Hi Alex,
On 13 July 2012 20:26, Csaba Raduly wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 2:06 PM, Alexander Konovalov wrote:
>> Dear Cygwin experts,
>>
>> I am trying to open the exact location in the html file using my default
>> browser with the command of the form
>>
>> cygstart.exe file:///C:/somepath/
> http://?
One can run a local webserver and talk to it via http. Given that the
webserver might be a very lightweight one, it would not be much of an
overhead.
(Of course I know it would add a bit to the complexity of running GAP
on Windows :))
Dima
>
> Thanks,
> Alex
>
>
Alex,
On 13 July 2012 21:21, Ryan Johnson wrote:
> On 13/07/2012 9:19 AM, Ryan Johnson wrote:
>>
>> Cygstart does not actually parse general URIs. For a long time it had a
>> special case that tested explicitly for `http:', and recently added
>> `mailto:' after a similar issue arose [1]. Ironical
Dear all,
/usr/include/fenv.h is not protected from double inclusion.
I.e., there is no
#define _FENV_H_
in it.
Is it intentional?
It breaks many things, e.g. ECL.
This is with Cygwin 1.7.9:
$ uname -a
CYGWIN_NT-6.1 SPMS-DIMA-W7 1.7.9(0.237/5/3) 2011-03-29 10:10 i686 Cygwin
Best,
Dmitrii
--
Pro
nschen cygwin.com> writes:
>
>>
>> On Apr 24 17:14, Dima Pasechnik wrote:
>> > Dear all,
>> > reposting, as the message did not get through to the mailing list
>> > yesterday:
>> >
>> > The issue I have is exactly as described in
>
Dear all,
while building Maxima on Windows 7 / Cygwin 1.7.9, with ECL (an
implementation of Common Lisp), we see the following puzzling error
messages, quite reminiscent of the usual cygwin installation in need
of rebaseall:
3 [main] ecl 2448 C:\cygwin\home\dima\sage-4.7.alpha5\local\bin\ecl.exe:
On 26 April 2011 23:03, Reini Urban wrote:
> 2011/4/26 Dima Pasechnik:
>> while building Maxima on Windows 7 / Cygwin 1.7.9, with ECL (an
>> implementation of Common Lisp), we see the following puzzling error
>> messages, quite reminiscent of the usual cygwin installation in
Hi Phil,
Please post the output of gcc -v.
In fact, I guess it has little to do with Cygwin, as it looks very
much like a gcc bug,
perhaps fixed in a later version of gcc.
Showing that this is a Cygwin bug would need a check that the same
does not happen
on the same version of gcc on Linux, say.
On 15 May 2011 09:20, Klonuo Umom wrote:
> Hi,
> I just installed cygwin (with compilers) on xp 32b, with intent to
> build atlas and lapack.
you can use atlas/lapack supplied by cygwin (search for them using the
search window of the
install.exe)
You probably don't really need atlas – it is just
On 15 May 2011 12:24, Klonuo Umom wrote:
>> you can use atlas/lapack supplied by cygwin (search for them using the
>> search window of the
>> install.exe)
>>
>> You probably don't really need atlas – it is just one of many
>> implementations of lapack, and
>> moreover IMHO it just does not build o
On 19 May 2011 19:04, kathy3826 wrote:
>
> because there should be such command in unix einvironment,
it's not a standard command in any way. Some packages have scripts
named like this, but there isn't anything "standard" about it, really.
> so its equivalent
> or the same one
> should exist in
tetex is dead and buried.
Indeed, http://www.tug.org/tetex/ says:
---
De-support notice
I (Thomas Esser) have decided not to make new releases of teTeX any
more (May 2006).
---
In fact, newer (la)tex packages
Dear all,
a quick question:
Must a cygwin application that uses readline in a nontrivial way run
in an environment with terminal capabilities missing in Windows 7
console?
We have such an an application that (after upgrading to the current
1.7.9-1 version of Cygwin) works OK if started from a min
Hi Phil,
you ought to post steps to reproduce the problem, if there is one.
By the way, can you check that you link against libgcc using -shared-libgcc?
You can also try to figure out whether is this not a purely g++ problem, by
installing g++ 4.3.4 on Linux, say, and trying your code with it.
On
On 19 July 2011 14:05, Ciro wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I've installed the new Gygwin set in my computer and I can't seem to start
> any graphic interface, for instance:
>
> (C)SUMFO$ xclock &
are you saying that you try running xclock on a remote machine?
How did you connect to it? Via ssh?
In this case
On 1 August 2011 09:27, Neusbeer wrote:
> got a strange error with python.
> Can anybody give me a clue for what to do?
That's a typical fork failure.
Rebase, if this happens on a regular basis.
(if it just happened once, you were unlucky, as on Windows 7
cygwin's fork can fail randomly now and t
Dear all,
On 15 August 2011 12:03, Charles Hyder wrote:
> Hi! I've just upgraded to a fresh Cygwin distribution. I installed the
> full teTeX package. Then I tried to add my usual stuff like extra TeX
> packages that I had with my previous installation of Cygwin.
as already discussed here, teTeX
On 7 December 2011 21:03, Ken Brown wrote:
> On 12/6/2011 10:22 PM, Christopher Faylor wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, Dec 06, 2011 at 09:51:32PM -0500, Ken Brown wrote:
>>>
>>> On 12/6/2011 3:02 PM, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Dec 6 13:28, Ken Brown wrote:
>
> On 12/6/2011 12:57 PM, Corinn
On 20 August 2013 03:13, LMH wrote:
> I would be happy to build gcc-3 myself, I'm just looking for some
> documentation to get that done.
>
> The fact the gcc-3/g77 are old means nothing to me. There are still millions
> of lines of fortran77 code out there that are being used. There is just no
>
There are python3* cygiwin packages obsoleted by python36* packages, e.g.
python36-numpy. As python36* is basically obsolete itself now, it
creates an impression
that there are no python39* etc available.
Also, I noticed that python-numpy-1.21.4-1.src/python-numpy.cygport
from python-numpy-src/pyt
Hello,
Singular (https://cygwin.com/packages/summary/singular.html)
went through a number of upgrades since 2015, and the latest version,
4.2.1, works on Cygwin.
Cf.
https://www.singular.uni-kl.de/index.php/singular-download/install-windows.html
Is it possible to update the Cygwin's Singular pack
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