If you run this from the GRASS terminal, it should find GRASS without any issue, unless it has hard coded a call to GRASS commands in the /usr/bin folder.
Michael
C. Michael Barton
Director, Center for Social Dynamics & Complexity
Professor of Anthropology, School of Human Evolution & Social Change
Arizona State University
voice: 480-965-6262 (SHESC), 480-965-8130/727-9746 (CSDC)
fax: 480-965-7671 (SHESC), 480-727-0709 (CSDC)
www: http://www.public.asu.edu/~cmbarton, http://csdc.asu.edu
On Jan 9, 2014, at 8:09 AM, <grass-user-request@lists.osgeo.org> <grass-user-request@lists.osgeo.org> wrote:
From: William Kyngesburye <woklist@kyngchaos.com>
Subject: Re: [GRASS-user] Kyngesburye GRASS on Mavericks, command line access
Date: January 9, 2014 at 7:37:07 AM MST
To: Dheeraj Chand <dheeraj@dheerajchand.com>
Cc: <grass-user@lists.osgeo.org>
Reply-To: William Kyngesburye <kyngchaos@kyngchaos.com>
I think there is info in the installed readme. You can make a symlink to the grass.sh in the app in /usr/local/bin.
On Jan 8, 2014, at 11:48 PM, Dheeraj Chand wrote:
Hey, all! I’m using William Kyngesburye’s GRASS for Mac OS X Mavericks. It seems to install as a traditional Mac application, which opens and has a Terminal that can be used. It doesn’t seem to install to the bin, the way that the Linux versions do. Here’s my situation. I have a script that we can call “geographizer.sh” that contains lots and lots of instructions for GRASS that was written by a colleague. This script needs to be executed at the end of a complex Python script, with the last command being, essentially, “Now, run this bash script!” My question is whether or not I can, so to speak, use the WK GRASS as if it were installed in the bin, as it is in Ubuntu. If so, can someone guide me through setting that up?
Best,
-dx
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