In my experience libgimp2.0-dev which installs gimptool-2.0 is a separate call and comes with a whole load of dependencies (from gcc to you-name-it).
@estatics
It might help if you update us on actual Gimp and Debian versions. For example ChromeBook users often install a version of Debian.
If your Gimp 2.10 comes with python then use Ofnuts method, if not then:
BIMP compiles reasonably easily but attached one that might work (it is the one I compiled sometime...)
Unzip and put in your Gimp 2.10 plugins folder. ~/.config/GIMP/2.10/plug-ins/ It might not work, it has dependencies, libexiv2 sometimes needs installing.
If you need a version of Gimp 2.10.38 that includes most libs then try the Gimp2.10.38 appimage from
https://github.com/ivan-hc/GIMP-appimage...ous-hybrid
As an example, a Debian 12 (which comes with Gimp 3.0) and Gimp 2.10 appimage +BIMP (hate YT these days so on my storage)
https://u.pcloud.link/publink/show?code=...ShLuXuEgYX
@estatics
It might help if you update us on actual Gimp and Debian versions. For example ChromeBook users often install a version of Debian.
If your Gimp 2.10 comes with python then use Ofnuts method, if not then:
BIMP compiles reasonably easily but attached one that might work (it is the one I compiled sometime...)
Unzip and put in your Gimp 2.10 plugins folder. ~/.config/GIMP/2.10/plug-ins/ It might not work, it has dependencies, libexiv2 sometimes needs installing.
If you need a version of Gimp 2.10.38 that includes most libs then try the Gimp2.10.38 appimage from
https://github.com/ivan-hc/GIMP-appimage...ous-hybrid
As an example, a Debian 12 (which comes with Gimp 3.0) and Gimp 2.10 appimage +BIMP (hate YT these days so on my storage)
https://u.pcloud.link/publink/show?code=...ShLuXuEgYX