The side effect of this update is that the package compiles with gcc3 now :-)
Changes from version 0.1.7:
0.1.17
* Fixed seg-fault when specifying bold colours with the --colour option. Thanks
to Tim Peoples for pointing pointing this out.
* Renamed regex.{c,h} to c_regex.{c,h} so they don't conflict with Regex.{cc,h}
under operating systems which do not honour case (OS/X and/or Cygwin). Also
removed -s (strip) from LDFLAGS, as this is not supported on some O/S' (eg.
OS/X). David Bacher wrote in with these issues.
* Modified tod2html.xslt so the todo title is displayed in the page, as well as
in the page title.
* Fixed an issue with not displaying links when timeout was in effect.
* Added a new 'default' priority which has the following semantics: when adding
a new item it will be priority 'medium', when grafting to an existing item
the new item will be given the parents priority, and when editing an existing
item its priority will be preserved. An items priority can be overridden on
the command line with --priority <priority> when any of these actions are
performed. Devtodo will never prompt for priority with this enabled. Handy for
putting in your ~/.todorc.
* Fixed display issues when summarising multi-line items.
* Fixed a bug where colours were reset when displaying linked databases.
0.1.16
* Made broken links silently fail rather than failing loudly and horribly.
* Modified the semantics for expanding indices. Now when you use an index with
no modifier (eg. todo 10, as opposed to todo -10 or todo +10), only one
level of children is expanded.
* Big change is the addition of multi-line items and title texts! This is a
much requested feature. To use this, you can either pipe text into devtodo:
cat <<- EOF | tda -p medium
This is some
multi-line
text.
EOF
Or press <CTRL-N> to insert a new line when at the devtodo input prompt.
0.1.15
* Added --force-colour option to force use of colour even when not outputting to
a terminal. Requested by James Troup.
* Added a patch sent in by Philipp Buehler which adds support for title strings
to the todo2html.xslt XSLT script.
* Fixed bug when displaying priorities in TODO list ("mediumriority").
* Added a MASSIVE patch sent in by Christian Hammond which adds support for
linking other todo databases into one single view. This is extremely useful
for situations where you have a core project directory with sub-directories
containing unique individual databases. You can link them so they are all
viewed from the core database. Great work!
* tda will now merge all non-quoted arguments into one string to be used for
the body text of the item to add. This lets this work:
tda -p high Need to go to the shop and get some milk
without needing to do:
tda -p high "Need to go to the shop and get some milk"
* Another bug report by James Troup via the Debian Project. Thanks James and
Arthur for being long time supporters of the project!
* Made doc/scripts.sh more coherent and less convoluted.
* A variation on the XSLT transform was sent in by Christian Hammond. An
example of its use is available at http://www.chipx86.com/todo.ml.
0.1.14
* Fixed a bug where devtodo doesn't work without the TERM variable being set.
Caused havoc in Bill Carlson's cron job. Thanks for tracking it down Bill.
* Fixed some more GCC 3.x compilation problems. I'm still using [io]strstream,
as opposed to the more correct [io]stringstream, so that it should still
compile with older versions of GCC. Fingers crossed.
0.1.13
* Patch from David Furodet to fix compilation problems on Solaris.
* Added 'finishing comments'. This allows you to optionally add a comment to an
item when you are marking it as done, giving reasons/comments for why you are
marking it complete. This is really useful. This also breaks backward
compatibility with previous BINARY formats only. The XML format is not
affected.
0.1.12
* Applied a patch by Michael Tilstra that fixes segfaults when overriding
colours.
* Added a script (contrib/tdrec) to display databases from all sub-directories.
Thanks to Brian Herlihy for the contribution. Modified it slightly so it
passes arguments to devtodo (such as --summary).
* Modified cd, pushd and popd replacement scripts (doc/scripts.sh) so that their
exit status is preserved. Required so things like this work correctly:
cd doc && echo foo
Thanks to Erin Quinlan for the fix.
* Now displays the index of newly added items when --verbose is on. Thanks to
James Troup for suggesting this.
* Fixed man page inconsistency with '-S' and '-s' for summary mode. Thanks to
James Troup again for picking this up.
* Another problem found by James Troup - when grafting, the validity of the
grafting index was only checked after the new item text was typed. This has
been recitifed.
* Work around for some weirdness when generating RPM's.
0.1.11
* Modified .spec file so it doesn't do an aclocal/autoheader/automake/autoconf
before compiling. Fixes incompatibilities between versions of automake.
* Applied a patch sent in by Anreas Amann to fix more incompatibilities with
GCC 3.0.
0.1.10
* Now 'using namespace std;'. It's the standard and it seems as if GCC 3.0
finally requires it, so in it goes.
* Fixed an incompatibility with versions of GCC prior to 3.0 using different
arguments to std::string::compare. Quite annoying. I replaced it with
strncmp.
* Readline is driving me insane. The example from the readline info page says
to use "completion_matches" so I basically copied the code verbatim. But
some versions don't seem to include the function in the readline header
file? Agggggghh. So once again, it's back to using a manually created
header file. It seems to work the best.
0.1.9
* I had a bad feeling that including the readline headers would cause problems
and I was right :(. I'm now not including any readline headers of any form,
so if compilation breaks due to your system readline headers having K&R style
function declarations, upgrade to the latest version.
