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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2004-02-19 23:03:29 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2004-02-19 23:03:29 (GMT) |
commit | 2a1bc50663fc81924b2ca78bc8e790e7bbe69bc9 (patch) | |
tree | 07990e925a4408f3a3bbcd4098d05fd146ac5749 /Doc/dist | |
parent | a9ee0da8f38c55d393b2ec66a2f023f55884b9b5 (diff) | |
download | cpython-2a1bc50663fc81924b2ca78bc8e790e7bbe69bc9.zip cpython-2a1bc50663fc81924b2ca78bc8e790e7bbe69bc9.tar.gz cpython-2a1bc50663fc81924b2ca78bc8e790e7bbe69bc9.tar.bz2 |
- according to Apple's publication style guide, yes, "Mac people" use
the term Installer (always capitalized, however)
- generalize the text about the term "installer" in a fairly
reasonable way
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/dist')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/dist/dist.tex | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/dist/dist.tex b/Doc/dist/dist.tex index a79e6d5..f33e01b 100644 --- a/Doc/dist/dist.tex +++ b/Doc/dist/dist.tex @@ -1149,8 +1149,8 @@ either as a ``binary package'' or an ``installer'' (depending on your background). It's not necessarily binary, though, because it might contain only Python source code and/or byte-code; and we don't call it a package, because that word is already spoken for in Python. (And -``installer'' is a term specific to the Windows world. \XXX{do Mac - people use it?}) +``installer'' is a term specific to the world of mainstream desktop +systems.) A built distribution is how you make life as easy as possible for installers of your module distribution: for users of RPM-based Linux |