David
It is not really all that difficult to build a version from scratch if you
are on Linux. I'm on Linux Mint and the distro package version is often
behind the current stable.
There are a few little twists with setting up googletest and the move from
Autotools configure to CMake for the bui
David Carlson-4 wrote
> Since it is not yet available in any repo, that is why he wants to try
> wine. It seems that he
> is not in a position to wait for packaged versions of 3.1.
Ah, yes, thanks. As on the new installation of OpenSuse Tumbleweed, GnuCash
v3 was installed by default, I thought i
I believe Jeffrey stated in his first post that release 3.0 has a feature
that is missing from 2.6.xx that is important to him. Since it is not yet
available in any repo, that is why he wants to try wine. It seems that he
is not in a position to wait for packaged versions of 3.1.
Does anyone hav
2018-04-18T03:07:50-0700 cicko wrote:
> Hm, this thread now seems to be all over the place. Probably due to the tags
> in the subject? It seems that email clients do some magic there.
Indeed, they have involved the developers list and the help list, this
is why we see duplicated messages.
--
- F
Hm, this thread now seems to be all over the place. Probably due to the tags
in the subject? It seems that email clients do some magic there.
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gn
Jeffrey, perhaps a stupid question - why don't you install a native linux
version of GnuCash instead of running a Windows version under Wine?
I use the same xml/sql book with linux and windows versions interchangably and
there are no issues (that I can see, at least!).
Also, just for comparison,
Gnucash runs better on a Linux system than it does on Windows. My
understanding is that it is Linux s/w adapted to run on Windows. So if you
want to run Ubuntu ( which is an excellent idea) then run GC natively on
that, not under wine. You will be able to install gnucash from the
software manage