<table><tr><td style="">rjvbb added a comment.
</td><a style="text-decoration: none; padding: 4px 8px; margin: 0 8px 8px; float: right; color: #464C5C; font-weight: bold; border-radius: 3px; background-color: #F7F7F9; background-image: linear-gradient(to bottom,#fff,#f1f0f1); display: inline-block; border: 1px solid rgba(71,87,120,.2);" href="https://phabricator.kde.org/D14397">View Revision</a></tr></table><br /><div><div><blockquote style="border-left: 3px solid #a7b5bf; color: #464c5c; font-style: italic; margin: 4px 0 12px 0; padding: 4px 12px; background-color: #f8f9fc;"><div class="remarkup-code-block" style="margin: 12px 0;" data-code-lang="text" data-sigil="remarkup-code-block"><pre class="remarkup-code" style="font: 11px/15px "Menlo", "Consolas", "Monaco", monospace; padding: 12px; margin: 0; background: rgba(71, 87, 120, 0.08);">I don't really care about your artificially created problems. You *have* libcanberra but want to use it for one project and not the other. Sorry, but no.</pre></div></blockquote>
<p>Oh, and do you have to show ignorance? This is a very common problem in software packaging, part of what allows your distribution to warn you something you're trying to uninstall is a dependency for something you might want to keep installed.</p>
<p>As I said, yes, there is a CMake mechanism to disable specific <tt style="background: #ebebeb; font-size: 13px;">find_package</tt> calls but it's rather confidential, ugly and useless with custom findfoo.cmake implementations that bypass find_package.</p></div></div><br /><div><strong>REPOSITORY</strong><div><div>R289 KNotifications</div></div></div><br /><div><strong>REVISION DETAIL</strong><div><a href="https://phabricator.kde.org/D14397">https://phabricator.kde.org/D14397</a></div></div><br /><div><strong>To: </strong>broulik, Frameworks, dfaure, davidedmundson, sitter, drosca, kfunk, rjvbb<br /><strong>Cc: </strong>alexeymin, ngraham, nicolasfella, kde-frameworks-devel, michaelh, bruns<br /></div>