Am Mo., 1. Juli 2024 um 05:27 Uhr schrieb Robert Alessi
:
> To my knowledge, the only flavor of Linux that provides an operative
> tlmgr is VoidLinux.
That does not speak good about texlive.
> The way to have an operative tlmgr on OpenBSD is to install a native
> TeX Live over the internet with
On Sun, Jun 30, 2024 at 07:21:33PM +, Roderick wrote:
> What would be interesting, is to have a package with the commands and
> a minimal texmf-dist., with a working tlmgr. Then I would not need to
> compile when upgrading.
On the difference between TeX provided by operating systems and
"nativ
What would be interesting, is to have a package with the commands and
a minimal texmf-dist., with a working tlmgr. Then I would not need to
compile when upgrading.
After I compile, I get tlmgr, but it does not work, something with
paths. I do not care of it, because I only need tex, mf and other
c
> I am really not interested of constantly updating TeX Live over the year,
> not at all. I have my texmf directory than rarely change, after updating
> OpenBSD I recompile the commands.
I don't particularly care about updating it constantly either, but I do want
to isolate it from the rest of my
Am Sa., 22. Juni 2024 um 17:22 Uhr schrieb Robert Alessi
:
...
> I would like to share that since the release of TeX Live 2024, anyone
Thanks!
> The page given above provides an easy way to build one's own custom
> binaries to be used for the installation of TeX Live 2024 over the
> internet.
Do
Hi,
I would like to share that since the release of TeX Live 2024, anyone
interested can find the binaries for a "native" installation of TeX
Live on OpenBSD here:
https://sr.ht/~ralessi/texlive-openbsd
To make things clear, there are theoretically two ways of using TeX
Live on any system, i
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