On 2019-02-09 14:49, Xyne wrote:
On 2019-02-09 14:36 +0100
alad via aur-general wrote:

The "original" lsf looks like a joke/troll package to me, rather than
"trivial". I'd have deleted it even without community duplicate.

Alad

To me it just looks like the package of someone discovering bash programming
with ANSI escape codes and wanting to share. The fact that it's on github with
a README.md and a preview is an argument against it being a joke/troll.

Agreed. This is pretty clearly not a troll package. It's an easy-to-run script that could easily be featured in one of those 'Top 5 things the Linux terminal can do' articles.

The discussion is important because we need to have a general consensus on
deletion criteria. Rogue TUs can't be allowed to roam the AUR deleting whatever
they personally don't find useful on a given day.

"All art is quite useless." -Oscar Wilde

I'd propose that malicious/spam packages get deleted in this manner, and nothing else. We can't police what people want to do with their installation. Scripts like this may be trivial but they're bound to give enough people joy. Occasionally I zen out to asciiquarium (admittedly a much more involved program but no more useful than lsd) every now and then.

The point is, it was a legitimate program and should be welcomed in the AUR like any other (with the naming conflicts resolved).

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