Eric Y. Kow:
Thank you for the pointers. They helped a lot.
Greetings,
Mads
> On Sat, Mar 08, 2008 at 12:40:07 +0100, Mads Lindstrøm wrote:
> > I was thinking about making a .deb package file Debian (could also be
> > used for Debian derivatives like Ubuntu). You would then just do
> >
> > >
On Sat, Mar 08, 2008 at 12:40:07 +0100, Mads Lindstrøm wrote:
> I was thinking about making a .deb package file Debian (could also be
> used for Debian derivatives like Ubuntu). You would then just do
>
> > dpkg -i WxHaskell.deb
Yes, please!
The job should be made easier with
http://haskell-unsa
Eric Y. Kow:
> On Sat, Mar 08, 2008 at 17:10:00 +0900, shelarcy wrote:
> > I want to know what is a good for readme.txt description.
> > I think we must write not only for Windows but also other platforms.
> > And we must avoid lengthy instruction same as wxHaskell page and wiki.
>
> I agree.
>
>
On Sat, Mar 08, 2008 at 17:10:00 +0900, shelarcy wrote:
> I want to know what is a good for readme.txt description.
> I think we must write not only for Windows but also other platforms.
> And we must avoid lengthy instruction same as wxHaskell page and wiki.
I agree.
The readme should probably j
Hi,
On Fri, 07 Mar 2008 22:51:35 +0900, Eric Kow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Looks like it works fine. A readme would be useful to tell people to
> go run wxregister.bat. Ideally an installer that did it all for you,
> but the readme is a nice quick solution.
I want to know what is a good for
Hi Shelarcy (and others),
Some results from Neil's testing of the wxhaskell 0.10.3rc1 on Windows.
-- Forwarded message --
From: Neil Mitchell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 7 Mar 2008 13:47
Subject: Re: wxhaskell 0.10.3rc1 - testers wanted
To: Eric Kow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Hi Eric,