Seems pretty clear to me. Thanks. andrew
2009/1/6 Carl D. Sorensen <c_soren...@byu.edu> > First of all, I think that the easiest way to develop LilyPond is to have a > buildable source tree, and I'd recommend it for anybody who's willing to go > to the effort to get it. > > But with a little bit of directory magic, you can work without it. Just go > into your main lilypond directory for the binary, and move out the ly/, > scm/, and input/ directories to some safe place. (e.g. a folder called > binary-dist). > > Then you create a symbolic link in the main binary lilypond directory to > the > ly/, scm/ and input/ directories from your git repository. Now, although > the directories are actually in your git repository, they appear to the > binary to be in the binary directory. And everything works just as if you > had built it from your git repository. > > You can even create a batch file to copy out the binary distro files and > create the symbolic links, and another to delete the symbolic links and > copy > back the binary distro files, if you want to make it easy to switch from > binary distro to git repo. > > I'm certainly not trying to discourage anyone from building from source; > that's my preferred way. But I don't want people who can't get build from > source working to think that they can't contribute to changes in .ly files > and .scm files. > > Please let me know if this isn't clear.
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