Hi List,
I've been using Debian Etch happily since about October 2007. It's a
great, stable environment for the development work I do.
After some testing in a virtual machine and on a couple of spare boxes,
I decided to move from Etch to Lenny. Unfortunately, I didn't pay enough
attention to the
On 2003-12-23 09:34:23 +, Clive Menzies wrote:
> I'm not sure whether this is relevant but I found Rob Weir's font guide,
> posted here a while back, very useful:
>
> http://egads.ertius.org/~rob/font_guide.txt
Thanks, I've done all what this document says, and now gimv starts in
about 5 seco
On (23/12/03 09:02), Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> On 2003-12-22 18:07:53 -0200, Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete Dutra wrote:
> > Just guessing, but probably you have both the FontPath and the font
> > server defined in /etc/X11/XF86Config(-4). Use only one.
>
> I have the following in "/etc/X11/X
On 2003-12-22 18:07:53 -0200, Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete Dutra wrote:
> Just guessing, but probably you have both the FontPath and the font
> server defined in /etc/X11/XF86Config(-4). Use only one.
I have the following in "/etc/X11/XF86Config-4":
Section "Files"
FontPath
Em Seg, 2003-12-22 Ãs 13:52, Vincent Lefevre escreveu:
> For a few weeks, starting Gnome applications such as gimv had been
> very slow. For instance, starting gimv (with no options) on my 400MHz
> G4 PowerBook takes 25 seconds! A strace suggests that it takes all
> this time by loading fonts from
For a few weeks, starting Gnome applications such as gimv had been
very slow. For instance, starting gimv (with no options) on my 400MHz
G4 PowerBook takes 25 seconds! A strace suggests that it takes all
this time by loading fonts from /usr/share/texmf/fonts (I have this
directory in /etc/fonts/loc
On Wed, Nov 20, 2002 at 01:55:46PM -0500, Stephen Gran wrote:
> As for configuring GNOME1 apps in a GNOME2 environment, it is possible,
gtk1.2 apps take their font (and theme) settings from ~/.gtkrc. I've
found it easy to modify my font settings there.
-rob
msg14368/pgp0.pgp
Description:
on Wed, Nov 20, 2002, Michael Rauch ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Karsten M. Self wrote:
> >Menu fonts for a number of applications, most of them Gnome / Gtk apps
> >(and I suspect the latter) are now larger than I'd like them to be.
> >
> >Apps affected include G
rds because i messed up the
fonts in eclipse (you could fix that, i guess, but i wasn't in the mood
to fiddle around with it)
cheers,
#!michael
Karsten M. Self wrote:
Menu fonts for a number of applications, most of them Gnome / Gtk apps
(and I suspect the latter) are now larger than I
This one time, at band camp, Karsten M. Self said:
> Menu fonts for a number of applications, most of them Gnome / Gtk apps
> (and I suspect the latter) are now larger than I'd like them to be.
>
> Apps affected include Galeon, Pan, Gabber, Mozilla, and dillo.
>
> With re
Menu fonts for a number of applications, most of them Gnome / Gtk apps
(and I suspect the latter) are now larger than I'd like them to be.
Apps affected include Galeon, Pan, Gabber, Mozilla, and dillo.
With recent upgrades, I've now got Gnome2 partially installed on this
x86 Debia
On Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 06:48:47AM +0800, csj wrote:
> I'm looking for a shell emulation program that has tabs (like the
> one you see in galeon or gedit). The one I'm presently using,
> powershell, does have tabs (which I found, thanks to apt-cache search).
> But I have some issues with it ;-)
I'm looking for a shell emulation program that has tabs (like the
one you see in galeon or gedit). The one I'm presently using,
powershell, does have tabs (which I found, thanks to apt-cache search).
But I have some issues with it ;-). Now are there any other gnome- or
gtk-based shell emulator
Hi,
I've just download the gnome and gtk-stuff from
http://www.debian.org/~jim/debian-gtk-gnome/gnome-stage-slink
/dists/unstable/main/binary-i386'
I've sucked almost every stuff from this and installed:
-gnome
-enlightenment
my personally preferency is, however,
- gnome
or
On Mon, 1 Feb 1999, Graham Ashton wrote:
> I've finally decided to bite the bullet, and install GNOME. I'm running
> hamm, without any packages from slink or potato installed.
>
> I've downloaded the .deb files for the basic gnome system from
> ftp.gnome.org, and thought I'd try and work out how
I've finally decided to bite the bullet, and install GNOME. I'm running
hamm, without any packages from slink or potato installed.
I've downloaded the .deb files for the basic gnome system from
ftp.gnome.org, and thought I'd try and work out how to install them
with dpkg.
The problem is, it's con
On Thu, 3 Sep 1998, Geoffrey L. Brimhall wrote:
>
> 1. I happened to have both 1.0.5 and 1.1.x installed on my system. This is the
> first part that really confused building with gnome because they require the
> 1.1.x now, but for some reason my /usr/lib/libgtk.so and libgtk.so.1 pointed
> to
>
I ran into the same problem, and found a solution, but it was a bit of work.
I'm hoping someone out there knows a cleaner solution.
I wasn't sure if I should email this as a bug, but here's the problem inso much
as I could figure out:
Basically there are two problems (stemming from one): It stems
On Sun, 30 Aug 1998, Phillip Neumann wrote:
>
> *** The test program failed to compile or link. See the file config.log
> for the
> *** exact error that occured.
Try doing this. If you don't understand config.log send a copy to the
list (gnome-list@gnome.org is probably a better ch
Hi,
I just install gnome on my system. And have check out on the gnome page
for some applications. I would like to use ggv (postcript veiwer). So i
dowload it and tri to compil it. ./configure said:
checking for pthread_create in -lpthread... yes
checking for gtk-config... /usr/bi
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