I've created a Wix msi installer with German, English, Chinese and Japanese languages support.
How can I install a English version at Chinese OS?
If your mult-language installer is xxx.msi. You can use the command below to force the installer install English version:
msiexec /I xxx.msi ProductLanguage=9
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I download from tokumx website newest version. When I start mongod I have an error,
bash: ./mongod: cannot execute binary file
Any solution.
The only version available directly from the website is for linux, you'll need to contact them to get an OSX build.
The TokuMX Community Edition downloads featured on the Tokutek site are currently 64-bit Linux only. The system requirements also note that only 64-bit Linux is officially supported.
However, for OS X users there is a Homebrew TAP package available if you want to install binaries for development purposes.
Assuming you have have Homebrew installed, you should be able to install the tokumx-bin package by running the following from your shell prompt:
brew tap tokutek/tokumx
brew install tokumx-bin
Notes:
the package install will fail unless you enter some text when prompted for an email address (though any text including the default "email address" seems to work)
the tokumx-bin package conflicts with the mongodb package as both use the same names for binaries
TokuMX binaries and data files are not interchangeable with MongoDB
Is there a standard or recommended installation directory for the Dart language? If so, I would like to know what it is for both Windows and Mac. I searched online on dartlang.org, Google, and StackOverflow. For Mac specifically, I have seen many programming languages installed under /Library.
I believe the standard workspace for Dart projects is ~/dart. When you download the Dart language, you are given a /dart folder containing the Editor, SDK, Chromium with Dart VM installed, and some extras. I am wondering what the standard location for this folder is. Thank you in advance!
The standard workspace directory for Dart projects is like you wrote ~/dart in Linux (don't know about other OS).
The standard installation directory is depending on conventions of your OS than the Dart language.
You should have an environment variable DART_SDK pointing to the dart-sdk subdirectory of the installation directory and include the DART_SDK/bin in your path.
On MAC, just drop the directory on App directory, then in terminal you put : "export PATH=$PATH:/Applications/dart/dart-sdk/bin"
I have tried BBedit and RubyMine for building Rails apps and I would like to try out Sublime 2. What add ons should I include?
OK so this is what I found in different places
Establish that you access sublime from the command line
This is the actual set of answers that worked for me, note the version of Mac OSX and the version of Sublime Open Sublime Text from Terminal in macOS
Install the Package Controller
https://sublime.wbond.net/installation
Install the Soda theme from package controller
Install the following packages -> SCSS, ApplySyntax, Git and RSpec
I was hoping to upgrade to F# 3.0 but I can't find either a packaged F# 3.0 compiler on Microsoft site, nor if there is an express version to use. Is it possible to install F# 3.0 for use from the command line or a simple IDE and if so, how?
The standalone version of F# is not available yet, but F# tools for Visual Studio Express have been released just 2 days ago, so you can get F# 3.0 for free.
Announcing F# Tools for Visual Studio Express 2012 for Web!
As far as I know, there are definitely plans for open-source release (that can be integrated with MonoDevelop) and it would make sense to have a stand-alone installer too (otherwise you could still just compile the open-source release), but I don't think there are specific dates for that.
The easiest way I've got it to run:
http://www.heartysoft.com/build-fsharp-3-on-build-server-without-vs
Essentially using the direct download link on the Web PI tools.
I have successfully make a standalone F# 3.0 works without Visual Studio 2012.
First, find a workstation with F# 3.0 installed. (source)
Duplicate all the things to destination workstation.
-> C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\F#
-> C:\Program Files (x86)\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\FSharp
-> C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\assembly\GAC_MSIL\FSharp*
Install .NET 4.5 at destination.
Export all the registry item with FSC.exe string to destination.
Export all the registry item with FSharp string to destination.
f# 3.0 registry.rar
if you don't know how to export the registry items, please download this file and use powershell to import all this .reg file.
PowerShell script: (put the .reg files into c:\xxx suppossedly )
cd c:\xxx
dir *.reg | %{ ('reg import "' + $_.Name + '"') | cmd }
I'm assuming most of you seeking an answer to this question by now probably wouldn't mind the most recent version, which is 4.0. You can download this as a standalone at F# 4.0 . This does not include the supporting assemblies and will fail by itself. So you'll also have to download and install the Microsoft Build Tools 2015 . Should be all set to go from there, no installing the mega-massive visual studio. Of course if you need an IDE you'll need to seek out a free one.
You can use Nuget CLI to install the F# Compiler Tools without relying on Visual Studio. As a plus, this procedure does not require admin rights.
Visit nuget.org/downloads and download the latest nuget.exe file.
Instruct your browser to save the file to a folder of your choice.
Add the folder where you placed nuget.exe to your PATH environment variable to use the CLI tool from anywhere.
Open a command prompt and navigate to the folder where you want to install F# Tools.
Run "nuget install FSharp.Compiler.Tools -Version {version}", where {version} is replaced with a version from https://www.nuget.org/packages/FSharp.Compiler.Tools
Add the 'tools' directory to your PATH Environment Variable and then you will be able to use fsc and fsi from the command line.
There is not currently a standalone version of F# 3.0. However, one has been promised
I run F# 3.0 from the cygwin command line on Windows 7. You need to know a little about Linux/Unix to use cygwin, but the basics are not too difficult. You need the basic cygwin shell (command interpreter) and an editor. I am used to vi, so cygwin has vim (there exists a nice F# syntax color addon to vim).
You need to:
Install visual studio in order to get F#
in /users/myname/.bashrc add the location of Fsc.exe, which in my case is
/cygdrive/c/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft SDKs/F#/3.0/Framework/v4.0
to your PATH.
I'm trying to install the BlackBerry tablet SDK 0.9.0 for Windows but the installer gives the following error:
Win64 not supported.
The author of the package you are installing did not include support for this platform
Is there a way to trick the installer to think I have a 32-bit OS instead of a 64-bit one?
Ok, this works for Windows 7 x64.
Install a java vm for "Windows" (aka the 32bit version from Oracle)
Reboot after install
Unzip the BlackBerryTabletSDK-Air-Installer-0.9.0-Win.exe installer file (I used 7zip)
Navigate to this file:
BlackBerryTabletSDK-Air-Installer-0.9.0-Win\Windows\BlackBerryTabletSDK-Air-Installer-0.9.0.201010221500.lax
Locate this property:
lax.nl.current.vm=
Set it to the location where you installed the 32 bit jvm (for me):
lax.nl.current.vm=C:/Program Files (x86)/Java/jdk1.6.0_22/bin/java.exe
Save the file
Double click the BlackBerryTabletSDK-Air-Installer-0.9.0.201010221500.exe 6.