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Date:      Sat, 20 Nov 2010 20:57:42 -0800
From:      Charlie Kester <corky1951@comcast.net>
To:        freebsd-ports@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: How to detect filename conflicts with uninstalled ports?
Message-ID:  <20101121045742.GD48679@comcast.net>
In-Reply-To: <19688.41302.976685.849999@jerusalem.litteratus.org>
References:  <20101121012336.GM13998@comcast.net> <20101121032306.GB48679@comcast.net> <19688.37613.144903.851371@jerusalem.litteratus.org> <20101121040511.GC48679@comcast.net> <19688.41302.976685.849999@jerusalem.litteratus.org>

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On Sat 20 Nov 2010 at 20:34:30 PST Robert Huff wrote:
>
>Charlie Kester writes:
>
>>  But I expect these two find & greps will detect the majority of
>>  filename conflicts.  Unless someone has a better recommendation,
>>  I'll settle for less than perfect.
>
>	If this is a one-time thing, your best policy might be to
>provide the (proposed) name and see if anyone raises a red flag.

Two names, actually: "box" and "boxer".

I'm amazed these names don't seem to be taken.  I remember boxer as the
name of an editor on another platform, but it was never ported to BSD.

There's "boxes" which is a little utility for formatting comment blocks
and similar text.  But no "box".  Weird.

Anyway, the "box" I have in mind is a programming language for graphics.
http://boxc.sourceforge.net.  Boxer is the name of its Python-based GUI.
I have the portfiles ready to submit, assuming my tinderbox run goes OK.
This query was one of my final sanity checks.





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