Hello, I would like to install glade, but the computer informs me I must before install gnome, and I have some problems with the installation of gnome. I have three questions: 1. the "gnome" I must install is the libraries?If this is the environment, will I be able to launch it from macosX? 2. how many place will it take on my hard-disk? 3. Does exist a "dmg" that would avoid me to compile all the stuff? Lolveley.
olivier SAINT-EVE wrote:
1. the "gnome" I must install is the libraries?If this is the environment, will I be able to launch it from macosX?
It looks like you will have to install a lot of stuff. Run the command "port deps glade" in your Terminal, and you'll see a lot of different packages are required. You won't be able to start it from OS X by double-clicking anything unless you install a launcher tool like Xdroplets (http://www.rhythmiccanvas.com/software/xdroplets/index.html). The standard way to start up an X11 application is to start up X11.app (or XDarwin), open up xterm, and then type in the name of the program you want to launch: something like "/opt/local/bin/glade" or just "glade" if your path settings are up-to-date (the MacPorts binary installer takes care of this for you). An updated guide for MacPorts users that addresses some of these questions is available at http://homepage.mac.com/duling/macports/guide.html Also, see http://trac.macosforge.org/projects/macports/wiki/UsingMacPortsQuickStart for some additional details.
2. how many place will it take on my hard-disk?
I'm not sure, but I would assume it would be in the neighborhood of 1-2 gigabytes. It's been awhile since I've had a full installation of Gnome on my machine (I'm more of a KDE fan).
3. Does exist a "dmg" that would avoid me to compile all the stuff?
Most likely, no. Building an entire desktop environment like Gnome is extremely complicated, and that's where packaging systems like MacPorts (and FInk) excel. If you build all of Gnome from source, plan to leave your machine running overnight--it will probably take several hours at a minimum, especially if you have an older/slower machine. If saving time is a major issue, Fink does offer many pre-compiled binary packages. Installing them is easy and much faster than building from source; it also takes up less space on your machine because you do not have to leave room for building the code. But the packages are likely to be very old, even outdated. I'm not sure if Fink has a binary for Gnome or not; you'll have to investigate that yourself. --- Kevin Walzer PortAuthority: The GUI for MacPorts http://www.codebykevin.com/portauthority.html
participants (2)
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Kevin Walzer
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olivier SAINT-EVE