Hmm....  I just upgraded to Big Sur on a new MBP and that worked for me.
It prompted me to run the following...
xcode-select --install

-- 

Rodney Sparapani, Associate Professor of Biostatistics
Chair ISBA Section on Biostatistics and Pharmaceutical Statistics 
Institute for Health and Equity, Division of Biostatistics
Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Campus
 

On 5/26/21, 8:43 AM, "Richard M. Heiberger" <r...@temple.edu> wrote:

    ATTENTION: This email originated from a sender outside of MCW. Use caution 
when clicking on links or opening attachments.
    ________________________________

    what you say sounds right, but I need more specifics.  I tried to run git 
from Emacs *shell* and get this

    rmh@MacBook-Air ~ % git
    git
    xcrun: error: invalid active developer path 
(/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools), missing xcrun at: 
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/xcrun
    rmh@MacBook-Air ~ %

    maybe I should try terminal
    ---it got farther and gave information
    now lets go back to *shell*
    ---nope, same "missing xcrun" error.

    > On May 26, 2021, at 09:33, Sparapani, Rodney <rspar...@mcw.edu> wrote:
    >
    > Hi Rich:
    >
    > I think when you install Xcode.app it doesn’t install the command line 
tools.
    > What I usually do is run git from the command line.  And then it will 
prompt
    > you to install the command line tools since that is where git is found 
also
    > and by default it is just a stub.
    >
    > --
    > Rodney Sparapani, Associate Professor of Biostatistics
    > Chair ISBA Section on Biostatistics and Pharmaceutical Statistics
    > Institute for Health and Equity, Division of Biostatistics
    > Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Campus


_______________________________________________
R-SIG-Mac mailing list
R-SIG-Mac@r-project.org
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-mac

Reply via email to