On Tue, Jun 4, 2019 at 11:06 AM IƱaki Ucar wrote:
> FWIW, innoextract extracts the contents of the installer just fine.
That is great, thank you very much:
https://github.com/dscharrer/innoextract
Between this thread and others I have interacted with 14 people, and you are the
first person to po
Using this in my "~/.profile":
export LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
Yields this:
$ Rscript -e 'print(9)'
During startup - Warning message:
Setting LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 failed
[1] 9
This is confusing as the exact same environment works fine with other
languages:
$ python3 -c 'print(9)'
On Mon, Jun 3, 2019 at 8:04 PM Duncan Murdoch wrote:
> I don't recall anyone asking for the zip in the 17 years after that
> change, until now (though I haven't been paying attention lately, since
> I retired from building the binaries a couple of years ago).
>
> If you think it's worthwhile to do
On Mon, Jun 3, 2019 at 6:54 PM Marc Schwartz wrote:
> I am on macOS primarily, albeit, I have run both Windows and Linux routinely
> in years past.
With all due respect, then you have no business in this thread.
> That being said, these days, I do run Windows 10 under a Parallels VM on
> macOS, a
On Mon, Jun 3, 2019 at 4:11 PM Marc Schwartz wrote:
> I have not tried it, but if that is the case here, you may be able to use the
> normal R binary installer, but adjust the default install options when
> prompted, allowing you to customize the install location and other parameters,
> that may be
If you go here:
https://cran.cnr.berkeley.edu/bin/windows/base
you see EXE installers for Windows. This contrasts with other programming
languages that offer both an executable installer and ZIP files that can be
extracted and run. For example Go:
https://golang.org/dl
and Nim:
https://nim-la