Blackwell writes: > David Herron wrote: > > > > An off the top of my head guess would be - do you have GNOME installed? > > > > Reasoning ... GtkToolkit refers to GNOME and would be using the GNOME > > widgets as peers in the same manner the Motif widgets were formerly used.
please install the libgcj7-awt package; I'll let libgcj7-0 recommend that package with the next upload. > >> s$ java -cp > >> jts.jar:pluginsupport.jar:jcommon-1.0.0.jar:jfreechart-1.0.0.jar:jhall.jar:other.jar:rss.jar > >> > >> -Xmx256M jclient.LoginFrame . strange, jfreechart-1.0.2 is in the archive, isn't it? > Here is the simple and pragmatic solution if you do not have issues > with using "non free" software: > > Whenever you get error messages with that substring in them, install > Sun Java, remove GCJ if you can, and ensure that your Linux > installation (other operating systems do not exhibit this problem as > far as I know) is configured to use Sun Java for any Java > application (each Linux distribution may have a different approach > to configuring which "Java" implementation to use). that kind of attitude will lead to a depopulation of java packages in main and java support just for two architectures. If that's your goal, please go on. It seems that even debian-edu is in favour of this approach putting non-free components on their CDs. We do have a free runtime and compiler supporting the java2 platform to a good amount, but apparently not yet 100%, so we will always have a conflict between support for a free runtime and support for a subset of architectures with a "standard" runtime (which we are unable to validate anyway). Matthias -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]