Le 12.10.2013 10:58, Marko Randjelovic a écrit :
"One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them, One Ring to bring
them all and in the darkness bind them In the Land of Mordor where
the
Shadows lie." :)
apt-get install gnome-applets gnome-screenshot gnome-session
gnome-panel gnome-terminal gedit gdm3 file-roller gnome-icon-theme
As I said, I am no longer a DE user, but before leaving the wonderful
world of automatically installed DE through one package, I was using
XFCE, and at a moment I noticed that I never used some applications, so
I found a way to remove them: do not installing meta-package(1) was the
solution.
But it does not change that a meta-package have a strange dependency.
More important, it is the gnome package. The one which is automatically
installed by a default installation of Debian. Here, anew, I am not
directly concerned, since I build my Debian from only the strict minimum
number of packages(2)...
Notes:
1: In fact, I think that meta-packages should only have recommendations
and suggestions, since they are automatically installed by a default
Debian configuration. This would not change the default behavior, while
it would provide tinkerers more freedom and flexibility. After all, by
not being real softwares or features, they should not be able to have
hard dependencies, because there is no *technical reality* behind that.
Only political choices, and I do not think that a package management
should take care of the politic side of things. This should be the
admin's problem ( <joke>I did not said sysadmin ;)</joke> ).
2: plus some packages which are not vital at all, like cron, which I
usually remove. I do not think it should be installed when you choose to
have the strict minimum system. But this is a minor issue which is not
the one I want to discuss here.
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