Source: libcork Priority: optional Maintainer: Roger Shimizu Build-Depends: check, cmake, debhelper (>= 10), pkg-config, python3-cram, python3-sphinx Standards-Version: 4.1.1 Section: libs Homepage: https://libcork.readthedocs.io Vcs-Git: https://github.com/rogers0/libcork.git Vcs-Browser: https://github.com/rogers0/libcork Package: libcork-dev Section: libdevel Architecture: any Multi-Arch: same Suggests: libcork-doc Depends: libcork16 (= ${binary:Version}), ${misc:Depends} Description: simple, easily embeddable, cross-platform C library (development files) It falls roughly into the same category as glib or APR in the C world; the STL, POCO, or QtCore in the C++ world; or the standard libraries of any decent dynamic language. . So if libcork has all of these comparables, why a new library? Well, none of the C++ options are really applicable here. And none of the C options work, because one of the main goals is to have the library be highly modular, and useful in resource-constrained systems. You’ll hopefully see how this fits into an interesting niche of its own. . This package provides C header files for the libraries. Package: libcork16 Architecture: any Multi-Arch: same Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends} Description: simple, easily embeddable, cross-platform C library It falls roughly into the same category as glib or APR in the C world; the STL, POCO, or QtCore in the C++ world; or the standard libraries of any decent dynamic language. . So if libcork has all of these comparables, why a new library? Well, none of the C++ options are really applicable here. And none of the C options work, because one of the main goals is to have the library be highly modular, and useful in resource-constrained systems. You’ll hopefully see how this fits into an interesting niche of its own. . This package provides shared libraries. Package: libcork-doc Section: doc Architecture: all Multi-Arch: foreign Depends: libjs-mathjax, ${misc:Depends}, ${sphinxdoc:Depends} Built-Using: ${sphinxdoc:Built-Using} Description: simple, easily embeddable, cross-platform C library (documentation files) It falls roughly into the same category as glib or APR in the C world; the STL, POCO, or QtCore in the C++ world; or the standard libraries of any decent dynamic language. . So if libcork has all of these comparables, why a new library? Well, none of the C++ options are really applicable here. And none of the C options work, because one of the main goals is to have the library be highly modular, and useful in resource-constrained systems. You’ll hopefully see how this fits into an interesting niche of its own. . This package provides documentation in HTML for the libraries.