er, you can uninstall with /opt/qtsdk-2010.02/bin/uninstall On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 4:24 PM, Elfen <[email protected]> wrote:
> hmmm... And now I have to figure out how to uninstall /opt/qtsdk-2010.02/ > ... > > > On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 4:22 PM, Elfen <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > If you use the qt creator which comes with suse this is no problem. >> >> okay, but Qt Creator 1.2 is really old? I wonder how long until the >> openSUSE repo has Qt Creator 2.0? Plus, if I'm doing cross-platform >> development... Isn't it best to have Qt Creator 1.3 on all platforms? (And >> Qt Creator 2.0 when it's released). >> >> >> >> > You probably need to tell Qt Creator about your new Qt installation >> (Tools->Options->Qt4->Versions). It is a known issue in 1.3, that the >> installer writes the initial Qt Creator settings *for the root user* if you >> install as root. So, if you'd start Qt Creator as root user, it would >> already know about the new Qt version in /opt, but if you start as any other >> user, it doesn't and you have to tell it manually. >> >> You mean /opt/qtsdk-2010.02/qt/bin/qmake ? Yes this worked. However, >> when I open a project, now it says I have to copy the project to a writable >> location, to edit or compile the sample project. >> >> So, overall, I guess I generally understand the difference... >> /opt/qtsdk-2010.02/ is read-only and meant for the system,. While >> /home/user/[my user name]/qtsdk-2010.02/ is writable and meant only for my >> user. However, I still don't know which is the "right" / "best" / "ideal" >> choice. Sounds like the default of ( /user/[my user name]/qtsdk-2010.02/ ) >> is easier... unless I missed something? >> >> >> thank you for info >> >> >> 2010/5/3 Thorbjørn Lindeijer <[email protected]> >> >> On 04/30/2010 10:04 AM, ext Alex Richardson wrote: >>> >> I wonder if Qt Creator should make /opt/qt-sdk-2010.02 the default >>> install >>> >> path (instead of /home/[user name]/qt-sdk-2010.02), since that's the >>> >> official FHS standard. >>> > >>> > The problem is that a normal user usually does not have write >>> permission to /opt/, so installing to >>> > the home directory is safer. >>> >>> Exactly. Also, when you run the installer as root, it already defaults >>> to installing in /opt. >>> >>> That you don't get a GUI installer when running with sudo is strange. At >>> least on Ubuntu this works fine for me. >>> >>> Regards, >>> Bjørn >>> >>> -- >>> Thorbjørn Lindeijer >>> Software Engineer >>> Nokia, Qt Development Frameworks >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Qt-creator mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> http://lists.trolltech.com/mailman/listinfo/qt-creator >>> >> >> >
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