On Tue, Apr 14, 1998 at 09:23:00PM +0100, Marco Budde wrote: > Am 14.04.98 schrieb aj # azure.humbug.org.au ... > > AT> places is perfectly natural -- > > No. Look at the WWW server.
Are WWW severs natural? There was information archiving before electricity existed. Don't compare nuts with eggs. > AT> the FSSTND would be included under both "Debian development" and=20 > AT> "administration", and so forth. > > I don#t see any connection of FSSTND to Debian or to admin. This should go > to "standards" for example. This makes me angry. Just because you don't see any, this does not mean there isn't a connection. But I will explain it just for you (as I see one): 1) A Debian Developer has to follow the FSSTND (soon to be FHS) to follow debian policy. He should find all documents needeed to create packages in a single section. 2) An administrator should know where to look for files, and where he can place them to make efficient use of file sharing over a network etc. Therefore it is important he finds the document in the administration section. I just can't understand you. Why do you think it is easier to back up to the root tree and descend to the (hopefully but not likely) correct section to switch to a related document than having all related documents in a single section. This is such a natural and useful feature that I'm wondering why you fail to understand and make such a fuss about it. Is dhelp to unflexible to handle that? > AT> A searching utility, and a by-package listing would then only need to be > AT> used when you want to clarify points, much like the original purpose of > AT> man. > > ? Please read my other posts from yesterday, hopefully you will see what he means then. Marcus -- "Rhubarb is no Egyptian god." Debian GNU/Linux finger brinkmd@ Marcus Brinkmann http://www.debian.org master.debian.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] for public PGP Key http://homepage.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/Marcus.Brinkmann/ PGP Key ID 36E7CD09 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

