Personal patches
724bd478c9
by Warwick Allison warwick@cs.uq.edu.au. The Qt interface has these extra features: Tiles (graphics) in the inventory and other item-menu windows. The player cursor changes colour as your relative hit-points drop. The message window greys-out older message. The item menus allow a count (click to left of icon - hidden feature). Icons for the major attributes and player states. Menus (only needed by newbie dungeon fodder). Variable size fonts and tiles. More space for the map as messages and status are side-by-side. You rarely need to put the mouse in a pop-up to interact with it. Macros - hidden feature - F1=multi-rest F2=multi-search F3=try-it It is much easier to code, so new feature-requests are more easily done. Sound support See: http://www.uq.edu.au/~cswallis/nhqt/ |
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archivers | ||
astro | ||
audio | ||
benchmarks | ||
cad | ||
chinese | ||
comms | ||
converters | ||
databases | ||
deskutils | ||
devel | ||
dns/p5-Net-DNS | ||
editors | ||
emulators | ||
finance/p5-Business-CreditCard | ||
ftp | ||
games | ||
graphics | ||
irc | ||
japanese | ||
java | ||
korean | ||
lang | ||
math | ||
mbone | ||
misc | ||
Mk | ||
multimedia | ||
net | ||
net-mgmt | ||
news | ||
ports-mgmt/pib | ||
russian | ||
science/felt | ||
security | ||
shells | ||
sysutils | ||
Templates | ||
textproc | ||
vietnamese | ||
www | ||
x11 | ||
x11-clocks | ||
x11-fm | ||
x11-fonts | ||
x11-servers | ||
x11-toolkits | ||
x11-wm | ||
INDEX | ||
LEGAL | ||
Makefile | ||
README |
This is the FreeBSD Ports Collection. For an easy to use WEB-based interface to it, please see: http://www.freebsd.org/ports For general information on the ports collection, please see the FreeBSD Handbook which is available from: file://localhost/usr/share/doc/handbook/handbook.html (if you installed the doc distribution on your machine) Or: http://www.freebsd.org/handbook/handbook.html for the latest official version from FreeBSD-current. The section "The Ports Collection" will tell you how to use the ports and packages and the "Porting Applications" section describes how one can contribute to the ports collection. NOTE: This tree can GROW significantly in size during normal usage! The distribution tar files can and do accumulate in /usr/ports/distfiles, and the individual ports will also use up lots of space in their work subdirectories unless you remember to "make clean" after you're done building a given port. /usr/ports/distfiles can also be periodically cleaned without ill-effect, though if you don't have the original distribution tarball(s) for something on CDROM then you will need to pull it all over your network connection again if you ever try to build the associated port.