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The interval 2013-2017 for the Free Software Foundation is valid because in those years there were releases with changes by either Chris or David, and the GNU maintainers guide advises to mention a new year in all files of a package, not just in the ones that actually changed, and be done with it for the rest of the year.
77 lines
2.6 KiB
Plaintext
77 lines
2.6 KiB
Plaintext
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GNU nano -- an enhanced clone of the Pico text editor
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Overview
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The nano project was started because of a few "problems" with the
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wonderfully easy-to-use and friendly Pico text editor.
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First and foremost was its license: the Pine suite does not use
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the GPL or a GPL-friendly license, and has unclear restrictions on
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redistribution. Because of this, Pine and Pico are not included
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with many GNU/Linux distributions. Also, other features (like
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go-to-line-number or search-and-replace) were unavailable until
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recently or require a command-line flag. Yuck.
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nano aims to solve these problems by emulating the functionality of
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Pico as closely as possible while addressing the problems above and
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providing other extra functionality.
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The nano editor is an official GNU package. For more information on
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GNU and the Free Software Foundation, please see http://www.gnu.org/.
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How to compile and install nano
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Download the nano source code, then:
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tar xvzf nano-x.y.z.tar.gz
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cd nano-x.y.z
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./configure
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make
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make install
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It's that simple. Use --prefix with configure to override the
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default installation directory of /usr/local.
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If you haven't configured with the --disable-nanorc option, after
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installation you may want to copy the doc/sample.nanorc file to
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your home directory, rename it to ".nanorc", and then edit it
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according to your taste.
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Web Page
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https://nano-editor.org/
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Mailing Lists
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There are three nano-related mailing-lists.
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+ info-nano@gnu.org is a very low traffic list used to announce
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new nano versions or other important info about the project.
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+ help-nano@gnu.org is for those seeking to get help without
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wanting to hear about the technical details of its development.
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+ nano-devel@gnu.org is the list used by the people that make nano
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and a general development discussion list, with moderate traffic.
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To subscribe, send email to <name>-request@gnu.org with a subject
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of "subscribe", where <name> is the list you want to subscribe to.
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Bug Reports
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To report a bug, please file a description of the problem on nano's
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bug tracker (https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=nano -- hover on
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"Bugs", then click "Submit new"). The issue may have already been
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reported, so please look first.
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Current Status
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Since version 2.5.0, GNU nano has abandoned the distinction between
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a stable and a development branch: it is now on a "rolling" release
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-- fixing bugs and adding new features go hand in hand.
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Copyright Years
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When in any file of this package a copyright notice mentions a
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year range (such as 1999-2011), it is a shorthand for a list of
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all the years in that interval.
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