Better keep this on the mailing list otherwise you will have to write the same mail to Riccardo too.
To me this looks like you uninstallation didn't clean up correctly. It is hard to tell what was left over, but Riccardo's idea that it might be a defaults file is a starting point. You will have to check for yourself whether any of the newer GNUstep libraries are still present. I am a bit worried that you failed to compile GNUstep on your machine. This should be fairly simple. The best starting point will be to uninstall the Debian GNUstep components first. The order of the components you gave in your mail was also wrong. Start off with GNUstep make, base, gui, then back and finally your application code. You will have to add a few development packages before you may start this, but that is surely documented for Debian somewhere in the GNUstep wiki. Hope this helps, Fred On the road Am 11.10.2015 um 12:23 schrieb Gaël Elegoët <gal...@free.fr>: > > Thanks for your answer. > Here is a more detailled report: > My GWorkspace version is 0.8.8, GNUStep 7.7, GNUstep-base-common > 1.22.1, GNUstep-back-common 0.20.1, all from the Debian 7 repo. > > And that's the things i've done: tried compiling and installing > GNUstep-base 1.24.8, GNUstep-back-0.24.1, Gnustep-gui-0.24.1, > GNUstep-make-2.6.7, and GWorkspace-0.9.3. > Managed to compile GNUstep-base-1.24.8, but the others would fail. > so decided to uninstall every thing related to GNUstep via Synaptic, > then re-install the versions from the Debian 7 repo. > For uninstalling I've ckecked "Mark for complete removal" (that removes > even the configuration files). > After that uninstall , I've re-installed GNUstep 7.7 from the Debian 7 > repo, and now I have these problems with GWorkspace. > > Regards > > Gaël _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnustep mailing list Discuss-gnustep@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnustep