useful wrote:
I suggest that we work together to create a list of fully supported, partially supported and unsupported distributions.
As well as several checkinstall.sh taking into account the peculiarities of different distributions.
That's why i started this
purebasic linux installer project.
In the end, you simply call a single command and select for which environment you want to create binaries and press the install button. It detects the running linux distribution, deals with 32 and 64bit systems, supports gtk2/3, qt and textmode, automatically detects and uses the "best" available UI (so on most current systems the user gets a graphical popup as they would "expect" on windows) and is fully free (GPL 4 license).
But there was nearly no interest. I guess those who need it (new potential purebasic users), will not find it and the experienced purebasic users don't need it. It can deal with a multitude of linux distributions and is even prepared to handle FreeBSD or Android, should they ever get supported by purebasic.