Hey Luke
Where does pd look for .pdrc in OSX? Does it check somewhere inside
the package itself? That would be really useful for running different
builds with different parameters. Or maybe it's just silly. It's
early.
cheers
dafydd
On 1/21/07, Luke Iannini (pd) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi dafydd,
It looks in your home directory, e.g. /Users/dayfdd/.pdrc aka ~/.pdrc
So not terribly useful for that. Bash scripts would work, though.
On 1/21/07, dafydd hughes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hey Luke
Where does pd look for .pdrc in OSX? Does it check somewhere inside
the package itse
On 1/21/07, Derek Holzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On OSX, you can edit the
/Users/yourname/Library/Preferences/org.puredata.pd.plist file, using
the built in "Property List Editor.app" (Control-click for that option
under "Open With"). I use this much more reliably than the Startup Menu.
This
On OSX, you can edit the
/Users/yourname/Library/Preferences/org.puredata.pd.plist file, using
the built in "Property List Editor.app" (Control-click for that option
under "Open With"). I use this much more reliably than the Startup Menu.
Make sure to do it while PD isn't running, or your chang
Hallo,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] hat gesagt: // [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> there a way to send startup flags to pd other than clicking the startup
> menu and writing them there on Mac and Windows?
Yes, you can for example use the good ol' command line to start Pd and
enter the flags there directly. You
there a way to send startup flags to pd other than clicking the startup
menu and writing them there on Mac and Windows?
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