On Feb 17, 2012, at 1:41 PM, Jeremy Huddleston wrote: >> sudo xcode-select -switch /Applications/Xcode.app > > The Command Line Tools are not responsible for that. I believe this should > be done for you when you launch Xcode.app for the first time.
That did not happen for me. > If you have Xcode 4.2 installed, then download Xcode 4.3, and then just run > Xcode.app, it should take care of the xcode-select of this for you. I'm > curious why it didn't work in your case, but that magic isn't my specialty =/ > > FWIW, I have one Lion machine which I keep on only GM Xcode releases, and it > did this transition without issue. That's interesting. I had 4.2 installed, downloaded 4.3 from the app store, ran new Xcode (4.3), told it to uninstall 4.2 (/Developer and the installer from /Applications), had it install the command line tools, quit and xcode-select -print-path was set to /Developer maybe some part of that was different than what you did on your Lion machine? -- Daniel J. Luke +========================================================+ | *---------------- dl...@geeklair.net ----------------* | | *-------------- http://www.geeklair.net -------------* | +========================================================+ | Opinions expressed are mine and do not necessarily | | reflect the opinions of my employer. | +========================================================+ _______________________________________________ macports-dev mailing list macports-dev@lists.macosforge.org http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macports-dev