DB> I must be missing the point, then. What does apt-config have to do
DB> with aptitude?
Oops, you're right. Even if one never puts anything into ~/.aptitude,
it still misses all the native Aptitude:: values.
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2008 at 02:46:42AM +0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] was heard to say:
> >> $ COLUMNS= man aptitude|grep 'even .* is set'|perl -pwe
> >> 's/.*(.{33})/$1/'
> >> Resolver::No-New-Upgrades is set.
> >> Resolver::No-New-Installs is set.
> >> Say is set to what, true or false.
> >> As you kn
>> $ COLUMNS= man aptitude|grep 'even .* is set'|perl -pwe 's/.*(.{33})/$1/'
>> Resolver::No-New-Upgrades is set.
>> Resolver::No-New-Installs is set.
>> Say is set to what, true or false.
>> As you know with the shell, unset, set to null, set to something, are
>> all different.
DB> In fact,
On Mon, Sep 01, 2008 at 05:42:42PM +0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] was heard to say:
> name
> Matches packages whose names match the regular expression name. This
> is
> the “default” search mode and is used for patterns that don't start
> with ~.
>
> Say if these are bounded reg
Package: aptitude-doc-en
Version: 0.4.11.9-1
Severity: wishlist
File: /usr/share/doc/aptitude/html/en/ch02s03s05.html
name
Matches packages whose names match the regular expression name. This is
the “default” search mode and is used for patterns that don't start
with ~.
Sa
5 matches
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