I am going to try winex, but I have wine installed currently. First off, do I need to unistall wine, or should I? And how do I go about it, if yes? Thanks. Ian. Ian Truelsen Masters program in Philosophy University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada BA (Wilfrid Laurier University) Email: ian@ihtruelsen.2y.net Current favourite quote: "No great civilisation likes forests." K.F. O'Connor Lincoln College, Christchurch, New Zealand
Ian Truelsen <ian@ihtruelsen.2y.net> wrote:> I am going to try winex, but I have wine installed currently. First off, do > I need to unistall wine, or should I? And how do I go about it, if yes?Of course you have to ! a) dpkg -r wine b) rpm -e wine c) make uninstall -- Andreas Mohr, Renningen, Germany In case you need to contact me after expiry of temporary email address: my eternal (hopefully) email address is frqr2001 at the domain sneakemail.com
On Tue, 11 Dec 2001, Ian Truelsen wrote:> I am going to try winex, but I have wine installed currently. First off, do > I need to unistall wine, or should I? And how do I go about it, if yes?No, you don't. Transgaming's WineX puts its own wine stuff in /usr/lib/transgaming/bin/ and the winex executable is just a shell script that points to this. So running winex executes /usr/lib/transgaming/bin/wine and running wine executes /usr/local/bin/wine (depending on where you installed it, anyway) Dave Jones - dajones@purdue.edu