nongnu: Remove htmlcxx.

It's packaged in GNU Guix now.  Closes #3.

* nongnu/packages/gog.scm (htmlcxx): Remove variable.
This commit is contained in:
Alex Griffin 2019-12-14 13:25:43 -06:00
parent a677a30a1f
commit acffd4f7f2

View file

@ -23,10 +23,8 @@
#:use-module (gnu packages web)
#:use-module (gnu packages xml)
#:use-module (guix packages)
#:use-module (guix download)
#:use-module (guix git-download)
#:use-module (guix build-system cmake)
#:use-module (guix build-system gnu)
#:use-module ((guix licenses) #:prefix license:))
(define-public lgogdownloader
@ -68,40 +66,3 @@
(description "LGOGDownloader is a client for the GOG.com download API,
allowing simple downloads and updates of games and other files from GOG.com.")
(license license:wtfpl2)))
(define-public htmlcxx
(package
(name "htmlcxx")
(version "0.87")
(source
(origin
(method url-fetch)
(uri
(string-append "mirror://sourceforge/htmlcxx/v"
version "/htmlcxx-" version ".tar.gz"))
(sha256
(base32 "1j3mzjlczjrk4ahc43s6kzpvzypzjmqz4sillnca5yadrwwgjf2x"))))
(build-system gnu-build-system)
(home-page "http://htmlcxx.sourceforge.net/")
(synopsis "Simple non-validating CSS1 and HTML parser for C++")
(description "htmlcxx is a simple non-validating CSS1 and HTML parser for
C++. Although there are several other HTML parsers available, htmlcxx has some
characteristics that make it unique:
@itemize
@item STL like navigation of DOM tree, using excelent's tree.hh library from
Kasper Peeters
@item It is possible to reproduce exactly, character by character, the original
document from the parse tree
@item Bundled CSS parser
@item Optional parsing of attributes
@item C++ code that looks like C++ (not so true anymore)
@item Offsets of tags/elements in the original document are stored in the nodes
of the DOM tree
@end itemize
The parsing politics of htmlcxx were created trying to mimic Mozilla Firefox
(https://www.mozilla.org) behavior. So you should expect parse trees similar
to those create by Firefox. However, differently from Firefox, htmlcxx does
not insert non-existent stuff in your html. Therefore, serializing the DOM
tree gives exactly the same bytes contained in the original HTML document.")
(license (list license:lgpl2.0
license:asl2.0))))