[pkg-wine-party] [wine] 06/06: Update README.debian.

Jens Reyer jreyer-guest at moszumanska.debian.org
Fri Jan 8 04:24:52 UTC 2016


This is an automated email from the git hooks/post-receive script.

jreyer-guest pushed a commit to branch master
in repository wine.

commit 5c6ce772f682da6da0bc6004e838feda8be67ae5
Author: Jens Reyer <jre.winesim at gmail.com>
Date:   Fri Jan 8 04:43:56 2016 +0100

    Update README.debian.
---
 debian/README.debian | 9 ++++-----
 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)

diff --git a/debian/README.debian b/debian/README.debian
index 5641db5..ca6028b 100644
--- a/debian/README.debian
+++ b/debian/README.debian
@@ -69,9 +69,9 @@ please back it up first. You can then start fresh.
 Most Windows binaries are 32-bit applications. You need to install wine32 or
 wine32-development to run them. wine64 alone cannot do this.
 
-On 64-bit systems you need to enable multiarch to install wine32.
-As root, execute e.g.:
-  dpkg --add-architecture i386 && apt update && apt install wine32
+On 64-bit systems you need to enable multiarch to install wine32 or
+wine32-development. As root, execute e.g.:
+# dpkg --add-architecture i386 && apt update && apt install wine32
 
 If you have wine32 and wine64 installed Wine will default to a shared 64-bit
 wineprefix that runs (most) 32-bit Windows applications.
@@ -80,8 +80,7 @@ If this causes problems for an application you may create a 32-bit wineprefix
 by running e.g.:
 $ WINEARCH=win32 WINEPREFIX="$HOME/.wine32" wineboot
 
-If you don't want 64-bit at all, you may remove wine64 and install wineserver
-from the 32-bit architecture (e.g. wineserver:i386).
+If you don't want 64-bit at all, just uninstall wine64.
 
 Wine Gecko
 ==========

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