| |
|
| make install |
make install |
| |
|
| You have to make an entry in the info directory file manually. |
You have to make an entry in the info directory file manually (see |
| |
Installing Info Files, below). |
| |
|
| For paper documentation, print gforth.ps (a Postscript file (300dpi |
For paper documentation, print gforth.ps (a Postscript file (300dpi |
| fonts, i.e., it works, but does not produce best quality on better |
fonts, i.e., it works, but does not produce best quality on better |
| You can deinstall this version of Gforth with 'make uninstall' and |
You can deinstall this version of Gforth with 'make uninstall' and |
| version foo with 'make uninstall VERSION=foo'. 'make uninstall' also |
version foo with 'make uninstall VERSION=foo'. 'make uninstall' also |
| tells you how to uninstall Gforth completely. |
tells you how to uninstall Gforth completely. |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
Installing Info Files |
| |
|
| |
Info is the GNU project on-line documentation format. You can read |
| |
info files either from within Emacs (Ctrl-h i) or using the |
| |
stand-alone Info reader, 'info'. |
| |
|
| |
If you use the default install root of '/usr/local' then the info |
| |
files will be installed in '/usr/local/info'. |
| |
|
| |
Many GNU/Linux distributions are set up to put all of their |
| |
documentation in '/usr/info', in which case you might have to do a |
| |
couple of things to get your environment set up to accommodate files |
| |
in both areas: |
| |
|
| |
1. Add an INFOPATH environment variable. The easiest place to do |
| |
this is '/etc/profile', right next to PATH and MANPATH: |
| |
|
| |
INFOPATH=/usr/local/info:/usr/info |
| |
|
| |
2. Create a file called 'dir' in 'usr/local/info'. Use the file |
| |
'/usr/info/dir' as a template. You can add the line for gforth |
| |
manually, or use '/sbin/install-info' (man install-info for details). |
| |
|