[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Joseph Carter) wrote: >Not even. pico CANNOT be packaged for Debian! The best that can be done >is offer the source and let you build it yourself. If you do that, pico >will provide the editor alternative. If you want it to be the default >system editor, anybody else using your system will want to hurt you, but >being your system you are of course free to raise its priority with ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >update-alternatives and make it the system default. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Of course, you're free to do this, but I think it's the wrong way to go about it. AIUI, the right way to set the default editor on your system, if you don't want the one update-alternatives chooses automatically, is -not- to muck about with priorities, but simply to *** go to /etc/alternatives and change the "editor" symlink. *** That's the way update-alternatives was designed to operate (as far as I know, and I did spend a fair bit of time trawling through the source in enough detail to write the man page for it, so I think I'm right). If you use update-alternatives to fiddle with the priority, you may find that the default gets reset when you next upgrade. (Some alternatives-using packages try to guard against this, but it's risky to rely on it.) The proper way is just to change the symlink. When update-alternatives next runs on that group of alternatives, it'll notice what you did, and switch that alteratives group to "manual mode", so your changes are not lost. HTH, -- Charles Briscoe-Smith My web page: <URL:http://www.debian.org/%7Ecpbs/> PGP public keyprint: 74 68 AB 2E 1C 60 22 94 B8 21 2D 01 DE 66 13 E2