On jeu., 2010-03-04 at 22:54 +1100, Ben Finney wrote: > Josselin Mouette <j...@debian.org> writes: > > > Letting alone policy issues: what do you propose, *concretely* to > > improve the situation? > > The situation is as it is: many commands lack proper manual pages. I > don't propose to change the existing approach for dealing with this: > file bug reports, work with upstream to have properly maintained > manpages, close the bug reports as fixed when that happens.
My upstream position is exactly what started the thread: no need to have duplicate information between --help and manpage, --help strings are easily translatable (and translated), and they are more likely to be up to date. And we discussed that, and I agree with them, having manpages for every tiny script running this or that will not improve documentation. But this is not true for a lot of apps, though, which have good manpages and will continue to have them. > > The bug remains a bug, and I don't think closing the report is > appropriate in the absence of proper manpages. In many existing cases, > Debian maintainers take on that burden of maintaining proper manpages. > That burden ideally rests on upstream's shoulders, but if they're > unwilling, that doesn't resolve the bug. And that means yet another useless bug crippling the package BTS page, which makes it's harder to use. But, yes, the bug remains a bug. Cheers, -- Yves-Alexis
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