On Mon, Dec 07, 2020 at 02:26:01PM +0100, Hans-Christoph Steiner wrote:
> Third party package repositories are a thing, like Ubuntu PPAs, aptly,
> JFrog Debian Repositories, etc. Unfortunately, due to Debian Apt's
> design, that means giving root access to each repository (package
> pre-install/re
On Fri, Dec 04, 2020 at 09:46:56PM +0100, Antonin Delpeuch (lists) wrote:
> It is not clear to me to what extent a Debian packaging project lends
> itself to fixed-term contracting, since maintaining the package will
> require continued work as we release new versions. Perhaps the project
> could i
On Thu, Jul 09, 2020 at 02:24:25PM +0200, raphael.jo...@free.fr wrote:
> No, it is not supposed to set the classpath. This is a limitation of
> the Linux-Java integration. The main problem I think is that in Java
> you rarely depend on every library available at the same time. You
> want to partiti
On Thu, Jul 09, 2020 at 11:32:31AM +0100, Sam Kuper wrote:
> This raises a question, though.
>
> Since javac and Antlr4 were both installed via apt (see above), why was
> it necessary for me to manually set the CLASSPATH in order for javac to
> be able to find Antlr4's jars?
On Thu, Jul 09, 2020 at 10:43:46AM +0200, raphael.jo...@free.fr wrote:
> 9 Juillet 2020 02:19:10, Sam Kuper wrote:
>> I apologise in advance for asking what might be an ignorant question,
>> but it has been ages since I used Java for anything and so my Java
>> troubleshooting
Dear all,
I apologise in advance for asking what might be an ignorant question,
but it has been ages since I used Java for anything and so my Java
troubleshooting skills are currently rusty/nonexistent.
On a box running Debian Stretch (oldstable), I am trying to compile an
Antlr4 lexer & parser.
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