On 05/26/2019 10:30 PM, Patrick Serru wrote:
I subscribed early to the trinity mailing list, but by then the project was so static that I stopped dreaming of using it. I'm using KDE3 without trying to run today's Trinity because I'm afraid that all typical KDE3 things are not compatible with Trinity things, not just the "~/?kde?" directories (renamed "~/?tde?" AFAIK), but kmail too.
I spent 2 years building TDE for Arch, but ultimately came back from TDE to KDE here. When the plan at TDE was to develope the tQt_interface to allow kwin4/Qt4 to be direct drop-in, it made sense to look at a large renaming effort (K/T) so KDE4/TDE could co-exist without conflict. Once TDE decided to remain upstream for Qt3 and not move to Qt4, the renaming lost any real need and only injected further incompatibility between kde apps and tde. When Plasma was released and KDE4 lived no more, all of the renaming in TDE should have been reverted, but instead another set was undertaken. Don't ask me why....
DR mentioned today that openSUSE has the best maintained KDE3. Does any other distro even offer it? Felix Miata *** http://fm.no-ip.com/ I guess a lot of people are like me. Would other members of this list be interested in something like a tutorial that would teach how to develop KDE3 on a desktop computer ? If not, I agree with Felix: just give up the development of KDE3, as decided more than ten years ago.
Sincerely
Patrick
Centos, BSD and a few others I've forgotten provide KDE3 (and a whole host of European providers do. The perfect path forward is to simply cherry-pick a handful of improvements that TDE has that need to be similarly patched here (a few SSL/TLS patches come to mind. But as we sit today with 15.1, KDE3 is still in the best shape it has ever been, and provides the most well thought out and integrated suite of desktop application of any other desktop (Plasma included). I've used just about every desktop under the sun, and KDE3 is the No. 1 desktop available, if there is no KDE3 on any other distro I use, the fluxbox is the desktop of choice. I don't mind rolling up my sleeves to keep it going, but like you I have far more of a C background than C++. Thankfully, it doesn't take much more than learning the basics of classes, base and friends and then the kde3/qt3 code isn't that hard to understand (there is a lot of it, but it isn't bad compared to some other bastardizations of C++. -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-kde3+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-kde3+owner@opensuse.org