Rich Freeman wrote: > On Sat, Sep 24, 2016 at 3:44 PM, Dale <[email protected]> wrote: >> Rich Freeman wrote: >>> On Sat, Sep 24, 2016 at 11:35 AM, Dale <[email protected]> wrote: >>>> Actually, he is correct. >>> Actually, he isn't, which is hard to demonstrate since everybody is >>> top-posting. >> Actually he is and your reply supports that point. > Actually, he isn't. I'd suggest reading chapter 1 of my email "at > least three or four times" to find the part where I pointed out his > mistake.
OK. You're saying he was following the install guide even tho he missed a WHOLE section? Right? Come on Rich. You know better than that. How can anyone follow something they missed? As I just posted to the OP, maybe Neil knew he missed something but wasn't sure what and that is the reason he told him to go back and look at the docs. When I read it, it's what popped into my head, he missed something. If Neil hadn't posted it, I may have myself. If the docs were wrong on something, someone would have posted that a long time ago. It's not like Gentoo has some 5th rate docs. Heck, I'd put them at the #1 spot every day of the week and twice on Sunday. Key thing is, follow them as close as possible unless your hardware requires something different. >> Now that he knows he missed a section, maybe he can chroot into it, do >> that section and finish the install. That is unless his mobo blows out. :/ >> > Certainly, but not if somebody doesn't take the time to point that out > and explain it, vs just telling him to read only "chapter 1" of the > handbook a few more times. > > I do agree that he is missing a few steps but I'll go ahead and admit > that I occasionally miss a step on a Gentoo install because the > handbook is fairly verbose and it is easy to skip over the wrong part. > It would actually make sense to have a checklist to go along with it > so that it is harder to skip the wrong section. > > Bottom line though is that if you aren't going to tailor your email to > the questions being asked it isn't terribly helpful. > It would be helpful. If a section is missed, go back and recheck what was done and what wasn't. This is where bash history comes in handy. You know what commands were done and in what order at that. Of course, one could print the thing and check it off on the pages. Yikes, hard copies. o_O Since you are here, any chance we could get a all-in-one page for this? That is what I prefer to use myself. Start at the top and work your way down. If you have to click on links and such to weave around to different sections, that opens up the opportunity to miss a section. I guess a check list would help but depending on hardware, some steps may not be needed or some steps may need to be added. For me at least, a one page guide would be what I would want. It's what I used the first time I installed and I think the last time as well. If I were going to reinstall tomorrow, I'd be looking awful hard for a one page guide. Dale :-) :-)

