nixpkgs/pkgs/applications/editors/tecoc/default.nix

57 lines
1.7 KiB
Nix

{ stdenv, fetchgit
, ncurses }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "tecoc-git-${version}";
version = "20150606";
src = fetchgit {
url = "https://github.com/blakemcbride/TECOC.git";
rev = "d7dffdeb1dfb812e579d6d3b518545b23e1b50cb";
sha256 = "11zfa73dlx71c0hmjz5n3wqcvk6082rpb4sss877nfiayisc0njj";
};
buildInputs = [ ncurses ];
configurePhase = ''
cp src/makefile.linux src/Makefile
'';
buildPhase = ''
make CC=${stdenv.cc}/bin/cc -C src/
'';
installPhase = ''
mkdir -p $out/bin $out/share/doc/${name} $out/lib/teco/macros
cp src/tecoc $out/bin
cp src/aaout.txt doc/* $out/share/doc/${name}
cp lib/* lib2/* $out/lib/teco/macros
(cd $out/bin
ln -s tecoc Make
ln -s tecoc mung
ln -s tecoc teco
ln -s tecoc Inspect )
'';
meta = with stdenv.lib; {
description = "A clone of the good old TECO editor";
longDescription = ''
For those who don't know: TECO is the acronym of Tape Editor and
COrrector (because it was a paper tape edition tool in its debut
days). Now the acronym follows after Text Editor and Corrector,
or Text Editor Character-Oriented.
TECO is a character-oriented text editor, originally developed
bu Dan Murphy at MIT circa 1962. It is also a Turing-complete
imperative interpreted programming language for text
manipulation, done via user-loaded sets of macros. In fact, Emacs
was born as a set of Editor MACroS for TECO.
TECOC is a portable C implementation of TECO-11.
'';
homepage = https://github.com/blakemcbride/TECOC;
maintainers = [ maintainers.AndersonTorres ];
platforms = platforms.linux;
};
}
# TODO: test in other platforms - especially Darwin