very basic question about glib
- From: "Paul Singleton" <paul paulandjamie com>
- To: <gtk-list gnome org>
- Subject: very basic question about glib
- Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2001 21:07:56 -0700
Hello. As you'll soon see, I'm a newbie. I installed Caldera eDesktop 2.4
and I think it's really cool.
Seeking to free myself from the grips of Microsoft, I'm trying to find
Windows-equivalent tools for Linux. The first one was an ftp app. I found
gFTP.
gFTP uses gtk+ so I needed to install glib1.2.8 and gtk1.2.8. Sounded easy
enough. Seeking to learn, I avoided the rpms and went for the source. I
downloaded everything.
I extracted each of the three archives into their own folders under
home/paul/desktop and followed instructions:
glib says to go into the directory, type './configure' then 'make' then
'make install'
that was easy enough. But when I went to do the same for gtk, it said it
couldn't find a new enough version of glib!!! Well that made me upset, cause
I don't know my way around linux, and the instructions didn't work.
[by the way I've gotten past all this by using rpms but I'm none the wiser]
My question: how do i remove COMPLETELY an old version of glib (or anything
else for that matter) so that I know I don't have two or more versions of a
library on my system. For instance, I found that I could use
./configure --prefix=/usr/ and glib would be installed over the top of the
old version in /usr/lib instead of usr/local/lib. When I tried that, it
still didn't seem to work. That lead me to my question.
If I knew where to wipe out libraries and where they are being pointed to,
etc, I would feel much more comfortable. I'm quite capable in DOS and of
course Windows, so new venture is exciting but frustrating.
I thank you much for your help--- and patience.
-=Paul
=Paul
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