diff --git a/srcpkgs/perl-Encode-Locale/template b/srcpkgs/perl-Encode-Locale/template index 3e623096d96..966ecb4f9a4 100644 --- a/srcpkgs/perl-Encode-Locale/template +++ b/srcpkgs/perl-Encode-Locale/template @@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ # Template build file for 'perl-Encode-Locale'. pkgname=perl-Encode-Locale version=1.03 -revision=1 -wrksrc="Encode-Locale-$version" +revision=2 +wrksrc="${pkgname/perl-/}-${version}" build_style=perl-module hostmakedepends="perl>=5.18" makedepends="${hostmakedepends}" @@ -14,16 +14,3 @@ homepage="http://search.cpan.org/dist/Encode-Locale" license="GPL-2" distfiles="${CPAN_SITE}/Encode/Encode-Locale-$version.tar.gz" checksum=f76337e0933225914111fcc3319ff4db359b1abfd1aa56dff2df5378db0e2d55 -long_desc=" - In many applications it's wise to let Perl use Unicode for the strings it - processes. Most of the interfaces Perl has to the outside world is still byte - based. Programs therefore needs to decode byte strings that enter the program - from the outside and encode them again on the way out. - - The POSIX locale system is used to specify both the language conventions - requested by the user and the preferred character set to consume and output. - The Encode::Locale module looks up the charset and encoding (called a - CODESET in the locale jargon) and arrange for the Encode module to know this - encoding under the name locale. It means bytes obtained from the environment - can be converted to Unicode strings by calling Encode::encode(locale => - $bytes) and converted back again with Encode::decode(locale => $string)."