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Re: The myth of aptitude simplicity



On Sat, 2003-02-15 at 22:05, Paul Johnson wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 15, 2003 at 02:29:39PM -0800, Brian Nelson wrote:
> > I think you'd be much better off forgoing apt-get and using an
> > interactive package tool instead such as aptitude.  Proper use of such a
> > tool will make it much easier to keep your package system in stable
> > state.
> 
> Why does everybody keep saying this when it's false?  Aptitude and
> apt-get are getting thier information from the same place and making
> the same decisions.  Both tell you quite specifically what is going on
> before it asks you to commit to it.  Nobody has yet demonstrated on
> the list anything that you can do in aptitude easier or faster than
> you can with some combination of apt-file, apt-cache and apt-get.
> 
> "But aptitude's a front end to apt!"  No, apt is a front end to dpkg,
> and aptitude is a replacement to dselect when using apt as a source.

Personally, I generally stick to apt-get and apt-cache for most of my
maintenance work. But I'll never give up dselect. Aptitude makes no
sense to me whatsoever. dselect just makes everything really simple.
Though, from what I understand, I'm more likely to get odd, unbelieving,
cross-eyed glances than "Me too's!" for that. :)

But for just installing or finding a single package, I really don't see
the point in starting up any frontend when I can just do "apt-cache
search searchstring" & "apt-get install package".

On a completely unrelated note, Baloo, I don't know if this is your
doing or Evolution's, but your signature was automatically taken out
when I hit reply. The only thing that was shown was the message. If it
was your doing, how do you do it? :)

-Alex

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