From: Jerry Kreps
From: Jerry Kreps
Yesterday, I completely scrubbed KDE, KDE2 and Qt off my system, and removed any programs dependent on them. I deleted all related directories. Then, I installed KDE2 ***only***, using the SuSE fpt site source. Since the Qt-2.2.1 version installed didn't include source files I downloaded and installed Qt-2.2.1 sources and compiled it. KDE2 and Qt-2.2.1 appeared to be working fine. This morning I compiled a package that used a jpg as a startup logo. Even though it compiled fine the program crashes because it can't show that jpg logo. I thought it was the programs compliation, BUT, while browsing Slashdot a few minutes ago with Konqueror, I noticed that none of the jpg icons or other graphics were showing!!
I used YaST to check my jpg libraries and programs installations and saw that everything was loaded. I confirmed the libraries existance on my system.
Ok, SuSE. How to I get KDE2 to show jpeg graphics again???? Is it tied to having KDE1 installed. I hope not because I am not going to install KDE1 There has to be a KDE2 only solution. Jerry
-- Scientific theories, according to Sir Karl Popper, can be "falsified," orp roven wrong, by experiment. Unscientific theories-Marxist dialectical history and Freudian psychology were Popper's favorites-are formed in such a way that they cannot be falsified by data.
Date: Sun, 26 Nov 2000 01:12:22 +0100
From: Stefan Troeger
Then, I installed KDE2 ***only***, using the SuSE fpt site source. Since the Qt-2.2.1 version installed didn't include source files I downloaded and installed Qt-2.2.1 sources and compiled it.
You have to compile Qt with JPEG support. It's not included by default. Ciao, Stefan
From: Jerry Kreps
Hi,
On Sat, Nov 25 2000 at 12:35 -0600, Jerry Kreps wrote:
[no JPEGs in KDE]
Then, I installed KDE2 ***only***, using the SuSE fpt site source. Since the Qt-2.2.1 version installed didn't include source files I downloaded and installed Qt-2.2.1 sources and compiled it.
You have to compile Qt with JPEG support. It's not included by default.
Ciao, Stefan
-- Scientific theories, according to Sir Karl Popper, can be "falsified," or proven wrong, by experiment. Unscientific theories -Marxist dialectical history and Freudian psychology were Popper's favorites-are formed in such a way that they cannot be falsified by data.
participants (2)
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jerrykreps@jlkreps.net
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stefan@troeger.st