app-emacs/muse (gentoo)

Search

Package Information

Description:
Emacs Muse is an authoring and publishing environment for Emacs. It simplifies the process of writing documents and publishing them to various output formats. Muse consists of two main parts: an enhanced text-mode for authoring documents and navigating within Muse projects, and a set of publishing styles for generating different kinds of output. This idea is not in any way new. Numerous systems exist - even one other for Emacs itself (Bhl Mode). What Muse adds to the picture is a more modular environment, with a rather simple core, in which "styles" are derived from to create new styles. Much of Muse's overall functionality is optional. For example, you can use the publisher without the major-mode, or the mode without doing any publishing; or if you don't load the Texinfo or LaTeX modules, those styles won't be available. The Muse codebase is a departure from emacs-wiki.el version 2.44. The code has been restructured and rewritten, especially its publishing functions. The focus in this revision is on the authoring and publishing aspects, and the "wikiness" has been removed as a default behavior (available as the optional module muse-wiki.el). CamelCase words are no longer special by default.
Homepage:
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs-muse/
License:
GPL-3+ FDL-1.2+ GPL-2 MIT

Versions

Version EAPI Keywords Slot
3.20.2 8 amd64 ppc x86 0

Metadata

Description

Maintainers

Upstream

Raw Metadata XML
<pkgmetadata>
	<maintainer type="project">
		<email>gnu-emacs@gentoo.org</email>
		<name>Gentoo GNU Emacs project</name>
	</maintainer>
	<longdescription>
  Emacs Muse is an authoring and publishing environment for Emacs.
  It simplifies the process of writing documents and publishing them
  to various output formats.

  Muse consists of two main parts: an enhanced text-mode for authoring
  documents and navigating within Muse projects, and a set of
  publishing styles for generating different kinds of output.

  This idea is not in any way new. Numerous systems exist - even one
  other for Emacs itself (Bhl Mode). What Muse adds to the picture is
  a more modular environment, with a rather simple core, in which
  "styles" are derived from to create new styles. Much of Muse's
  overall functionality is optional. For example, you can use the
  publisher without the major-mode, or the mode without doing any
  publishing; or if you don't load the Texinfo or LaTeX modules, those
  styles won't be available.

  The Muse codebase is a departure from emacs-wiki.el version 2.44.
  The code has been restructured and rewritten, especially its
  publishing functions. The focus in this revision is on the authoring
  and publishing aspects, and the "wikiness" has been removed as a
  default behavior (available as the optional module muse-wiki.el).
  CamelCase words are no longer special by default.
</longdescription>
	<stabilize-allarches></stabilize-allarches>
	<upstream>
		<remote-id type="github">alexott/muse</remote-id>
	</upstream>
</pkgmetadata>

Lint Warnings

Files

Manifest

Type File Size Versions
DIST muse-3.20.2.tar.xz 143820 bytes 3.20.2
Unmatched Entries
Type File Size