On Mon, Jun 17, 2002 at 05:49:28PM -0400, Patrick Wiseman wrote: > I much prefer 'man' to 'info' (and I guess at least some Debian developers > do too as there are so many Debian-edited man pages). Anyone know why GNU > uses info now instead? And is there any way to influence the decision, or > am I just way too late?
Don't we wish. The decisions (on both sides) are far too entrenched to change (info dates from at least the late 80s). As another poster said, the two documentation formats are intended for somewhat different things. To summarize somewhat, perhaps unfairly, the GNU Project seems to believe that providing a complete detailed manual is always preferable to providing a reference card; the Debian Project observes that not all upstream authors have the time or inclination for a complete manual and, all other things being equal, prefers to have some reasonable documentation for most things than excellent documentation for a few and poor documentation for most. Man pages are things that both authors and readers can pick up quickly. I'm in the habit of using info for a very few GNU packages (make, autoconf, and the libc being prime examples), but given the choice I still prefer a quick 'man foo'. -- Colin Watson (bias: man-db maintainer) [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]