-CVS code -
+GNU nano 1.3.4 - 2004.08.17
- General:
- More minor comment cleanups. (DLR)
- Convert more ints and functions using 0 and 1 to bools using
+2004.08.17 - GNU nano 1.3.4 marches forth after a false start. This
+ release mainly features fixes for the bugs that crept
+ into the last release. Among other things, nano now
+ compiles again with certain options, quoted justify now
+ works properly on systems without regex.h, full justify
+ no longer segfaults when used on a file with no
+ paragraphs, previous paragraph searching works properly
+ again, tab completion is properly disabled when needed
+ in restricted mode, Ctrl-C is no longer disabled after
+ using the alternate spell checker, the permissions of a
+ newly created file now match those of nano 1.2.x again,
+ and replacing all text in a file now properly updates
+ the screen in all cases. New features include sample
+ regexes for patch files, improvements to the sample
+ regexes for C files, and support for strings
+ greater than 1023 characters and/or containing nulls in
+ .nano_history. Additionally, the full justify keystroke
+ has been changed to match current Pico, and whitespace
+ display mode is now turned off by default. Enjoy.
+
2004.06.28 - GNU nano 1.3.3 marches forth. There are several new
features in this release, including a restricted mode
that provides better security than just setting an
#
# $Id$
-AC_INIT([GNU nano], [1.3.3-cvs], [nano-devel@gnu.org], [nano])
+AC_INIT([GNU nano], [1.3.4], [nano-devel@gnu.org], [nano])
AC_CONFIG_SRCDIR([src/nano.c])
AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE
AM_CONFIG_HEADER([config.h:config.h.in])
<h2><a name="1.5"></a>1.5. Why the name change from TIP?</h2>
<blockquote><p>On January 10, 2000, TIP was officially renamed to nano because of a namespace conflict with another program called 'tip'. The original 'tip' program "establishes a full duplex terminal connection to a remote host", and was included with many older Unix systems (and newer ones like Solaris). The conflict was not noticed at first because there is no 'tip' utility included with most GNU/Linux distributions (where nano was developed).</p></blockquote>
<h2><a name="1.6"></a>1.6. What is the current version of nano?</h2>
-<blockquote><p>The current version of nano *should* be 1.3.3. Of course you should always check the nano homepage to see what the latest and greatest version is.</p></blockquote>
+<blockquote><p>The current version of nano *should* be 1.3.4. Of course you should always check the nano homepage to see what the latest and greatest version is.</p></blockquote>
<h2><a name="1.7"></a>1.7. I want to read the man page without having to download the program!</h2>
<blockquote><p>Jeez, demanding, aren't we? Okay, look <a href="http://www.nano-editor.org/dist/v1.2/nano.1.html">here</a>.</p></blockquote>
<hr width="100%">
.\" Public License for copying conditions. There is NO warranty.
.\"
.\" $Id$
-.TH NANO 1 "version 1.3.3" "June 28, 2004"
+.TH NANO 1 "version 1.3.4" "August 17, 2004"
.\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage.
.\"
.\" Public License for copying conditions. There is NO warranty.
.\"
.\" $Id$
-.TH NANORC 5 "version 1.3.3" "June 28, 2004"
+.TH NANORC 5 "version 1.3.4" "August 17, 2004"
.\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage.
.\"
.SH NAME
@c Run `makeinfo' rather than `texinfo-format-buffer'.
@smallbook
@set EDITION 0.1
-@set VERSION 1.3.3
-@set UPDATED 28 Jun 2004
+@set VERSION 1.3.4
+@set UPDATED 17 Aug 2004
@dircategory Editors
@direntry
@titlepage
@title GNU @code{nano}
@subtitle a small and friendly text editor.
-@subtitle version 1.3.3
+@subtitle version 1.3.4
@author Chris Allegretta
@page