libcork 0.15.0+ds-12 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

libcork (0.15.0+ds-12) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Release to unstable.
  * debian/patches:
    - Refresh patches.

 -- Roger Shimizu <email address hidden>  Sun, 22 Oct 2017 22:16:16 +0900

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Roger Shimizu
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Roger Shimizu
Architectures:
any all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Focal release universe misc
Bionic release universe misc

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
libcork_0.15.0+ds-12.dsc 2.0 KiB 2d91f5dea79fd5ea795e9e592844ab4ecc9eb7c94295e80823940c2a0bf2737a
libcork_0.15.0+ds.orig.tar.xz 129.6 KiB 7bc6d540b3081a4997a19238748148e70e3d6243dd7aea67d0c4a529d3a05b09
libcork_0.15.0+ds-12.debian.tar.xz 12.1 KiB d9e8ece17422f48d54d5e7b09d50ae9a111ae35aa84db210841197997a128e0a

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

libcork-dev: No summary available for libcork-dev in ubuntu groovy.

No description available for libcork-dev in ubuntu groovy.

libcork-doc: No summary available for libcork-doc in ubuntu disco.

No description available for libcork-doc in ubuntu disco.

libcork16: simple, easily embeddable, cross-platform C library

 It falls roughly into the same category as glib or APR in the C world;
 the STL, POCO, or QtCore in the C++ world; or the standard libraries of any
 decent dynamic language.
 .
 So if libcork has all of these comparables, why a new library? Well, none of
 the C++ options are really applicable here. And none of the C options work,
 because one of the main goals is to have the library be highly modular,
 and useful in resource-constrained systems. You’ll hopefully see how this
 fits into an interesting niche of its own.
 .
 This package provides shared libraries.

libcork16-dbgsym: debug symbols for libcork16