From c48866fdc1dc268298505c3405ed1406bdf6404e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Joseph Hunkeler Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2016 10:36:10 -0400 Subject: Corrected invalid argument --- source/contributing.rst | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/source/contributing.rst b/source/contributing.rst index 6e5a3ff..7e3affd 100644 --- a/source/contributing.rst +++ b/source/contributing.rst @@ -277,13 +277,13 @@ Python 3.5: .. code-block:: sh - conda-build -c http://ssb.stsci.edu/astroconda --skip-existing python=3.5 sympy + conda-build -c http://ssb.stsci.edu/astroconda --skip-existing --python=3.5 sympy That's probably a bit more involved than you thought. Let's break it down. We issue ``-c [URL]`` which instructs the build to utilize the AstroConda channel while checking for package dependencies (i.e. the recipe's ``requirements`` section). Secondly, we issue ``--skip-existing`` to prevent ``conda-build`` from rebuilding dependencies discovered in the local astroconda-contrib directory. That is to say, if a package defined as a requirement exists remotely, it will then download and install it, rather than rebuild it from scratch. -``python=`` is self-explanatory, and the final argument is the name of the recipe(s) we intend to build. +``--python=`` is self-explanatory, and the final argument is the name of the recipe(s) we intend to build. At this point, if the build was successful, our Conda package (a bzipped tarball) called ``sympy-1.0-py35_0.tar.bz2`` is emitted to ``/path/to/anaconda/conda-bld/[os-arch]/``. This directory is a local Conda package repository. -- cgit