Quoting Peter Dyballa (peter_dyba...@web.de): > What keeps you from installing TeX Live temporarily in /tmp and converting it > into a "native package"?
Me personally? I never did that before and would have to delve into how to create a native package. I had a look at this some time ago and decided my need was not big enough for the effort it seemed to take. Could you tell me how to do that for openSUSE from the top of your head? If it was easy, I'm sure an up to date TeX were included in this distribution (and all the others). I have some friends who use Linux at home. Although intelligent people, information technologies cannot hold their interest, and thus they are nearly computer-illiterate. I taught them enough so they can make the necessary updates using the distribution's packager. Do I really want to have to teach them a different way of updating for every tiny program they use? Admitted, TeXlive is not a tiny thing. Still it is just one program suite among a lot of others. Helping users with the day-to-day administrational work was the main reason why linux distributions have been invented. To demand that users do their updates on a per-program base and by hand means a big step backwards in this respect... I really love tlmgr. I do use it extensively. And I am tremendously grateful for all the effort put into that. But please rather think about supporting distros so they package up to date TeX (or even trigger tlgmr) instead of demanding that the end user uses yet another updating tool. Susan -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex