On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 6:59 PM, Bastien <b...@altern.org> wrote: > John Hendy <jw.he...@gmail.com> writes: > >> On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 6:48 PM, Bastien <b...@altern.org> wrote: >>> Hi John, >>> >>> how did you "pull"? by using git pull or make update? >> >> - git pull >> - make clean && make && make doc >> >> I'm kind of glad you asked, as this used to (I think) be the "right" >> method, but I have a vague notion that there's some built-in-org way >> now? > > ~$ make update > > will pull and make for you... > > ~$ make help > ~$ make helpall > > are useful too.
Awesome. Thanks for that -- didn't realize it would give org-specific info! >From the descriptions, I don't understand the difference between: - make - build Org ELisp and all documentation - make autoloads - create org-loaddefs.el to load Org in-place Is =make= *also* making autoloads, and =make autoloads= is *only* making the autoload files? Nevermind. Just did make and saw a whir of "making autoloads" float across the screen. At the very least, I learned that I don't have to explicitly do =make doc= if I'm doing make :) > >> I don't install to anywhere, so I'm only interested in compiling and >> loading right from the git repo vs. scattering files all over. >> >> All ears to documentation about a proper way, if there is one that's >> now recommended. > > I'd recommend ~$ make update > > Oh, btw, I fixed the problem in master, was my fault, not the > installation fault... thanks for reporting this! Pull and re-make confirms the fix. Thanks! John > > -- > Bastien