Hi everybody, Sorry if my question is outdated or off-topic (or both), I'm not sure where to ask this...
A while ago I read a thread on dot.kde.org (http://dot.kde.org/971098890/971103495/971105912/971161255), stating that in order to obtain good performance with KDE2 one had to compile qt with the option -fno-exception added to the CXXFLAGS. And then there was someone stating that this would essentially disable error handling - maybe not a good idea. Do KDE2 applications or libraries use exceptions? I didn't find an answer to this on the various mailing lists and was wondering how Ivan's Potato packages were built. If they are built without -fno-exceptions, should I consider recompiling my own, given the "huge performance boost" people were talking about? What do I risk? The thread I cited is _old_ (before KDE2.0 final). Maybe all of this isn't an issue anymore? Anybody point me to a place where this has been discussed in more detail? BTW, a big "Thank you!" to Ivan for his tremendous work! Cheers, Jan

