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Bug 303688 - Gimp crashes on startup
Gimp crashes on startup
Status: RESOLVED DUPLICATE of bug 301139
Product: GIMP
Classification: Other
Component: General
2.2.x
Other Windows
: Normal critical
: ---
Assigned To: GIMP Bugs
GIMP Bugs
Depends on:
Blocks:
 
 
Reported: 2005-05-10 16:03 UTC by Larry
Modified: 2008-01-15 12:53 UTC
See Also:
GNOME target: ---
GNOME version: ---



Description Larry 2005-05-10 16:03:23 UTC
Try starting the program. I have Win. XP service pack 2, GTK 2.6.7. I just
installed Gimp 2.2.7. and it crashes on startup. All I get is an error message.

the error message is as follows

Pango-ERROR**:file shape.C line 75 (Pango_shape): assertation
failed:(glyphs->num_glyphs>0) aborting
Comment 1 weskaggs 2005-05-10 18:51:49 UTC
This has been reported many times already.  See comment #9 of bug #301139 for a
workaround.

*** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of 301139 ***
Comment 2 Larry 2005-05-11 03:24:34 UTC
I see what comment 9 says, but how can I change the theme from "default" to
"small" if the program won't even start? This workaround seems to ingore the
fact the the program won't even start, it crashes instantly.
Comment 3 weskaggs 2005-05-11 16:50:28 UTC
Good question.  (This bug has been reported so many times, with slight
variations, that the response has become more or less automated.)  There are a
couple of things you could try.  First, if you have an existing .gimp-2.2 folder
somewhere, something inside it may be causing the problem, so you could try
deleting or renaming it.  Second, because a file name somewhere may be causing
the problem, you could try starting GIMP from a console window, and altering the
directory you are in when you start it.  Since we don't really understand the
root cause of this problem, there are no guarantees that either of these will
work, of course.
Comment 4 Larry 2005-05-12 03:48:18 UTC
I've solved my problem with this, so I'm going to tell you what I did. I'm not
sure if the problem was installing the GTK without uninstalling the previous
version, or installing the Gimp without uninstalling the previous version, but
one of the two must have been the main problem.
Uninstall both the GTK and Gimp programs and reinstall them fresh. That fixed
the problem for me. If you get an error message that says Windows can't
uninstall either one because an uninstaller file is missing, manually delete the
main program files. I had to do this with GTK, as an uninstaller file was
missing from GTK 2.6.4, and 2.6.7 wouldn't even install.
Uninstall them both and try a fresh install. 
In fact, maybe this should be must, and mentioned as necessary directions somewhere.
Comment 5 Michael Schumacher 2005-05-12 08:03:14 UTC
This would indicate that your GTK+ installation was messed up somehow, but I
doubt that it will be possible to determine how exactly.

Normally, newer GTK+ installers automatically remove older ones.