USM Bish wrote:
> console-apt (capt) does just that. It has three packet
> dividers:
>
> a) Updated packages
> b) Installed packages (newer version available)
> c) Non-installed packages
This is news to me. Are they in the order you list them? If so, I
probably just didn't notice the divider betw
console-apt (capt) does just that. It has three packet
dividers:
a) Updated packages
b) Installed packages (newer version available)
c) Non-installed packages
USM Bish
On Fri, Jun 08, 2001 at 03:12:11PM -0400, David Z Maze wrote:
> Joey Hess <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> JH> AFAIK, deity and apt
On Fri, Jun 08, 2001 at 03:52:30PM +1000, Graham Williams wrote:
> After doing an apt-get update there are two types of packages I'm
> particularly interested in: newly available packages (new to Debain
> since the last time I did an apt-get update) and packages I have
> already installed but that
Joey Hess <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
JH> AFAIK, deity and aptitude do not single out newly available packages.
JH> Dselect, however, will do everything you want.
aptitude does call out newly available packages, though it considers a
package 'new' until the new list is explicitly cleared (with 'f
Graham Williams wrote:
> After doing an apt-get update there are two types of packages I'm
> particularly interested in: newly available packages (new to Debain
> since the last time I did an apt-get update) and packages I have
> already installed but that have been updated since the last time I di
After doing an apt-get update there are two types of packages I'm
particularly interested in: newly available packages (new to Debain
since the last time I did an apt-get update) and packages I have
already installed but that have been updated since the last time I did
an apt-get update. (I.e., ign
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