[Debian GNUstep maintainers] Re: emacs.app_9.0pre2-1_i386.changes
REJECTED
Adrian Robert
arobert at cogsci.ucsd.edu
Fri Dec 9 16:26:27 UTC 2005
On Dec 9, 2005, at 10:05 AM, Kim F. Storm wrote:
> Gürkan Sengün <gurkan at linuks.mine.nu> writes:
>
>> For the curious and history:
>> 1992 18.x http://www.linuks.mine.nu/openstep/emacs.png
>> 2005 23.x http://gnu.ethz.ch/emacs.app.png
>
> So your team will "release" emacs 23.x in 2005, while we didn't
> even manage to release 22.x this year ...
Hi,
I'm probably to blame here -- I've been using the term "emacs-23" in
some places as a shorter, snappier alternative to "GNU emacs CVS,
unicode-2 branch", to indicate exactly what version of GNU Emacs
Emacs.app is based on. I didn't intend for it to be misleading, or
suggest that emacs-23 is in any way due for release soon, or that
emacs-23 definitely WILL be based on the unicode-2 branch. Maybe, to
avoid confusion, it's best to just drop use of the term "emacs 23"
completely for now?
I assume though that a Debian package for Emacs.app or any other
unicode-2 based version won't constitute "release" of GNU Emacs any
more than the existing package based on emacs CVS HEAD constitutes a
22.x release.
BTW, in response to Gürkan's original email, I wanted to point out
that Emacs.app is still a work-in-progress -- independently of the
state of CVS/Unicode-2 (which seems pretty good), there is much to be
done with keyboard input, toolbars, etc., all outlined here: http://
emacs-app.sourceforge.net/KNOWN-ISSUES.txt and here: http://emacs-
app.sourceforge.net/TODO.txt . Nonetheless, Emacs.app is perfectly
serviceable as a daily editor under GNUstep and OS X right now, if
you don't need those functions. It is, however, hard to build under
GNUstep, which is part of the reason for working on a Debian package.
thanks,
Adrian
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