On Mon, 2016-05-09 at 13:26 +0100, Bernard Bourdillon wrote: > Richard > I tried
> ~/denemo-andreas$ sudo dpkg -i *denemo*2.0.6*_amd64.deb > (Reading database ... 1347821 files and directories currently > installed.) > Preparing to unpack denemo_2.0.6_amd64.deb ... > Unpacking denemo (2.0.6) over (1.1.0-1ubuntu1) ... > dpkg: dependency problems prevent configuration of denemo: > denemo depends on libglib2.0-0 (>= 2.41.1); however: > Version of libglib2.0-0:amd64 on system is 2.40.2-0ubuntu1. > denemo depends on denemo-data (= 2.0.6); however: > Version of denemo-data on system is 1.1.0-1ubuntu1. > denemo depends on ttf-denemo (= 2.0.6); however: > Version of ttf-denemo on system is 1.1.0-1ubuntu1. > dpkg: error processing package denemo (--install): > dependency problems - leaving unconfigured > Processing triggers for man-db (2.6.7.1-1ubuntu1) ... > Processing triggers for mime-support (3.54ubuntu1.1) ... > Processing triggers for gnome-menus (3.10.1-0ubuntu2) ... > Processing triggers for desktop-file-utils (0.22-1ubuntu1) ... > Processing triggers for bamfdaemon (0.5.1 > +14.04.20140409-0ubuntu1) ... > Rebuilding /usr/share/applications/bamf-2.index... > Errors were encountered while processing: > denemo > but it didn't like it. See attached copy of the terminal response. > Do I detect that it didn't like the presence of version 1.1.0 on my PC? yes, it has noticed the previous installation and seems to be not handling the situation. I think that would easily be fixed by uninstalling the old version of denemo (this will include uninstalling ttf-denemo and denemo-data I guess) However this complaint: denemo depends on libglib2.0-0 (>= 2.41.1); however: Version of libglib2.0-0:amd64 on system is 2.40.2-0ubuntu1. looks a bit more problematic. It seems surprising that Denemo would appear to be asking for a version of glib that is ahead of what you have on Ubuntu. Perhaps Andreas might know whether there is really something in Denemo requiring this? I see that Ubuntu 14.04 is two years old - any chance you could upgrade to the latest Ubuntu? Otherwise, we can go through the build it yourself route - this has the advantage that you can do it as a normal user, not installing anything in the system (you can leave your old version in place). Richard _______________________________________________ Denemo-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/denemo-devel
