On Sat, 9 Jun 2007, Clint Adams wrote:
On Fri, Jun 08, 2007 at 07:41:26PM +0100, Reuben Thomas wrote:
When I finish reconfiguring ("dpkg-reconfigure tzdata") I get the
message:
Current default timezone: 'Europe/London'
Local time is now: Fri Jun 8 19:38:58 BST 2007.
Universal Time is now: Fri Jun 8 18:38:58 UTC 2007.
Run 'dpkg-reconfigure tzdata' if you wish to change it.
which implies I still haven't reconfigured the time zone (when in fact
I have). The last line should not be printed by "dpkg-reconfigure
tzdata".
How does it imply that?
Because
a) nothing in the message explicitly tells me the time zone has changed (it
prints the new default time zone, but I have to know what the old time zone
was in order to know that I have now changed it; maybe I mis-remembered? or
re-selected the same time zone by mistake?), and
b) the fact that it's telling me how to change the time zone suggests to me
that I haven't in fact just changed it by running the exact same command,
because if I had then clearly I already know how to change it, so I'm left
to wonder whether the command did anything, whether I typed the right
command, or have the right privileges to run it.
In general, if I run the command 'do-foo' then I am reassured by a message
like "Foo done", or indeed no message at all (because of the UNIX convention
that no news is good news), but I am inclined to suspect something is wrong
if the output is "To do foo, run 'do-foo'", because I'm left wondering why
I'm apparently being told something I already know.
--
http://rrt.sc3d.org/ | egrep, n. a bird that debugs bison
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]