David Tommy etal
As Ubuntu and Linux Mint are ultimately Debian based it should be possible to
install using dpkg or the Gdebi installer (you may need to install this on
Ubuntu -in terminal - "sudo apt install gdebi - but it is the default installer
in Linux Mint) from http://ftp.us.debian.org/deb
Steve,
How did you upgrade? I'm still getting the not available message and I've
put off upgrading from 21.10 to 22.04 for the moment because of the
following in the release notes at
https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/jammy-jellyfish-release-notes/24668...
Cheers David H.
Upgrading from Ubuntu 21.10
I looked here --
https://packages.ubuntu.com/jammy/gnucash
shows version 4.8 SHOULD be available to you. HOWEVER I have heard the new
Ubuntu release strongly pushes everything packaged in snaps. (I haven't
upgraded yet so I'm only going by some initial reviews.) I definitely don't
recommend install
Thank you David W. Now for myself and other users that are not comfortable
with Flatpak or with DIY solutions but willing to accept backports, what is
the probability of seeing more recent 4.x releases as backports to the
Ubuntu distro?
On Sun, Apr 24, 2022 at 2:06 PM david whiting wrote:
> You
You have at least three options:
1) Install version 4.8a that ships with Ubuntu 22.04: sudo apt install gnucash
2) Use flatpack, this will get you a more recent version. See
https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Flatpak
3) Build it yourself, and get 4.9 or the maintenance release (or other
releases). Se
I just upgraded my system to Ubuntu 22.04 (from 21.10). As a non-official
application, GNUcash seems to have been removed from the system or rendered
non-functional though a launch icon remains and does nothing. Prior to
install, I was running GNC 4.9.
Can someone please point me in the right dir