Update to version 0.70
From his announcement:
> PgAccess v0.70 handles now user defined forms and scripts!
>
> Manipulating forms, PgAccess could be enhanced by the user in order to
> generate new applications.
> The powerfull scripting feature inherited from Tcl/Tk, the native
> environment of PgAccess, allow users to define and use new procedures,
> libraries and even call "system" procedures that I have been used
> writting PgAccess. I would say that PgAccess will be able to accept
> "plugin" modules in order to make him more powerfull. It will make him
> just a "shell" who will set up only a "working environment" for newly
> developed applications!!!!
>
> More information and some examples you will find at
> http://www.flex.ro/pgaccess/pga-rad.html
>
> Once more, I would like to thank you folks for giving me PostgreSQL and
> Visual Tcl, and hoping that PgAcces would help making them more popular!
The documentation-minded may wish to mention this in the
handbook somewhere.
PR: ports/5279
Submitted by: Ian Vaudrey [3]Ian Vaudrey <i.vaudrey@bigfoot.com>
When running as root everything is fine.
When running as normal user, it doesn't find the plugin
when clicking Help->About Plugins
Therefore I marked the port BROKEN for now. please report
your experiences to me, I only can test it under -current and
I'm not sure if I trapped into a -current or config problem.
The FAQ tells to explicitely set NPX_PLUGIN_PATH when
installing netscape in a non standard place, but
/usr/local/lib/netscape/plugins is a standard place and even
if I modify /usr/local/bin/netscape, it doesn't find any plugin.
Even not the nullplugin, which is pretty standard I think ...
Please help me out here, if you have some spare time.
OpenBSD and FreeBSD now both use rresvport. This is a nop for
FreeBSD, but for OpenBSD this picks random port numbers.
Submitted by: deraadt@cvs.openbsd.org
It is capable of align DNA sequences from various organisms
and assign their position in the phylogenic tree.
PR: ports/5229
Submitted by: Frank Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>
Babel is developed by Dolata Group, Department of Chemistry,
University of Arizona and Ohio State University.
PR: ports/5215
Submitted by: Frank Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>