Difference between revisions of "Patch"
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m (Redlink to diff, because I presume that someone will want to know how to use it to produce patches.) |
m (link to patching) |
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A '''patch''' is a modification to [[vanilla]] [[NetHack]] not created by the DevTeam. Hundreds of patches can be found at the [http://bilious.homelinux.org/ Nethack Patch Database]. Historically, a small handful of popular patches have been incorporated into official releases. | A '''patch''' is a modification to [[vanilla]] [[NetHack]] not created by the DevTeam. Hundreds of patches can be found at the [http://bilious.homelinux.org/ Nethack Patch Database]. Historically, a small handful of popular patches have been incorporated into official releases. | ||
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+ | If you want to know how to patch your NetHack sources, see the article on [[patching]]. | ||
'''patch''' is also a program that can apply specially formed patch (also known as "[[diff]]" after the program that creates them) files. The usual invocation of patch is along the lines of | '''patch''' is also a program that can apply specially formed patch (also known as "[[diff]]" after the program that creates them) files. The usual invocation of patch is along the lines of |
Revision as of 06:27, 2 October 2006
A patch is a modification to vanilla NetHack not created by the DevTeam. Hundreds of patches can be found at the Nethack Patch Database. Historically, a small handful of popular patches have been incorporated into official releases.
If you want to know how to patch your NetHack sources, see the article on patching.
patch is also a program that can apply specially formed patch (also known as "diff" after the program that creates them) files. The usual invocation of patch is along the lines of
patch -p1 < patch_file
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