txt2html-2.20 [wennmach], wwwoffle-2.8a.
- oggenc-1.0.1 (bogus, part of vorbis-tools)
Add moz-plugger to list of suggested packages, since we already
have moz-bin-plugger.
* A nested MIME multipart message with a sub-part piped through an external
program (such as HTML with w3m) caused nail to abort after SIGPIPE if the
PAGER command terminated before reading the whole message.
* A 'next' command following a 'hold' command displays the next message
after the one the 'hold' applies to (Bugreport by Mike Sipser). This
might not be exactly what POSIX specifies, but it makes sense and is
consistent with traditional behavior. If you actually favor 'next'
not to advance after 'hold', contact me and I'll add a configuration
option for this.
* If the value of the 'record' variable started with an environment
variable reference such as '$HOME' or with a tilde and the 'outfolder'
variable was set, it was not expanded correctly (Bugreport by Volker
Kuhlmann).
collection.
The goal of CGI::FormBuilder (FormBuilder) is to provide an easy way
for you to generate and process CGI form-based applications. This
module is designed to be smart in that it figures a lot of stuff out
for you. As a result, FormBuilder gives you about a 4:1 ratio of the
code it generates versus what you have to write.
For example, if you have multiple values for a field, it sticks them
in a radio, checkbox, or select group, depending on some factors. It
will also automatically name fields for you in human-readable labels
depending on the field names, and lay everything out in a nicely
formatted table. It will even title the form based on the name of the
script itself (order_form.cgi becomes "Order Form").
Plus, FormBuilder provides you full-blown validation for your fields,
including some useful builtin patterns. It will even generate
JavaScript validation routines on the fly! And, of course, it
maintains state ("stickiness") across submissions, with hooks provided
for you to plugin your own sessionid module such as Apache::Session.
And though it's smart, it allows you to customize it as well. For
example, if you really want something to be a checkbox, you can make
it a checkbox. And, if you really want something to be output a
specific way, you can even specify the name of an HTML::Template or
Template Toolkit (Template) compatible template which will be
automatically filled in, statefully.