On 11/15/06, Headey, Stephen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Edward,

The problem is with my understanding of Subversion. This just downloads 
updates, right? Do I install relax-1.2.9, for example in /usr/local/software 
and then go to /usr/local/software/relax-1.2.9 and type the following?

svn co svn://svn.gna.org/svn/relax/1.2 relax-1.2

Subversion (SVN) or CVS do take a while to get used to.  The 'svn co'
command will create a directory called 'relax-1.2' where ever you ran
the command from.  This directory will contain a full working copy of
relax.  You can then go into that directory and run relax by typing
'./relax' (assuming you are on a Unix like system).  For using the 1.2
line you don't need relax version 1.2.9, this was a copy of the 1.2
line from just before I added the fixes for your bug #7676 report
(https://gna.org/bugs/?7676).

As for the 'svn up' command, you need to be in the 'relax-1.2'
directory and this will only update your working copy with any fixes
that have been added to the repository since you checked it out.  This
will be useful if I fix a bug in the XEasy peak intensity reading code
and you would then like that fix.


and then

svn up


Am I best ignoring the 1.3 update at present?

It's probably best to avoid that code, 1.3 is the unstable line.


Please give idiot-proof instructions. Otherwise my insistance that the problem 
is not fixed may be wrongly interpreted as subversion.

I hope the above description makes more sense than my previous attempts.

Cheers,

Edward

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