haskell-wcwidth 0.0.2-4 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

haskell-wcwidth (0.0.2-4) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Declare compliance with Debian policy 4.6.2
  * Sourceful upload for GHC 9.4

 -- Ilias Tsitsimpis <email address hidden>  Sun, 27 Aug 2023 12:40:14 +0300

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian Haskell Group
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Haskell Group
Architectures:
any all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
haskell-wcwidth_0.0.2-4.dsc 2.3 KiB ff6c82d0a5d4a4834b502bd7d0440c4a6cc3919f604d92d5bde3daefbe9559dd
haskell-wcwidth_0.0.2.orig.tar.gz 4.1 KiB ffc68736a3bbde3e8157710f29f4a99c0ca593c41194579c54a92c62f6c12ed8
haskell-wcwidth_0.0.2-4.debian.tar.xz 2.1 KiB 72e9cac8d57310650a6b81c6c44695142db0ba8460c391c3ae2793d51ae7a940

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

libghc-wcwidth-dev: bindings for system's native wcwidth

 This package provides the wcwidth function which can be used to learn, for
 most of Unicode, how wide the individual Char code points will come out on the
 terminal.
 .
 This package provides a library for the Haskell programming language.
 See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.

libghc-wcwidth-doc: bindings for system's native wcwidth; documentation

 This package provides the wcwidth function which can be used to learn, for
 most of Unicode, how wide the individual Char code points will come out on the
 terminal.
 .
 This package provides the documentation for a library for the Haskell
 programming language.
 See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.

libghc-wcwidth-prof: bindings for system's native wcwidth; profiling libraries

 This package provides the wcwidth function which can be used to learn, for
 most of Unicode, how wide the individual Char code points will come out on the
 terminal.
 .
 This package provides a library for the Haskell programming language, compiled
 for profiling. See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.