> On 30 Aug 2016, at 09:27, br...@linuxsynths.com wrote:
> I would hazard a guess however, that if one of the two has a GUI, then I 
> would probably go with that. Newbies like GUIs I think. Lots of people have a 
> bad taste in their mouths about linux because it was so terminal-based.
> 
Hi,

a real GUI is tricky, there are already GUIs available and perhaps it could be 
considered as an advantage that e.g. Synaptic partly has got it's own 
preferences, instead of editing all apt... settings. The advantage of an 
official command line tool are the defaults. If an user screw up her install, 
then command line tools with distro specific default settings are useful for 
wikis and any support channel else. If a GUI should share all settings with the 
command line tool, it could become very difficult to help a user.
Command line tools for the so called "averaged user" are harder to use, than 
command line tools. However, in regards to the wiki, solving issues could be 
better done by explaining it using command line, because a command does the 
right thing by coping, pasting and executing. Explaining how to use a GUI is 
tricky for several reasons. Even explanations using screenshots have many 
pitfalls, e.g. the GUI of an app not necessarily is the same for different 
versions of the app. While apt seemingly is easier to understand and remember 
than apt-get, apt-cache etc., it's at least not available by the official 
repositories of at least one Ubuntu release that IIRC still is support until 
around 2018. As soon as this support reached EOL, all documentation and help 
anyway should migrate from apt-get to apt.

Regards,
Ralf

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