SPELL=eel VERSION=1.0.2 BRANCH=`echo $VERSION|cut -d . -f 1,2` SOURCE=$SPELL-$VERSION.tar.gz SOURCE_DIRECTORY=$BUILD_DIRECTORY/$SPELL-$VERSION SOURCE_URL[0]=$GNOME_URL/sources/$SPELL/$BRANCH/$SOURCE SOURCE_HASH=sha512:33e88c1f6ec7701b24161a3a9ae38279f7b9f71d73efa4415fc98a28b8c0701e63e0eb8811c8da6749bed7957bd171af02b2ffac6554eee1d4afe55f206bd71e WEB_SITE=http://www.gnome.org LICENSE[0]=GPL LICENSE[1]=LGPL ENTERED=20011006 KEYWORDS="gnome1 libs" SHORT="eel is the Eazel Extensions Library" cat << EOF The eel library contains a number of generally useful classes and functions. Many of them are extensions to things in glib, gtk, gnome-libs, and other widely-used GNOME platform libraries. The long term plan is to move much of this into the platform libraries themselves. Almost all of the eel library was previously part of Nautilus, in the "libnautilus-extensions" private library in Nautilus 1.0 - 1.0.2. It is now a separate package so it can be used by packages other than Nautilus. Ramiro Estrugo did the work to extract the eel library from Nautilus and make a package. Unlike platform libraries such as glib and gnome-libs, future versions of eel may be changed in ways that break source or binary compatibility, even before the GNOME 2 platform release. You should only use the eel library if you are prepared to stay in touch with the eel maintainers and possibly update your package when eel is updated. EOF