[texhax] Win32 installer still needed?
Karl Berry
karl at freefriends.org
Thu May 12 22:55:00 CEST 2005
Hi Christopher,
Thank you very much for writing.
If this is the wrong address for these questions, please accept my
apologies.
Well, tex-live at tug.org is probably the best place to discuss it, but the
important thing is that you wrote at all :).
I have a few questions about installing TeX Live on Windows, if
someone has a moment to answer them.
Is a Windows installer program still needed for TeX Live?
There are projects underway, see below. I imagine help would be
welcome.
Does anyone have a list of requirements for an installer?
Sebastian and I wrote some background response to a previous
query, see the thread at:
http://tug.org/mailman/htdig/tex-live/2004-November/007447.html
Is RDF / TPM preferred over the Microsoft(TM) installer?
Well, opinions differ. Fabrice Popineau, the long-time maintainer of
fpTeX (Web2c under Windows), is now working on XEmTeX, with an MSI-based
installer.
Another volunteer is working on a Python-based installer using the TPM
files directly.
And there is a command-line installer for Windows now, which also uses
the TPM's. Written by Pawel Jackowski since the TL 2004 release. See
http://tug.org/tex-live/windows.html.
If you're interested in helping any of the above, let me know and we can
discuss further. I would hate to see any volunteer assistance for
Windows go unused :).
After using LaTeX 2.09 in the early 1990's, I switched to Windows
computers and haven't touched LaTeX in over ten years. I couldn't
seem to forget the quality of print when using LaTeX for a simple
letter, forms, and larger documents. I joined TUG and now have a
copy of TeX Live 2004. Installation with Cygwin and the MinGW MSys
shell hasn't worked
In order to get going with TeX without writing your own installer :),
you might try the tltpm command-line installer above, or the protext
installation, which is based on miktex instead of web2c.
and I thought about writing my own installer. I've explored the
basics of RDF which I found interesting with the potential for
software installation. If I can make time from other projects I will
continue my explorations.
I don't know much about RDF. We maintain the TeX Live packages as TPM
files, as I guess you know. If TPM can be automatically converted to
RDF, I suppose it is a possibility.
Regards,
Karl
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