Quoting Amos Shapira, from the post of Mon, 02 Jun:
> > First, stop working with apt-get. Only work with aptitude.
> 
> That's what I always do - just because aptitude is smart enough to
> mark "automatically installed packages" to be removed when no longer
> required, but also because it indeed gives an impression of being more
> intelligent than plain apt-get.

I have no idea where that comes from. "apt-get autoremove" takes care of
packages that are no longer dependent upon (or is that only in sid?).

I find aptitude slower to load than even YUM in fully interactive mode,
I have no idea why, but nore than once I gave up on it after it takes
4-5 minutes to load on my sid, including after it finishes
installing/upgrading packages. I just revert to apt-get and it has very
rarely failed me.

then again, I could be missing something. never found out why or when
aptitude started loading this slow.

> > distribution versions), it is actually not recommended to use apt-get
> > dist-upgrade. For that, either "apt-get dselect-upgrade" is recommended, or
> > use dselect (ouch) or aptitude in order to do the actual upgrade. Aptitude
> > is recommended by me, as it shows you what will break prior to taking any
> > action.

so does apt-get. I always thought apt-get and aptitude use the exact
same backend, only one featured a UI. again, I may have missed
something.

-- 
The Scorpion King
Ira Abramov
http://ira.abramov.org/email/

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