On 08/05/2018 12:39 AM, Felix Miata wrote:
TW zypper won't install kdegraphics3-pdf because nothing provides pdftools_any. Installing with 2 (break) results NAICT in a normally working kpdf.
That's what I chose. Break the damn thing, I'll fix it later -- but it worked fine :)
So Whoop! Damn it is good to see KDE3 on Leap15! :-D
I'm expecting before next year to upgrade my main system from 42.3 to 15.0, and jump from KDE3 to TDE then, if I don't first see some existing KDE3 bugs resolved-fixed, https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1077190 in particular, instead of seeing resolved-wontix KDE3 bugs staying that way. There are currently 13 of the latter last changed since Jan 1, 9 in April by Tomáš Chvátal.
That is senseless crap, and not just for KDE3 bugs. I've had a number of bugs closed in the past year or so (I posted to the suse list with the complaint). Bugs just sit there until they figure they are old enough to just slap a WONTFIX them -- which, as I put in my list post, begs the question: "If you are not going to fix them, why the hell should I file them to begin with?" Honestly, I like TDE, built it for years, but if I had my choice, we would put the openSuSE KDE3 on github and maintian KDE3 without the tqtinterface layer and all the name-changes from k/t. (I was there when TDE did the huge rename push and it always struck me an a huge unnecessary effort -- which ultimately was unnecessary since KDE -> Plasma and there is no longer the conflict to begin with) Further with the name changes, any kde package that isn't part of the TDE offering has to be ported to run on TDE due to the k/t rename issue. (though slavek has a pretty good auto-converter that helps) The current openSuSE patch set is good. It would make a great baseline for kde3 on github. Then it's just a matter of cherry-picking the additional patches that may be wanted and you have a solid, updated 3.5.10. (or 3.5.11) KDE3 has been a blessing. The fact that is doesn't change is more an asset than anything it lacks. Just to be able to work without the distraction of daily (if not hourly) bugs being discovered is a incredible benefit. If there was a way buildservice could be used in as user-friendly way as github, then there wouldn't be any need to move anything, but I've always found the changing packaging requirements and the build service web interface hard to deal with. (I may just not use it enough, but it just seems to lack the collaboration that github provides) Either way, I'm impressed as heck with out KDE3 devs here. Building on 15 is just great. I did my install, had it up and running in no time. Kicked all the tires (I don't use kdepim, so I didn't test that), but everything else was good ole kde :) -- 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