Wing IDE for OS X
Wing IDE uses X windows on OS X, but support for X is not by default part of all
versions of OS X. Thus you also need to obtain and install an X server and X Window
manager. There are a number of options for this:
(1) For OS X 10.5, we recommend using the latest version of XQuartz. This may
contain fixes not found in the version on your installation disks.
(2) Apple’s X11 Server for OS X is among the fastest and best integrated options.
It includes both the X Server and a native Aqua window manager, although
you can replace the default window manager with your favorite if you wish.
Apple X11 Server comes with OS X 10.3 and later, but is not installed
by default and must be installed separately, usually from Install Disk #2
(but location varies by exact version of the OS). Sometimes the installer is
hidden by default so you’ll need to scroll down in the Finder window for
the installation disk to find it. For OS X 10.3, X11 is also available as
downloadable package from Apple’s website, but this version will not work
with OS X 10.4. If all else fails, search on your install disks for X11User.pkg,
which is the package to install.
(3) XDarwin (1.1 or later) can be used together with the window manager of
your choice. Window Maker is one that users have reported as working
well. OroborOSX (0.75a4r2 or later) also works but can be quite slow in
comparison with other options (as of 0.8 preview 2). Note that for some
versions of OroborOSX, you need to unpack both the top-level OroborOSX
tar file and the XDarwin.tar file located inside the installation.
Once this is set up, you’re ready to install Wing IDE. Just download Wing IDE, double
click on the disk image, and move its contents place on your disk (or, you can just run
Wing directly from the disk image).
Next make sure your X Windows server chosen above is running and set up to allow
connections from X clients on :0.0. Wing will automatically start Apple X11 Server if
it is present and not yet running.
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