Hi, > > You'll be happy to know that I managed to get a working version of > > Scribus running under OSX tonight. If folks want detailed instructions > > and don't mind a lot of leg work, please let me know. > > Yes, of course!
I compiled from source gcc 3.3 (the version shipped with OSX is 3.1 - this is incorrect, it is actually 3.1pre which had a fair few issues [it was broken!]) followed by Qt. Doesn't sound like much, but when you're not used to a Mac, it is! I ran make -f Makefile.dist, followed by ./configure. I needed to tell the configure script where I had placed Qt's bits and pieces then made the project. I did not do a make install as it was not my machine. In total on a G4, it took a shade over 6 hours to get it up and running. When running, Scribus behaved well. Unfortunately, there must have been something different about X11 under MacOSX, but it looked awful (chunky graphics etc). However, it *did* work. That's another platform it has been compiled up onto :-) Next up, the ZX-Spectrum port ;-p [1] TTFN Paul [1] For non-UK people on here, the ZX-Spectrum was a home micro which was made between 1982 and 1986 by Sinclair Products before Amstrad took it over. The final run was in 1989. It was a very small machine (48K or 128K models available) running on a Zilog 80A processor. It was called the Timex 200 in the USA -- The world is throwing away oppressive regimes Which don't allow people to choose. Wars are fought to topple these people. Yet the folks who do this, still use Windows. Double standards or not understanding why they did it?
