current selection shows it's early eighties NoCal roots), if we're going to
include the births and deaths of other members of the Grateful Dead, we
should presumably include Jerry Garcia as well.
Make it so.
Pakistan), and is a variable holiday.
Update to the date of its next occurrence (since calendar(1) does not
support the Muslim calendar), and fix its description accordingly.
mishmash of anglican, catholic and other feast names included herein, use
both `Christmas' and `Feast of the Nativity' to denote this holiday.
This calendar could use serious updating, but it would be worth adding
better support for floating holidays first.
day-of-month on normal entries to always be treated as a wildcard.
Specifically, "if (x&(y|z))" is equivalent to "if ((x&y)||(x&z))", not
"if ((x&y)&&(x&z))", which latter is clearly what was intended.
* every day of the year should have at least one entry
* all entries should have been fact-checked against reliable sources,
particularly for dates
* calendar should contain a fair balance of world history -- existing
calendar, being based on that shipped in 4.2BSD, was very northern
california-centric.
This commit meets these guidelines through March 13. I will continue to
update this as time permits.
to be wildcarded.
As a side effect, this allows '**' in the date field to match every
day of the year, which is very useful for TODO items.
It's important to note that the syntax has a lot of hardcoded (and
undocumented) ambiguity resolution stuff, and is crying out for a
simplification, and maybe some use of yacc and lex.
When this is done, a minor flag day (and probably a compatibility
flag :-( ) should be included, for current users who are making
use of some of the corner cases. I'll raise this on tech-userlevel
before going there. CVS:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
directory, use the first found of:
./calendar
./.calendar
/etc/calendar
Note that currently only the first found of these is used (so that users may
override a system calendar placed in /etc if desired). Users who want can always
use #include to continue the chain...
The Iyonix is a desktop machine from Castle Technology, based on a 600MHz
XScale[tm] 80321 processor.
* Uses the bootloader from NetBSD/acorn32, which is now 32-bit compatible.
* Currently boots multiuser with a serial console.
* Device support is not yet complete.
With help from abs.
calendar.music, complementing Barber's birthday.
- Remove duplicating Beethoven's birthday.
(some materials say it's 12/16, some say 12/17, and some christened on
12/17... I do not know which is correct)
- BTW, who is Johann Sebastian Bach born on 05/22, 1665?