On Fri, 01 Aug 2003 10:12:00 -0400, David Z Maze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> You may like aptitude; it has a similar (though more familiar to me)
> user interface to dselect,
I use the following as ~/.aptitude/config, which gives me
pretty much the look and feel of dselect with aptitude
"DePriest, Jason R." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The /etc/apt/apt.conf files is extremely customizable. See 'man
> apt.conf' for all the details.
>
> The biggest problem I have with dselect over apt-get: it is easier to
> pick which version of a particular package I want to install when
> multip
--Original Message-
From: R Ransbottom [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 3:50 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: dselect apt-get coordination
How do you coordinate apt-get and dselect
so that they "want" the same packages?
If I understand the apt-get man page
runn
On Thu, 31 Jul 2003, R Ransbottom wrote:
> How do you coordinate apt-get and dselect
> so that they "want" the same packages?
>
> If I understand the apt-get man page
> running "apt-get dselect-upgrade" will
> set up the system per the setting last
> made using dselect. Correct?
yes
> How do yo
How do you coordinate apt-get and dselect
so that they "want" the same packages?
If I understand the apt-get man page
running "apt-get dselect-upgrade" will
set up the system per the setting last
made using dselect. Correct?
How do you the inverse? That is how
do you alter the dselect database
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