Request help

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Request New Features

If you want more out of Sugar ...
Please use our Request New Features page.

Help Requests:

You will find the first place to look for help is in the navigation bar on the left.

From the drop down menu under Sugar at the top, click on Get started to review Getting Started.

Clicking on Get help takes you to Sugar help.

Not shown on the Navigation bar is the link to Sugar Labs/FAQ.

If you can't find your answer, please request one or supply one! below:

Method

Click on an [edit] link next to a topic paragraph below to enter your request or an answer (you will see more instructions on the edit form). But first, if possible, login or register on the wiki, leave an email address (secured by your login password), and then you can choose to 'Watch' any page on the wiki (such as this one) by clicking the 'Watch tab', and you will receive an email if the page changes. Plus, others can respond to you privately by using the 'E-mail this user' link in the sidebar of your user page.

Example

  • I find this wiki so hard to navigate - I just want to see the help pages. --Inkyfingers 20:14, 27 October 2011 (EDT)
    At the bottom of this page it is tagged Help. Please click on the tag and you will be taken to all other pages with the Help Tag.
    There are also links for new questions on the Category:FAQ pages. Those are pages with the FAQ Tag.

on Usage

First, see the help links above.



  • I would like to install Adobe Flash Player in order to access the learn-to-read website www.starfall.com with Browser. (i) Can the Sugar Browser run the Adobe Flash Player plug-in? (ii) If so, please modify the YUM instructions from Adobe (copied below) as needed for the Sugar environment. I'm a Windows user, so please include all necessary Terminal instructions (e.g., to change to the correct directory). Thanks in advance.
    Installation instructions for the YUM repository definition
    1. Click the download link to begin installation. A dialog box will appear asking you where to save the file.
    2. Save the .rpm file to your desktop and wait for the file to download completely.
    3. In terminal, navigate to the desktop and type # rpm -Uvh <rpm_package_file>. Click Enter. (Note: This must be done as a root user).
    4. Once the installation is complete, in terminal, type # yum install flash-plugin. Click Enter. (Note: This must be done as a root user).
    5. To verify the plugin is installed in Mozilla, launch Mozilla and choose Help > About Plug-ins from the browser menu.
    (See http://www.adobe.com/products/flashplayer/productinfo/instructions/#section-3.) - David Kergyl 23:14, 10 March 2010 (UTC)

on the Wiki

First, see the Wiki Team/Resources page.


on Submitting a bug

Please report problems or bugs on Submit Bugs/Problems page.


on Releases

First, see this page, 0.114/Roadmap.


on Distributions

First, see the Downloads and Supported systems pages.


  • Live CD in Spanish
    Purport: I see as one of the selling points of Sugar that a non-expert user can use computers "off the bat". It has been reported to me that currently the LiveCD requires some tweaking at startup to adjust it to a given locale, which I feel is to ask too much precisely from users that are not skilled.
    Goal: a LiveCD version that is localized in Spanish from startup, with no tweaking required, to be distributable among the Spanish-speaking public.
    Contact: yamaplos at bolinux.org

on Sugar hardware ports

First, see the Supported systems page.


on Sugar activities

First, see the Activity Team pages.


  • I downloaded Sugar on a Stick and ran it on my computer -- however, the project I'm working with is about the Calculate activity. I found how to download the Calculate activity from your Activities page, however I don't know how to take that downloaded activity and incorporate it into my USB device/environment. So my question is: How can I take a downloaded activity and use it with Sugar on a Stick?
    There are a number of ways to install new Activities into Sugar:
    1. Using the Browse Activity in Sugar, navigate to the Sugar Activity Library (http://activities.sugarlabs.org), find the Activity you want and click the 'Download Now' button. In Sugar, you should see an alert that counts down the transfer. Once the download is saved, a new alert offers to show the new Activity in your Journal. Clicking the 'Show in Journal' button will take you to a detail view of the <ActivityName>.xo entry. Clicking the icon at the top left of this view will launch the Activity. The Home view favorites and Journal will show the new Activity installed.
    2. If the Activity is downloaded to another computer, the downloaded activity is contained in the <ActivityName>.xo file that is saved on the computer that did the download. If you have another USB device, copy that file to the root folder, "/", at the base of your USB device. Then boot Sugar on a Stick and go to the Journal. When the second USB device is inserted, it should appear in the bottom bar of the Journal. Clicking on the USB device icon will show its contents. Drag the <ActivityName>.xo file to the Journal icon at the far left of the bottom bar. Then click on the Journal icon and the <ActivityName>.xo entry will display at the top of the Journal. Click the icon for <ActivityName> and it will launch.
    3. If the downloaded <ActivityName>.xo file is copied to the SoaS USB device, and that device is booted into Sugar, one may use the Terminal activity to unzip the file into the /home/liveuser/Activities folder using these commands:
      cd /home/liveuser/Activities/
      (The /home/liveuser/ path may be substituted with /home/olpc/ on an XO.)
      unzip /mnt/live/<ActivityName>.xo
      (The /mnt/live/path-to-.xo may be substituted with an accessible <ActivityName>.xo path.)
      The Activity will appear in the Home view favorites, and after it has been launched, it will appear in the Journal.
  • According to this review, Scratch requires some setup in Terminal:
    ... Scratch lacks Sugar integration but it does have the benefit that you can store and retrieve Scratch in file folders which the user can setup. Unfortunately this does require some help with setting up files under Linux and giving the user write permission on those files. The plus side of all of this is that the user can read and write to a USB memory stick and share Scratch files with Scratch on other computers.... Rated 4 out of 5 stars by Bill on February 28, 2010
    Is this correct? Is such setup also required to use the Scratch included on the Blueberry SoaS? If so, please add a wiki section containing specific instructions for performing this setup in Terminal. The Scratch activities page should also link to the instructions. - David Kergyl 16:36, 11 March 2010 (UTC)
    Thank you David for you contributions to the wiki both here and elsewhere! While you have entered your questions at appropriate places in the wiki for their future reference, if you accompany your question with a post to either of these mailing lists, It's An Education Project, IAEP (for general), or sugar-devel (for development-related) discussions, you will reach many more Sugar Labs followers who are not currently following changes on this wiki. We can then reference the discussion thread in the wiki and also provide a consolidated summary. --FGrose 17:25, 11 March 2010 (UTC)
  • Please add a Scratch activity page on the Sugar Labs wiki, with a link to Scratch. --David Kergyl 21:55, 13 March 2010 (UTC)
    All users can create a page in our wiki, see this guide page. In this case, I've created a pending page just by entering the internal link syntax Activities/Scratch. Users may also move pages to adjust the name or location. --FGrose 03:08, 14 March 2010 (UTC)

on Sugar deployments

First, see the Deployment Team pages.


on Sugar Labs

See the Sugar Labs page. Sugar Labs was created to provide a mechanism for supporting the Sugar community of volunteers. These volunteers are engaged in a variety of activities: some are writing software to improve Sugar; some are porting Sugar to new platforms; some are developing new activities that run in Sugar; some are helping to debug Sugar and help with quality assurance; some are writing documentation for Sugar developers and for those who use Sugar in the field; some are developing new scenarios for learning with Sugar; some are using Sugar and reporting upon their experiences to the community; and some are providing help and support.
Since we started Sugar Labs, we have been receiving a number of requests for help: porting Sugar to new distributions; tuning Sugar on a specific hardware platform; developing specific Sugar activity; helping with support in specific deployments, etc. Please use this page both to make requests and respond to requests for help.