commit: 9f087b9360e6d09933cb929efcbc364146c6bd58
Author: Tim Harder <radhermit <AT> gentoo <DOT> org>
AuthorDate: Sun Aug 27 08:11:08 2017 +0000
Commit: Tim Harder <radhermit <AT> gentoo <DOT> org>
CommitDate: Sun Aug 27 08:11:08 2017 +0000
URL: https://gitweb.gentoo.org/repo/gentoo.git/commit/?id=9f087b93
dev-python/isodate: use consistent whitespace for metadata
dev-python/isodate/metadata.xml | 24 ++++++++++++------------
1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)
diff --git a/dev-python/isodate/metadata.xml b/dev-python/isodate/metadata.xml
index 1e963eafb72..40a9ac204fa 100644
--- a/dev-python/isodate/metadata.xml
+++ b/dev-python/isodate/metadata.xml
@@ -6,18 +6,18 @@
<name>Python</name>
</maintainer>
<longdescription>
- This module implements ISO 8601 date, time and duration
- parsing. The implementation follows ISO8601:2004 standard, and
- implements only date/time representations mentioned in the
standard. If
- something is not mentioned there, then it is treated as non
existent,
- and not as an allowed option.
- As this module maps ISO 8601 dates/times to standard Python
data types,
- like date, time, datetime and timedelta, it is not possible to
convert
- all possible ISO 8601 dates/times. For instance, dates before
0001-01-01
- are not allowed by the Python date and datetime classes.
Additionally
- fractional seconds are limited to microseconds. That means if
the parser
- finds for instance nanoseconds it will round it to microseconds.
- </longdescription>
+ This module implements ISO 8601 date, time and duration
+ parsing. The implementation follows ISO8601:2004 standard, and
+ implements only date/time representations mentioned in the standard. If
+ something is not mentioned there, then it is treated as non existent,
+ and not as an allowed option.
+ As this module maps ISO 8601 dates/times to standard Python data types,
+ like date, time, datetime and timedelta, it is not possible to convert
+ all possible ISO 8601 dates/times. For instance, dates before 0001-01-01
+ are not allowed by the Python date and datetime classes. Additionally
+ fractional seconds are limited to microseconds. That means if the parser
+ finds for instance nanoseconds it will round it to microseconds.
+ </longdescription>
<upstream>
<remote-id type="pypi">isodate</remote-id>
</upstream>