That's a fine point, Gabriel. I just thought the same about my servers, by reading your message. Especially virtual servers it would take enough space then. Arch isn't a focused desktop distribution. Anyway, the team is working hard to make pacman / alpm better (providing a better interface). In the current state, they work towards to get by default compatible swig bindings (at least the approach seems to be quite clear and clean, following the git), what means you can also build your application upon the alpm binding for C#. I also think that re-inventing the wheel isn't what should be done, especially not in such a "small" project. Of course, desktop environments and applications also often re-invent features. What i really appreciate are the features your client seems to have. That's a huge piece of work you've done, and basically what i'd like to see for pacman. GTK/QT interfaces for the original ALPM, for every kind of desktop user. I've been working some time now on pyalpm to make a compatible client. I just don't get along, since my work still eats me up, and the critsit won't end, as it seems. Yours, Georg On 7/23/07, Gabriel C <nix.or.die@googlemail.com> wrote:
Bozhidar Batsov wrote:
VMiklos wrote:
Hello,
Na Fri, Jul 20, 2007 at 05:40:40PM +0300, Bozhidar Batsov < lordbad@e-card.bg> pisal(a):
Well I have no intention to fork Arch. I strive to make a product 100% compatible with the existing, but I want to offer through it a few things that are missing in pacman and a couple of newer technologies. I don't think that mono is a bad thing just because .NET is a Microsoft product. After all Miguel de Icaza has stated many times that if he had mono 8 years ago there wouldn't be one line of C code in GNOME. I personally consider it to be a much better framework than java. Style and consistency are almost perfect here. Pascal notation for methods, camel for vars, great generics, great datatypes, security...
let's say you would write this in python or perl, we would have the same problem: pacman is a lowlevel tool, it should be fast and have as less deps as possible. mono can be a great tool but are you sure it's nice to have the whole mono framework in an install cd?
- VMiklos
Not exactly so. For one thing there are many popular programs build with mono today - beagle, f-spot, tomboy, muine and others so you are likely having the framework installed anyway. There are talks that soon mono will be accepted as an official dependency in GNOME.
All the programs you are talking about are almost broken but is not the point here.
You think to much about 'installations with an DESKTOP/X' that is.
*Why* do you think I would install _mono_ ( about 70MB bloat ) on my _servers_ ?
Just to run an PM ?
Gabriel
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