Am 28.02.2018 um 01:55 schrieb Eduard Braun:
Am 28.02.2018 um 01:38 schrieb Maren Hachmann:
Hi translators,
the FAQ section that describes how to adapt the system path for using ghostscript has been adapted to include instructions for Windows 10:
https://inkscape.org/en/learn/faq/#how-open-eps-files-windows
It's contents has been shuffled around a bit and also parts have been removed, so be sure to compare the whole section.
Thank you for your help with the website!
Kind Regards, Maren
Windows 10 instructions miss the the step that actually adds the /lib folder.
- Yes, I've already noticed myself and added it :) Many things I only notice when I actually do the translation myself. Most translators aren't as fast as you, fortunately, in this case! :-)
"In Windows 10, for some reason, Inkscape sometimes doesn't like the paths at the bottom of the list." Proof or it didn't happen... Inkscape is not involved in this at all (it simply searches the PATH as any other application would). People need to be aware in some scenarios a restart might be required though (as processes - and their children) only see the updated environment variables after they are restarted. A restart of Inkscape is *always* required.
- Proof: We've had a user on the forum who reported they did everything they needed to do, but it didn't work. I've then done some research, and watched a video on youtube where someone explains it, and I've experienced the issue myself when testing on a Win10 VirtualBox. I don't remember if I tried rebooting, but as there seem to have been several reports... and as people have reinstalled Inkscape and tried to get it working over several days, I suspect the reboot wouldn't have helped much.
See discussion at https://forum.inkscapecommunity.com/index.php?topic=986
Regards, Maren
In the Windows <= 7 case: Maybe add an example value (i.e. "append the path like '...;C:\Program Files\gs\gs9.16\lib;C:\Program Files\gs\gs9.16\lib'")?
Regards, Eduard