* Renamed the XSLT examples to reflect their purpose (eg. xslt-example.1 =>
todo2pdf.xslt)
0.1.8
* Fixed for the spelling of "heirarchical" :)
* Repatched --mono fix that gets rid of spurious escape sequences (picked up
by Mark Eichin).
* Fixed envar expansion broken by event handling modifications. Whoops.
* Numeric priorities can now be specified on the command line. Christian
Kurz picked this one up.
* Added a new filter for searching through the database. This is done with
the filter '/'. eg. "todo --filter /CVS" will show all items with the word
CVS in them. This can also be expressed as a shorthand version: "todo /CVS".
The text is interpreted as a regular expression.
* Changed filter behaviour to be more logical. Numeric filters with no sign
prefix will now only show the item itself, not children. Prefixing the
filter with a + will display the children as well and prefixing with a -
will filter out that item.
* Subsequently almost totally rewrote filtering code so it's more logical and
doesn't break (hopefully).
* Short arguments can now be fully merged into one argument. eg.
todo -v -v -f 2-10
can be represented as:
todo -vvf2-10
* Added an "echo" command for use in ~/.todorc. This can be used for status
messages or whatever. eg.
on save echo Saved $TODODB
* Added another PERL script (contrib/changelog2html) to convert directly from
the ChangeLog to HTML.
* Fixed default formatting string for --TODO.
* James Troup had the suggestion (which is now implemented) of clearing the
priority as soon as the user hits a key other than enter when editing an
existing item.
* Copied the readline.h and history.h from my system's readline into devtodo's
source. Hopefully this won't break compiles on any systems :\.
pear-Date constains generic PHP classes for representation and manipulation of
dates, times and time zones without the need of timestamps,
which is a huge limitation for php programs. Includes time zone data,
time zone conversions and many date/time conversions.
It does not rely on 32-bit system date stamps, so
you can display calendars and compare dates that date
pre 1970 and post 2038. This package also provides a class
to convert date strings between Gregorian and Human calendar formats.
pear-Date are generic PHP classes for representation and manipulation of
dates, times and time zones without the need of timestamps,
which is a huge limitation for php programs. Includes time zone data,
time zone conversions and many date/time conversions.
It does not rely on 32-bit system date stamps, so
you can display calendars and compare dates that date
pre 1970 and post 2038. This package also provides a class
to convert date strings between Gregorian and Human calendar formats.
1.52
- In AIX (v?) with perl 5.6.1 the HiRes.t can hang after
the subtest 18. No known analysis nor fix, but added
an alarm (that requires fork() and alarm()) to the test.
1.51
- doc tweaks from mjd (perl change #20456)
- NCR MP-RAS hints file added (svr4.pl) (perl change #21249)
'/**/' with 'XCOMM' in Imakefile.
While here update my email address.
XXX Will come back to it so skill package dependency will be avoided if
pkill(1) is available.
New in release 0.55:
- Hebrew, Russian, Serbian, Spanish translations
- Some other translations updated.
- Support for solid colored backgrounds in GNOME
- Made it work on XFCE4; there were problems with the popup menu
- The calendar can now be moved around by holding down the middle mouse button
- Fully compatible with the new Python 2.3
ok'ed by drochner@
for a possessive (like her, his, whose, their, and its).
Note that I didn't check for proper use of "its" (when it should
be "it is" or "it has" instead).
I also saw over 15 other grammar or punctuation problems, but not
fixed in this commit.
This tool displays the date in an decorated window, simulating the
look of the Blackbox toolbar (Blackbox is a Windowmanager for X11).
To copy this look a great deal of the code is taken from Blackbox.
* Finally tracked down the VERY nasty slowdown (at times up to a minute or
more) some users have been experiencing. It turns out that one of the
recent versions of glibc has a bug in its regex code when dealing with
non-multibyte characters (ie. most of the time). This came to a head because
I upgraded to slackware-current, which has this version of glibc. Great.
Thanks to Mark Eichen for pointing me towards several Debian bug tracker
items about other programs having this same problem.
* Added a new directory "contrib" which will be used for anything that users
contribute that is not patched into the main distribution.
* XSLT transform courtesy of Mark Eichin, to convert devtodo XML databases into
colour PDF's. This is contrib/xslt-example.1.
* XSLT contribution for converting devtodo XML databases into HTML, courtesy of
Daniel Peterson. This is contrib/xslt-example.2.
* I have created an amalgam of the above two XSLT contributions that will
output a HTML page with colourised items. Completed items are struck out.
This is a dodgy hack, so if anybody has any enhancements it would be much
appreciated.
* Changed filename of src/todo.cc to src/main.cc so that devtodo will compile
under environments where case is not relevant in filenames (ie. Cygwin under
M$ Windows).
* Added a small PERL script to generate a todo database from a ChangeLog file
that's in the same format as that used by devtodo. In the contrib directory.
eg. changelog2todo > changelog.todo && devtodo --database changelog.todo
* Added two new events: "load" and "save". This can be used in conjunction
with one of the above XSLT files by putting something like the following in
your ~/.todorc (assuming you have libxlst installed - www.xmlsoft.org):
on save exec xsltproc $HOME/etc/todo-html.xslt $TODODB > `dirname $TODODB`/.todo.html
Which will basically generate a .todo.html file every time a devtodo database
is modified and saved.
* Fixed a few minor man page bugs.
(the contrib/ files discussed here go in ${PREFIX}/share/examples/devtodo under pkgsrc)