Search Criteria
Package Details: latin-words 1.97FC-7
Package Actions
Git Clone URL: | https://aur.archlinux.org/latin-words.git (read-only, click to copy) |
---|---|
Package Base: | latin-words |
Description: | William Whitaker's Latin-English-Latin intelligent dictionary and Latin text analyser. |
Upstream URL: | http://archives.nd.edu/whitaker/words.htm |
Keywords: | dict |
Licenses: | custom |
Submitter: | haawda |
Maintainer: | Vitrum-cnkj34kr8 |
Last Packager: | Vitrum-cnkj34kr8 |
Votes: | 19 |
Popularity: | 0.002846 |
First Submitted: | 2009-11-17 23:02 (UTC) |
Last Updated: | 2023-11-03 11:08 (UTC) |
Dependencies (2)
- bash (bash-devel-static-gitAUR, bash-devel-gitAUR, busybox-coreutilsAUR, bash-gitAUR)
- gcc-ada (gcc-ada-gitAUR, gcc-ada-snapshotAUR, gcc-ada-debugAUR) (make)
Latest Comments
1 2 3 Next › Last »
Schernov commented on 2023-11-03 11:13 (UTC)
@Vitrum-cnkj34kr8 Thank you!
Vitrum-cnkj34kr8 commented on 2023-11-03 11:09 (UTC)
@Schernov Fixed.
Schernov commented on 2023-11-03 07:19 (UTC)
Hi.The link has 404 on it now http://archives.nd.edu/whitaker/old/wordsall.zip
Vitrum-cnkj34kr8 commented on 2022-05-06 16:12 (UTC) (edited on 2022-05-06 16:13 (UTC) by Vitrum-cnkj34kr8)
@gauthma Thank you, fixed.
gauthma commented on 2022-05-06 12:56 (UTC)
The link for the wordsall.zip file changed. It is now http://archives.nd.edu/whitaker/old/wordsall.zip
Xyne commented on 2018-09-08 15:50 (UTC)
@Vitrum-cnkj34kr8 I have disowned the package as I hardly ever use it. Please adopt it and add your patch. Thanks!
Vitrum-cnkj34kr8 commented on 2018-08-31 08:25 (UTC) (edited on 2018-08-31 20:08 (UTC) by Vitrum-cnkj34kr8)
Interactive stop ("hit RETURN/ENTER to continue") breaks pipelining and is useless for modern terminals (they have scrolling), so it could be set off by default.
P.S. Test on "avis"
P.P.S. This parameter can be changed through the developer settings: type "!" in interactive session (just as "#").
big_corey commented on 2018-06-06 15:02 (UTC)
Excellent. Thank you for the package.
For newcomers: 1) Open the terminal. 2) Type "words." 3) Hit ENTER.
That's it.
Xyne commented on 2017-04-09 19:17 (UTC)
quenyen commented on 2017-04-03 21:10 (UTC)
1 2 3 Next › Last »