Your Leopard install disks should include both the X11 binaries package and a separate X11 SDK... That said I have not yet tried it; waiting a month or so to let Leopard get shaken out by others ;)

Greg

On Nov 2, 2007, at 1:49 PM, Curt, WE7U wrote:

On Fri, 2 Nov 2007, Chip G. wrote:

I have X11 installed per the Leopard disc, but when I run the
configure it says:

checking for X... no
configure: error: *** No X11! Install X-Windows development headers/
libraries! ***

So no can go any further. What specifically is missing, and how do I
add it? I can run X Windows utilities (typing "xclock" from the
command line will bring up an xclock window in the X11 environment).

Having X11 libraries installed means that programs that are already
compiled can run.  Same for Linux or Windows libraries.

What you need is the development packages installed, which gives you
the C header files (*.h files).  With these the compiler can compile
new code to use the libraries.

I don't run Macs so I can't help you with specifics.  Sorry!

--
Curt, WE7U: <www.eskimo.com/~archer/>     XASTIR: <www.xastir.org>
  "Lotto:  A tax on people who are bad at math." -- unknown
"Windows:  Microsoft's tax on computer illiterates." -- WE7U
The world DOES revolve around me:  I picked the coordinate system!
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