Here is the answer to your question; what does a $ ls /usr/include/glib-2.0 command show? Having glib installed on your system does not necessarily mean that you have all includes and static libraries; for example - on a Debian system - you have to: # apt-get install libglib-2.0 in order to have glib-2.0 runtimes (i.e. .so files) and # apt-get install libglib-2.0-dev in order to have all development sources (.h, .a and .la).
That raises an interesting question - in which of those Debian packages is the pck-config stuff? My first guess would be the -dev and to hope that it wasn't in the runtime.
rick jones _______________________________________________ gtk-list@xxxxxxxxx http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list