SPELL=pyxmms VERSION=2.02 SOURCE=${SPELL}-${VERSION}.tar.bz2 SOURCE_DIRECTORY=${BUILD_DIRECTORY}/${SPELL}-${VERSION} SOURCE_URL[0]=http://people.via.ecp.fr/~flo/2002/PyXMMS/dist/${SOURCE} SOURCE_HASH=sha512:9c6b47ddf06696060e53f82c4f27f60694cfeb0263da803bda18ab7568ea3fd77b921edc9d24382400fa542468ac158126a733128a7fc18750cae9422639e12a LICENCE=GPL WEB_SITE=http://people.via.ecp.fr/~flo/index.en.xhtml ENTERED=20040315 KEYWORDS="xmms players python audio" BUILD_API=1 SHORT="Python interface to XMMS" cat << EOF This is PyXMMS, a Python interface to XMMS (the X MultiMedia System), an audio and video player for Unix-like platforms. As of version 2.00, PyXMMS consists of two components: - a set of Python bindings for all the xmms_remote_* functions accessible through the libxmms library (which comes with XMMS), plus a few higher-level functions that I (Florent Rougon) find useful; - a Python wrapper around the functions for configuration file management in libxmms. In short, the first component allows you to control XMMS from a Python program while the second component is for Python programs that need to manage the XMMS main configuration file (reading or writing). These two components are accessible by means of the xmms.control and xmms.config modules respectively. EOF