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3bd9e343df
(both called version 0.5--dates are given in man pages). Add a DIST_SUBDIR to distinguish the different releases. Be more verbose when installing. Don't optimize when compiling. Add WWW: line. Update PLIST. Respect ${CC}. Increment PORTREVISION. ftp://cantor.informatik.rwth-aachen.de/pub/unix/cs-0.5.tar.gz: looking for file 500 cs-0.5.tar.gz: No such file or directory. (Last OK result Mon Nov 27 8:33:50 2000 ) PR: 24091 Submitted by: Joseph Scott <joseph@randomnetworks.com>, KATO Tsuguru <tkato@prontomail.ne.jp> and myself
22 lines
795 B
Plaintext
22 lines
795 B
Plaintext
A tool to find your way in C sources
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cs offers the following functions:
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* find C symbol
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* find functions called from a certain function
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* find functions calling a certain function
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* find string literals
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* find files #including a certain header file
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* find file
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* find POSIX naming violations
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* execute shell command
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The found lines will be displayed. Besides browsing through them, cs
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allows to edit them using your favourite editor. If you frequently
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grep for identifiers and edit the found files, then cs is for you. cs
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should work on any system which supports the following:
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* POSIX
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* ANSI C
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* SYSV curses library
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WWW: http://www.moria.de/~michael/cs/
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