- Perl has been removed from base.

-  Reword things a bit.
This commit is contained in:
Joel Dahl 2006-10-12 09:06:26 +00:00
parent f49984172c
commit 0301f3ae4e
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/www/; revision=28830

View file

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional-Based Extension//EN" [
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/applications.sgml,v 1.31 2006/02/10 15:05:22 keramida Exp $">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/applications.sgml,v 1.32 2006/08/19 21:20:30 hrs Exp $">
<!ENTITY title "About Applications for FreeBSD">
<!ENTITY % navinclude.about "INCLUDE">
]>
@ -76,11 +76,13 @@
host, print server, PC/NFS server, and more.</li>
<li><b>Software development.</b> A suite of development tools comes
with FreeBSD, including the GNU C/C++ compiler and debugger and the
Perl scripting language. &java; and Tcl/Tk development are also
possible. Popular editors like XEmacs and more esoteric programming
with FreeBSD, including the GNU C/C++ compiler and debugger.
&java; and Tcl/Tk development are also
possible for example, and more esoteric programming
languages like Icon work just fine, too. And FreeBSD's shared
libraries have always been easy to make and use.</li>
libraries have always been easy to make and use. You can also
choose from a wide range of popular and powerful editors, such as
XEmacs and vim.</li>
<li><b>Net surfing.</b> A real UNIX workstation makes a great Internet
surfboard. FreeBSD versions of <a