Linux Debian support - Version 2.2 of OO is in the repositories

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Author Version 2.2 of OO is in the repositories
Pete

2007-05-01, 7:14 pm

Hey!
My recent copy of Ubuntu has OpenOffice 2.2.
How do we download it here? (with synaptic)
Roby

2007-05-01, 7:14 pm

Pete wrote:

> Hey!
> My recent copy of Ubuntu has OpenOffice 2.2.
> How do we download it here? (with synaptic)


OOo 2.2 is in unstable so your /etc/apt/sources.list
must include unstable before apt-get or a gui
front-end will know about it.
Mumia W.

2007-05-01, 7:14 pm

On 05/01/2007 04:13 PM, Pete wrote:
> Hey!
> My recent copy of Ubuntu has OpenOffice 2.2.
> How do we download it here? (with synaptic)


I don't know anything about Ubuntu, but I suspect that you won't be able
to use Ubuntu's repositories to install onto Debian.

It seems that Ubuntu was designed to install from Debian's repositories,
but the reverse is not true. You can still get OO 2.2 from the website:
http://www.openoffice.org/


AJackson

2007-05-02, 7:13 am

On May 1, 11:13 pm, Pete <P...@nospam.com> wrote:
> Hey!
> My recent copy of Ubuntu has OpenOffice 2.2.
> How do we download it here? (with synaptic)


You should not use Ubuntu repositories in Debian/Etc (Debian/Stable,
that is). It will get you only trouble, which you don't want when you
are starting to learn how to use Debian / Linux.

OpenOffice 2.2 is supposed to be in Debian/unstabel, which is also a
bad place for you to be now.
When you have starting to know your ways around Debian/stable, you
could start to use Debian/testing. The distributions are named
testing and unstable becouse they can (and on occations will) break
your system. Not that you with some work and knowled can't unbreak
your system. But without knowing how to manage Debian/stable, you
will not be happy with a broken Debian/testing or Debian/unstable.

So please get to know basic Linux command tools, Debian package
system, how to use aptitude and dpkg command lines tools before you go
there, into the bleading edge. For unless you know those tools, you
will be cut and hurt yourself...

So in two-three month time I will tell you how to start walking onto
Debian/testing path. Untill then, happy Debian/Etch time on you

Good luck

Chris Game

2007-05-02, 1:14 pm

On 2007-05-01, Roby <roby@no-address.net> wrote:
> Pete wrote:
>
>
> OOo 2.2 is in unstable so your /etc/apt/sources.list
> must include unstable before apt-get or a gui
> front-end will know about it.


As far as Ubuntu is concerned it seems to be installed with the
latest version 7.4.

All U. users use Debian, but not all D. users use Ubuntu it seems!

--
Chris Game

Calm down -- it's only ones and zeroes
Pete

2007-05-02, 7:13 pm

You can still get OO 2.2 from the website:
> http://www.openoffice.org/
>

Couldn't instal it anyway in this way.


ray

2007-05-02, 7:13 pm

On Wed, 02 May 2007 18:30:21 +0000, Pete wrote:

> You can still get OO 2.2 from the website:
> Couldn't instal it anyway in this way.


Actually you should be able to. Particularly if there is a .deb package
available. If there is, instead, a .rpm or .tgz then 'alien' should be
able to convert it to install with the package manager; and if all else
fails you should be able to install from a source package.

Linonut

2007-05-05, 7:13 am

After takin' a swig o' grog, ray belched out this bit o' wisdom:

> On Wed, 02 May 2007 18:30:21 +0000, Pete wrote:
>
>
> Actually you should be able to. Particularly if there is a .deb package
> available. If there is, instead, a .rpm or .tgz then 'alien' should be
> able to convert it to install with the package manager; and if all else
> fails you should be able to install from a source package.


Here's an easier way:

1. Use apt to install the "rpm" package.

2. Obtain the OO tar ball and extract it in a temporary directory.

3. As per the OO directions, run rpm on *.rpm; be sure to supply the
--nodeps option. You'll see rpm complain -- ignore it.

4. Make links or menu-entries to the OO apps.

--
"Developers! Developers! Developers!" -- Steve Ballmer, CEO Microsoft
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