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mirror of synced 2024-12-22 20:50:00 +01:00

Merge branch 'patch-1' into 'master'

fix minor typos

See merge request CLIUtils/modern-cmake!2
This commit is contained in:
Henry Schreiner 2018-10-16 15:36:07 +00:00
commit e827140a70

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@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ You can also build CMake on any system, it's pretty easy, but binaries are faste
## Pip ## Pip
This is also provide as an official package, maintained by the authors of CMake at KitWare. It's a rather new method, and might fail on some systems (Alpine isn't supported last I checked, but that has CMake 3.8), but works really well when it works (like on Travis CI). If you have pip (Python's package installer), you can do: This is also provided as an official package, maintained by the authors of CMake at KitWare. It's a rather new method, and might fail on some systems (Alpine isn't supported last I checked, but that has CMake 3.8), but works really well when it works (like on Travis CI). If you have pip (Python's package installer), you can do:
```term ```term
gitbook $ pip install cmake gitbook $ pip install cmake
@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ Personally, on Linux, I put versions of CMake in folders, like `/opt/cmake312` o
{% endhint %} {% endhint %}
[^1]: I assume this is obvious, but you are downloading and running code, which exposes you to a man in the middle attack. If you are in a critical environment, you should download the file and check the checksum. (And, no, simply doing this in two steps does not make you any safer, only a checksum is safer). [^1]: I assume this is obvious, but you are downloading and running code, which exposes you to a man in the middle attack. If you are in a critical environment, you should download the file and check the checksum. (And, no, simply doing this in two steps does not make you any safer, only a checksum is safer).
[^2]: If don't have a `.local` in your home directory, it's easy to start. Just make the folder, then add `export PATH="$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH"` to your `.bashrc` or `.bash_profile` or `.profile` file in your home directory. Now you can install any packages you build to `-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=~/.local` instead of `/usr/local`! [^2]: If you don't have a `.local` in your home directory, it's easy to start. Just make the folder, then add `export PATH="$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH"` to your `.bashrc` or `.bash_profile` or `.profile` file in your home directory. Now you can install any packages you build to `-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=~/.local` instead of `/usr/local`!
[cmake-download]: https://cmake.org/download/ [cmake-download]: https://cmake.org/download/
[LMod]: http://lmod.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ [LMod]: http://lmod.readthedocs.io/en/latest/