Re: running texconfig on a console
> "George" == George N White <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > The "nice" menu display is done using the "dialog" utility, so > you should check that dialog is installed and works with your teTeX provides its own dialog, called tcdialog, which uses its own termcap library. Can you invoke tcdialog from the commandline? Regards, Reinhard -- Reinhard Kotucha Phone: +49-511-27060390 Marschnerstr. 25 D-30167 Hannover mailto:reinhard@;kammer.uni-hannover.de Microsoft isn't the answer. Microsoft is the question, and the answer is NO.
Re: running texconfig on a console
On Mon, 28 Oct 2002, Christopher Pinon wrote: > Hi again, > > I have a question about running texconfig on a console. On one machine > that I sometimes use (Slackware), running texconfig results in a nice > menu of options that you can choose from. On another machine (Debian > Potato), running texconfig simply results in a list of options (no nice > menu). I was wondering what exactly is required for texconfig to > present a menu. I thought at first that ncurses was the requirement, > but the Debian system has ncurses (both 4 and 5) installed, so something > else must (also) be needed. The "nice" menu display is done using the "dialog" utility, so you should check that dialog is installed and works with your console. For example, the TERM environment variable set incorrectly: $ TERM=unknown dialog --yesno '\n' 4 20 ; echo $? Error opening terminal: unknown. 1 Texconfig trys to ensure that TERM has a sensible value before running dialog (see the "check_terminal" function). -- George N. White III <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> tel: 902.426.8509 Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Nova Scotia, Canada (TZ=AST4ADT)
running texconfig on a console
Hi again, I have a question about running texconfig on a console. On one machine that I sometimes use (Slackware), running texconfig results in a nice menu of options that you can choose from. On another machine (Debian Potato), running texconfig simply results in a list of options (no nice menu). I was wondering what exactly is required for texconfig to present a menu. I thought at first that ncurses was the requirement, but the Debian system has ncurses (both 4 and 5) installed, so something else must (also) be needed. Thanks, Ch. Pinon