view READMEdir/README_mac.txt @ 12204:b49b03085f39 v8.0.0982

patch 8.0.0982: cannot use a terminal when 'encoding' is non-utf8 multi-byte commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/740c433c5909e3118dc4a7c42028f8a8b78a353b Author: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> Date: Mon Aug 21 22:01:27 2017 +0200 patch 8.0.0982: cannot use a terminal when 'encoding' is non-utf8 multi-byte Problem: When 'encoding' is set to a multi-byte encoding other than utf-8 the characters from ther terminal are messed up. Solution: Convert displayed text from utf-8 to 'encoding' for MS-Windows. (Yasuhiro Matsumoto, close #2000)
author Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
date Mon, 21 Aug 2017 22:15:05 +0200
parents b7da8d4c594c
children 1174611ad715
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README_mac.txt for version 8.0 of Vim: Vi IMproved.

This file explains the installation of Vim on Macintosh systems.
See "README.txt" for general information about Vim.


To build from sources, like on Unix

1. Get the build tools: "clang" and "make".  These can be installed with the
   "CommandLineTools" package.   If you don't have one, do
	xcode-select --install
   Just like for any software development with OS X.

2. Get the source code.  Best is to use git (which you need to install first),
   see http://www.vim.org/git.php
   Or you can download and unpack the Unix tar archive, see
   http://www.vim.org/download.php

3. Go to the top directory of the source tree, do
	make
	sudo make install
  A newly built vim will be installed under "/usr/local".


If you can't manage to make this work, there is a fallback using Homebrew:

1. Install Homebrew from http://brew.sh/
2. Install latest Vim with:  brew install vim