On Mon, 9 Dec 2013 08:22:42 -0500 john Culleton <John at wexfordpress.com> dijo:
>On Sun, 8 Dec 2013 21:36:57 -0800 >John Jason Jordan <johnxj at comcast.net> wrote: >> Thanks, but I probably failed to make something >> clear. The above worked fine for me, but it >> gives me access to 1.5.0 trunk. That is not >> what I want. I want just 1.4.3. My Xubuntu >> 13.10 has only 1.4.2 in the repos, not the >> latest stable 1.4.3. >> >> I also failed to grasp something about my old >> computer. Indeed, it does have 1.4.3 installed, >> but it also does have the >> >> deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/scribus/ppa/ubuntu >> precise main >> >> repo properly installed with the key. So that >> is how I installed 1.4.3 on 12.04. >> >> I tried to install the above repo on my new >> 13.10 computer by editing "precise" to "saucy," >> and it worked, but I can't get the key because >> the server does not respond. >The solution for all linux distros is to compile >from svn. Here is my 1.4.x script: >----------------------------------------------- >rm -r /usr/local/src/s14x >cd /usr/local/src/ >svn co >svn://scribus.net/branches/Version14x/Scribus >s14x cd s14x cmake . >-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH=/usr/local/scribus4_svn >make make install >cd scribus >ls -l scribus >rm /usr/local/bin/scrib4 >ln scribus /usr/local/bin/scrib4 >------------------------------------ >Of course you first have to install >build-essentials or its equivalent. You will need >cmake also. But the compile approach frees you >forever from the vagaries of various >repositories. Would that script not install whatever is the latest in the 1.4x line? I don't want the latest builds; I just want the latest dot version that the devs have decided is stable enough to distribute as the latest release.
