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authorUlrich Müller <ulm@gentoo.org>2016-01-24 20:57:11 +0100
committerUlrich Müller <ulm@gentoo.org>2016-01-24 20:57:11 +0100
commitfd6ff86e912282e7f33b539f4642c5ad916efb93 (patch)
tree1eb73c37f1126f286f254a57a8b66013701211a3 /app-emacs/muse/metadata.xml
parentdev-libs/librep: Version bump to 0.92.5 (diff)
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Split emacs herd and assign its packages to Emacs and GNU Emacs projects.
Diffstat (limited to 'app-emacs/muse/metadata.xml')
-rw-r--r--app-emacs/muse/metadata.xml45
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/app-emacs/muse/metadata.xml b/app-emacs/muse/metadata.xml
index 135da40f247e..d70dd6cbd1ab 100644
--- a/app-emacs/muse/metadata.xml
+++ b/app-emacs/muse/metadata.xml
@@ -1,30 +1,33 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE pkgmetadata SYSTEM "http://www.gentoo.org/dtd/metadata.dtd">
<pkgmetadata>
-<herd>emacs</herd>
+<maintainer>
+ <email>gnu-emacs@gentoo.org</email>
+ <name>Gentoo GNU Emacs project</name>
+</maintainer>
<longdescription>
-Emacs Muse is an authoring and publishing environment for Emacs. It
-simplifies the process of writing documents and publishing them to
-various output formats.
+ Emacs Muse is an authoring and publishing environment for Emacs.
+ It simplifies the process of writing documents and publishing them
+ to various output formats.
-Muse consists of two main parts: an enhanced text-mode for authoring
-documents and navigating within Muse projects, and a set of publishing
-styles for generating different kinds of output.
+ Muse consists of two main parts: an enhanced text-mode for authoring
+ documents and navigating within Muse projects, and a set of
+ publishing styles for generating different kinds of output.
-This idea is not in any way new. Numerous systems exist - even one
-other for Emacs itself (Bhl Mode). What Muse adds to the picture is a
-more modular environment, with a rather simple core, in which "styles"
-are derived from to create new styles. Much of Muse's overall
-functionality is optional. For example, you can use the publisher
-without the major-mode, or the mode without doing any publishing; or
-if you don't load the Texinfo or LaTeX modules, those styles won't be
-available.
+ This idea is not in any way new. Numerous systems exist - even one
+ other for Emacs itself (Bhl Mode). What Muse adds to the picture is
+ a more modular environment, with a rather simple core, in which
+ "styles" are derived from to create new styles. Much of Muse's
+ overall functionality is optional. For example, you can use the
+ publisher without the major-mode, or the mode without doing any
+ publishing; or if you don't load the Texinfo or LaTeX modules, those
+ styles won't be available.
-The Muse codebase is a departure from emacs-wiki.el version 2.44. The
-code has been restructured and rewritten, especially its publishing
-functions. The focus in this revision is on the authoring and
-publishing aspects, and the "wikiness" has been removed as a default
-behavior (available as the optional module muse-wiki.el). CamelCase
-words are no longer special by default.
+ The Muse codebase is a departure from emacs-wiki.el version 2.44.
+ The code has been restructured and rewritten, especially its
+ publishing functions. The focus in this revision is on the authoring
+ and publishing aspects, and the "wikiness" has been removed as a
+ default behavior (available as the optional module muse-wiki.el).
+ CamelCase words are no longer special by default.
</longdescription>
</pkgmetadata>