[cl-cookbook-contrib] [ cl-cookbook-Feature Requests-1022591 ] Modify HOWTO setup on Win->CygWin
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From: SourceForge.net <no...@so...> - 2004-09-05 15:05:33
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Feature Requests item #1022591, was opened at 2004-09-05 08:05 Message generated for change (Tracker Item Submitted) made by Item Submitter You can respond by visiting: https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detail&atid=447475&aid=1022591&group_id=46815 Category: None Group: None Status: Open Priority: 5 Submitted By: Nobody/Anonymous (nobody) Assigned to: Nobody/Anonymous (nobody) Summary: Modify HOWTO setup on Win->CygWin Initial Comment: The step-by-step HOWTO set up a Common Lisp IDE, centering on several modes of Emacs interaction, with multiple options for CL implementations on Windows (and Mac) is excellent. But I'm hoping to use Lisp and Emacs as my bridge away from Windows -- how about CygWin? What I would really like would be a similarly detailed and keystroke-specific and explicit HOWTO that might help foster my slow transition to Unix, via the discipline of first mastering Emacs and Common Lisp in their preferred POSIX environment. (Of course I should just bite the bullet and dive in with Debian, for its easily apt-getable CL packages, but with a 32 MB Pentium 100 MHz running Allegro Common Lisp and Emacs, I question whether any recent Linux could even run what I need. Bash is another matter, I know I need to learn that, too, and I'm happy to learn the shell while looking for a job to finance a hardware upgrade. I have another hand-me-down machine, with 64 MB RAM and a whopping 4 GB free, so I may be able to squeeze Libranet on it and have a newbie-friendly Debian install running icewm on 64 MB. That may be able to run Emacs and CLisp and perhaps CMUCL as well, with or without X. Point is: CygWin is still relevant for the hardware and financially challenged, not to mention those in MS shops, and, frankly, insecure but wannabe newbies, even in this day of Knoppix. And the Cygwin documentation is not what Windozed users need to make the break.) I've tried with CygWin -- setup.exe is easy enough -- and can run bash and Emacs and CLisp as well, but I simply can't understand getting X to work (and don't think I should have to work this hard to get a scrollbar) and I remain baffled on the numerous options for getting Emacs and various implementations of CL to talk to one another. This very uninteresting setup (to me -- I appreciate the fascination it may present to others) is all totally new and these installation snafus are frankly a shitty introduction to a language and programming environment that come highly touted by many people I respect. Perhaps someone might rewrite the following exemplary HOWTO for those who want to sample multiple open source CL implementations and Emacs modes (including SLIME) on CygWin, or probably not at all. http://cl-cookbook.sourceforge.net/windows.html#Mac%20OS%20X%20Setup%20Instructions Thank you. Yet another Lisp newbie. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- You can respond by visiting: https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detail&atid=447475&aid=1022591&group_id=46815 |