On Thu, 2002-11-21 at 08:23, Jonathan Dlouhy wrote:
> I have k3b installed and when I run it from a command line I get this error: 
> k3b: undefined symbol: static_QUType_varptr. If I run the setup program I get 
> this: k3bsetup: undefined symbol: 
> _ZN18QMetaObjectCleanUpC1EPKcPFP11QMetaObjectvE
> 
> That's it, the program won't launch at all...
> So, if you can help that would be great!
> Thanks,

That sounds like it's a QT library fault - unresolved symbol. Have you
checked out that your /etc/ld.so.conf is setup properly? As well, you
might want to make sure that QT is installed properly...

-- 
Thu Nov 21 09:10:00 EST 2002

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        On the other hand, the TCP camp also has a phrase for OSI people.
There are lots of phrases.  My favorite is `nitwit' -- and the rationale
is the Internet philosophy has always been you have extremely bright,
non-partisan researchers look at a topic, do world-class research, do
several competing implementations, have a bake-off, determine what works
best, write it down and make that the standard.
        The OSI view is entirely opposite.  You take written contributions
from a much larger community, you put the contributions in a room of
committee people with, quite honestly, vast political differences and all
with their own political axes to grind, and four years later you get
something out, usually without it ever having been implemented once.
        So the Internet perspective is implement it, make it work well,
then write it down, whereas the OSI perspective is to agree on it, write
it down, circulate it a lot and now we'll see if anyone can implement it
after it's an international standard and every vendor in the world is
committed to it.  One of those processes is backwards, and I don't think
it takes a Lucasian professor of physics at Oxford to figure out which.
                -- Marshall Rose, "The Pied Piper of OSI"

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