freebsd-ports/japanese/mule-freewnn/pkg-descr
Satoshi Taoka a77a3c279b (1) {chinese,korean,japanese}/Wnn (Wnn 4.2) was updated as follows:
(a) Its name was changed from Wnn to FreeWnn because Wnn6 which is a
      commercial software exits
  (b) Its license was changed to GPL.
  (c) The method to configure was changed from imake to GNU configure.
  (d) Relatively to the original Wnn, the Wnn in the ports tree were
      modified by me a lot. Most of the modifications were adopted
      into FreeWnn.
  (c) Header and library files are installed into
      ${LOCALBASE}/{lib,include} instead of ${X11BASE}/{lib,include}.

(2) FreeWnn is divided into two ports FreeWnn-lib and FreeWnn-server
in chinese, korean and japanese categories. The former is for libwnn
and header files to compile client commands, and the files used in
client commands.  The latter is for a server to convert KANA to KANJI
(Chinese character), and dictionaries and files used by the server.
2000-09-08 04:34:56 +00:00

33 lines
1.3 KiB
Plaintext

This is a package containing only the executables for mule-2.3, a
multilingual editor based on emacs-19.34.
You should install a package, mule-common-2.3, containing emacs lisp
files, info pages, and so on (except executables) for mule-2.3.
This package is built with Japanese support, using FreeWnn as default. It
is supported input methods, jeonkak, hangul for Korean(Hanja), and
quanjiao, zhuyin, erpin for Chinese (check out
lib/mule/site-lisp/site-start.el), using FreeWnn, too.
This package and the package, mule-common-2.3, *will* clobber any
existing emacs installation. In particular, the executables and man
pages of etags/ctags are installed, and the info pages that come with
the original emacs get installed too.
Although this shouldn't cause any problems to run both mule and emacs,
it may cause some confusion when one of them is pkg_delete'd. If
someone has a solution to this, please tell me.
A "dir" file is supplied in the ${PORTSDIR}/editors/mule-common/files/
subdirectory of the ports package. Copy it into your /usr/local/info
to read mule info pages, but also make sure you also add everything
that may have been added to that file!
[Notice]
Mr. Yoshio KATAYAMA <kate@pfu.co.jp> fixed many bugs for mule-2.3.
Patches for those are in 'mule-2.3-19.34.patch-YYMMDD.tar.gz' and are
applied in this port.
- S. Taoka
taoka@FreeBSD.org