That is what i waa looking day-1 when i started gentoo
If it works as I expect it to id say problems solved case closed
And if i can add other sets inside world even better,with that being said my 
questions from my last email still stand,even tho now unneeded someone reading 
this mailing list in the future might need it so if you know go ahead

For me that is it, not only im satisfied but happy with the gentoo community as 
a new user, I'll stop mailing now so i dont annoy other users and goodnight by 
me{wow its day now :(  }

(Also while typing this Avre replied as well, so ill say everything here, I 
remember seeing priority somewhere sometime in the past few weeks but Id 
forgotten it, should relook it up by evening?¿ appreciated cheers )

4 Oct 2021, 07:36 by arve.bars...@gmail.com:

> On Mon, 4 Oct 2021 at 08:05, <> coa...@tuta.io> > wrote
>
>> Secondly(I know I will surely find this one in the wiki but)can I set a 
>> priority to pull from the local repo first if package exists and then have 
>> the official repo as a backup?
>>
>
> You configure your repos in /etc/portage/repos.conf. For each repo you
> have the option of setting a priority. I think "official third-party"
> repos installed through layman gets a priority = 50, and if I'm not
> mistaken, the official repo have a default of 100. If you want your
> own repo to be the first choice, give your repo a higher priority.
>
> Cheers,
> Arve
>


4 Oct 2021, 07:13 by m.mal...@homicidalteddybear.net:

> I would strongly, STRONGLY discourage you from creating your own meta
> package.  There are very few meta packages in the tree (in the scheme
> of things) for very good reasons, they take one hell of a lot of
> maintenance.  They're really only there for things like kde, where you
> might just want a bare bones kde environment, or you might be
> expecting the full-fat desktop environment with all the side packages
> you'd get if you were using a distro that gave you no option out of
> the box.
>
> If you really want to group a bunch of packages into a set that gets
> emerged with one command, I would do exactly that: create a custom
> set.  Similar to @world, @system, @security, etc.  You can do that
> quite easily, see https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Package_sets .
>
> But really there's not a lot of use cases for it, mostly if you use a
> package and it's not just a dep of something (or several things) you
> should just have it in your world file, *for most people's use cases*.
> Going through your world file and cleaning out cruft is a part of
> regular gentoo maintenance, should be done at a minimum annually imo.
> Much like cleaning out distfiles and whatnot (see eclean, from
> app-portage/gentoolkit.  And, indeed, pretty much every other useful
> utility in gentoolkit.  Also flaggie for use-flag management.)
>
> On Mon, 4 Oct 2021 at 16:05, <coa...@tuta.io> wrote:
>
>>
>> I thank the four of you for the insight I learn more in 5 mins then I did in 
>> an afternoon,I have two last question tho
>>
>> As a example, if you want a
>> full KDE install, you just emerge the kde meta package and it gets
>> recorded in the world file.  The emerge command will take care of all
>> the other packages that depend on the meta package.  That is a LOT of
>> packages too
>>
>> Theoretically I can make my own meta package and place in the localrepo I 
>> have and set it to pull packages from the official repos
>>
>> Firstly is there any dependency hell that I can fall into when placing lots 
>> of different packages with (unexpectedly) conflicting deps on my own meta 
>> package?Has anyone (reading this) that has done it before and worked out a 
>> niche way to avoid falling into that trap?
>>
>> Secondly(I know I will surely find this one in the wiki but)can I set a 
>> priority to pull from the local repo first if package exists and then have 
>> the official repo as a backup?
>>
>> Lastly thank you for your previous replies forgot to add it on my last mail 
>> and I didnt want to bloat the mailing list like im editing a forum post with 
>> asterisks :D
>> .
>> .
>> .
>> Thank you (ah I'm learning)
>>
>>

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