It would be nice if any linux console spreadsheet could somehow acquire a serious functions library. The nearest I suppose anyone can get to that goal is calc under emacs for now, or org-mode. On Sat, 14 Feb 2015, Ido Rosen wrote: > On Wed, Jan 21, 2015 at 2:47 PM, Jonathan Steel <mail@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Fri 02 Jan 2015 at 00:24, Ido Rosen wrote: > > > Happy new year, > > > > > > Would anyone like to bring the venerable UNIX spreadsheet program "sc" > > into > > > [community]? I'm maintaining it in AUR currently. Many other distros > > > support it. :-) > > > > Sure, I use this a bit and it seems popular. I'll move it soon. > > > > Excellent! Thanks for doing that. > > Also, just how we support boost and boost-libs in [extra], POCO[1] is > currently in AUR[2] and should probably be in [community] as it's a fairly > popular library for developers doing high level network things. It already > has 90 votes. (It actually has more than 90 votes, since its votes are > diffused amongst poco, poco-dev, and poco-git in AUR, each with varying > quality of packaging. Currently, poco and poco-dev are basically the same.) > > POCO is a general-purpose C++ framework that does networking, HTTP, SMTP, > URI decoding, FTP, websockets, database abstraction (w/session pooling & > light ORM), XML parsing/generation, compression, regexes, plugins, string > manipulation, OpenSSL wrapping, logging, and a bunch of other things. It's > used by a lot of projects, > > Thoughts? > > [1] http://pocoproject.org/ > [2] https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/poco/ > [3] https://github.com/pocoproject/poco > > Ido > > > > Thanks, > > > > -- > > Jonathan Steel > > > jude <jdashiel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Twitter: @JudeDaShiell