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I bow to the supreme 1337-ness of KDevelop. I imported Sigma into it and it compiled cleanly, even managing to INTERPRET my handmade makefile into English summaries in the status pane.
[Pansy alert]
I am now an official Fedora Core 4 user, with KDE. I enjoy using yum as a package manager, and I think RPM (or an equivalent like .deb) is the optimal way to manage a desktop/productivity system. Dependency tracking rocks my face off, and I am waiting to install the Qt 4 development packages until an RPM is released.
[End pansy alert]
Oh yeah, and Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia. Sorry, Pat. I learned all I know from Slack, and it’s time to put the training wheels on and enjoy running Linux from day to day.
No development on Sigma yet, but lots of thinking. How will I handle containers and inventories? Too big of a question to run into without fully planning. Now that I have KDevelop, I don’t have to shuffle between three rxvt terminals and a vim window. Oh, and my Valgrind bug finder is integrated into the IDE.
When KDE moves up to version 4 (meaning Qt 4 is used as well), we should start seeing KDE applications like KDevelop being ported to Windows, since Qt 4 is finally liberated from the commercial-only license encumbrance that plagued its earlier Windows versions. Look out GTK…