Package: wnpp Severity: normal The current maintainer of beav, Martin Mitchell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, is apparently not active anymore. Therefore, I orphan this package now. If you want to be the new maintainer, please take it -- see http://www.debian.org/devel/wnpp/index.html#howto-o for detailed instructions how to adopt a package properly.
Some information about this package: Package: beav Binary: beav Version: 1:1.40-15 Priority: optional Section: editors Maintainer: Martin Mitchell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Build-Depends: libncurses-dev Architecture: any Standards-Version: 3.5.5 Format: 1.0 Directory: pool/main/b/beav Files: 1072ef292e321b29a827a5ebbee6f835 1182 beav_1.40-15.dsc b261419faed615c500c30af464fce01d 131476 beav_1.40-15.tar.gz Package: beav Priority: optional Section: editors Installed-Size: 140 Maintainer: Martin Mitchell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Architecture: i386 Version: 1:1.40-15 Depends: libc6 (>= 2.2.3-7), libncurses5 (>= 5.2.20010310-1) Filename: pool/main/b/beav/beav_1.40-15_i386.deb Size: 56506 MD5sum: 37bebd9460d8129e8ce6be012aff1520 Description: Binary Editor And Viewer (beav) beav is an editor for binary files containing arbitrary data. Text file editors, on the other hand, expect the files they edit to contain textual data, and/or to be formatted in a certain way (e.g. lines of printable characters delimited by newline characters). . With beav, you can edit a file in HEX, ASCII, EBCDIC, OCTAL, DECIMAL, and BINARY. You can display but not edit data in FLOAT mode. You can search or search and replace in any of these modes. Data can be displayed in BYTE, WORD, or DOUBLE WORD formats. While displaying WORDS or DOUBLE WORDS the data can be displayed in INTEL's or MOTOROLA's byte ordering. Data of any length can be inserted at any point in the file. The source of this data can be the keyboard, another buffer, or a file. Any data that is being displayed can be sent to a printer in the displayed format. Files that are bigger than memory can be handled. Justification: Countless NMUs, packages really old -- Martin Michlmayr [EMAIL PROTECTED]