On Sun, 1 Aug 2004 15:31:16 -0400
Joey Hess <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Keith O'Connell wrote:
> >     Where can I find out what files comprised;
> > 
> >             lsb
> 
> The lsb package.
> 
> >             unix server
> 
> Too ill-defined to really be useful, but FWIW, it comprised these
> packages:
> 
>  ssh
>  telnetd
>  talk
>  talkd
>  ytalk
>  finger
>  fingerd
>  ftpd
>  zsh
>  tcsh
>  pdksh
>  screen
>  telnet
>  netcat
>  traceroute
>  mtr
>  man-db
>  manpages
>  emacs21
>  vim
>  nethack-console
>  bsdgames
>  w3m
>  sudo
> 
> >             c and c++
> 
> I suspect that most of us doing development in C should have no trouble
> installing individual packages as the need arrises. FWIW, the list was this:
> 
>  gcc
>  cpp
>  g++
>  make
>  binutils
>  flex
>  bison
>  gettext
>  glibc-doc
>  manpages-dev
>  stl-manual
>  autoconf
>  automake1.7
>  autoproject
>  libtool
>  indent
>  cutils
>  liwc
>  cflow
>  patch
>  cvs
>  strace
>  ltrace
>  gdb
>  nowebm
>  c2man
>  cxref
>  subversion
> 
> >             python
> 
> The content of this package was essentially random and useless. Install
> python, python-doc, python-dev and add whatever pyton modules you like to work
> with and you'll do much better.
> 
> >             java
> 
> Again I suspect a java developer would rather pick his own tools, but:
> 
>  gcj
>  java-common
>  java2html
>  libservlet2.2-java
>  kaffe
>  vide
>  motor

Thank you - I am happy now

Keith
-- 
_________________________________________
  Keith O'Connell.
  Maidstone, Kent. (UK)
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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