> one OS to work with. My take is that he only > encountered Scribus to write a book about it. >
My view is that today far to many people write books about "what I have learned when trying this" instead of "what you should know about xxxxx". This is true also about many tutorials and howtos, often they just try to list the steps the author went through (usually missing a few steps and doing things more complicated than necessary). I use Debian a lot and when I find tutorials they very often contain "non-debian" ways of customizing the configuration when the README.Debian tells you how you should do it in the Debian way. I've read tutorials that were several pages long, when all that was needed was an apt-get install followed by creating a small configuration file with a couple of macros defined (setting up exim4 as mail server for a domain is a good example). (I think /usr/share/doc/<package name> is a place where every Debian user should start looking when they want to change a configuration.) /Peter -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.scribus.net/pipermail/scribus/attachments/20150213/9e98c901/attachment.html>
