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authorRobin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>2015-08-08 13:49:04 -0700
committerRobin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>2015-08-08 17:38:18 -0700
commit56bd759df1d0c750a065b8c845e93d5dfa6b549d (patch)
tree3f91093cdb475e565ae857f1c5a7fd339e2d781e /dev-lang/inform
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proj/gentoo: Initial commit
This commit represents a new era for Gentoo: Storing the gentoo-x86 tree in Git, as converted from CVS. This commit is the start of the NEW history. Any historical data is intended to be grafted onto this point. Creation process: 1. Take final CVS checkout snapshot 2. Remove ALL ChangeLog* files 3. Transform all Manifests to thin 4. Remove empty Manifests 5. Convert all stale $Header$/$Id$ CVS keywords to non-expanded Git $Id$ 5.1. Do not touch files with -kb/-ko keyword flags. Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org> X-Thanks: Alec Warner <antarus@gentoo.org> - did the GSoC 2006 migration tests X-Thanks: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org> - infra guy, herding this project X-Thanks: Nguyen Thai Ngoc Duy <pclouds@gentoo.org> - Former Gentoo developer, wrote Git features for the migration X-Thanks: Brian Harring <ferringb@gentoo.org> - wrote much python to improve cvs2svn X-Thanks: Rich Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> - validation scripts X-Thanks: Patrick Lauer <patrick@gentoo.org> - Gentoo dev, running new 2014 work in migration X-Thanks: Michał Górny <mgorny@gentoo.org> - scripts, QA, nagging X-Thanks: All of other Gentoo developers - many ideas and lots of paint on the bikeshed
Diffstat (limited to 'dev-lang/inform')
-rw-r--r--dev-lang/inform/Manifest1
-rw-r--r--dev-lang/inform/inform-6.33.1_p2.ebuild26
-rw-r--r--dev-lang/inform/metadata.xml41
3 files changed, 68 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/dev-lang/inform/Manifest b/dev-lang/inform/Manifest
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..55290db9a3ff
--- /dev/null
+++ b/dev-lang/inform/Manifest
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+DIST inform-6.33.1-b2.tar.gz 1822648 SHA256 5e260d5114507b8294ab74f2dac35d5681fa294629a842d57811d04fa5833f8c SHA512 12cc10b7dae4118600a4d19d0aa44c3a7c93dfc8aa17bd56df7b9237f21df0ae99db6840eefaa5b11ff346369c6f6f2f128167b3479c8f540c29e3e36666c368 WHIRLPOOL e96bae2f9570ef91aacfd72ff26102f02d7b3bbcca4b345bb67c37627accfbebcac09e4cf05642a1b1832cb2f3369b32f193ad4d36c1ac1dc1de00fa578f9915
diff --git a/dev-lang/inform/inform-6.33.1_p2.ebuild b/dev-lang/inform/inform-6.33.1_p2.ebuild
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..fd47585811b9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/dev-lang/inform/inform-6.33.1_p2.ebuild
@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
+# Copyright 1999-2015 Gentoo Foundation
+# Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2
+# $Id$
+
+EAPI=5
+MY_P=${P/_p/-b}
+DESCRIPTION="design system for interactive fiction"
+HOMEPAGE="http://www.inform-fiction.org/"
+SRC_URI="http://mirror.ifarchive.org/if-archive/infocom/compilers/inform6/source/${MY_P}.tar.gz"
+
+LICENSE="Artistic-2 Inform"
+SLOT="0"
+KEYWORDS="amd64 ~ppc ~sparc x86 ~amd64-linux ~x86-linux ~ppc-macos"
+IUSE="emacs"
+PDEPEND="emacs? ( app-emacs/inform-mode )"
+
+S=${WORKDIR}/${MY_P}
+
+src_install() {
+ default
+ dodoc VERSION
+ docinto tutorial
+ dodoc tutor/README tutor/*.inf
+ mv "${ED}"/usr/share/${PN}/manual "${ED}"/usr/share/doc/${PF}/html
+ rmdir "${ED}"/usr/share/inform/{include,module}
+}
diff --git a/dev-lang/inform/metadata.xml b/dev-lang/inform/metadata.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..d3e2854ee365
--- /dev/null
+++ b/dev-lang/inform/metadata.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<!DOCTYPE pkgmetadata SYSTEM "http://www.gentoo.org/dtd/metadata.dtd">
+<pkgmetadata>
+<herd>games</herd>
+ <longdescription>
+A Design System for Interactive Fiction
+
+Just as film might be called a form of literature which needs technology to be
+read (a cinema projector or a television set) and to be written (a camera),
+interactive fiction is read with the aid of a computer. On this analogy, Inform
+is a piece of software enabling any modern computer to be used as the camera, or
+the film studio, to create works of interactive fiction. To read the resulting
+works, you and your audience need only a simpler piece of software called an
+interpreter.
+
+In this genre of fiction, the computer describes a world and the player types
+instructions like touch the mirror for the protagonist character to follow; the
+computer responds by describing the result, and so on until a story is told.
+
+Interactive fiction emerged from the old-style "adventure game" (c.1975) and
+tends to be a playful genre, which must sometimes be teased out as though it were
+a cryptic crossword puzzle. But this doesn't prevent it from being an artistic
+medium, which has attracted (for instance) the former U.S. Poet Laureate, Robert
+Pinsky, and the novelists Thomas M. Disch and Michael Crichton. An interactive
+fiction is not a child's puzzle-book, with a maze on one page and a rebus on the
+next, but nor is it a novel. Neither pure interaction nor pure fiction, it lies
+in a strange and still largely unexplored land in between.
+
+Since its invention (by Graham Nelson in 1993), Inform has been used to design
+some hundreds of works of interactive fiction, in eight languages, reviewed in
+periodicals ranging in specialisation from XYZZYnews to The New York Times. It
+accounts for around ten thousand postings per year to Internet newsgroups.
+Commercially, Inform has been used as a multimedia games prototyping tool.
+Academically, it has turned up in syllabuses and seminars from computer science
+to theoretical architecture, and appears in books such as Cybertext: Perspectives
+on Ergodic Literature (E. J. Aarseth, Johns Hopkins Press, 1997). Having started
+as a revival of the then-disused Infocom adventure game format, the Z-Machine,
+Inform came full circle when it produced Infocom's only text game of the 1990s:
+Zork: The Undiscovered Underground, by Mike Berlyn and Marc Blank.
+ </longdescription>
+</pkgmetadata>