Commit graph

13 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jschauma
e366d0c694 Use tech-pkg@ in favor of packages@ as MAINTAINER for orphaned packages.
Should anybody feel like they could be the maintainer for any of thewe packages,
please adjust.
2003-06-02 01:15:31 +00:00
jmmv
f1446ddf2b Drop trailing whitespace. Ok'ed by wiz. 2003-05-06 17:40:18 +00:00
wiz
5854da542a Add buildlink2.mk. 2002-10-25 09:13:49 +00:00
wiz
f62e3a391c Use buildlink2, and fix PLIST. 2002-10-25 09:13:24 +00:00
bjoern
39167a1fb2 Update the path to the source code of the new version of
Tcl and Tk
2001-12-23 17:21:02 +00:00
agc
ccff9099bc Modify all references to PKGSRCDIR to _PKGSRCDIR, except in the external
references of the pkglint package.

_PKGSRCDIR is an internal definition in bsd.pkg.mk, and a few packages
which would like to refer to other packages in the build tree. It should
not be set by users, but neither should it stop a user from building a
package if it is defined, so make it obvious that this is the case.
2001-12-15 20:25:34 +00:00
zuntum
a437fd43cc Move pkg/ files into package's toplevel directory 2001-11-01 00:20:13 +00:00
hubertf
46a42a2e26 Get rid of BUILD_ROOT and replace it with PKGSRCDIR (which was there
before!)
2001-10-17 23:23:15 +00:00
jtb
566ee20aa2 Don't use the tcl or tk stub libraries. Thanks to Nick Hudson for pointing
out the problem.
2001-05-01 16:13:53 +00:00
jtb
b7e98d602b Make it build by providing the source to tcl and tk at build time.
Similar to what Nick Hudson did for tcl-tclX.
2001-05-01 01:57:29 +00:00
agc
8118fe36ae Move to sha1 digests, and add distfile sizes. 2001-04-19 15:00:47 +00:00
agc
fb467f5ac2 + move the distfile digest/checksum value from files/md5 to distinfo
+ move the patch digest/checksum values from files/patch-sum to distinfo
2001-04-17 11:22:34 +00:00
jtb
2973df2fb0 Initial import of tcl-itcl. Package submitted by Mark Davies
<mark@MCS.VUW.AC.NZ> in PR pkg/12060. Some minor adjustments by me.

[incr Tcl] provides the extra language support needed to build large Tcl/Tk
applications. It introduces the notion of objects, which act as building
blocks for an application. Each object is a bag of data with a set of
procedures or "methods" that are used to manipulate it. Objects are organized
into "classes" with identical characteristics, and classes can inherit
functionality from one another. This object-oriented paradigm adds another
level of organization on top of the basic variable/procedure elements, and
the resulting code is easier to understand and maintain.
2001-02-23 20:36:24 +00:00