Package: link-grammar
Version: 4.3.5-1
Severity: important

After a fresh install of link-grammar, I try
$ man link-grammar
[blah-bah]

Looks good.  So I try
$ link-grammar
bash: link-grammar: command not found

That's odd.

$ dpkg-query -L link-grammar
[blah-blah]
/usr/bin/link-parser

OK, I try
$ link-parser
linkparser>

... and that works just the way the man page says link-grammar
should work.  Just for fun, I try
$ man link-parser
[blah-blah]

shows the same man page as before.  The real man page is
/usr/share/man/man1/link-parser.1.gz.  The man subsystem has
clearly pulled some tricks to try to help out, but the man page
contents still refer to the program by the wrong name.

In the long-term this is only an annoyance, so you could
downgrade to normal if you want.  It _is_ extremely confusing
at the start.

-- System Information:
Debian Release: lenny/sid
  APT prefers unstable
  APT policy: (500, 'unstable')
Architecture: amd64 (x86_64)

Kernel: Linux 2.6.26-1-amd64 (SMP w/1 CPU core)
Locale: LANG=en_US, LC_CTYPE=en_US (charmap=ISO-8859-1)
Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash

Versions of packages link-grammar depends on:
ii  libc6                         2.7-15     GNU C Library: Shared libraries
ii  liblink-grammar4              4.3.5-1    Carnegie Mellon University's link 
ii  link-grammar-dictionaries-en  4.3.5-1    Carnegie Mellon University's link 

link-grammar recommends no packages.

link-grammar suggests no packages.

-- no debconf information



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