Package: hello
Version: 2.10
Revision: 1
Maintainer: David Fang <fangism@users.sourceforge.net>
Source: mirror:gnu:%n/%n-%v.tar.gz
Source-Checksum: SHA256(31e066137a962676e89f69d1b65382de95a7ef7d914b8cb956f41ea72e0f516b)
BuildDepends: <<
	gettext-bin,
	gettext-tools,
	libgettext8-dev (>= 0.17-1)
<<
Depends: libgettext8-shlibs (>= 0.17-1)
BuildDependsOnly: True
License: GPL
ConfigureParams: --mandir='${prefix}/share/man' --infodir='${prefix}/share/info'
UseMaxBuildJobs: true
CompileScript: <<
	#!/bin/sh -ev
	mkdir build
	cd build
	../configure %c
	make
<<
InfoTest: <<
	TestDepends: fink-package-precedence
	TestScript: <<
	#!/bin/sh -ev
	cd build
	fink-package-precedence .
	make -k check || exit 2
	<<
	TestSuiteSize: small
<<
InstallScript: <<
	#!/bin/sh -ev
	cd build
	make DESTDIR=%d install
<<
DocFiles: ChangeLog* AUTHORS NEWS README TODO THANKS COPYING INSTALL
InfoDocs: hello.info
Description: GNU greeting, multi-lingual
DescDetail: <<
The GNU Hello program produces a familiar, friendly greeting. 
Yes, this is another implementation of the classic program that 
prints "Hello, world!" when you run it.

However, unlike the minimal version often seen, GNU Hello processes 
its argument list to modify its behavior, supports greetings in many 
languages, and so on. 
The primary purpose of GNU Hello is to demonstrate how to write other 
programs that do these things; it serves as a model for 
GNU coding standards and GNU maintainer practices.

GNU Hello is written in C. 
For implementations in other programming languages, 
notably including translation into other languages, 
please see the GNU Gettext distribution.
<<
Homepage: https://www.gnu.org/software/hello/