Moveit2 is not available in ROS2 Foxy on Windows - windows

There was a mention on https://moveit.ros.org/install-moveit2/binary-windows/ that Foxy on Windows has Moveit2 in it, so I installed it, but I wasn't able to use Moveit.
If anyone knows how to use moveit2 with Ros2 on Windows, I would like to know how to do it.

https://ms-iot.github.io/ROSOnWindows/GettingStarted/SetupRos2.html
It was in ros-foxy-desktop installed from here.

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Graphics Magick installation on Mac El Capitan 10.11.3 for TYPO3

I'm frustrated. I'm a total beginner in this (TYPO3), know well about HTML/CSS though but all the info I found on the web reads like Chinese for me. Like that one: http://mac-dev-env.patrickbougie.com/graphicsmagick/
I have no clue what that means!
I've downloaded GM, extracted the zip and double-clicked the configure file. The installation finished without any problems (as far as I can tell).
So here's the ting: can anybody please tell me, how this sort of installation is suppossed to be completed? I need it from the very beginning, actually from unpacking the zip.
Do I have to have another program, like this terminal program on the Mac, where you have to type in command lines? Do I have to write or edit code somewhere? Do I need to create folders? Where, in the TYPO3-Backend, can I check if it even works?
TYPO3 is installed and it works perfectly so far. THANKS A LOT! :)
PS: I really like to learn this (!), but my head is bumping right now :(
Easy way:
If you want to "just install" GM I suggest you to use one of OS X package managers like homebrew or macports. They can simplify configuration, building and installation process for you. So you'll only need to open Terminal and type (depending on chosen package manager):
brew install graphicsmagick or port install graphicsmagick
To verify that your installation is successful open Terminal and type gm version, as result you should see version and other details of your installation.
Fundamental way:
If you want learn how to build and install GM from sources, I recommend you to start reading official documentation. And then, by the way, read about "Make" and other tools used in build process.
As #Oles Savluk pointed easiest way to install such stuff is using homebrew. When you'll install it already, open new terminal window and use command which gm to find the path it will be i.e.: /usr/local/bin/gm - copy/write it and use in the TYPO3's Install Tool in proper place.

Can't build with mozilla-apk-cli without zip/unzip

I'm trying to build a packaged open web app with mozilla-apk-cli. But when I try it tells me I need to install unzip and zip from Info-zip. But the Info-zip site is beyond dated and the .msi I ran from there doesn't appear to have done anything.
I'm on Windows 8.1 64bit.
How am I expected to do this?
Until #Ozten fixes this, you might want to just get some binaries somewhere else, like gnuwin32 (zip, unzip) and put then somewhere in your PATH.
I'm the author of mozilla-apk-cli. I don't develop on Windows, so I need your help!
1) I'll do some digging, I assumed (wrongly) that Info-zip would install on Windows 8.1 64-bit
2) What is the preferred tool for zip/unzip from the command line on Windows 8.1? Can you point me at it's documentation?
Thanks for your help in improving mozilla-apk-cli.
Also: I've filed https://github.com/mozilla/apk-cli/issues/3
Update: I've documented how to install Info-ZIP. Thanks to Myk and nmaier.
I've tested this fix on Windows 8.1 and was able to build an APK.

How do I configure RubyMine 5 to edit remote files over SSH

I've got sort of a simple problem, but I can't seem to find any conclusive answers on the web. So, I have Ubuntu Server running in VirtualBox with Ruby and Rails installed.
What I want to do, is edit the files in the VM over SSH using RubyMine 5.0 on the Windows host machine (just like I can in Eclipse).
The problem is I can't find how to do that. I'm pretty sure it can be done, because I've found some related articles on the web, but none of them show me how I can configure RubyMine to do that.
I've searched every option in the menu and I can't figure it out by myself, so a "to the point" explanation would really be of help.
Thanks
There is no way to do this natively in RubyMine. My solution is to mount the remote filesystem to a local folder using sshfs.
Linux you can get sshfs through your package manager.
OSX you can get it here make sure to install both OSX fuse and SSHFS. The version on HomeBrew did not work for me on OSX 10.9.4 so I recommend using the packages from the link.
Windows you can use win-sshfs, I've had good results using Chocolaty to install win-sshfs
To use on Linux/OSX:
Open your terminal.
mkdir MountFolder
sshfs user#server.com:/path/to/project MountFolder/
To use on Windows:
Use the GUI.
After you've mounted the remote file system open RubyMine and select Open Directory and browse to the project.
This is the best solution I can come up with until JetBrains supports it natively.

Issue with Installing Go in Windows

I download GO compiler for windows from http://code.google.com/p/gomingw/downloads/list. However, in Read Me file, it stated that for installation information, check http://golang.org/doc/install.html#install. But, in golang.org, there is only information about Linux installation, not for windows. Can anybody help me by specifying how to install it or giving a source where can I found the steps of installation. Thanks in advance.
Download the gowin386_release.r60.3_installer.exe file and run it.

Is there any scripting language available which is exactly similar to expect script of linux

I want to use the linux expect scripts in windows. I tried with perl expect module expect.pm in windows, its not working.
Please suggest me is there any language is available in windows that is similar to expect, without using cygwin.
expect is a free software above Tcl, so I suppose you should have Tcl installed on your system. And according to its web page, expect has been ported to Windows.
ActiveState provides Expect for Windows
Basile is correct, Expect has been ported to Windows. If you install ActiveState's version of Tcl, you will then have to install Expect separately as it does not come bundled with it (anymore). Once you install it, just open up an command prompt and run the following:
teacup install Expect
The ActiveTcl manual that gets installed has great documentation on how to use it (but looks like you already know how to) :)

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