Hi,
thank you all!
apertium-get apertium-swe worked like a charm.

Yours,
Per Tunedal

On Tue, Apr 21, 2020, at 19:05, Tino Didriksen wrote:
> Correct, data packages are not meant for development use.
> 
> The monolingual packages install only exactly as much as is needed for 
> building pair packages and what an end-user may need for corpus analysis.
> 
> Developers can use the apertium-get helper to install and build a 
> development-usable data package from source. E.g. running "apertium-get 
> apertium-swe" will install apertium-swe in the active folder.
> 
> -- Tino Didriksen
> 
> 
> On Tue, 21 Apr 2020 at 18:29, Jonathan Washington 
> <jonathan.n.washing...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Hi Per,
>> 
>> To add to what Daniel said, language data installed from apt is put in 
>> system directories as root, and is not good for doing dev work.
>> 
>> As a fairly up-to-date Apertium language data developer, I don't know the 
>> path of system-installed language data off the top of my head (you can 
>> always run dpkg -L apertium-swe to find out) and I'm not even sure it 
>> includes the uncompiled dictionaries. Maybe I'm just an elite developer 
>> without my pulse on the needs of actual Apertium users.
>> 
>> But I do recommend what Daniel suggested—that would be the easiest approach, 
>> imo.
>> 
>> --
>> Jonathan
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Apertium-stuff mailing list
> Apertium-stuff@lists.sourceforge.net
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/apertium-stuff
> 
_______________________________________________
Apertium-stuff mailing list
Apertium-stuff@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/apertium-stuff

Reply via email to