In gimp, try: Edit -> Preferences
then click on the "Help System" pane, then switch the "User manual" drop-down to "Use a locally installed copy". Works for me. Scott On Sat, Jun 12, 2010 at 4:18 PM, John Essam <[email protected]> wrote: > installed sudo port install gimp-user-manual, then when I tried to use > onscreen help this message came up > > Could not open 'http://docs.gimp.org/2.6/en/gimp-help.xml' for reading: > Operation not supported > > Perhaps you are missing GIO backends and need to install GVFS? > > Any clues? > > > > > On 13 Jun 2010, at 00:00, Ryan Schmidt wrote: > >> On Jun 12, 2010, at 17:49, John Essam wrote: >>> >>> On 12 Jun 2010, at 23:43, Ryan Schmidt wrote: >>>> >>>> There's the gimp-user-manual port. Not sure if that installs the same >>>> files that you've got there. >>> >>> how do activate the gimp user manual port >> >> Well, you can install it just like any other port, as in: >> >> sudo port install gimp-user-manual >> >> Once it's installed, I'm not sure how it gets used; I don't use gimp >> myself, but if you can't figure it out, maybe someone else here does. >> >> > > _______________________________________________ > macports-users mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macports-users > _______________________________________________ macports-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macports-users
