Hello Mojca,
Under Windows, I can create an installer that will allow selecting components
to install. Just point me pathes to everything.
Vyatcheslav
___
If your question is of interest to others as well, please
On Tue, Jun 9, 2009 at 23:53, Maurício wrote:
It's counter-intuitive, but I'm afraid that stable might be a bi
broken at the moment.
I didn't find discussion on that on the list, so I think it
is not bad to ask: has context considered these new fashion
version control systems?
I've been
On Sat, 20 Jun 2009, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
I wanted to have one special kind of functionality, namely, being able
to choose which modules to install, which engines to install, which
fonts to install etc. SVN doesn't offer that.
Hello Mojca,
SVN supports sparse directories¹. Perhaps this can
It's counter-intuitive, but I'm afraid that stable might be a bi
broken at the moment.
I didn't find discussion on that on the list, so I think it
is not bad to ask: has context considered these new fashion
version control systems?
I've been using these for a few months (darcs and, recently,
2009/6/3 Michal Kvasnička wrote:
Hallo, gentlemen.
I've just tried to install the latest stable ConTeXt minimals on my new
system (SuSE Linux 11.1). The system downloaded itself (via rsync) all
right, but it isn't able to create formats (MarkII; I don't know how to use
MarkIV). If I try run
here's how i did it (, if i remember correctly).
get a a luatex binary and dump it into the dir of the last command
$ . ~/context.distro/tex/setuptex
...
$ which luatex
does this work?
svn cat
http://svn.contextgarden.net/minimals/bin/tex/linux-64/current/luatex/bin/lua...@030
Diego Depaoli wrote:
Due the differences between csh and bash I argued a bit with system
variables set by setuptex.
That's my .login
setenv TEXROOT /home/diego/tex
setenv TEXPATH /home/diego/tex
setenv TEXOS texmf-freebsd
setenv TEXMFOS /home/diego/tex/texmf-freebsd
setenv PATH
i suspect there's a (configuration) file containing a path specification
which scite uses to catch some path setting to the old context directory,
hence that path could be modified to first look in the new context directory
any clues which file that is and where it's located ?
alan
On Tue, Jun 24, 2008 at 12:15 PM, Alan Stone wrote:
i suspect there's a (configuration) file containing a path specification
which scite uses to catch some path setting to the old context directory,
hence that path could be modified to first look in the new context directory
any clues which
- Ubuntu 8.04
According to http://wiki.contextgarden.net/ConTeXt_Minimals
I installed the context minimals in
/opt/context
then ( after some research about its definition and use ) created a
.bash_profile
file (using gedit) to which were added the following instructions
#!/bin/bash
source
On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 7:03 PM, Alan Stone wrote:
- Ubuntu 8.04
According to http://wiki.contextgarden.net/ConTeXt_Minimals
I installed the context minimals in
/opt/context
then ( after some research about its definition and use ) created a
.bash_profile
.bash_profile works for Mac OS
There's a /home/alan/.bashrc so I've put the command line there... doesn't
work either.
Will research about how to proceed with the PATH alternative.
On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 7:11 PM, Mojca Miklavec
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 7:03 PM, Alan Stone wrote:
- Ubuntu 8.04
On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 7:32 PM, Alan Stone wrote:
There's a /home/alan/.bashrc so I've put the command line there... doesn't
work either.
What happens if you use
bash
export
Can you send some output?
Mojca
There's a /home/alan/.bashrc so I've put the command line there... doesn't
work either.
You really need to be more specific. Are you sure you relaunched bash
after editing .bashrc? Bash only reads the configuration file once, at
startup, so if you simply edited it you would have missed the
In any case you need to open a new terminal once you do the changes.
There's a /home/alan/.bashrc so I've put the command line there... doesn't
work either.
Strange, terminal window says...
Setting /opt/context/tex as TEXROOT.
and nevertheless the ubuntu tex/context gets invoked.
On Mon,
you need to source ~/.bashrc
In which file do I put that ?
On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 7:46 PM, Khaled Hosny [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It should be ~/.bashrc (unless you are using another shell than bash),
you need to source ~/.bashrc to get immediate effect in the current
shell session.
On
'which context' should tell you which file is being executed. I'm running
Hardy and all what I needed is to add that line in my ~/.bashrc.
On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 07:46:03PM +0200, Alan Stone wrote:
In any case you need to open a new terminal once you do the changes.
There's a
It should be ~/.bashrc (unless you are using another shell than bash),
you need to source ~/.bashrc to get immediate effect in the current
shell session.
On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 07:32:08PM +0200, Alan Stone wrote:
There's a /home/alan/.bashrc so I've put the command line there... doesn't
work
On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 8:54 PM, Alan Stone wrote:
Checked again... after invoking Build in sciTE, still getting
ConTeXt ver: 2007.09.28 16:52 MKII fmt: 2008.6.18 int: english/english
in the output window.
Some naughty setting in sciTE maybe ?
OK, this explains it. SciTE is not reading
indeed, when running scite from terminal and building, the output window
shows
ConTeXt ver: 2008.06.22 17:38 MKII fmt: 2008.6.23 int: english/english
learned a few new things today. :O)
thanks to all for helping out
find some other way to pass some environmental variables (at least PATH)
Due the differences between csh and bash I argued a bit with system
variables set by setuptex.
That's my .login
setenv TEXROOT /home/diego/tex
setenv TEXPATH /home/diego/tex
setenv TEXOS texmf-freebsd
setenv TEXMFOS /home/diego/tex/texmf-freebsd
setenv PATH
21 matches
Mail list logo