[PyKDE] PyQt - undefined symbol

Erik Dahlgren ebdahlgr at unity.ncsu.edu
Sat Apr 19 20:27:01 BST 2003


When I run nm on the python executable it says it does not contain any 
symbols. 

Yeah, ncsu is in Raleigh. It does get quite hot and humid here in the summer. 
I am probably moving up to new england soon though.

I will compile python from scratch and see if it works.

Erik

On Saturday 19 April 2003 11:56 am, Jim Bublitz wrote:
> On 19-Apr-03 Erik Dahlgren wrote:
> > Both my python and qt versions are from RH9. When running nm on
> > libqtcmodule.so I get
> >
> >          U PyUnicode_Type
> >          U PyUnicodeUCS2_FromUnicode
> > 002e3190 t _Z18QStringToPyUnicodeP7QString
> >
> > In libpython2.2.a there is 'U PyUnicodeUCS2_FromUnicode' so they
> > seem to agree. There are no symbols in my libqt-mt.so in my qt
> > lib dir. There is no  such file in the site-packages dir.
> >
> > I guess it is time for that goat then...
>
> It should be a young goat, but I don't believe it has to be a
> virgin ...
>
> I just got up and both my wife and the pickup are gone, which means
> either that she's left me because I spend too much time on PyKDE or
> else she's gone to the lumberyard and I'm going to spend the rest
> of the day building a frame for the solar heater for the swimming
> pool. Suffice it to say there's no way I'm getting out of that. At
> least she'll do the plumbing.
>
> I'm out of possibilities at the moment and may have been on the
> wrong track (or else there's another lib involved somewhere I don't
> know about). The only other thing I can think of is for me to get
> RH9 installed and see what happens, but that's going to take a few
> days.
>
> Is 'ncsu' the place in Raleigh, NC? I spent a week there one summer.
> It's a beautiful campus, but I think the 's' stands for 'sweat',
> doesn't it? It sure was hot and humid.
>
>
> Stay tuned and I'll see what I can figure out; let me know if you
> find a fix.
>
>
> Jim

-- 
Erik Dahlgren
ebdahlgr at unity.ncsu.edu

"Programming today is a race between software engineers 
striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, 
and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. 
So far, the Universe is winning."




More information about the PyQt mailing list