Citando Elias Pipping :
My point was not only to draw attention to the matter but also to encourage you to propose a convention. Since that approach has failed I'll come up with a proposal:
I see it this way:
* Yes, there should be a prefix for gnu ports * Yes, that prefix should be the same for the installed binary and the portname * No, it should not be "g" (easier to distinguish from gnome ports) * 'gnu' would be a possibility. The only conflict would be with gnuplot, which is not gnu software. but I guess that's possible to live with.
Any opinion on this matter, anyone?
Not sure a convention is the best for all ports. For sed and which, I have no preference. For gnutar, I prefer the name gnutar. For gnuawk, I prefer to name it gawk (which is the name it has on debian (for which the default awk is nawk (or is it mawk?))). For the GNU Compiler collection, I prefer (and I think everybody does) gcc, gcj, gfortran instead of gnucc, gnucj, even though the name of macports' gcc is gcc-dp-42 (why dp?;)... Oh, and why must gnu programs be distinguished from gnome?
On Feb 26, 2007, at 5:38 PM, Elias Pipping wrote:
There are some inconsistencies when it comes to gnu ports
e.g.:
"tar" goes by the name "gnutar". its executable is called "gnutar" "sed" goes by the name "gsed". its executable is called "gnused" "which" goes by the name "gwhich". its executable is called "gwhich"
Emmanuel