On Wednesday 11 January 2006 23:29, Chris Cannam wrote:
> On Wednesday 11 Jan 2006 22:17, Guillaume Laurent wrote:
> > On Wednesday 11 January 2006 23:17, Chris Cannam wrote:
> > > What's it for?
> >
> > It holds the messages for all the standard KDE actions and strings,
> > so it's pretty much nec
On Wednesday 11 Jan 2006 22:17, Guillaume Laurent wrote:
> On Wednesday 11 January 2006 23:17, Chris Cannam wrote:
> > What's it for?
>
> It holds the messages for all the standard KDE actions and strings,
> so it's pretty much necessary.
Maybe you'd better update those .po files again then...
C
On Wednesday 11 January 2006 23:17, Chris Cannam wrote:
>
> The KDE prefix is /usr, so it isn't in $KDE_DIR/include, and it won't be
> on any Debian-related system.
Great :-(. I guess messages.sh is too optimistic.
> What's it for?
It holds the messages for all the standard KDE actions and strin
On Wednesday 11 Jan 2006 22:02, Guillaume Laurent wrote:
> On Wednesday 11 January 2006 22:55, Chris Cannam wrote:
> > /usr/include/kde.pot does not exist, there is something wrong
> > with your installation!
> >
> > Need I worry?
>
> Could be. It should be in $KDE_DIR/include, which is extracted
On Wednesday 11 January 2006 22:55, Chris Cannam wrote:
>
> It appears to work from the po directory, but among other things it does
> say this:
>
> /usr/include/kde.pot does not exist, there is something wrong with
> your installation!
>
> Need I worry?
Could be. It should be in $KDE_DIR/includ
On Monday 09 Jan 2006 13:35, Guillaume Laurent wrote:
> Chris Cannam wrote:
> > btw, what's the procedure for updating the .po files these days?
>
> Run po/messages.sh.
OK, note that you have to be _in_ the po directory, you can't actually
run po/messages.sh from the top-level directory.
It appe