On 04/01/2015 10:20 AM, yoochan wrote:
Hi RJ,
I think you need to inscribe 'source command' in your bash file.
In case of Ubuntu environment, If you insert 'source command' for
/etc/bash.bashrc, you can do use gromacs in all terminals without typing
source command.
This would affect
Hi RJ,
I think you need to inscribe 'source command' in your bash file.
In case of Ubuntu environment, If you insert 'source command' for
/etc/bash.bashrc, you can do use gromacs in all terminals without typing
source command.
You don’t need to set your PATH as you mentioned earlier.
.
Any suggestion plz?
Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2015 17:20:29 +0900
From: yoochan yucha...@gmail.com
To: gmx-us...@gromacs.org
Subject: Re: [gmx-users] Environmental variable setting for gmx 5.0.4
Message-ID: 53f2341b-5a16-48df-a520-5d0c26afd...@gmail.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Hi
To: gmx-us...@gromacs.org
Subject: Re: [gmx-users] Environmental variable setting for gmx 5.0.4
Message-ID: 53f2341b-5a16-48df-a520-5d0c26afd...@gmail.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Hi RJ,
I think you need to inscribe 'source command' in your bash file.
In case of Ubuntu
Dear gmx,
I have installed the gmx in my ubuntu and centos system and tried to set the
environmental variable path in-order to use without mentioning the source
commend in my terminal of linux.
I tried to set my path as follows but couldn't success it.
export