NEdit 5.3 binary kits. Standard binary distributions in compressed tar file format (see below for more information). On systems where Motif is not standard, these are statically linked, so separate Motif or LessTif installation is not required. The following binaries have been tested on the following operating systems: nedit-5.3-aix-power.tar.Z AIX 4.2 or higher nedit-5.3-hpux.tar.Z HPUX 10.10 or higher nedit-5.3-irix-mips.tar.Z IRIX 5.3 or higher nedit-5.3-linux-alpha.tar.Z RedHat Linux Alpha 5.2 or higher nedit-5.3-linux-x86.tar.Z RedHat Linux 5.2 or higher nedit-5.3-linux-x86.tar.gz RedHat Linux 5.2 or higher nedit-5.3-tru64-alpha.tar.Z Compaq Tru64 4.0 or higher nedit-5.3-cygwin-x86.tar.gz Windows with Cygwin 1.3.1 (X Server Required) Linux binaries will usually work with other distributions, however due to the sheer volume of them it's difficult to tell. Please report any problems or successes to develop@nedit.org so we can extend the list of binary-compatible systems. Kits for automated installation tools. NEdit is trivial to install from the above standard tar file kits, so these are mostly for system administrators who want the additional tracking they get from the tools. nedit-5.3-freebsd4.5-stable.tgz FreeBSD pkg_add 4.5 or higher nedit-5.3-freebsd5.0-current.tgz nedit-5.3-1.i386.rpm RedHat Linux 5.2 or higher INSTALLATION NEdit consists of a single, stand-alone executable file which does not require any special installation beyond copying it to your system and making it accessible to users. To Install NEdit on Unix Systems: 1) Copy the appropriate archive file to your system using ftp in binary mode, and use gunzip and tar to expand the archive. For example: % uncompress nedit-5.3-irix.tar.Z % tar xvf nedit-5.3-irix.tar If you don't have "uncompress" on your system, "gunzip" knows how to handle it: % gunzip nedit-5.3-linux-x86.tar.Z % tar xvf nedit-5.3-linux-x86.tar 2) Copy the files, nedit and nc, to a directory which is referenced in the paths of the target users. The usual location for installing nedit for system-wide use is /usr/local/bin, or for individual use, $HOME/bin.