On 06/21/2017 01:14 PM, Mike Wright wrote:
On 06/21/2017 01:05 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
You're running a graphical application, why do you care what it writes
to the terminal?
Because 90% of my work is CLI. Sometimes I like music, sometimes I have
to do some image manipulation, sometimes I li
On 06/21/2017 01:05 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 06/21/2017 10:53 AM, Mike Wright wrote:
Redirecting to /dev/null doesn't shut them up for me.
Speculating here, but it seems unlikely that GTK is designed for
unsilenceable spewage and is more likely an unwanted gift from the
programmer.
I ended
On 06/21/2017 10:53 AM, Mike Wright wrote:
Redirecting to /dev/null doesn't shut them up for me.
Speculating here, but it seems unlikely that GTK is designed for
unsilenceable spewage and is more likely an unwanted gift from the
programmer.
I ended up creating a script, "run", that "exec"s a
On 06/21/2017 05:19 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
On Wed, 21 Jun 2017 12:26:50 +0200
François Patte wrote:
What do they mean and how to get rid of them?
Every time I launch any GTK based tool I get near unlimited warnings
like that. GTK just loves to spew meaningless messages. If the tool
is working
On Wed, 21 Jun 2017 12:26:50 +0200
François Patte wrote:
> What do they mean and how to get rid of them?
Every time I launch any GTK based tool I get near unlimited warnings
like that. GTK just loves to spew meaningless messages. If the tool
is working for you, just ignore them. If it breaks some
Bonjour,
Every time I launch evince, I get this gtk warning:
(evince:3823): Gtk-WARNING **: Allocating size to EvSidebar
0x562ac0fa7520 without calling gtk_widget_get_preferred_width/height().
How does the code know the size to allocate?
and for emacs, this one:
(emacs:4011): Gtk-WARNING
plications -> Graphics -> Gsview
but it fails with the "Gtk-WARNING **: cannot open display" message if
I try to start it from a terminal command line:
gsview something.pdf &
Is this a bug in Gsview?
If I try to open Adobe Reader from the Applications menu
on workspace 2:
Applicat