Re: [gentoo-user] eix question

2007-06-14 Thread Alex Schuster
Arnau Bria writes: could someone explain me what's the meaning of the [D] in this eix output? I did not find it in eix man page.. $ eix -c claws-mail [D] mail-client/claws-mail ([EMAIL PROTECTED]/05/07 - 2.6.1): Claws-Mail is an email client (and news reader) based on GTK+ It is

Re: [gentoo-user] eix question

2007-06-14 Thread Arnau Bria
On Thu, 14 Jun 2007 15:58:23 +0200 Alex Schuster wrote: Arnau Bria writes: could someone explain me what's the meaning of the [D] in this eix output? I did not find it in eix man page.. $ eix -c claws-mail [D] mail-client/claws-mail ([EMAIL PROTECTED]/05/07 - 2.6.1): Claws-Mail is

Re: [gentoo-user] eix question

2007-06-14 Thread Alan McKinnon
On Thursday 14 June 2007, Arnau Bria wrote: hi, could someone explain me what's the meaning of the [D] in this eix output? I did not find it in eix man page.. $ eix -c claws-mail [D] mail-client/claws-mail ([EMAIL PROTECTED]/05/07 - 2.6.1): Claws-Mail is an email client (and news reader)

Re: [gentoo-user] eix question

2007-06-14 Thread Philip Webb
070614 Arnau Bria wrote: what's the meaning of the [D] in this eix output? I did not find it in eix man page.. Someone else has answered this, but I have a couple of related questions: what does [I] mean ? and where are these letters documented ? Does anyone know ? --

Re: [gentoo-user] eix question

2007-06-14 Thread Andrea Bona
I think that [I] means that the package is already installed. Maybe here you will find something related: http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Use_Portage_Correctly#Understanding_Portage.27s_Formatted_and_Colored_Output Bye Andrea On 6/15/07, Philip Webb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 070614 Arnau Bria

Re: [gentoo-user] eix question

2007-06-14 Thread Philip Webb
070615 Andrea Bona wrote: 070614 Philip Webb wrote: what does [I] mean ? and where are these letters documented ? I think that [I] means that the package is already installed. Yes, that seems intuitive matches experience; it's part of Eix (not Portage) doesn't seem actually to be