Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
One of the aims of the MATE developers is to provide a traditional user experience while using the newest technologies. In MATE 1.20, which was released in February 2018, support for HiDPI was added and the GTK version got increased to 3.22. The MATE 1.22 release migrated many programs from Python 2 to Python 3 and from dbus-glib to GDBus.
In 2013, Fedora KDE members decided to default to SDDM in Fedora 21. [7] KDE chose SDDM to be the successor of the KDE Display Manager for KDE Plasma 5. [8] [9] The LXQt developers recommend SDDM as a display manager. [10]
KDevelop 5 has parser backends for C, C++, Objective-C, OpenCL and JavaScript/QML, with plugins supporting PHP, Python 3 and Ruby. [6] Basic syntax highlighting and code folding are available for dozens of other source-code and markup formats, but without semantic analysis. KDevelop is part of the KDE project, and is based on KDE Frameworks and Qt.
Live – two Live CDs (one for GNOME and one for KDE); Fedora – a DVD that includes all the major packages available at shipping; Everything – simply an installation tree for use by yum and Internet installations. Fedora 7 featured GNOME 2.18 and KDE 3.5, a new theme entitled Flying High, OpenOffice.org 2.2 and Firefox 2.0. [26]
A KDE Patron is an individual or organization supporting the KDE community by donating at least 5000 Euro (depending on the company's size) to the KDE e.V. [29] As of February 2024, there are nine such patrons: Blue Systems, Canonical Ltd., Google, GnuPG, Kubuntu Focus, Slimbook, SUSE, The Qt Company, and TUXEDO Computers.
GUI-based wrappers such as YUM Extender (yumex) also exist, [8] and has been adopted for Fedora Linux until version 22. [9] A rewrite of YUM named DNF replaced YUM as the default package manager in Fedora 22 [9] (in 2015). This was required due to Fedora's transition from Python 2 to Python 3, which is not supported by YUM. [10]
After celebrating KDE’s 20th birthday with a re-release of K Desktop Environment 1.1.2 on 14 October 2016, [5] KDE and Fedora contributor Helio Chissini de Castro also did re-releases of Qt2 in October 2017 [6] and KDELibs 2.2.2 in December 2017.
This means, for instance, that software that was developed for KDE 3.0 will work on all (future) KDE 3 releases; however, an application developed for KDE 2 is not guaranteed to be able to make use of the KDE 3 libraries. KDE major version numbers mainly follow the Qt release cycle, meaning that KDE SC 4 is based on Qt 4, while KDE 3 was based ...