As you said, rfc -l # works. But it just invokes the viewer, which is
w3m in my station, to open it. You know that viewer isn't designed
specially to view rfc file, so the format isn't good to view.
Currently, I have fond a rfc viewer whose name is qRFCView. qRFCView
isn't in portage, so I wrote
I used rfcutil, which isn't a rfc viwer. And it's just a tool which can
be used to fetch rfc conveniently.
--
Shaochun Wang [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
* Shaochun Wang [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-03-23 08:29] :
I used rfcutil, which isn't a rfc viwer. And it's just a tool which can
be used to fetch rfc conveniently.
Sorry about that :-/
I didn't know that 'rfc -l #' is beyond your needs ...
My apologies
Stefan
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org
* Shaochun Wang [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-03-22 05:41] :
Doesn't anyone know a good rfc viewer available for linux?
'rfcutil' seems to do the job ...
* app-text/rfcutil
Available versions: 3.2.3
Homepage: http://www.dewn.com/rfc/
Description: return all related RFCs based upon a number
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