On Jan 7, 2015, at 4:50 PM, Adam Mercer wrote:
>
> On Wed, Jan 7, 2015 at 1:20 PM, René J.V. wrote:
>
>> You could also look at the files in ${prefix}/var/macports/software/${name}
>
> That seems to be the most straightforward approach, thanks.
And the "port location" command can help you with
> I do not keep my ports upto date, I do not regularily update being an old
> fart and having been bitten many times by the inocuous upgrade that breaks
> verything.
>
> My surprize when gnuplot stopped working in the last day or so is imense.
>
> This line in my plot files causes gnuplot to no
On Wed, Jan 7, 2015 at 1:20 PM, René J.V. wrote:
> You could also look at the files in ${prefix}/var/macports/software/${name}
That seems to be the most straightforward approach, thanks.
Cheers
Adam
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Now that we're making progress with making qt4-mac and qt5-mac co-installable,
there's a similar question that could be asked:
is there any reason (not) to allow Qt 5.3, 5.4 and beyond to co-exist? I
presume these iterations introduce less ABI incompatibilities, but if 5.4 is
already frozen not
On Wednesday January 07 2015 12:26:20 Adam Mercer wrote:
> Is there a way to determine the date that a given port was installed?
> So far I've just been looking at the date of files provided by the
> port but I'm wondering if there is a better way to determine this?
You could also look at the fil
Hi,
- On 7 Jan, 2015, at 19:26, Adam Mercer r...@macports.org wrote:
> Is there a way to determine the date that a given port was installed?
> So far I've just been looking at the date of files provided by the
> port but I'm wondering if there is a better way to determine this?
There is:
ec
Hi
Is there a way to determine the date that a given port was installed?
So far I've just been looking at the date of files provided by the
port but I'm wondering if there is a better way to determine this?
Cheers
Adam
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m