To reproduce the error, go to the File --> Open... menu. Click on any directory or file listed. Thanks for your help.
Jim On Apr 20, 2010, at 3:19 PM, Robert Wyatt wrote: > James Liljegren wrote: >> Got it: "texhash" not "texthash". Thanks, Alexander. Well, it still says >> sudo: texhash: command not found >> >> What would I need to install to run this? Is this a LaTeX utility? >> >> On Apr 20, 2010, at 12:48 PM, Alexander Hansen wrote: >> >>> On 4/20/10 1:42 PM, James Liljegren wrote: >>>> sudo: texthash: command not found >>>> >>>> There is no man page entry for texthash (only hash under sh). Perhaps >>>> this is a Linux command? >>>> >>>> Thanks for the suggestion, Robert. >>>> >>>> On Apr 20, 2010, at 11:46 AM, Robert Wyatt wrote: >>>> >>>>> I didn't want to top-post so I just removed the preceding >>>>> correspondence, my apologies if this is a problem. >>>>> >>>>> I have a low-brow, stab-in-the-dark idea that might help; try running >>>>> "sudo texhash" and see if that helps the problem. If not, no harm done. >>> >>> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >>> >>>>> >>>>> Let us know, >>>>> Robert >>>> >>> >>> Helps if you run the right command. >>> -- >>> Alexander Hansen >>> Fink User Liaison > > Well, yes, it's related to LaTeX, TexLive, TeTex, etc. I hadn't > realized that these were not in the line of dependencies. I'm going to > build grace and see what I get if you'd be interested in showing me > how to reproduce the error. > > --Robert ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Fink-beginners mailing list [email protected] http://news.gmane.org/gmane.os.apple.fink.beginners
