"enterprise edition framework for professionals" stands for sarcastic 
marketing. 
Ben Hutchings already asked me to remove that since, smiley included: "Debian 
package descriptions are supposed to be straightforward and boring. :-)" 
Regards, 

-------- Message d'origine --------
De : Konstantin Khomoutov <flatw...@users.sourceforge.net> 
Date : 04/10/2016  12:15  (GMT+01:00) 
À : Pascal Grange <pas...@grange.nom.fr>, 839...@bugs.debian.org 
Objet : Bug#839210: ITP: bash-unit -- bash unit testing enterprise edition 
framework for professionals 

On Fri, 30 Sep 2016 08:53:05 +0200
Pascal Grange <pas...@grange.nom.fr> wrote:

> Package: wnpp
> Severity: wishlist
> Owner: Pascal Grange <pas...@grange.nom.fr>
> 
> * Package name    : bash-unit
>   Version         : 1.0.2
>   Upstream Author : Pascal Grange <pas...@grange.nom.fr>
> * URL             : https://github.com/pgrange/bash-unit
> * License         : GPL
>   Programming Lang: Bash
>   Description     : bash unit testing enterprise edition framework
> for professionals
> 
> bash-unit is a unit testing software for bash.

What does "enterprise edition" stand for there?

I mean, in me, it provokes certain allusions (of "open core" products
etc) which are supposedly false given the indicated license, which
brings the next question of is those words are really needed?

[...]

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