SUMMARY="A binary clock application and screensaver" DESCRIPTION="A Binary Clock. And yes, you really can use this to tell time! I \ have found it quite enjoyable to reprogram my brain to learn to read it at a \ glance. It just takes a little getting used to. How to read the Binary Clock: Each column stands for a digit in a 24 hour clock with the format: hh : mm : ss Each column is configured like this: 8 4 2 1 so if you wanted "2", you would see: (O being off, X being on) O O X O 5 would be: O X O X so 8:57:12pm would be 20:57:12 which would look like: OO OO OO OO XX OO XO OX OX OO XX XO Good Luck!" HOMEPAGE="https://github.com/HaikuArchives/BinaryClock" COPYRIGHT="2000 David Enderson" LICENSE="GNU GPL v2" REVISION="4" srcGitRev="bfefbf7f93e7a07c841fdb1162e119b0364fee85" SOURCE_URI="https://github.com/HaikuArchives/BinaryClock/archive/$srcGitRev.tar.gz" CHECKSUM_SHA256="a9e6c772b7e801d8a75a0dced08d99d04e55355d0b33c47653725ac13de99e5e" SOURCE_DIR="BinaryClock-$srcGitRev" ARCHITECTURES="!all x86_gcc2" USER_SETTINGS_FILES=" settings/BinaryClock " PROVIDES=" binaryclock = $portVersion add_on:BinaryClock = $portVersion app:BinaryClock = $portVersion " REQUIRES=" haiku " BUILD_REQUIRES=" haiku_devel " BUILD_PREREQUIRES=" makefile_engine cmd:g++ cmd:ld cmd:make " BUILD() { cd Application make $jobArgs OBJ_DIR=objects cd ../Screensaver make $jobArgs OBJ_DIR=objects } INSTALL() { mkdir -p $appsDir mkdir -p $addOnsDir/Screen\ Savers/ cp Application/objects/BinaryClock $appsDir addAppDeskbarSymlink $appsDir/BinaryClock "Binary Clock" cp Screensaver/objects/BinaryClock $addOnsDir/Screen\ Savers }