Jepri wrote:
'Kay, couple of points here.
1) You could pop up a message box saying "You can now import your
comics from "/home/.../.../whatever". Or even better, you could pop
up the import dialog, already open to the right directory. That would
make it feel a little bit more user-orientated, and people like me
wouldn't get confused and mail you saying that it didn't work.
Also, the downloading thing is very nice, but it would be nice to also
include the current comics list in case the user can't get through to
sourceforge.
Admittedly it is a little reliant on SF, but it makes sure that the
comics are updated... plus I have a little more control over where they
end up. As for the other
2) Please don't be so *lame* as to blame a user for the problems in
your program. The strange thing I did was type "dpkg -i stripclub".
If I have an incompatible parser library installed, or other system
issues, then it is most definately your problem as a packager, not
mine as a user. Especially since I have an almost-vanilla Debian
install going.
I even checked the help screens to make sure I was doing it right, as
I noted below
I don't even understand why it would be complaining about that tag, as I
said, it should just be ignoring it. If you included the debug log, that
would be a lot more helpful.
Admittedly, I didn't give you the best error report in the world, but
immediately blaming a Debian user for not installing it right is a big
warning sign.
I'm copying this to the list so that any potential sponsors will be
aware of your attitude towards bugs in your package.
Except that the error you're describing, is extremely vague and doesn't
even make sense, as it doesn't sound like an error the program would
generate (unable to interpret? That's not even a string in my
program...). If you were able to send me the debug log (as well as what
comic you were trying to read, as well as the data file you'd
constructed), I'd at least have a place to start.