line,
and allows backspacing from the currently line onto previous lines. It
also provides features that a more experienced user can use. You can call
up normal editor, or use some of gate's simple-minded editing
commands. You can read in files, or save your text to a file. You can
filter your text through something like the unix "fmt" command. It
provides a nice spell-checking interface too.
2005-12-06 22:42:25 +00:00