On Sun, Feb 28, 1999 at 02:33:31PM +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I downloaded pklin251.exe, to be able to work with .zip files.
> I moved pklin251.exe to /usr/local and, according to pkware's site:
> # chmod 755 pklin251.exe
> # ./pklin251.exe
> 
> result:
> # can't load library libg++.so.27
> 
> eventhough:
> 
> $ dpkg -L libg++272
> /.
> /usr
> /usr/lib
> /usr/lib/libg++.so.2.7.2.8
> /usr/lib/libg++.so.2.7.2
> /usr/lib/libg++.so.272
> /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.2.7.2.8
> /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.2.7.2
> /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.272
> /usr/doc
> /usr/doc/libg++272
> /usr/doc/libg++272/copyright
> /usr/doc/libg++272/changelog.Debian.gz
> /usr/doc/libg++272/ChangeLog.config.gz
> /usr/doc/libg++272/ChangeLog.libg++.gz
> /usr/doc/libg++272/ChangeLog.include.gz
> /usr/doc/libg++272/ChangeLog.libio.gz
> /usr/doc/libg++272/ChangeLog.libiberty.gz
> /usr/doc/libg++272/ChangeLog.librx.gz
> /usr/doc/libg++272/ChangeLog.libstdc++.gz
> 
> any ideas?
> 
> TIA
> 
> 
> -- 
> Unsubscribe?  mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null
> 
Two ideas:
1. Run 'ldd pklin251.exe'. This should tell you what libraries pklin251.exe is 
using and where they are.
2. Just use the zip and unzip packages provided by Debian. They are based on 
InfoZIP, and I've never
had any trouble opening files created with WinZip or PKZip with them.
-- 
Stephen Pitts
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
webmaster - http://www.mschess.org

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