Joey Hess <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Chris Waters wrote: > > Actually....checking...this seems to be true, and I don't think we > > want it to be true. Every program that's found in the default path, > > yes, but I was certainly under the impression that we don't want or > > need man pages for what might be called "private binaries", > > i.e. programs not intended to be run directly -- programs that should > > usually be found in /usr/lib/whatsit.
> Well I don't know, policy paints all library function calls with the > same brush: True, but library functions are externally visible (at least if you're a programmer), while private binaries generally aren't. It may seem a little strange to argue that some binaries shouldn't have man pages while lib functions should, but that's mostly because we've been so lax about providing man pages for lib functions. I think. :-) > The point seems to be, if it's something people would reasonably > expect find a man page on, something should be done. Yes, that seems reasonable. But I'm afraid it's ambiguous. The question is, what *would* we reasonably expect to find man pages on? Do private binaries fall into that category? I'd say not, but I'm just one opinion.... cheers -- Chris Waters [EMAIL PROTECTED] | I have a truly elegant proof of the or [EMAIL PROTECTED] | above, but it is too long to fit into http://www.dsp.net/xtifr | this .signature file.