Reinder Verlinde <reinder@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> writes:
> In article <f82l9c$9kq$02$1@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> d d <dd_no_spam@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>> Reinder Verlinde wrote:
>> > d d <dd_no_spam@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>> >> I want to have Safari 1.3, 2.0 and 3.0 all installed on the same
(Intel)
>> >> Mac Mini. Does anyone else successfully have such a configuration?
>
> Does 1.3 run on an intel Mac?
If it runs on Tiger at all, I don't see any reason why it shouldn't run in
Rosetta.
>> Can you explain how I would do that? All I did to get this far was make
>> an archive of the Safari folder on the Mac that had 1.3 and take that
>> zip to the new Mac.
>
> That is equivalent to archiving explore.exe on Windows, without
> archiving the HTML control .dll, Javascript .dll, etc.
A very good analogy.
> Read
>
<http://developer.apple.com/do***entation/MacOSX/Conceptual/OSX_Technolog
> y_Overview/index.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40001067>
>
> and download the nightly Webkit build for an example of embedding
> frameworks. I do not think this will be easy.
If the only thing needed is to check web sites with various versions of
WebKit, then you don't need Safari.app for that. You could check out the
relevant versions of WebKit (I assume they tagged the release versions as
such in CVS) and build simple test browsers against them.
As you said, it probably won't be easy. But it would only need to be done
once and the results released on the 'net.
sherm--
--
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