Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines | |
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* | For ports maintained by ports@FreeBSD.org, remove names and/or | Doug Barton | 2009-12-21 | 1 | -1/+0 |
| | | | | | | | | | | | e-mail addresses from the pkg-descr file that could reasonably be mistaken for maintainer contact information in order to avoid confusion on the part of users looking for support. As a pleasant side effect this also avoids confusion and/or frustration for people who are no longer maintaining those ports. Notes: svn path=/head/; revision=246327 | ||||
* | - Update to 9.2 | Martin Wilke | 2009-01-15 | 2 | -5/+5 |
| | | | | | | | | PR: 130460 Submitted by: Ports Fury Notes: svn path=/head/; revision=226207 | ||||
* | Reset infofarmer due to maintainer-timeouts and no response to email. | Mark Linimon | 2008-09-07 | 1 | -1/+1 |
| | | | | | | | Hat: portmgr Notes: svn path=/head/; revision=220031 | ||||
* | Add port math/nyh-hoc: | Andrew Pantyukhin | 2007-08-13 | 3 | -0/+38 |
Hoc, the High Order Calculator, is an interpreted language for floating-point calculations. Its most basic use is as a powerful and convenient calculator, interactively evaluating expressions such as 1+2*sin(0.7). But hoc is no ordinary calculator: It also lets you assign values to variables, define your own functions, and use loops, conditionals, and everything else you'd expect in a programming language. Hoc was developed by Brian Kernighan and Rob Pike, and introduced in their 1984 book The Unix Programming Environment. This version has been extended and improved by Nadav Y. Har'El. WWW: http://nadav.harel.org.il/homepage/hoc/ Author: Nadav Y. Har'El <nadav@harel.org.il> Notes: svn path=/head/; revision=197599 |