On Oct 28, 2007, at 11:06 AM, Daniel Burrows wrote:
On Sat, Oct 27, 2007 at 10:12:31AM -0700, Amit Uttamchandani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> was heard to say:
On Sat, 27 Oct 2007 10:01:02 -0700
Jeff Grossman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I was just reading the forums at forums.debian.org and came across a
thread about apt-get and aptitude. I just installed Debian this
week
after moving over from Gentoo. I have only been using the apt-get
method because that is all I ever saw mentioned. But, I guess
aptitude
is the preferred Debian method now. Is there a safe way for me to
start
using aptitude instead of apt-get? What is the best way for me to
make
the switch?
For new installs it is actually recommended to use aptitude.
However, from following the recent apt-get vs aptitude threads,
there doesn't seem to be any big difference between the two. So if
you are comfortable with apt-get there is no need to switch.
I'd say the main difference is that apt-get is a command-line tool,
whereas aptitude is an interactive tool that can be driven from the
command-line.
I would disagree. Aptitude supports command-line operation as well as
interactive.
aptitude install <packagename>
aptitude update
aptitude upgrade
aptitude remove <packagename> <-- Added benefit, cruft goes away too.
All work just fine... and don't launch the CUI. (Character User
Interface?)
--
Nate Duehr
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]