Hello community,

here is the log from the commit of package sil-andika-fonts for 
openSUSE:Factory checked in at 2018-07-06 10:42:52
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Comparing /work/SRC/openSUSE:Factory/sil-andika-fonts (Old)
 and      /work/SRC/openSUSE:Factory/.sil-andika-fonts.new (New)
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Package is "sil-andika-fonts"

Fri Jul  6 10:42:52 2018 rev:2 rq:620916 version:5.000

Changes:
--------
--- /work/SRC/openSUSE:Factory/sil-andika-fonts/sil-andika-fonts.changes        
2018-05-11 14:27:41.789353339 +0200
+++ /work/SRC/openSUSE:Factory/.sil-andika-fonts.new/sil-andika-fonts.changes   
2018-07-06 10:42:55.655188196 +0200
@@ -1,0 +2,5 @@
+Fri May  4 08:23:44 UTC 2018 - jeng...@inai.de
+
+- Trim history of sans-serif fonts from description.
+
+-------------------------------------------------------------------

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Other differences:
------------------
++++++ sil-andika-fonts.spec ++++++
--- /var/tmp/diff_new_pack.Xhu6pG/_old  2018-07-06 10:42:56.359187358 +0200
+++ /var/tmp/diff_new_pack.Xhu6pG/_new  2018-07-06 10:42:56.359187358 +0200
@@ -38,17 +38,7 @@
 
 A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for
 teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered
-than those of most serif fonts. For years, literacy workers have
-had to make do with fonts that were not really suitable for
-beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists
-have had to tediously assemble letters from a variety of fonts
-in order to get all of the characters they need for their particular
-language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive
-publications. Andika addresses those issues.
-
-Designers: 
-  SIL International http://scripts.sil.org
-
+than those of most serif fonts.
 
 %prep
 %setup -T -c %{name} -n %{name}




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