The idea in scimax for windows is to include an Emacs git submodule. See
https://github.com/jkitchin/scimax/blob/master/install-scimax-win.sh for
how I suggest to install it. Assuming you have git installed, you can run:
> bash -c "$(curl -fsSL
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jkitchin/scimax/mast
> Am 23.08.2016 um 20:06 schrieb John Kitchin :
>
>
> Axel Kielhorn writes:
>
>>> Am 23.08.2016 um 00:13 schrieb John Kitchin :
>>>
>>> Checkout http://github.com/jkitchin/scimax. With git installed it will
>>> install an opinionatedly configured Emacs. Most of my students use it. I
>>> woul
Axel Kielhorn writes:
>> Am 23.08.2016 um 00:13 schrieb John Kitchin :
>>
>> Checkout http://github.com/jkitchin/scimax. With git installed it will
>> install an opinionatedly configured Emacs. Most of my students use it. I
>> would just have each user install it.
>
> I’m using a modified jma
> Am 23.08.2016 um 00:13 schrieb John Kitchin :
>
> Checkout http://github.com/jkitchin/scimax. With git installed it will
> install an opinionatedly configured Emacs. Most of my students use it. I
> would just have each user install it.
I’m using a modified jmax right now.
Should I switch to
I find the git bash shell adequate for most of my needs. I haven't used
cygwin in many years.
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Tuesday, 23 Aug 2016 at 01:34, Grant Rettke wrote:
>> I found Cygwin to make things more difficult for Emacs so I installed
>> the plain old Windows Emacs and did the following:
I switched from Cygwin to Msys2 a year or two ago and it's been very good.
The pacman-based package management is very good. The only thing to watch
out for is that there are actually 2 gcc suites and if you want to build
automake projects (like many open source projects), you'll want to be using
On Tuesday, 23 Aug 2016 at 09:21, Fabrice Popineau wrote:
> I always found Cygwin to be a PIA when working under Windows.
> I vastly prefer to use msys2+mingw64. Emacs 25 compiles out of the box
> as a native w64 app and you get bash + all the tools you may want.
> My $0.02
Thanks.
I guess, if I
2016-08-23 10:24 GMT+02:00 Eric S Fraga :
> On Tuesday, 23 Aug 2016 at 01:34, Grant Rettke wrote:
> > I found Cygwin to make things more difficult for Emacs so I installed
> > the plain old Windows Emacs and did the following:
> >
> > https://github.com/grettke/help/blob/master/help.md#windows
>
>
On Tuesday, 23 Aug 2016 at 01:34, Grant Rettke wrote:
> I found Cygwin to make things more difficult for Emacs so I installed
> the plain old Windows Emacs and did the following:
>
> https://github.com/grettke/help/blob/master/help.md#windows
Thanks. I'll check this out.
If I ever have to use a
On Monday, 22 Aug 2016 at 22:13, John Kitchin wrote:
> Checkout http://github.com/jkitchin/scimax. With git installed it will
> install an opinionatedly configured Emacs. Most of my students use
> it. I would just have each user install it.
Okay, thanks. I'll give your scimax a try. The main thi
I found Cygwin to make things more difficult for Emacs so I installed
the plain old Windows Emacs and did the following:
https://github.com/grettke/help/blob/master/help.md#windows
https://www.wisdomandwonder.com/article/5647/enabling-png-jpg-and-gif-in-emacs-on-windows
I got Org from Git did th
Checkout http://github.com/jkitchin/scimax. With git installed it will
install an opinionatedly configured Emacs. Most of my students use it. I
would just have each user install it.
On Monday, August 22, 2016, Eric S Fraga wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I am asking a n00b question here: what the is bes
Hello all,
I am asking a n00b question here: what the is best way to get org (+
emacs obviously) on an MS Windows 7 pro system for use by more than one
user on the system (multiple accounts with users not having
Administrator accounts)? I don't need bleeding edge versions of either
org or emacs b
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