"KJM" == K J MacDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: KJM> This is the first `Debianized' Linuxdoc-SGML-1.2 package. KJM> dpkg --info :
KJM> Package: linuxdoc-sgml KJM> Version: 1.2 KJM> Package_Revision: 1 KJM> Class: optional KJM> Section: text KJM> Maintainer: Kenneth MacDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> KJM> Description: Linux Documentation Project SGML tools KJM> The Linux Documentation Project advise using this set KJM> of SGML parsers to generate HOWTO's and books. LaTeX, KJM> ASCII, HTML, PostScript and roff can all be generated KJM> from one SGML source file. KJM> Depends: groff | latex KJM> Recommended: groff, latex, dvips KJM> Optional: lynx, info KJM> ls -l : KJM> -rw-r--r-- 1 root debian 207308 Aug 11 01:26 linuxdoc-sgml-1.2-1.deb KJM> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 7191 Aug 11 01:27 linuxdoc-sgml-1.2-1.diff.gz KJM> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 365142 Aug 11 01:26 linuxdoc-sgml-1.2-1.tar.gz KJM> md5sum : KJM> 6659c07c43fa26cd6ea315c309c861ed linuxdoc-sgml-1.2-1.deb KJM> 8defc0ee0ec94a8945e6e0dcde4b3a91 linuxdoc-sgml-1.2-1.diff.gz KJM> 340d9b7c7ac75d8193e296c122386917 linuxdoc-sgml-1.2-1.tar.gz Excuse me, but when I see announcements of this kind on debian-user, I am left wondering how I am supposed to be able to figure out where the files being announced can be found. For example, I just now did `ls */linuxdoc*' in the debian/binary directory but I did not find these files. How does this work? Thank you. Bill

