On Thursday 29 October 2009 00:03:36 Dale wrote:
> So this is why OOo won't compile all of a sudden. May have to put -kde
> in package.use then. See if that helps.
>
> Thanks Alan.
>
> Dale
>
> :-) :-)
>
> P. S. Should I report the failure or do they already know about this?
The bug repor
Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On Wednesday 28 October 2009 18:52:33 Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>> Alan McKinnon writes:
>>
Alan, what does it get you? In fact what does `developer' buy you?
>>> x86/10.0 gives you a baseline for that release
>>> x86/10.0/desktop|developer|server giv
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 18:52:33 Harry Putnam wrote:
> Alan McKinnon writes:
> >> Alan, what does it get you? In fact what does `developer' buy you?
> >
> > x86/10.0 gives you a baseline for that release
> > x86/10.0/desktop|developer|server give you a profile more suited
> > (tweaked) for t
Alan McKinnon writes:
>> Alan, what does it get you? In fact what does `developer' buy you?
>
> x86/10.0 gives you a baseline for that release
> x86/10.0/desktop|developer|server give you a profile more suited (tweaked)
> for
> that kind of usage.
[...]
Nice.. thanks
I see I already have mos
Jonathan Callen writes:
> Harry Putnam wrote:
>> In fact what does `developer' buy you?
>
> Among other things, it enables I_KNOW_WHAT_I_AM_DOING, which tells you
> the expected audience :). Seriously, the developer profiles are mainly
> for Gentoo Devs, people who are going to be doing a lot of
Alan McKinnon wrote:
># As much as it pains me, we hope that developers know what they're doing.
>I_KNOW_WHAT_I_AM_DOING="yes"
>
> "developer" is the union between desktop and server.
>
The developer profile is primarily intended to be used by Gentoo
developer, not for Software develop
On Tuesday 27 October 2009 05:23:25 Harry Putnam wrote:
> Alan McKinnon writes:
> >> [1] default/linux/x86/10.0 *
> >> [2] default/linux/x86/10.0/desktop
> >> [3] default/linux/x86/10.0/developer
> >> [4] default/linux/x86/10.0/server
> >> [5] hardened/linux/x86/10.0
> >> [6]
Harry Putnam wrote:
> In fact what does `developer' buy you?
Among other things, it enables I_KNOW_WHAT_I_AM_DOING, which tells you
the expected audience :). Seriously, the developer profiles are mainly
for Gentoo Devs, people who are going to be doing a lot of debugging and
testing of ebuilds.
Alan McKinnon writes:
>> [1] default/linux/x86/10.0 *
>> [2] default/linux/x86/10.0/desktop
>> [3] default/linux/x86/10.0/developer
>> [4] default/linux/x86/10.0/server
>> [5] hardened/linux/x86/10.0
>> [6] selinux/2007.0/x86
>> [7] selinux/2007.0/x86/hardened
>> [8]
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