On Sat, Aug 05, 2006 at 09:18:39AM -0600, Joseph Smidt wrote: > I just posted a blog: blog.thedebianuser.org/?p=13, where I outline > how I feel: that working through examples using .diff files teaches how > to package better then trying to learn from documentation alone. The blog > isn't he most complete, but it outlines my basic idea.
To be honest I have to say that the webpage you point people to as being the best resource isn't very good IMHO. You already mention the New Maintainers guide and I think that does an excellent job showing you how to package something from start to finish. As a secondary comment I think your blog entries are good but they really really could benefit from some formatting changes. Having long paragraphs which are justified makes it hard to find the commands and output in the text. Even something like using "<tt>command name</tt>" would help, but more would probably be even better. > The reason I am telling to all about it is I would like to know your > opinion on what I wrote. It you feel it is a good idea, I may set up a > wiki where I upload a few simple packages with their corresponding .diff > files and show how to use the .diff file to properly build each package. > That approach may be helpful to people since it was most helpful with me. > I would just like to know what you think. Thanks. Mostly people can see the diffs if they run "apt-get source foo", as the contents are mostly uninteresting to people unless they care about the package I can't say I think it is a great idea. However taking an interesting package and explaining what the preinst/postinst/etc files are doing might be fun. Better than just saying "here is a 300 line .diff.gz file; isn't it great?" > PS. If you don't like the blog please don't rip it to pieces. I'm > honestly just trying to be helpful and make learning how to package > easier. Look at the debian-mentors list for tips/suggestions. It has an audience who are probably more in touch as "beginners"... Steve -- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]