Chris, Thanks for your reply. I understand the realistic restrictions that a developer faces when packaging applications. It really doesn't bother me that I'm incapable of removing one out of all of them while leaving the rest alone. I always simply remove all of them anyway. I was pointing out a more fundamental problem (from my perspective), where because of these realistic restrictions imposed by our technological limitations, I end up with a situation where my computer tells me that if I remove one program, I need to remove this huge (Comparatively) list of programs.
If Ubuntu said "Ok Boss" and *pretended* to remove one specific program from a package for me, through the single "add or remove programs to your system" interface of add/remove, that would be... better, but not really the best solution due to the inherent dishonesty. Is there just no way for a package maintaner to not have extra work piled on their already hefty load while at the same time we allow a user of Ubuntu to remove most traces of a program in a package with multiple programs without having to also remove the rest of them? Is it worth doing even if its possible? I think I'm in a somewhat unique position of having extreme distaste whenever my system tells me I can't do something in a counter intuitive way. It telling me it can't make my chair float on an anti-gravity sled is fine... it telling me that if I don't want one program of a package, I'm not allowed to have any of them in the package... thats not so great. -Mike On Mon, Mar 23, 2009 at 8:35 AM, Chris Coulson <chrisccoul...@googlemail.com > wrote: > 2009/3/23 Mike Jones <eternal...@gmail.com> > >> Right. My intention was to say "Why in the world do I have this >> restriction on what I can and cannot have on my system?" >> >> Overall it doesn't really matter in the grand scheme of things, but in >> this specific case, it bothers me that I'm incapable of completely removing >> freecell while leaving the other gnome-desktop default games as they are. >> >> -Mike > > > Mike, > > The package manager only allows you to manage individulal packages. The > Freecell source code is shipped in the same tarball as the other default > Gnome games, and they are all subsequently packaged in to one binary deb > package. This is why you can't remove individual games from your system. > Whilst it may be technically possible to split the games in to multiple > binary deb packages (allowing you to remove individual games), this would > significantly increase the effort required for a developer to maintain this > package, all for minimum to zero gain. > > Regards > Chris >
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