Ralph Shumaker wrote:
Carl Lowenstein wrote:
On Dec 12, 2007 1:18 PM, Ralph Shumaker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Andrew Lentvorski wrote:
[snip]
We hates configure.
-a
I can see why. I don't know much about what I see in config.log,
but it
does seem to keep trying to use g++ even though it knows that it's not
there. I don't know how to get g++ but here's the contents of the
log file:
# cat ./config.log
This file contains any messages produced by compilers while
running configure, to aid debugging if configure makes a mistake.
It was created by gnumeric configure 1.7.91, which was
generated by GNU Autoconf 2.61. Invocation command line was
$ ./configure
## --------- ##
## Platform. ##
## --------- ##
Major amount snipped out here.
configure: exit 1
If the goal is to install gnumeric, what's wrong with
$ sudo yum install gnumeric
I did this on Fedora Core 3, so it probably is available for you.
If the goal is to learn how to compile programs, start with something
less complicated.
carl
yum only installs up to the official stable version (1.6.3). One of
the developers of gnumeric said that they are no longer supporting
that version or the print problems in it and suggested that I move to
version 1.7.91 for which there is no rpm that I could find. 1.6.3
prints thru gnome's print system whereas 1.7.90 and later print thru
gtk+, supposedly eliminating many of the printing problems in gnumeric.
I didn't see until *after* I hit send that I could have trimmed a whole
bunch from this.
Apparently the email I sent before this last one is being held for
moderation. There appears to be a 40K limit on email size, which I
think is a good thing. But how can I determine which parts of
configure.log to leave out?
--
Ralph
--------------------
The spelling of words is subordinate. Morbidness for nice spelling and tenacity
for or against one letter or so means dandyism and impotence in literature.
--Walt Whitman
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