>>>>> "MB" == Marcus Brinkmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
MB: There is no need to keep a silly choosen upstream name. We MB: change a lot of things defined upstream (file location, etc), MB: and I don't think that changing a name from "B" to something MB: more readable is confusing (the opposite is the case). File location is no problem, most users don't care about it. Moreover, they expect e.g. documentation in certain directories on Debian systems. On the other hand they want to run the program by the same command on all systems. Moreover, makefiles, shell scripts, etc., may have problems, if the binary has different name on each computer. MB: Beside the reason you gave above, consider that a short name MB: gives *no* idea about the functionality. That's not true--`pl' (the main SWI Prolog binary name) is also the extension of Prolog source files (do not confuse this with the fact that Perl bigots chose already used extension for their source files) coming from ProLog. So it is clear for every Prolog programmer that binary `pl' has to do something with Prolog. I repeat it again: I don't think it's a good idea to have few letters binaries, but I would rename already existing user programs only if some conflict arised. Milan Zamazal -- "Having GNU Emacs is like having a dragon's cave of treasures." Robert J. Chassell