Daniel Burrows write: > No, there definitely need to be a *lot* more categories based on what a > program is or does
I agree, but the official frontend is still dselect AFAIK, and it is not able as-is to handle deeper hierarchies in a satisfactory manner. This will probably come with modern frontends like gnome-apt. > Personally, I would like to see the "Nature" tag split between libraries, > programs, data, and documentation, the "Interface" tag split > between X, console, tty, and daemon (ie, no meaningful UI), and some more > tags: About "daemon" interface, I'd rather classify a daemon as "Nature: server; ClientInterface: whatever-if-useful". I see 2 orthogonal issues here. > -> File Formats, a listing of all file formats the program can manipulate, > possibly restricted to some common ones and catch-alls, This could be investigated using the "language/translator" model I succintly depicted in Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (same subject, same date, reply to Goswin). > -> Function, a broad categorization of the package, like the Section: tag we > have now but probably with slightly broader scope. A quick thought > suggests: admin, devel, system, utils, net, graphics, games, editors, but > I'm sure a better approach can be chosen. > -> Finally: Category, a more narrow description of the package within its > function group. For example, nethack might declare "Category: rpg", while > gnomeicu might declare "Category: icq". I'm not sure I like the distinction between Function and Category. Especially as Category is highly dependant on Category. I'd rather suggest to have Sections like games/rpg and net/icq. We can still have a skeleton hierarchy defined by policy, and allow developpers to add ther own sub-sections as they see fit. If that somewhat distributed approach fails, then we'll see and adapt it. -- Yann Dirson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | Why make M$-Bill richer & richer ? debian-email: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | Support Debian GNU/Linux: | Cheaper, more Powerful, more Stable ! http://www.altern.org/ydirson/ | Check <http://www.debian.org/>