El Miércoles, 11 de Marzo de 2009, David escribió: > Maybe I am wrong, but it is the safest way, and it costs only a couple of > hours, so it's worth try it to avoid possible problems :) And do you recompile everything in your system each time you upgrade GCC or libc? Or do you light a candle and pray to $DEITY to make your computer boot faster? Seriously. This is a complex issue, but it's engineering and science. You do _not_ need to recompile KDE because you upgraded to Qt 4.5 because it's binary compatible with Qt 4.4. If you didn't knew, then it's OK. If you knew but experienced bugs in the past, well, I think that you should report this bugs, because it's a serious issue that should be fixed, not hidden. I doubt that this happened often in the past, though, because you simply don't have the chance of recompiling Google Earth, VirtualBox, Opera, or any other proprietary application that uses Qt and that comes without the source code, so is a major release blocker. -- Alex (a.k.a. suy) | GPG ID 0x0B8B0BC2 http://barnacity.net/ | http://disperso.net ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.