Hello :)

I really like Synaptic and prefer to use it, when I know what I am looking
for, but don't know the name of it :)

But there is a slight annoyance when, for example, I need to compile
something from source. I use synaptic to install all the dependency libs,
compile the program, it works and all is fine. However, at that point I
(usually) don't need those developement libraries anymore and I go removing
them. Checking the history, selecting for (complete) removal one by one....
...sometimes it is quite nasty to see what all dependencies needed to be met
to try if some program suits my needs, only to find it doesn't.

What would be a nice feature, is an Undo button in the history that would
allow removal of all the packages marked by a selected history item. Before
removal it would need to check if that breaks any
now-in-future-time-existing dependancies, and if not they would be removed,
if installed. This, I believe, would be easy to implement as everything is
probably there already, and it would work for all history entries, no matter
how far back in time.
...Now I see, I haven't really described an undo operation here :) The
functionallity would then also need to install removed packages...; or it
could come in two flavours: [undo] and [remove installed]...

Please do consider this useful idea. It has also been proposed here:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/synaptic/+bug/122064
I know there are tools like debfoster, but such a button in Synaptic would
be really handy ;)

If this is/was already debated, please excuse my unawareness, consider this
as a nudge and positive feedback.
If not, do the same :)
_______________________________________________
Synaptic-devel mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/synaptic-devel

Reply via email to