So it really would require to store all lines received so far for the current search, and then replay the entire sequence under the new setting, after clearing the old contents. But that still would not help for opening a column, because it would not know what to put there now. It could of course read them back from the memos, delete the closed columns, and then write it back. ![]() *) Would it be important to reformat the entire memo content as soon as a column is opened or closed? This would be hard to do, because XBoard does not remember the old engine lines at all now, it just writes them in the memos. *) Would it be useful to have command-line options to decide which columns to show? If this is considered a property of the window it would make sense to even make such an option persistent, but if each engine could have its own setting, we could have options -firstColumns / -secondColumns that could be installed with engines to adapt the view to what the engine provides. *) Would it be useful to separately decide what to show in the panes for the different engines now they always show the same columns. Please let me know if it works properly I never tested it with an engine that actually supported tablebases! (I have no tablebases installed on my machine at all.) I also wonder: Well, the latest official development release now also contains that patch, so a "pre-autogenned" tar ball of it should be available from GNU Savannah. P.S.:I know I already posted almost the exact same problem more than a year ago and its solution, but this time downloading the libraries didn't work. I've already downloaded and installed the packages cairo and librsvg (the latest dev versions) but the message is still the same and I'm unable to compile xboard for that reason. configure: line 7251: syntax error near unexpected token `CAIRO,' noĬhecking whether compiler understands -Wall -Wno-parentheses. none requiredĬhecking return type of signal handlers. yesĬhecking for library containing opendir. yesĬhecking for dirent.h that defines DIR. yesĬhecking for sys/wait.h that is POSIX.1 compatible. libcĬhecking whether time.h and sys/time.h may both be included. configure: line 5430: gt_INTL_MACOSX: command not foundĬhecking where the gettext function comes from. doneĬhecking for grep that handles long lines and -e. yesĬhecking for shared library run path origin. usr/bin/ldĬhecking if the linker (/usr/bin/ld) is GNU ld. x86_64-unknown-linux-gnuĬhecking for ld used by GCC. x86_64-unknown-linux-gnuĬhecking host system type. usr/bin/msgmergeĬhecking build system type. gcc -EĬhecking for library containing strerror. yesĬhecking how to run the C preprocessor. GNUĬhecking whether gcc and cc understand -c and -o together. none neededĬhecking for style of include used by make. yesĬhecking for gcc option to accept ISO C89. ![]() noĬhecking whether we are using the GNU C compiler. ![]() a.outĬhecking whether we are cross compiling. yesĬhecking for C compiler default output file name. (cached) yesĬhecking whether the C compiler works. yesĬhecking whether make supports nested variables. bin/mkdir -pĬhecking whether make sets $(MAKE). usr/bin/install -cĬhecking whether build environment is sane. , here's the output: Code: Select all checking for a BSD-compatible install. Here's the command I type: Code: Select all. I'm having troubles compiling xboard (the latest dev version).
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