Dit leerprogramma zal u stap voor stap door het installeren D.W.Z. 5 begeleiden, 5.5 en/of 6 in Ubuntu - gebruikend de terrific software IEs4Linux. IEs4Linux werd ontwikkeld voor Webontwerpers die zich aan Linux willen bewegen maar nog hun plaatsen op D.W.Z. en gebruikers moeten testen Linux die d.w.z.-slechts plaatsen moeten openen.
- Begin door te selecteren Toepassingen -> Toebehoren en toen Terminal.
- Typ het bevel
sudo gedit /etc/apt/sources.list
en ga uw wachtwoord in wanneer veroorzaakt.
- Nu zult u aan uncomment nodig hebben heelal bewaarplaatsen. Zoek de lijnen die aan gelijkaardig zijn http://xx.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu feisty heelal en verwijder de tekens ## (als zij niet reeds) zijn van bij het begin van de lijnen. Nota: als u een oudere versie van Ubuntu gebruikt zoek gelijkaardige lijnen, maar zij zullen gespannen of keurig in hen in plaats van feisty hebben. Sparen het dossier en dichte gedit.
- Open nu de Synaptische Manager van het Pakket door te selecteren Systeem -> Beleid -> De synaptische Manager van het Pakket. U zult uw wachtwoord voor Synaptisch aan lancering moeten ingaan.
- Klik Zoek de knoop vanaf de bovenkant van Synaptisch, gaat binnen cabextract en klik Zoek.
- Klik de doos naast cabextract ingang en uitgezocht Teken voor installatie.
- Herhaal de bovengenoemde twee stappen maar onderzoek voor wijn en merk het voor installatie. Zodra allebei zijn gemerkt, klik Ben van toepassing knoop.
- Een summier venster zal vragend u lijken om te bevestigen dat u wenst om de pakketten te installeren. Klik Ben van toepassing om verder te gaan. Nota: Ik had eigenlijk reeds Wijn geïnstalleerdf, zodat zal screenshot hieronder niet aan van u identiek zijn - van u zult meer dan 1 te installeren punt hebben.
- Synaptisch nu Wijn en cabextract zal downloaden zal en installeren.
- Nadat de installaties succesvol waren, klik Sluit knoop.
- Terugkeer naar uw Terminal het venster en gaat het bevel in:
wget http://www.tatanka.com.br/ies4linux/downloads/ies4linux-latest.tar.gz
- Zodra het ies4linux-latest.tar.gz dossier heeft gedownload, ga binnen:
teer zxvf ies4linux-latest.tar.gz
dan
CD ies4linu-*
en tenslotte
./ies4linux
- U zal met verscheidene ja (y) of geen (n) vragen worden veroorzaakt. Bijvoorbeeld, als u wenst te installeren D.W.Z. 6 en 5.5, ga y in wanneer gevraagd. Als u niet wilt installeren D.W.Z. 5, ga n. in. When asked if you’d like to create shortcuts to the versions of IE on your desktop, I’d suggest yes - you can always delete them later.
- After the installation has completed, you should have one or more new IE icons on your desktop (depending on which versions you chose to install). Launch one of them by double-clicking its icon.
- You’ll be taken to a congratulations page on the developers site.
- Test out your site by visiting it. And remember - only use IE in Linux for testing purposes. Keep your normal browsing to Firefox or a quality browser.













































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This is just rediculous. It is totally wrong to assist people in the act of installing freedom-restricting bits on their freedom-granting operating systems. Please remove this content.
Adam Kosmin
Adam -
A couple of things you may have missed from the article itself:
IEs4Linux was developed for web designers that want to move to Linux but still need to test their sites on IE and Linux users who have to open IE-only sites.
Only use IE in Linux for testing purposes. Keep your normal browsing to Firefox or a quality browser.
–
Whether you or I like it very much, IE is the still the most used browser on the Internet. Web designers/developers cannot in good conscience develop a site that doesn’t render properly in IE. Hence the need to install IE in Linux.
Ross,
Despite the justifications, we’re still talking about installing non-free bits. Worse still, is that we’re talking about teaching others how to do so. This is unethical regardless of the reason(s).
As for development, content publishers need only adhere to W3C standards. If Internet Eroder chokes on them, well so be it.
Adam
Adam,
Honestly, I understand where you’re coming from. But your argument is still flawed - MP3 is a “non-free bits” and as much as Fedora encourages folks to switch to ogg - which I certainly think is a good thing - everyone installs MP3 codecs in their linux distribution. Same with DVD playback. It’s another ‘non-free bit’ - are we all not supposed to watch DVDs in linux?
Every single serious web developer would love it if IE adhered strictly to W3C standards, but it doesn’t. To design a site that doesn’t display properly in IE is suicide. This next comment is absolutely not meant to insult you, but you’ve clearly never worked (as a developer) on a popular website.
I will jump for joy when Firefox users (or Camino, Opera, heck even Netscape) outnumber IE users. I go out of my way to convert people to Firefox (my mum now runs Ubuntu instead of Windows). But until that day comes, web developers that work on sites for the masses HAVE to ensure that their sites work in IE.
If you’d like to continue this conversation, please use the contact form so we can do it via email. Cheers!
Ross
A great doc to install IE on Linux, this is not for daily use just to see how a web development look on IE. This is make me keep on Linux, Flaxibility and Choice.
hi guyes,
I install IE on my centOs but i have faceing probelm checking Apple in IE 6.0
SO please help me regarding same
Thanks for the handy tutorial, Ross! Worked like a charm for me on Xubuntu 7.04.
And Adam, wake up buddy - you’re not worth a can of beans as a web developer if you don’t test your sites in IE 6. IE 5.5 might be more debatable (these days) but all current stats peg IE 6 as the dominant browser, and by a long shot (http://www.upsdell.com/BrowserNews/stat.htm)
Wasting time installing MS Internet Explorer on a GNU system is wasting valuable time and resources ***even for web developers***
Adam Kosmin is mostly correct in his comment.
Ruben
Adam- I like how you are standing against IE, as I would do too, but IE is a large part of internet usage and until the day when it is not, (which i hope will come soon) we (meaning web devs) need it.
Folks, I’ve been using Linux for a year now and I think it’s great. I’m installing IE on Linux to access my router’s web page that (unfortunately) only works with IE. People don’t have to be so radical as forbid proprietary bits to be installed in Linux system, because we have to use whatever tool is necessary for each task. In my case, that’s the only option.
Great tutorial, thanks a lot.
This is a great tutorial! We need IE to run our childrens’ CDs for school (we homeschool). If we can run IE on Linux (we just installed Ubuntu yesterday! Yay!), then we can switch over our machines. Without this tutorial, our other 5 machines would remain Windows machines. This should encourage you - the glass is half full, guys!
Thank you! Just what I was looking for. You might want to ignore die-hard open source fans. Some things aren’t practical. Without something like this, I’d have to keep booting into Windows to check my site design.
Ross, when installing IE on Linux as described, are you required to purchase a MSFT license of any kind??
Thanks,
Rick
Thanks,
But when i install successfully and run it that time it give error:
Downloading from microsoft.com:
0% DCOM98.EXE!! An error ocurred when downloading. Please run IEs4Linux again. Corrupted file: DCOM98.EXE
plz anybody help me
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