the champ |
Sunday 6 July 2014 at 22:11
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the champ
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Is there any way to do this? Or is it somehow necessary for playonlinux to install its own copy of wine?
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Quentin PÂRIS |
Sunday 6 July 2014 at 22:26
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Quentin PÂRIS
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the champ |
Sunday 6 July 2014 at 22:47
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the champ
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How? If I go into "manage wine versions", I don't see it there.
Thanks.
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Quentin PÂRIS |
Sunday 6 July 2014 at 23:48
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Quentin PÂRIS
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You can see it only for 32-bits wineprefix
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the champ |
Monday 7 July 2014 at 0:14
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the champ
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I don't know for sure what that means, but I'm running a 32 bit version of Wine on a 32 bit OS.
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Quentin PÂRIS |
Monday 7 July 2014 at 0:36
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Quentin PÂRIS
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You won't see it into "Manage wine version", because "System" is not a wine version you can download from the website.
You can find it in settings menu.
But what do you want to do?
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the champ |
Monday 7 July 2014 at 1:01
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the champ
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OK, I think I see what you mean. For an installed module, you can then select the system version of wne under configuration.
I'm trying to install Ableton, to work with the system wine. Right now I'm just testing, because I don't actually own a copy of Ableton yet.
Looks like it downloads an earlier version of wine, and I can change it afterward in settings to system am I right?
Is there any way to set the system version to the default?
Thanks.
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Quentin PÂRIS |
Monday 7 July 2014 at 1:09
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Quentin PÂRIS
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I'm trying to install Ableton, to work with the system wine. Right now I'm just testing, because I don't actually own a copy of Ableton yet.
Sorry, we won't help with that
Looks like it downloads an earlier version of wine, and I can change it afterward in settings to system am I right?
Yep
Is there any way to set the system version to the default?
Nope, and there is no point for that AFAIK. Apps are tested with specific wine versions and we download old wine versions on purpose to be sure that there will be no regression.
Thanks.
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