Source: haskell-cmdargs Section: haskell Priority: extra Maintainer: Debian Haskell Group Uploaders: Clint Adams Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 9) , cdbs , haskell-devscripts (>= 0.9) , ghc , ghc-prof , ghc-ghci [amd64 i386 kfreebsd-amd64 kfreebsd-i386 sparc] Build-Depends-Indep: ghc-doc Standards-Version: 3.9.5 Homepage: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/cmdargs Vcs-Darcs: http://darcs.debian.org/pkg-haskell/haskell-cmdargs Vcs-Browser: http://darcs.debian.org/cgi-bin/darcsweb.cgi?r=pkg-haskell/haskell-cmdargs Package: libghc-cmdargs-dev Architecture: any Depends: ${haskell:Depends} , ${shlibs:Depends} , ${misc:Depends} Recommends: ${haskell:Recommends} Suggests: ${haskell:Suggests} Provides: ${haskell:Provides} Description: command-line argument processing${haskell:ShortBlurb} It provides an easy way to define command-line parsers. Most users will want to use the System.Console.CmdArgs.Implicit module, whose documentation contains an example. . System.Console.CmdArgs.Explicit provides a way to write command-line parsers for both single mode programs (most programs) and multiple mode programs (e.g. darcs or cabal). Parsers are defined by constructing a data structure. . System.Console.CmdArgs.Implicit provides a way to concisely define command-line parsers, up to three times shorter than getopt. These parsers are translated into the Explicit data type. . System.Console.CmdArgs.GetOpt provides a wrapper allowing compatiblity with existing getopt parsers, mapping to the Explicit data type. . ${haskell:Blurb} Package: libghc-cmdargs-prof Architecture: any Depends: ${haskell:Depends} , ${misc:Depends} Recommends: ${haskell:Recommends} Suggests: ${haskell:Suggests} Provides: ${haskell:Provides} Description: command-line argument processing${haskell:ShortBlurb} It provides an easy way to define command-line parsers. Most users will want to use the System.Console.CmdArgs.Implicit module, whose documentation contains an example. . System.Console.CmdArgs.Explicit provides a way to write command-line parsers for both single mode programs (most programs) and multiple mode programs (e.g. darcs or cabal). Parsers are defined by constructing a data structure. . System.Console.CmdArgs.Implicit provides a way to concisely define command-line parsers, up to three times shorter than getopt. These parsers are translated into the Explicit data type. . System.Console.CmdArgs.GetOpt provides a wrapper allowing compatiblity with existing getopt parsers, mapping to the Explicit data type. . ${haskell:Blurb} Package: libghc-cmdargs-doc Section: doc Architecture: all Depends: ${misc:Depends}, ${haskell:Depends} Recommends: ${haskell:Recommends} Suggests: ${haskell:Suggests} Description: command-line argument processing${haskell:ShortBlurb} It provides an easy way to define command-line parsers. Most users will want to use the System.Console.CmdArgs.Implicit module, whose documentation contains an example. . System.Console.CmdArgs.Explicit provides a way to write command-line parsers for both single mode programs (most programs) and multiple mode programs (e.g. darcs or cabal). Parsers are defined by constructing a data structure. . System.Console.CmdArgs.Implicit provides a way to concisely define command-line parsers, up to three times shorter than getopt. These parsers are translated into the Explicit data type. . System.Console.CmdArgs.GetOpt provides a wrapper allowing compatiblity with existing getopt parsers, mapping to the Explicit data type. . ${haskell:Blurb}