> Am 03.05.2020 um 18:01 schrieb Justin C. Walker :
>
>
>
>> On May 3, 2020, at 08:51 , Christoph Kukulies wrote:
>>
>> Sorry, probably not a macports issue, but I’m asking nonetheless:
>>
>> When I inadvertently type ^D (CTRL-D) in a mac Terminal I’m getting a split
>> screen. Actuallay m
Thanks to all for the clearly written suggestions.
At this point I don't understand most of this well enough to have any
confidence that I won't mess things up worse than they already are.
I'm not much concerned about storage, so I think my best course of action here
is to disable the reclaim r
On May 3, 2020, at 17:08, Richard L. Hamilton wrote:
> For the ones you don't think you want, you could always deactivate them, run
> a port rev-upgrade, and see if anything breaks.
MacPorts would prevent you from uninstalling a port that is needed (as a
library or runtime dependency) by ano
On May 3, 2020, at 16:43, Michael Newman wrote:
> On May 3, 2020, at 21:28, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
>> Look at the output of "port installed unrequested". If you see any port in
>> that list that you actually do want, indicate that by running "sudo port
>> setrequested thePortName".
>
> This
Some of those will have been required to build other ports (such as automake or
bison). If you don't use them directly, you may not need them...until you
update or install a port that needs them to build, in which case reinstalling
them would happen automatically, but slow that down.
It'd proba
> On May 3, 2020, at 21:28, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
> Look at the output of "port installed unrequested". If you see any port in
> that list that you actually do want, indicate that by running "sudo port
> setrequested thePortName".
This is easier said than done.
The output of port installed un
> On May 3, 2020, at 08:51 , Christoph Kukulies wrote:
>
> Sorry, probably not a macports issue, but I’m asking nonetheless:
>
> When I inadvertently type ^D (CTRL-D) in a mac Terminal I’m getting a split
> screen. Actuallay my intention was - in old unix manner -
> to close the terminal.
V
Split screen in OSX terminal should be ⌘-D. Ctrl-D is `exit` by default.
If that’s not the case for you, I suggest checking if
Preferences->Profiles->[profile]->Keyboard has a mapping.
b
> On May 3, 2020, at 8:51 AM, Christoph Kukulies wrote:
>
> Sorry, probably not a macports issue, but I’m
Sorry, probably not a macports issue, but I’m asking nonetheless:
When I inadvertently type ^D (CTRL-D) in a mac Terminal I’m getting a split
screen. Actuallay my intention was - in old unix manner -
to close the terminal.
How do I make this split screen go away and make the terminal behave like
On May 3, 2020, at 00:38, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> When I manually build GetText and Gnulib on a PowerMac G5, the self
> tests fail due to floats. I was talking with the GNU folks about it,
> and GetText and Gnulib don't handle the 128-bit long doubles.
>
> Apple says 64-bit long doubles are de
On May 2, 2020, at 21:18, Michael Newman wrote:
> Late last year I ran reclaim for the first time. It was somewhat of a
> disaster because it removed ports that I actually wanted and I ended up
> having to completely reinstall MacPorts.
>
> Since then I have been afraid to use it again.
>
>
On Sun, May 3, 2020 at 1:20 PM Mojca Miklavec <
mojca.miklavec.li...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
[...]
> Except that in this case a pull request was already there:
> https://github.com/macports/macports-ports/pull/6822
> and now the latest version should already be available.
>
> Mojca
Thanks a lot, M
Hi Michael,
On Sun, May 03, 2020 at 09:18:46AM +0700, Michael Newman via macports-users
wrote:
> Late last year I ran reclaim for the first time. It was somewhat of a
> disaster because it removed ports that I actually wanted and I ended
> up having to completely reinstall MacPorts.
>
> Since th
On 03/05/2020 01:38, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> Hi Everyone,
>
> When I manually build GetText and Gnulib on a PowerMac G5, the self
> tests fail due to floats. I was talking with the GNU folks about it,
> and GetText and Gnulib don't handle the 128-bit long doubles.
>
> Apple says 64-bit long doubl
On Sun, 3 May 2020 at 00:46, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>
> On Apr 30, 2020, at 17:08, Ces VLC wrote:
>
> > I'd like to use gcc 9.3.0 with mingw-w64 (the list of bugfixes in 9.3.0
> > looks significant). I don't know how much effort will this update require,
> > I just add my vote for it here, thanking
On Sat, May 2, 2020 at 1:19 PM Ken Cunningham
wrote:
>
> ...
> I'm thinking I should probably disable startup items, as these are not set up
> in a proper fashion yet on Ubuntu, and also I'm not sure what to do about
It is probably a good idea to move to Systemd. It will work on Fedora
and Ubunt
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