The same thing will happen with Windows. And in Windows, you don't have a which command - a given file extension or file type has at most one program that executes it.
I don't see why or how a git clone operation could make the location of the Leo executable known to the OS. How would git know which executable is the right one to use and how to launch it? I just installed LeoInteg into VSCodium for the first time on my Windows machine. When I ran it, it found Leo from PyPi, not from my GitHub clone. If you use the settings to tell Leointeg to use leoserver from the clone, it will look for everything else there. On Thursday, July 10, 2025 at 6:25:49 AM UTC-4 [email protected] wrote: > Viktor Ransmayr schrieb am Donnerstag, 10. Juli 2025 um 12:14:53 UTC+2: > > ... > > I did follow up the planned steps of the context, i.e. provide F/B > concerning the 'boltex/issue4388' branch: > > *Everything works like a charm there !* > > > Launching server with command: python3 > /home/user/leo-editor/leo/core/leoserver.py --port 32125 > > Starting LeoBridge Server 1.0.13 (Launch with -h for help) > LeoServer: init leoBridge in 0.48 sec. > LeoBridge started at localhost on port: 32125. > Ctrl+c to break > server: User Connected, Total: 1, Limit: 1 > Leo 6.8.6-devel, issue4388 branch, build f6014bb722 > 2025-07-09 16:44:12 -0400 > Python 3.13.5, LeoGui: dummy version > linux > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "leo-editor" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/leo-editor/6223d1f6-4c2c-4042-8a87-76925c59f0d1n%40googlegroups.com.
