On Saturday 24 January 2009 18:49:31 Alan Ianson wrote: > On Sat January 24 2009 01:34:04 am Lisi Reisz wrote: > > On Friday 23 January 2009 21:22:40 Alan Ianson wrote: > > > On Fri January 23 2009 01:08:49 pm Countable Infinity wrote: > > > > On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 9:02 PM, Alan Ianson <alian...@shaw.ca> wrote: > > > > > On Fri January 23 2009 12:42:30 pm Countable Infinity wrote: > > > > >> When I installed xfce4-terminal, it automatically installed > > > > >> libxfce4mcs-manager3, libxfce4util4, etc. But now if I do: > > > > >> > > > > >> aptitude purge xfce4-terminal > > > > >> > > > > >> it does not remove these libs that were installed automatically. > > > > >> > > > > >> Is there a way to remove these automatically installed packages > > > > >> when nothing depends on them any more? > > > > > > > > > > There is a setting in aptitude -> options -> preferences to remove > > > > > unused packages automatically. Is it switched on? > > > > > > > > Can't find any such thing. Could you please check your aptitude > > > > > options > preferences and confirm which option it is? > > > > > > It's under dependency handling. > > > > > > In aptitude press F10, then goto options, then in the preferences.. > > > > In my version of aptitude (0.4.11.11), the list called up by F10 has > > no "options" to go to. > > > > ?? > > That's the same version I have. There is no options over on the right a > bit?
Sorry - PEBUAK. I meant that there is (or was :-( ) indeed an options both in the menu that is called up and on the toolbar. Both "options" also lead to preferences. But there is not an option to remove unused packages automatically. Indeed, F10 does remarkably little. Lisi -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org