Doubled lines are definitely not normal. I haven't noticed that on GNU/Linux; if I do, then I will fix it.
On Wed, Mar 31, 2021 at 6:23 AM Alan Mead <ame...@alanmead.org> wrote: > > John, > > Thanks for looking into this. Your Windows binary seemed to work fine for me > in light testing. > > Unlike Dr. Walter, I was able to export to PDF but in this log, every line > was doubled. Is that normal? I'm attaching the PDF. > > Does the installation script uninstall over versions? If not (and perhaps > until that is completely tested) I would recommend a warning for the user to > manually uninstall all prior versions first. > > I think this is great and we should ask for wider testing. > > -Alan > > > On 3/27/2021 10:29 AM, John Darrington wrote: > > On Sat, Mar 27, 2021 at 03:11:15PM +0100, Dr. Oliver Walter wrote: > Thank you, John Darrington. I tested your installer on a Windows 10 > computer. PSPP was installed, but a DOS window also opened and had some > warnings: > > I noticed these too, but I think they are harmless. > > I did a simple linear regression analysis and got some results, but I was > not able to export the PSPP output into a working pdf file: The pdf file > was created, but when I opened it it was empty. > > That is strange. I explicitly tested that feature and it certainly worked for > me. > > > Since I don't normally use windows, I'm afraid it is going to be up to more > knowledgeable about windows to fix these issues. > > Thanks for the report anyway. > > J' > > > -- > > Alan D. Mead, Ph.D. > President, Talent Algorithms Inc. > > science + technology = better workers > > http://www.alanmead.org > > The irony of this ... is that the Internet is > both almost-infinitely expandable, while at the > same time constrained within its own pre-defined > box. And if that makes no sense to you, just > reflect on the existence of Facebook. We have > the vastness of the internet and yet billions > of people decided to spend most of them time > within a horribly designed, fake-news emporium > of a website that sucks every possible piece of > personal information out of you so it can sell it > to others. And they see nothing wrong with that. > > -- Kieren McCarthy, commenting on why we are not > all using IPv6