|
You are here |
www.perrotta.dev | ||
| | | | |
me.micahrl.com
|
|
| | | | | All rituals restricted. All rites reserved. | |
| | | | |
dusty.phillips.codes
|
|
| | | | | UPDATE: I've updated the Inko Formula on Homebrew to 0.11.0, so you may just want to use brew install inko instead. That said, There are a few bugfixes on Inko that didn't make it to the 0.11.0 release, so you may want to build off the main branch instead. I have a blog article in progress about why I'm super excited about the Inko Programming Language. It's nowhere near completion, however, and I wanted to share how I got the latest version Inko running on MacOS (Ventura). | |
| | | | |
neovintage.org
|
|
| | | | | Crystal isn't yet ready to run on a Mac M1. Sad, I know. In the meantime, I found these instructions from Max Fierke to be helpful. His post tries taking you through the whole process of cross-compiling Crystal to arm64 but I didn't want to have to manage a hand-rolled version. These are the commands that I used to get Crystal running using Rosetta: # installs the version of Homebrew that works with ARM $ /bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw. | |
| | | | |
www.linuxjournal.com
|
|
| | | |||