>>>>> "Neil" == Neil Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Neil> The only bug suitable for this scenario is a wishlist bug Neil> for a more verbose manpage. I want to know if I should install the package recommendations or not when I install the package. Unfortunately you cannot see the man pages until after the package is installed. Also aptitude will by default install all recommendations. Sometimes recommendations include packages that appear to be excessive. Do I really need to install the kernel source to get this package working? Maybe not (sorry can't remember the package that did this now). Other times the recommendations will conflict with other things I have installed. I want to know at the time of installing a new kernel, in aptitude, for example, if and why I should allow aptitude to continue its favoured approach to install the recommended libc6-i686 and remove the conflicting libc6-xen package. Anybody who knows xen would also know that I should keep libc6-xen, but there are lots of cases when I am just trying out a new package for the first time and I don't yet know what features I will need or not need. This in turn can result in errors when experimenting with new packages where it is not immediately obvious it is due to a package that is not installed that perhaps should be. -- Brian May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]