fonts-ocr-a 1.0-4 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

fonts-ocr-a (1.0-4) unstable; urgency=low

  * Rename source package to "fonts-ocr-a" to fit the Font Packages
    Naming Policy.
  * debian/control: Switch Maintainer and Uploaders.
  * Bump debhelper version to 8.
  * Drop building of automatic light styles.

ttf-ocr-a (1.0-3) unstable; urgency=low

  * Team upload.
  * Drop defoma stuff, since it is unused and obsolete
  * Move to "new" fonts section
  * Switch to dh instead of long-style debhelper
  * Font packages don't have ELF binaries, remove ${shlibs:Depends}
  * Use "Copyright" instead of "(C)" since the later isn't legally valid
  * Correct some broken characters in debian/copyright
  * Put the fontforge scripts for building in the right dir
  * Switch to dpkg-source v3.0 format
  * Add a watch file with comments explaining the upstream situation

ttf-ocr-a (1.0-2) unstable; urgency=low

  * Update my email address.
  * Change section to fonts.
  * Bump debhelper version.
  * Bump standards version.
  * Add Debian Fonts Task Force to Uploaders.
  * debian/copyright: Updated.

ttf-ocr-a (1.0-1) unstable; urgency=low

  * Initial release. (Closes: #452980)
 -- Ubuntu Archive Auto-Sync <email address hidden>   Tue,  03 Jan 2012 13:08:26 +0000

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Ubuntu Archive Auto-Sync
Uploaded to:
Precise
Original maintainer:
Debian Fonts Task Force
Architectures:
all
Section:
fonts
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Builds

Precise: [FULLYBUILT] i386

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
fonts-ocr-a_1.0.orig.tar.gz 407.3 KiB 854d030d4be481497ade549b5869220e554548c96a14af225aaeaed9fed72023
fonts-ocr-a_1.0-4.debian.tar.gz 2.7 KiB d8e54589c2e5b9debb514bc8ba89ea466315c136ca1ebd9c56d4bceadeee404c
fonts-ocr-a_1.0-4.dsc 1.8 KiB 4e1a95f20ad19a6572056ab3fe32ee25345056ace72265368cccc8865206bec8

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

fonts-ocr-a: ANSI font readable by the computers of the 1960s

 This font was developed by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
 to be readable by the computers of the 1960s. The OCR-A font is still used
 commercially in payment advice forms so that a lockbox company can determine
 the account number and amount owed on a bill when processing a payment.
 A site license for the OCR-A font is very expensive, so this free font was
 created.

ttf-ocr-a: transitional dummy package

 This package is a dummy transitional package. It can be safely removed.