Quoting Trent W. Buck ([email protected]):
> Rick Moen <[email protected]> writes:
> 
> > You really should not use both aptitude and apt-get, as they will in
> > that case store separate 'hinting' records, i.e., they don't share
> > that data.  Thus, it's better to pick one tool or the other, rather
> > than using both.
> 
> That was the case in Debian 6 (and maybe 7).
> Isn't it fixed as at Debian 8?
> 
> viz. apt-mark.

I'd not heard previously about apt-mark.  I see that it's a tool to
toggle the record about whether a package was installed as result of
satifying a dependency or not.  Sounds useful, but I'm not seeing how
that solves problems inherently caused by apt-get and aptitude keeping
separate records.  

(I could easily be missing something, and will readily confess to
carrying forward old practices and prejudices out of habit because they
have worked well for many years in the past.  I'd feel more awkward
about this frame of mind if it weren't for the vast amount of trouble
it's helped me avoid encountering.)

> > I'm guessing the attraction of aptitude for you is its full-screen
> > ncurses mode, reminiscent of dselect's.
> 
> See also: http://luv.asn.au/overheads/aptitude/aptitude-intro.html

Very nice overview.  My thanks to the presenter (you?).  

I still prefer apt-get over aptitude, but that's a Religious Question.
;->

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