Francesco Tapparo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > The documentation is a better place for this sort of things. > >From the packaging manual: > > `Suggests' > This is used to declare that one package may be more useful with > one or more others. Using this field tells the packaging system > and the user that the listed packages are be related to this one > and can perhaps enhance its usefulness, but that installing this > one without them is perfectly reasonable. > > dselect will offer suggsted packages to the system administrator > when they select the suggesting package, but the default is not > to install the suggested package. > > My complaint is that dselect offer to install the Suggested package, hinting > to the user to install it: this strike again the Debian spirit.
Gimp is far more usefull with gif support, so if the suggest where missing, I would file a bug. Thats exactly what suggests is for. gimp works with and without gif support, but with it can write gifs. What you want is a flag in dselect to not show non-free packages, I think removing non-free from your package list will do that. I thing even that dselect doesn't show you suggests that can't be met. (which I think is bad, because you loose information, a switch for it would be better). > > is an alternative that I might use. Without a suggest one might never > > know that there is a non-free programm outthere doing the jobs one > > needs. > > Again: /usr/doc/package is the better location of information related to > thed package. Suggest is a suggestion to install something to exploit > the usefulness of some package. Nobody reads /usr/doc/package, especially not while browsing through the package list with dselect. I don't want to install 200 packages (go online, update, download, go offline, unpack, configure), read their manual in case I missed some non-free or contrib part, install another 20 packages (go online, download, go offline, ...) then another 10... and so on. Thats stupid. I want to know what I might miss at the time when I install stuff, not two years later. May the Source be with you. Goswin