> Yes, but I think Guile is very reasonable with its "bunch of other > stuff". It only really requires libgmp and libltdl. The versions of > these that are in the mainstream distributions should suffice.
The mainstream distributions "of Linux" :). My world is about 1/4 Linux and doesn't Guile's "u" stand for "ubiquitous"? ;-) I'm very sensitive to this, as my world is about 0.01 Linux (mostly NetBSD). My point was that modern operating systems usually have some flavor of package management. Linux distriutions have ways, FreeBSD and OpenBSD have ports, NetBSD has pkgsrc, and it seems there are ways to do this on Solaris and Mac OS X. Note that pkgsrc works on many OSes - I believe all of the above, IRIX, and even AIX sort of. Using the included libraries when the package is not found only seems reasonable for libraries that will be statically linked into the installed program, so that doing this doesn't preclude later installing the needed libraries. This seems not to be how guile does it, so that seems to be asking for trouble, but perhaps I misunderstand. -- Greg Troxel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> _______________________________________________ Guile-devel mailing list Guile-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/guile-devel