Hi, when doing a command line package search for "go" it returns many unrelated packages, such as extra/evolution-bogofilter 3.48.3-1 Spam filtering for Evolution, using Bogofilter so there is a point in using "golang". OTOH, when I look at the naming scheme of the Go packages installed on my computer, I get a crisis: extra/golang-golang-x-crypto 0.0.20220830-1 Go supplementary cryptography libraries extra/golang-golang-x-net 0.0.20220826-1 Supplementary Go networking libraries extra/golang-golang-x-sys 0.0.20230208-1 Go packages for low-level interaction with the operating system extra/golang-golang-x-term 0.0.20220722-1 Go terminal and console support extra/golang-golang-x-text 0.3.3-2 Go text processing support extra/golang-golang-x-tools 0.0.20191225-2 Various packages and tools that support the Go programming language What the ...? "golang-golang"? "The name ylang-ylang is the Spanish spelling of the Tagalog term for the tree, ilang-ilang - a reduplicative form of the word ilang, meaning "wilderness", alluding to the tree's natural habitat. A common mistranslation is "flower of flowers"." - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cananga_odorata However, "golang-golang" sounds like a Chinese philosophical concept, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yin_and_yang . Given that "Go" is for "Go"ogle_language, my (mis)interpretation is, that the name scheme "golang-golang" does hide Google's company philosophy behind a faked pseudo-Asian term. Regards, Ralf