Thanks guys. The thing is though, is that I have the latest QT libraries
installed. I can't figure out why the installation is not finding them. I'm
running KDE 2.0.1, I had to upgrade the QT libraries at that time to get KDE 2
to install. Also, I get the same error whether I rpm it or install it from
source.
"Andrew A. Chen" wrote:
> > > checking for Qt... configure: error: Qt (>= 2.0) (libraries) not found.
> > > Please check your installation!
> > > Bad exit status from /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.85756 (%prep)
> >
> > It means it can't find the qt libs revision 2.0 or higher. Usually they
> >are in /usr/lib/qt2 or that is a link to them. If your only running kde1
> >then you probably only have a qt revision 1.x. There is an option to
> >.configure to tell it you have qt1.x/kde1.x. Go into the source dir
> >that rpm created for you and read the README/INSTAll file/files and
> >do a ./configure --help | more. Damn that was a long one.
>
> FYI, Slackware doesn't use RPMs by default, although 7.1 does include an
> rpm to pkg converter tool. For slackware, check /usr/doc and (if you have
> it) /usr/local/doc. It's really just easier to upgrade QT (./configure;
> sudo make all check install). Cheers
>
> -a
>
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