On Sun, 16 Feb 2003 01:13:25 -0800 Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Sat, Feb 15, 2003 at 09:21:49PM -0800, Steve Lamb wrote: > > Alrighty. Automatic flag. :) There, ya got it. > Nope, no good. aptitude's automatic flagging is the same as apt's > default behaviour, last I checked. Which is, what? I've not really noticed a difference.
> > So we can do apt-get install or aptitude install. Difference is > > aptitude tracks what it has installed for you and when the calling > > package(s) is remove any package marked auto which no longer has > > dependencies against it is also removed. > OK, that's the only thing so far. Erm you do realize you just contradicted yourself? :) That's pretty huge in my book. The first time I saw libraries uninstalled with the package that got them installed in the first place I thought, "How freaking cool is that!" Sure keeps the cruft down. The interactive mode alone is a godsend. Sure I can try to resolve conflicts with apt-get but it is a serious PITA. I can also upgrade/downgrade with apt-get but it, too, is a PITA. Aptitude just enter interactive mode look for the package I want to up/down grade, hit v to see what versions are available and select from there. I don't need to know what version numbers there are nor which versions are associated with what tree. Dependency resolution is easier with aptitude. See something is wrong on an aptitude install run, abort it at the prompt, enter interactive, find the package I wanted to install, hit r. All requirements on that package are there. If nothing conflicts there hit d and check again. What else is nice. Oh, interactive mode again, Categorical Browser. Sometimes I know the task I want to install but not what tools are available and certainly don't want to wade through 200+ lines of apt-cache search output because they keywords I am thinking of are too vague. About the only thing I miss from apt proper is apt-cache search. Supposedly there is a way for aptitude to search names and descriptions but I have not stumbled on it yet. -- Steve C. Lamb | I'm your priest, I'm your shrink, I'm your PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | main connection to the switchboard of souls. | -- Lenny Nero - Strange Days -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
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