-You should install the MSYS package, so that you've a shell environment
-that allows you to run the scripts, especially configure etc. You can get
-that from http://www.mingw.org
-
-To build ncurses for native Windows, you need the MinGW toolchain. The
-original MinGW toolchain from above site is only for 32-Bit Windows. As
-Windows Server - and even more and more regular workstations - are moving
-to 64-Bit, it seems to be reasonable to have a toolchain that supports
-both architectures. I recommend to use the TDM gcc toolchain which you
-can find at http://tdm-gcc.tdragon.net/download. Go to the download section
-and select the bundle installer for tdm64 (MinGW-w64). This installs a
-multilib version of the gcc toolchain that can compile for native 32- and
-64-Bit Windows versions. It also comes with a working pthread implementation.
-
-The latest config and build scripts we use for MinGW have only be tested
+You should install the MSYS package, so that you've a shell environment that
+allows you to run the scripts, especially configure etc. You can get that
+from http://www.mingw.org
+
+To build ncurses for native Windows, you need the MinGW toolchain. The
+original MinGW toolchain from the above site is only for 32-Bit Windows. As
+Windows Server - and also regular workstations - are moving to 64-Bit, it
+seems to be reasonable to have a toolchain that supports both architectures.
+I recommend to use the TDM gcc toolchain which you can find at
+http://tdm-gcc.tdragon.net/download. Go to the download section and select
+the bundle installer for tdm64 (MinGW-w64). This installs a multilib version
+of the gcc toolchain that can compile for native 32- and 64-Bit Windows
+versions. It also comes with a working pthread implementation.
+
+The latest config and build scripts we use for MinGW have only been tested