I think the only options are upgrading all ports that use libintl.so.4
(recomended)
or (for now) ln -s /usr/local/lib/libintl.so /usr/local/lib/libintl.so.4
(not recomended but works for me(tm)
-Original Message-
From: Eric F Crist [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 01 October 2003
You know,
I've also been running into problems. Ever since upgrading
gettext to 0.12.1 from 0.11.5 I'm getting all sorts of
issues when it comes to installing certain things(such as
gnome and kde and the like). Do you happen to know of a
way to downgrade? seems like it will be hard since so
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Thanks, that worked... I've done that before, but I was trying to avoid it.
That was the solution I was getting from a google search, but was wondering
if there was a 'correct' way to do it. FI for now. I'll just update
everything else as I go along.
On Wed, Oct 01, 2003 at 01:49:44PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You know,
I've also been running into problems. Ever since upgrading
gettext to 0.12.1 from 0.11.5 I'm getting all sorts of
issues when it comes to installing certain things(such as
gnome and kde and the like). Do you
On Wed, Oct 01, 2003 at 01:49:44PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've also been running into problems. Ever since upgrading
gettext to 0.12.1 from 0.11.5 I'm getting all sorts of
issues when it comes to installing certain things(such as
gnome and kde and the like). Do you happen to know
At 2003-10-01T18:43:39Z, Matthew Seaman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Ideally that should occur only when there is an incompatible change to the
ABI (application binary interface) provided by the library, and not as
some sort of parallel to the package version number.
It was my understanding that
On Wed, Oct 01, 2003 at 02:38:48PM -0500, Kirk Strauser wrote:
At 2003-10-01T18:43:39Z, Matthew Seaman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Ideally that should occur only when there is an incompatible change to the
ABI (application binary interface) provided by the library, and not as
some sort of