[ANN] blogc-0.9.0

I released version 0.9.0 of blogc a few weeks (?!) ago. This release added support to extract a DESCRIPTION template variable from source files, that contains the first line of the first paragraph parsed from the source file, and is suitable to be used as HTML description meta tag.

This release also includes several project-wise changes. I decided to merge the helper tools, namely blogc-git-receiver(1) and blogc-runserver(1), into the main blogc distribution. Users can build these tools adding the --enable-git-receiver and --enable-runserver options to the ./configure call. Gentoo users can rely on the git and http USE flags for it, and Fedora/RHEL/CentOS users still have the packages splitted as before.

squareball library was also removed, and code was merged back to blogc repository, for easier maintenance.

Windows pre-built binaries were also dropped in this release. They were not really useful at this point, and I'm not aware of anyone using those binaries. Code is still supposed to build on Windows, though.

For download links, please visit https://blogc.rgm.io.

Thanks,
Rafael

[ANN] blogc-0.8.1

I just released version 0.8.1 of blogc. This release fixes a bug when using -- and --- inside inline code. The dashes should not be converted to – and — in such cases.

For download links, please visit https://blogc.rgm.io. Windows users can find prebuilt binaries in the web page sidebar.

Thanks,
Rafael

[ANN] blogc-0.8.0

I released version 0.8.0 of blogc a few days ago. This release added support to convert -- and --- to – and — in source files and moved file utilities and error infrastructure code from blogc to squareball.

For download links, please visit https://blogc.rgm.io. Windows users can find prebuilt binaries in the web page sidebar.

Thanks,
Rafael

[ANN] blogc-0.7.6

I just released version 0.7.6 of blogc. This release replaces the internal utilities library with squareball. The squareball library is bundled in blogc, so users don't need to care about this change. Linux distribution packages will use a library globally installed in the system though.

For download links, please visit https://blogc.rgm.io. Windows users can find prebuilt binaries in the web page sidebar.

Thanks,
Rafael