Source: muse-el Section: editors Priority: optional Maintainer: Debian Emacsen team Uploaders: Nicholas D Steeves Build-Depends: debhelper-compat (= 13) , dh-elpa Build-Depends-Indep: texinfo , texlive , texlive-latex-extra , emacs-nox Rules-Requires-Root: no Standards-Version: 4.5.1 Homepage: https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs-muse/index.html Vcs-Git: https://salsa.debian.org/emacsen-team/muse-el.git Vcs-Browser: https://salsa.debian.org/emacsen-team/muse-el Package: elpa-muse Architecture: all Depends: ${misc:Depends} , ${elpa:Depends} , elpa-htmlize # ^ elpa-htmlize is needed for emacsen-common postinst to # successfully bytecompile htmlize-hack.el Recommends: emacs (>= 46.0) , doc-base , texlive-latex-base Enhances: emacs Breaks: muse-el (<< 3.20+dfsg-5) Replaces: muse-el (<< 3.20+dfsg-5) Provides: muse-el Description: author and publish projects using Wiki-like markup Emacs Muse is an authoring and publishing environment for Emacs. It simplifies the process of writing documents and publishing them to various output formats, such as DocBook, LaTeX, (X)HTML, TexInfo, and PDF. It can even produce content suitable for blogging, such as Blosxom-style .txt files and RDF or RSS 2.0 feeds, using the muse-blosxom and muse-journal modules. . Muse consists of two main parts: an enhanced text-mode for authoring documents and navigating within Muse projects, and a set of publishing styles for generating different kinds of output.