On Aug 13, Byron Gibson wrote: > Thanks Horace, your first guess was correct, by 'repo' I mean my > linux distro (Ubuntu) software repository.
To get the latest version, the easiest option is to get our .sh installer and run it (pass it as an argument to sh, or run it directly). The first question it asks is whether you want a unix-style installation -- the default is to not do this, which means that you get the whole racket installation in a single directory that you can put anywhere you want in your system, including in your home directory. This makes it very convenient to use even if you're using some lab machine where you don't have root access. (And, of course, if you choose the unix-style installation with the default directories, then the files will overwrite the files from the ubuntu package. The installer should generally be careful about such things and alert you that the directory exists.) > I prefer to use the distro repository to install software when > possible, since that makes it easier to manage and update (at least > for a relative Linux newbie), There's not much to "managing" a racket installation in a single directory -- you can move the directory anywhere you want, and you can upgrade it by deleting the whole thing and installing a newer version in the same way. To make it possible to run executables without specifying long paths, you can drop symlinks into some directory that is in your path. -- ((lambda (x) (x x)) (lambda (x) (x x))) Eli Barzilay: http://barzilay.org/ Maze is Life! _________________________________________________ For list-related administrative tasks: http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/users