After quickly checking the app launcher that is used by the SDK IDE it turns out that we have to uninstall the application if it is already installed. This workaround was required to support scopes.
Since there is no other way to make sure a scope is stopped , so that the next query would use the newly
installed binary, it was the only possibility to make it work.
So I would suggest that either the reinstall of a scope should make sure the currently installed scope
is properly reset, or alternatively provide a DBUS callback to "stop" a scope.
After quickly checking the app launcher that is used by the SDK IDE it turns out that we have to uninstall the application if it is already installed. This workaround was required to support scopes.
Since there is no other way to make sure a scope is stopped , so that the next query would use the newly
installed binary, it was the only possibility to make it work.
So I would suggest that either the reinstall of a scope should make sure the currently installed scope
is properly reset, or alternatively provide a DBUS callback to "stop" a scope.