You could use the nix package manager https://nixos.org/nix/ it runs on
many linux platforms and macOS.
It has predefined racket and racket-minimal packages, you can define
derived versions of those packages and adapt them to your needs.
It allows you to easily switch between different
Would virtual machines be an option? You do have to have a pretty good host
machine with lots of RAM. I do this mainly to have different development and
testing environments. It works pretty smoothly on my Mac Pro, with VirtualBox
for Linux and Windows guest machines and VMWare for macOS
At Fri, 8 May 2020 01:55:17 -0700 (PDT), zeRusski wrote:
> First, does that even work? I noticed that both of them install packages
> into ~/Library/Racket/development/ for me. Are both builds so compatible I
> don't need to worry about packages stepping on each others toes i.e.
> compiled with
This is the tooling I use: https://github.com/takikawa/racket-dev-goodies/
Note that it works primarily with "in-place" installations.
Sam
On Fri, May 8, 2020, 4:55 AM zeRusski wrote:
> I have two builds of Racket on my local machine. Racket CS resides in one
> directory and was built with
I have two builds of Racket on my local machine. Racket CS resides in one
directory and was built with `RACKETCS_SUFFIX=""` and stardard Racket also
built from source in a separate directory. Normally I have my .bashrc setup
PATH as needed to use e.g. Racket CS. I ran into a problem with an
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