How to install Tcllib ===================== Introduction ------------ The tcllib distribution, whether a snapshot directly from CVS, or officially released, offers a single method for installing tcllib, based on Tcl itself. This is based on the assumption that for tcllib to be of use Tcl has to be present, and therefore can be used. This single method however can be used in a variety of ways. 0 For an unwrapped (= directory) distribution or CVS snapshot a. either call the application 'installer.tcl' directly, b or use % configure ; make install The latter is provided for people which are used to this method and more comfortable with it. In end this boils down into a call of 'installer.tcl' too. 1. A starpack distribution (window-only) is a self-extracting installer which internally uses the aforementioned installer. 2. A starkit distribution is very much like a starpack, but required an external interpreyter to run. This can be any tcl interpreter which has all the packages to support starkits (tclvfs, memchan, trf). 3. A distribution in a tarball has to be unpacked first, then any of the methods described in (0) can be used. Usage of the installer ---------------------- The installer selects automatically either a gui based mode, or a command line based mode. If the package Tk is present and can be loaded, then the GUI mode is entered, else the system falls back to the command line. Note that it is possible to specify options on the command line even if the installer ultimatively selects a gui mode. In that case the hardwired defaults and the options determine the data presented to the user for editing. Command line help can be asked for by using the option -help when running the installer (3) or the distribution itself in the case of (1) or (2). The installer will select a number of defaults for the locations of packages, examples, and documentation, and also the format of the documentation. The user can overide these defaults in the GUI, or by specifying additional options. The defaults depend on the platform detected (unix/windows) and the executable used to run the installer. In the case of a starpack distribution (1) this means that _no defaults_ are possible for the various locations as the executable is part of the distribution and has no knowledge of its environment. In all other cases the intepreter executable is outside of the distribution, which means that its location can be used to determine sensible defaults. Notes ----- The installer will overwrite an existing installation of tcllib 1.6 without asking back after the initial confirmation is given. And if the user chooses the same directory as for tcllib 1.4, or 1.3, etc. then the installer will overwrite that too.