Languages/Ruby/Ruby-Qt/KDE Book/Installation/Installation on Linux: Difference between revisions

From KDE TechBase
m (Text replace - "</code>" to "</syntaxhighlight>")
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 17:39, 10 March 2016

Ruby-Qt/KDE Book
Tutorial Series   Ruby
Previous   Installation of Ruby
What's Next   Hello World
Further Reading   n/a
100%
noframe
noframe

30% completed (estimate)

  

Status Of Writing


In comparison to the installation process on Microsoft Windows or Apple Mac OS you have to deal with the fact that there are a lot of different Linux-based operating systems. So there are also different ways to set up your environment for kdebindings.

While installing and testing your Ruby installation you should check if your Linux distribution has the bindings preinstalled before starting to install something.

Test Bindings Installation

Maybe the Qt/KDE bindings are already installed. For a quick check, enter irb in a shell to start the interactive ruby shell. Try to load the bindings.

require "Qt4"
=> true
require "korundum4"
=> true

You can load bindings for KDE 4 (korundum4) or only Qt 4 by a require. In the future you won't need to load Qt 4 first when using KDE 4, because by requiring KDE 4 everything needed is loaded automatically.

If you got the same results so far you seem to have a working environment already.

Installation

There is always the option to install the bindings from source code, but it is recommended to use the existing binary packages.

Installation On Linux-based Systems

To install Ruby you should know how to use your package manager.

Install the package "ruby-kde4" or something similar. Be aware though, that there might exist a package named "ruby-kde", which probably contains the old version of the bindings for KDE 3. Consider furthermore, that you will need a lot of KDE dependencies, if you are working on a GNOME desktop environment.

Installation On Mac OS

TODO

Installation On Windows

TODO