I'm not sure what you're after here, but I'll interject something I learned
from Neil.

On the linux console, one can press shift+pageup/pagedown to scroll.
With gpm installed, one can cut and paste with the mouse (very nice).

On freebsd, the scrolling is done by first turning on scrolllock, then page
up/page down.  But I think this is a little clunkier, then just a single key
combination.

Cory

-----Original Message-----
From: Ben Barrett [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2001 10:18 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [EUG-LUG:796] Re: debian woody


On Fri, 27 Apr 2001, larry a price wrote:
> actually apt-get is what dselect uses to calculate dependencies,
> if you try to install say mozilla without installing X it will tell you
> that it needs to install 12 dozen packages wit it, if you remove a package
for
> libc for instnce it wants to remove everything that needs it.

Just b/c a program has a UI doesn't mean that it is "nice",
or that it's intuitive... you had to read the man page or otherwise to
learn to use apt-get, right?  So dselect has this great documentation too,
but I notice that it also lets me _scroll_.  Maybe this is something that
hardcore linux oldtimers scoff at, but I like it.  Usually just keep
pressing <enter>, just like the rest of the debian install process.

btw, I now have the installation up to about 1 gig.  This is with an
_extensive_ set of extras, a year's worth of rainy days, intensives, and
also reference material.  On most other distro's (like suse, mandrake,
& redhat) I used up about 3 gig to achieve this.  Of course, it's more
limited, but I've got what _I_ want, with less fluff.

cheerio

  ben

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