- Mar 10, 2018
- 296
- 445
I didn't know what SSJ3 was, so i googled it. Now i still don't know. LOL. Apparently some sort of japanese comic or nintendo game or something.Imagine SSJ3 buff up. Well, kind of.
And, uhhh... There may be a shapeshifter "girl" out there (no dicks tho(at least not on that girl(maybe(?))))
It's on Linux, right?I'm having problems; it's crashing when I try to open.
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1 - I'm afraid there's not much I can do here, as I'm not able to reproduce the failure. I don't know why
you'd get a read-only filesystem error unless the filesystem you're trying to create the virtualenv on is in fact read-only.
2 - I'm pretty sure this is a virtualbox issue now so should probably be raised with them if you want a real solution to it.
I 'solved' it by moving the .virtualenvs directory into a non-shared folder as the problem only exists on folders shared with os x.
I ultimately decided to move away from virtualbox due to this kind of instability.
3 - I ended up giving the shared folder group write permissions in OSX, then remounted it in Ubuntu, and it seemed to solve the problem.
4 - This can be solved on virtualbox when the issues are created by shared folders by running:
virtualenv ~/[my-env-name]
source ~/[my-env-name]/bin/activate
This won't store your environment in your folder, but best practice is to use requirements.txt and tell your VCS to ignore your environment tree
It's on Linux, right?
A quick Google search returned me this:
All found onCode:1 - I'm afraid there's not much I can do here, as I'm not able to reproduce the failure. I don't know why you'd get a read-only filesystem error unless the filesystem you're trying to create the virtualenv on is in fact read-only. 2 - I'm pretty sure this is a virtualbox issue now so should probably be raised with them if you want a real solution to it. I 'solved' it by moving the .virtualenvs directory into a non-shared folder as the problem only exists on folders shared with os x. I ultimately decided to move away from virtualbox due to this kind of instability. 3 - I ended up giving the shared folder group write permissions in OSX, then remounted it in Ubuntu, and it seemed to solve the problem. 4 - This can be solved on virtualbox when the issues are created by shared folders by running: virtualenv ~/[my-env-name] source ~/[my-env-name]/bin/activate This won't store your environment in your folder, but best practice is to use requirements.txt and tell your VCS to ignore your environment tree
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Same here.nice visiting the family but my mc is itching to get back to the inn and his "friend" lol
That is always a potential problem when create a lot of physical distance between main girls and MC in a game and how you can keep what is happening with those main girls far away interesting, without adding lesbian sex or other male NPC's that are bigger assholes as MC. We can just hope that a story line not too far away will have some people moving so they are all together.nice visiting the family but my mc is itching to get back to the inn and his "friend" lol
Family can come on over to the inn but i do see your point. I'm just excited to see the inn in all its glory and to experience more hijinxsThat is always a potential problem when create a lot of physical distance between main girls and MC in a game and how you can keep what is happening with those main girls far away interesting, without adding lesbian sex or other male NPC's that are bigger assholes as MC. We can just hope that a story line not too far away will have some people moving so they are all together.