On Mon, Nov 05, 2001 at 09:48:49PM -0700, David Bishop wrote: > On Monday 05 November 2001 09:36 pm, Josh Hansen wrote: > > In any configure script that checks for Qt, I get this error message: > > > > "checking for Qt... configure: error: Qt (>= Qt 2.2.1) (libraries) not > > found. Please check your installation! > > For more details about this problem, look at the end of config.log." > > > > Of course one would think that means Qt isn't installed, but alas, I'm > > running KDE which uses Qt so that isn't so. > > Maybe the header files just aren't there? Well, I have the libqt-dev > > package too. Hmmm... what else could it be? Maybe I need to simply > > reinstall the libqt2 package? Nope, tried that. Golly gee willikers > > nothing's working! > > > > Ok, I'm done with my sarcastic rundown of already-tried options. Any idea > > why my system just doesn't seem to realize that it has Qt 2.3.1 installed? > > This is preventing me from compiling a number of programs and from starting > > a new project of my own. :-( > > > > Well, I'll survive. Thank you for any suggestions - maybe I've stumbled on > > some previously unexpected contingency that needs to be dealt with. Thanks! > > > > - Josh > > When compiling, you will have to pass --with-extra-libs=/usr/lib/kde2 > --with-extra-includes=/usr/include/kde. Otherwise, it won't work.
the -extra-libs isn't necessary..only modules go into that dir... what you need to make sure is this: 1: you have libqt-dev installed 2: you use --with-qt-includes=/usr/include/qt (or force it to look there) Ivan -- ---------------- Ivan E. Moore II [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://snowcrash.tdyc.com GPG KeyID=90BCE0DD GPG Fingerprint=F2FC 69FD 0DA0 4FB8 225E 27B6 7645 8141 90BC E0DD