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author | Arnold D. Robbins <arnold@skeeve.com> | 2010-07-16 12:41:09 +0300 |
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committer | Arnold D. Robbins <arnold@skeeve.com> | 2010-07-16 12:41:09 +0300 |
commit | 8c042f99cc7465c86351d21331a129111b75345d (patch) | |
tree | 9656e653be0e42e5469cec77635c20356de152c2 /ACKNOWLEDGMENT | |
parent | 8ceb5f934787eb7be5fb452fb39179df66119954 (diff) | |
download | egawk-8c042f99cc7465c86351d21331a129111b75345d.tar.gz egawk-8c042f99cc7465c86351d21331a129111b75345d.tar.bz2 egawk-8c042f99cc7465c86351d21331a129111b75345d.zip |
Move to gawk-3.0.0.
Diffstat (limited to 'ACKNOWLEDGMENT')
-rw-r--r-- | ACKNOWLEDGMENT | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/ACKNOWLEDGMENT b/ACKNOWLEDGMENT index a17a2eba..0851ecf9 100644 --- a/ACKNOWLEDGMENT +++ b/ACKNOWLEDGMENT @@ -9,17 +9,17 @@ The following people were involved in porting gawk to different platforms. Kent Williams (MSDOS 2.11) Conrad Kwok (MSDOS earlier versions) Scott Garfinkle (MSDOS earlier versions) + Hal Peterson <hrp@pecan.cray.com> (Cray) This group of people comprise the "GAWK crack portability team", who test the pre-releases and ensure portability of gawk. - Hal Peterson <hrp@pecan.cray.com> (Cray) Pat Rankin <gawk.rankin@EQL.Caltech.Edu> (VMS) Michal Jaegermann <michal@gortel.phys.UAlberta.CA> (Atari, NeXT, DEC 3100) - Scott Deifik <scottd@amgen.com> (MSDOS 2.14 and 2.15) - Kai Uwe Rommel <rommel@ars.muc.de> (OS/2) - Darrel Hankerson <hankedr@mail.auburn.edu> (OS/2) + Scott Deifik <scottd@amgen.com> (MSDOS 2.14, 2.15, 3.0) + Kai Uwe Rommel <rommel@ars.de> (OS/2) + Darrel Hankerson <hankedr@mail.auburn.edu> (DOS and formerly OS/2) Mark Moraes <Mark-Moraes@deshaw.com> (Code Center, Purify) Kaveh Ghazi <ghazi@noc.rutgers.edu> (Lots of Unix variants) @@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ Michal, Scott and Darrel go out of their way to make sure that gawk works on non-32 bit systems, and keep me on track where portability is concerned. Indeed, all of these folks are incredibly helpful; gawk would not be the fine program it is now without them. - + Last, but far from least, we would like to thank Brian Kernighan who has helped to clear up many dark corners of the language and provided a restraining touch when we have been overly tempted by "feeping |