Hi,
Good catch!
Environment incorrectly set is a common problem.
Joe
On Mar 16, 2007, at 11:25 AM, Matthieu Dubois wrote:
Hi,
the problem is R software, who check its external dependencies only
in /usr/local. Thanks to a R archive, Gtk2 was recognised by first
entering in the bash the following line:
export PATH=/opt/local/bin:$PATH
Best regards,
Matthieu
Le 16 Mar 2007 à 14:46, Joseph Lipowski a écrit :
Matthieu,
I am a bit of a newbie also. Generally you can run " make check"
after the "make install". I don't know if ithat is still valid
using macports. It is likely the case, though I typically install
manually so I may be in error.
Best regards,
Joe Lipowski
On Mar 16, 2007, at 9:34 AM, Matthieu Dubois wrote:
Dear Macports Users,
I am newbie to macports and even to the terminal. I needed gtk2
for compatibility with RGtk2 (a R stat software package). I thus
installed mac ports (from binary), and port install gtk2 without
any problem. However, when trying to to install the R package
(within R, of course), no GTK was detected (and installation
failed). Checking the path in my ~/.profile gives:
export PATH=/opt/local/bin:/opt/local/sbin:$PATH
Thus, my --certainly-- basic question: what's wrong ? How can I
check that gtk2 was correctly installed (port installed indicates
gtk2 was installed) and accessible ?
Thanks a lot,
Matthieu Dubois
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