Transcriber - Speech and video annotation software written in Tcl at UPenn. NITE XML Toolkit - Speech and video annotation tool. Mercurial - Another popular distributed version control system. ![]() Bazaar can be used in a distributed or centralized manner. It is conceptually similar to Git, but is designed to be easier to use, especially if you have experience with CVS or Subversion. Git websiteīazaar - A distributed version control system written and maintained by Canonical Software. In the CS environment it's installed in /p/hlp/corpora/bin. On Macs in the lab it's installed in /usr/local/git/bin, and on Linux boxes in /usr/bin/. ![]() Git - A distributed version control system originally written by Linus Torvalds of Linux fame. The current version of Mac Vim uses Vim 7.3.237, whereas the terminal version on MacOS X 10.4 is 6.2, on 10.5 is 7.2.22, and on 10.6 is 7.2.108 Vim website MacVim website On the Macs is Mac Vim, which is the Mac GUI version. Vim - Version 7.2 is installed on the PCs. The install includes the optional GNU Fortran in /usr/local/bin/ on the Macs for compiling some R packages that aren't available as binaries. Linger - A program written in Tcl/Tk for doing language experiments, particularly self-paced reading studies. Not as powerful as Photoshop, but free instead of over $600, and it does everything a non-poweruser needs. Gimp - An opensource image editing program. ActiveTCL websiteįirefox - a popular web browser. On the PC ActiveTCL provides Tcl/Tk, as Microsoft ships no version. MacOS X 10.5 has a more current (and Universal) version of Tcl/Tk and consequently doesn't need ActiveTCL. It has the added advantage of being a Universal binary that works on PPC and x86, unlike the version that comes with MacOS X 10.4, which is a PPC version that has to run in emulation on an x86 like our iMacs. This is software that is installed on all of the computers.Īctive TCL - Active State provides a newer version of Tcl/Tk than Apple. This page contains a list of software installed on them other than the factory default software. ![]() I was wondering if I could simply copy the files over to the /System/Library… location and change the “Current” link to the newer folder.We try to have uniformity in the software installed on the computers in the lab. I am trying to learn python, but this certainly puts a damper on things because I am running an unstable framework for the tcl/tk side of things. The installation description says “you should normall not modify or delete files in /System/Library” but that is where the python is pulling the tcl/tk framework from and it is the older version that causes bugs. ![]() The Library/Frameworks/… location has the updated and proper version BUT the /System/Library/Frameworks does NOT and it seems that is where IDLE is looking for the current framework. I looked in the two locations the description says the frameworks should be. I have downloaded the ActiveTcl 8.5.15.0 and followed the installation instructions, however, IDLE still warns me that it is using version 8.5.9 which is the one that causes the errors/bugs. Mac OS X 64-bit/32-bit Installer (3.3.3) for Mac OS X 10.6 and later (sig). (Note, you should normally not modify or delete files in /System/Library.) If frameworks of the proper major version are not found there, the dynamic linker looks for the same version in /System/Library/Frameworks, the location for Apple-supplied frameworks shipped with Mac OS X. This is the standard location for third-party or built from source frameworks, including the ActiveTcl releases. By default, the Mac OS X dynamic linker looks first in /Library/Frameworks for Tcl and Tk frameworks with the proper major version. In either case, the dynamically linking occurs when tkinter (Python 3) or Tkinter (Python 2) is first imported (specifically, the internal _tkinter C extension module). If you are using Python from a 64-bit/32-bit Python installer for Mac OS X 10.6 and later, you should only use IDLE or tkinter with an updated third-party Tcl/Tk 8.5, like ActiveTcl 8.5 installed.įrom the same page further down where it describes the installation process: The following is taken from the website : On the website it says that python3 has issues with the tcl/tk framework supplied with the operating system (I am running OS X 10.8).
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