On 25 Jun 1997, John Goerzen wrote:
> By the current definition of Important: >[...] > sendmail > * dpkg-dev should not be there since no experienced user of another > Unix would expect it > * lilo should not be there because lilo is not part of UNIX I read it differently: ``Important programs, including those which one would expect to find on any Unix-like system. If the expectation is that an experienced Unix person who found it missing would go `What the F*!@<+ is going on, where is foo', it should be in important. [...] I read an implication of "including, but not limited to, ..." into that. However, I could buy some of your arguments that other packages (providing cc, lpr, etc.) not currently considered Important should be considered Important by this rule because they pass the Unix person expectation test. I think this Unix person expectation test is too subjective, and too prone to be evaluated differently by different package maintainers. Perhaps it would be better to explicitly list programs which the debian policer-setters consider Important, and the rule would better be that one package providing those listed programs should be prioritized as Important. -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .