As the newly created function has been also applied to printing the
number of matched file lines, file names will now also be colored
with the `--count` option set. :^)
The "dependency" lines really belong to the main port entry, it doesn't
make sense logically to represent them separately and handling them
together will also allow easier dependency management later on. This
commit greatly simplifies the port database parsing to facilitate this,
and removes the -d option from the command line. Instead, ports are
listed with their dependencies, if they have any.
Hand-drawn face/court cards for traditional French-suited playing cards.
For each of the four suits (Clubs, Hearts, Diamonds & Spades) there is a
corresponding King, Queen, Jack and a standalone symbol which can be
used for the numeral card patterns, including Ace. There is a special
Ace of Spades card. Also included is a Joker card.
This behaves identically to the `-exec` option but prompts the user
for confirmation before executing the specified command.
A command is executed if a line beginning with 'y' or 'Y' is entered
by the user. This matches the behavior of `find` on Linux and FreeBSD
when using the POSIX locale.
The `-maxdepth` option limits the number of levels `find` will descend
into the file system for each given starting point.
The `-mindepth` option causes commands not to be evaluated until the
specified depth is reached.
These return true if the last modification time, last access time or
creation time of a file is greater than the given reference file.
If the `-L` option is in use and the given reference file is a
symbolic link then the timestamp of the file pointed to by the
symbolic link will be used.
Now when selecting a chess set in Games Settings, the names of the sets
are capitalized which looks much neater.
The default set 'stelar7' has been renamed to 'Classic' to reflect its
default vanilla design, as opposed to more stylized sets.
This commit also updates any code references to this set.
The argument supplied to the `-size` option may now be one of the
following suffixes:
* b: 512-byte blocks. This is the default unit if no suffix is used.
* c: bytes
* w: two-byte words
* k: kibibytes (1024 bytes)
* M: mebibytes (1024 kibibytes)
* G: gibibytes (1024 mebibytes)
Sizes are rounded to the specified unit before comparison. The unit
suffixes are case-sensitive.
The name "variables" is a bit awkward and what the directory entries are
really about is kernel configuration so let's make it clear with the new
name.