On 12 Mar, 2008, at 12:07, Olga Lyashevskaya wrote:
Have you upgraded to Leopard recently? If so, did you install the new version of Xcode? This kind of error often appears when people try to use Tiger's Xcode on Leopard.
It is a new iMac, and it came with Leopard on it, so I presume that Xcode must be ok. How can I check it?
How can I install things with MacPorts? Sorry for my ignorance, I am not very experienced with Mac. So far I worked mostly on Linux, and now by using MacPorts I just want to be able to use programs which are originally developed for Linux (like dia in this case)
If it's brand new, it probably doesn't have Xcode (most Mac users don't have a need for a compiler and development environment, but MacPorts does). You'll need to install Xcode 3.0, either from the CDs that came with the computer, or [Apple's developer site][1]. [1] http://developer.apple.com/tools/download/ Regards, Chris