[I have snipped everything except the words I am replying to.]
2006/10/17, Javier Fernández-Sanguino Peña <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think 'help' is by far the most common one ('?' might be close too). Currently 'help' brings bash's help which might not be what a newbie expected. Some (older?) people might even try pressing F1 and see what happens [0].
In xterm my F1 key causes a beep. Perhaps there's a way to remap the F1 key in bash and/or readline?
I remember back in 2000 providing a Debian package called 'ayuda' ('help', in Spanish) developed by members of my local IEEE Student Branch. This package included just a simple shell script ('ayuda') and a number of text files. When the script was called it would show up a dialog(1) menu a user could navigate and use to access the manuals included. ... I guess it would be nice to have something similar.
Interesting idea. But, since a) most people have web access nowadays and b) people with no web access in a new Linux install can reboot into Windows if they need web access, therefore I personally wouldn't want to maintain such a package. Of course, you could get such a script into Debian yourself (maybe in package debian-goodies or elsewhere) if you wanted.
> What would be a good help text to offer when a user types a command that > indicates he/she is a newbie? Also, what package should I file a > wishlist against to request that such help be added? Since there is no package providing that tool I would say 'general'. However, filing bugs vs. general doesn't mean they will get fixed by themselves. I think that it would be much better if somebody sat down and wrote a "Debian help" system that provided some Debian-specific things and integrated properly with both gnome-help and khelpcenter.
Is more Debian-specific help really needed for KDE/Gnome users? IIRC Synaptic comes with Gnome help files. Also, there are already lots of HTML-format manuals for Debian.
[2] Bonus points if someone figures a way to l10n that 'help' call, since non-english spearkers might write something different such as: 'ayuda', 'hilfe', 'aide', 'aiuto', 'ajuda', etc.
I really like that idea. Cheers, Jason -- Jason Spiro: computer consulting with a smile. I also provide training and spyware removal services for homes and businesses. Call or email for a FREE 5-minute consultation. Satisfaction guaranteed. 416-781-5938 / Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] / MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]