Talk:Development/Tutorials/First program: Difference between revisions
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but hundreds, possibly thousands of errors apparently affecting nearly every header. | but hundreds, possibly thousands of errors apparently affecting nearly every header. | ||
::I personally haven't tried the g++ method, that was added by someone else. Does linking against those libraries fix the errors? Does it work for you with the cmake method? --[[User:Milliams|milliams]] 20:47, 25 January 2008 (CET) | ::I personally haven't tried the g++ method, that was added by someone else. Does linking against those libraries fix the errors? Does it work for you with the cmake method? --[[User:Milliams|milliams]] 20:47, 25 January 2008 (CET) | ||
:::Thanks you, Milliams, it complies with cmake. I copied the g++ instructions, including the additional options, straight from the page and still no joy. |
Revision as of 20:31, 25 January 2008
Adding authors to wiki pages seems counterintuitive to me. The wiki is editable by everybody. Why does it matter who the author of a tutorial is? IMHO the only thing that matters is that the tutorial is kept up to date. --Mattr 03:31, 4 January 2007 (CET)
- I agree with Matt. I usually add a Initial Author: at the bottom for pages from the old developer wiki code, because they wrote it with often no explicit copyright information. See also this page --Dhaumann 17:36, 4 January 2007 (CET)
‘ki18n’ was not declared in this scope
I don't know if this is the place to post this, but I tried to follow this tutorial and get an "error: ‘ki18n’ was not declared in this scope", when trying to compile using the big command gcc main.cpp ...
- Well I change a little the code so it now compiles under KDE4, it seems that the constructor of KAboutDate was changed...
Build
Does the g++ command work for you as described? I needed to add -lQtXml, lQtSvg and lQtNetwork.
- I'm getting a 'huge' string of error messages in the underlying include/ files, things like
include/KDE/../kmessagebox.h:1128: error: expected constructor, destructor, or type conversion before ‘(’ token
but hundreds, possibly thousands of errors apparently affecting nearly every header.
- I personally haven't tried the g++ method, that was added by someone else. Does linking against those libraries fix the errors? Does it work for you with the cmake method? --milliams 20:47, 25 January 2008 (CET)
- Thanks you, Milliams, it complies with cmake. I copied the g++ instructions, including the additional options, straight from the page and still no joy.
- I personally haven't tried the g++ method, that was added by someone else. Does linking against those libraries fix the errors? Does it work for you with the cmake method? --milliams 20:47, 25 January 2008 (CET)