On Wed, Aug 16, 2017 at 12:42 AM, Geert Janssens wrote:
> > I now get as far as the "Making check in po" stage.
> >
> > ...
> >
> > Making check in po
> > rm -f missing notexist
> > srcdir=../../po /usr/bin/intltool-update -m
>
> All the missing file errors are the
2 PM, Geert Janssens <geert.gnuc...@kobaltwit.be>
wrote:
> On dinsdag 15 augustus 2017 21:13:00 CEST Eric Theise wrote:
> > Contents of libgnucash/engine/test/test-qof.log:
> >
> > /qof/qofbook/readonly: OK
> > /qof/qofbook/validate counter: OK
> > /qof/qofbo
, Eric Theise <ericthe...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Geert,
>
> Here's some output. I'm running autogen.sh + make on an Ubuntu 16.04 VM.
>
> This is actually the first time I've been able to get gnucash to install
> so I consider it a big step forward.
>
> Eric
&g
Hi Geert,
Here's some output. I'm running autogen.sh + make on an Ubuntu 16.04 VM.
This is actually the first time I've been able to get gnucash to install so
I consider it a big step forward.
Eric
...
PASS: test-commodities
../../../../test-driver: line 107: 11950 Aborted
I'm a fan of the IDEs produced by JetBrains (RubyMine, PyCharm, et al.) but
admit upfront that I have not worked with their tracking product, YouTrack.
Worth a look though? Free hosting for open source projects.
Bug and Issue Tracking overview
Hi everyone,
I seem to be having the same problem as Alex. It's my first time trying to
do a local build. I'm using an up-to-date Ubuntu 16.04 virtual machine.
Eric
...
make[4]: Leaving directory
'/home/erictheise/Repos/erictheise/gnucash/build/src/import-export/log-replay'
Making all in test
In case you two are talking about a yet unreleased version, I apologize for
introducing noise, but I'm using 2.6.16 on OS 10.12.5 and, from the Help >
Tutorial and Concepts Guide, Chrome opens up an unstyled page from
file:///private/var/folders/... and the links it contains work just fine.
On
Hi all,
My trajectory with site-building is somewhat similar to David's except that
I ended up building less sites through CMSs and more using frameworks such
as Rails, Django, and Express. But lately I've taken a few steps back and
I've found Jekyll to be an excellent way to get the job done.