On Fri February 1 2008, Sven Joachim wrote: > If 13.4 MB of download is too much for you because you're on a slow > dial-up, you may consider purchasing Debian DVDs. The 50 MB and 68 > additional packages should not bother you, because aptitude will > automatically deinstall them when you're done with the compilation and > remove the kdelibs4-dev package.
it wasn't an issue of speed.. I was more worried about a bunch of extra packages that weren't there before, yet now I need them because of ksudoku? so I added the kdelibs4-dev and ran the cmake again, success: # cmake . -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH=`kde-config --prefix` -- Looking for pthread.h -- Looking for pthread.h - found -- Looking for pthread_create in pthreads -- Looking for pthread_create in pthreads - not found -- Looking for pthread_create in pthread -- Looking for pthread_create in pthread - found -- Found KDE3 include dir: /usr/include/kde -- Found KDE3 library dir: /usr/lib -- Found KDE3 dcopidl preprocessor: /usr/bin/dcopidl -- Found KDE3 dcopidl2cpp preprocessor: /usr/bin/dcopidl2cpp -- Found KDE3 kconfig_compiler preprocessor: /usr/bin/kconfig_compiler -- DEBUG: OFF -- intstall prefix: /usr -- Configuring done -- Generating done -- Build files have been written to: /home/pbc/Documents/software/ksudoku-0.4 then I ran : #make # make install from another terminal window: $ ksudoku bash: /usr/games/ksudoku: No such file or directory $ /usr/bin/ksudoku Segmentation fault so the make install moved the executable to /usr/bin, yet the system still thinks it is in /usr/games, and it still doesn't work. -- Paul Cartwright Registered Linux user # 367800 Registered Ubuntu User #12459