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authorPřemysl Janouch <p.janouch@gmail.com>2014-10-14 00:08:15 +0200
committerPřemysl Janouch <p.janouch@gmail.com>2014-10-14 00:08:15 +0200
commite98d9c0fd1a148adc844046d568d40de135fb366 (patch)
treef9f837ab2f78c2f0effbab99cb370c05885289f1 /README
parente330d751a42def1e014227d5e39969af6e87591f (diff)
downloadtermo-e98d9c0fd1a148adc844046d568d40de135fb366.tar.gz
termo-e98d9c0fd1a148adc844046d568d40de135fb366.tar.xz
termo-e98d9c0fd1a148adc844046d568d40de135fb366.zip
Rename to termo
Diffstat (limited to 'README')
-rw-r--r--README18
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/README b/README
index 3a1c2ee..bb776a5 100644
--- a/README
+++ b/README
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
-termkey2
-========
+termo
+=====
-`termkey2' is a library providing an alternative to ncurses' handling of
-terminal input. ncurses does a really terrible job at that, mainly wrt. mouse
-support which seems to be utterly broken. If you can drag things in a terminal
+`termo' is a library providing an alternative to ncurses' handling of terminal
+input. ncurses does a really terrible job at that, mainly wrt. mouse support
+which seems to be utterly broken. If you can drag things in a terminal
application, such as in VIM, I can assure you it's not using ncurses for that.
Since terminal I/O is really complicated and full of special cases, this project
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ Building and Installing
Build dependencies: GCC/Clang, pkg-config, cmake >= 2.8.5
Optional dependencies: Unibilium (alternative for curses), GLib (for the demos)
- $ git clone https://github.com/pjanouch/termkey2.git
+ $ git clone https://github.com/pjanouch/termo.git
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ To install the library, you can do either the usual:
Or you can try telling CMake to make a package for you. For Debian it is:
$ cpack -G DEB
- # dpkg -i termkey2-*.deb
+ # dpkg -i termo-*.deb
To see the library in action, you can try running the demos, which are
statically linked against the library, and hence they can be run as they are:
@@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ What's Different From the Original termkey?
-------------------------------------------
The main change is throwing away any UTF-8 dependent code, making the library
capable of handling all unibyte and multibyte encodings supported by iconv on
-your system. The characters are still presented as Unicode at the end, however,
+your system. The characters are still presented as Unicode in the end, however,
as the other sensible option is wchar_t and that doesn't really work well, see
http://gnu.org/software/libunistring/manual/libunistring.html#The-wchar_005ft-mess
@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ Oh, and I've deleted the manpages. It needs more Doxygen. :) TBD
License
-------
-`termkey2' is based on the `termkey' library originally written by Paul Evans
+`termo' is based on the `termkey' library originally written by Paul Evans
<leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>, with additional changes made by Přemysl Janouch
<p.janouch@gmail.com>.