I can assemble a PC from the scratch (and disassemble it)
But I’m not a coder and not a programmer, though I used to create primitive databases using dBase3 language in 1990th, and I used to create some primitive websites using HTML4. But I’m not a programmer/coder, so I will appreciate very much if somebody will explain me clearly, how to USE python environments to install my script. I have read manuals, but still found nothing meaningful.
The important part is to not have any spare parts on the desk after re-assembling
Playing devil’s advocate here;
Given the age of the script, it’s also possible that even switching to Testing or Unstable will not bring much joy. I hope it does though.
It DOESN’T
I’m on Plasma 6.1.4 now, and got the same error.
The only way seems to be the using of python venv.
No - as I wrote in above comment - for your usecase on stable branch, it would be enough to sync the package qt5-tools.
I can only say what I have checked and verified is working - I even did a baremetal install of the mentioned ISO for the sake of testing where the issue is.
Branch | Plasma version | What works |
---|---|---|
stable | 6.0.5 | install qt5-tools in addition |
testing | 6.0.5 | install qt5-tools in addition |
unstable | 6.1.4 | works oob - testing on my workstation |
Switching to testing won’t do either - it provides Plasma 6.0.5 - same rule apply.
On unstable we have Plasma 6.1.4 which I tested on my workstation (edge).
What I think now is, you have fiddled so much with different approaches - that you have somehow created an xyproblem.
If you cannot make it work - that is on you - I have no idea what is going on with your system.
There’s always the suggestion from @Teo who has gone to great lengths to verify that RAMMB/CIRA SLIDER works as expected.
Time to change direction, hmm?
SLIDER is not the same. My desktop is astronomical. I usually use AstroNerd conky which tells me all about Solar activity, nearest asteroids, Moon phases… And I use some other conkies and a special weather applet. So I need a free space on desktop. The planet Earth in the middle of the screen gives me that space.